---
name: management-briefing-writer
description: "Writes a clear, structured briefing note for editorial managers, department heads, or senior leadership on a specific editorial, operational, or strategic issue."
status: stable
category: writing
subcategory: institutional
version: 1.0
eval_score: 4.2
tags: [briefing, management, internal, editorial, strategy, memo]
---
# Management Briefing Writer

## What This Skill Does
Writes a clear, structured briefing note for editorial managers, department heads, or senior leadership on a specific editorial, operational, or strategic issue.

## When To Use This Skill
- You need to brief a managing editor, head of department, or executive team on an emerging story, a sensitive editorial decision, a staffing matter, or an operational issue.
- You have complex information — from multiple sources, with competing considerations — and need to present it concisely so a decision-maker can act on it quickly.
- You are preparing a briefing that will be read before a meeting, not discussed aloud, and needs to stand alone without you in the room to explain it.
- You need to flag a risk, recommend a course of action, or summarise external developments that affect your newsroom or production.
- You need to write a briefing that is non-partisan internally — presenting options fairly rather than arguing a single position.

## What You Need To Provide
**Required:**
- The subject of the briefing in one sentence
- The key facts, developments, or findings that management needs to know
- The decision or awareness required from the reader (what you need them to do, approve, or understand)
- Any deadline or time sensitivity

**Optional:**
- Relevant background that management may not have (organisational context, prior decisions, external factors)
- Options or courses of action with brief pros and cons if a decision is required
- Who else has been consulted or informed
- Any risks or sensitivities that should be flagged
- Preferred tone (neutral informational, advisory, urgent)

## How the Assistant Approaches This
1. Writes a one-sentence subject line that tells the reader exactly what the briefing is about — not a vague title but a precise description of the issue and the action required.
2. Opens with a "bottom line up front" summary: two to three sentences covering what has happened or what the issue is, why it matters now, and what is being asked of the reader. A busy editor should be able to read this paragraph and act on it without reading further.
3. Expands into a structured body covering background, key facts, and — where relevant — options with their implications. Keeps each section short enough to scan.
4. Closes with a clear "Recommended action" or "Action required" line stating exactly what the briefing is asking for, from whom, and by when.
5. Maintains a neutral, professional register throughout — factual, direct, and free of editorial advocacy or internal political positioning.

## Output Format
A structured memo, typically 300–600 words. Uses clear section headers: **Subject**, **Summary**, **Background**, **Key Facts / Developments**, **Options** (if a decision is required), **Recommended Action**. No jargon. No bullet points longer than one line. Written in third person or an impersonal register — not "I think" but "The recommendation is." Short paragraphs. Designed to be read in under three minutes.

## Quality Criteria
- [ ] Subject line states the issue and required action, not just the topic
- [ ] Summary paragraph can stand alone — the reader knows what to do after reading it
- [ ] Background section contains only information the reader does not already have
- [ ] Any options are presented with equal weight unless there is a clear recommendation
- [ ] Recommended action specifies who does what and by when
- [ ] Tone is neutral and factual — no internal advocacy or emotional framing
- [ ] Total length is under 600 words unless complexity genuinely requires more

## Example

### Input
Subject: A reporter on the investigative team has filed a formal complaint against their direct editor alleging repeated exclusion from story assignments following a disagreement over a source's anonymity. HR has received the complaint and is conducting an initial review. The deputy editor needs to be briefed before a team meeting scheduled for Thursday morning. The deputy editor is not the line manager of either party. No disciplinary action has been taken yet. The newsroom does not yet know about the formal complaint.

Key facts:
- Complaint filed Monday. HR review underway, expected to conclude within two weeks.
- The reporter and editor have not been in direct communication since Friday.
- Thursday's team meeting includes both parties.
- The story they disagreed about has not been published.
- Legal has been notified as a precautionary measure.

Decision needed: Whether to reschedule Thursday's meeting or proceed with both parties present.

### Output
**BRIEFING NOTE — CONFIDENTIAL**

**Subject:** Formal HR complaint between investigative reporter and editor — guidance required on Thursday team meeting

**Summary**

A formal HR complaint has been filed by a reporter on the investigative team against their direct editor. HR is conducting an initial review, expected to conclude within two weeks. Both parties are scheduled to attend a team meeting on Thursday morning. A decision is needed on whether to proceed with that meeting as planned.

**Background**

The complaint arises from a disagreement over source anonymity on an unpublished investigation. The reporter alleges they were subsequently excluded from story assignments. The matter was escalated to HR on Monday. Legal has been notified as a precautionary measure. No disciplinary findings have been made and no action has been taken against either party.

Neither party is aware that the other has been informed of this briefing. The wider team has not been told that a formal complaint has been filed.

**Key Facts**

- HR review is underway and is expected to take up to two weeks.
- The reporter and editor have not communicated directly since Friday.
- The story at the centre of the dispute has not been published and its status is unresolved.
- Thursday's meeting includes both parties in the same room with no prior facilitation.

**Options**

**Option A — Proceed with meeting as scheduled.** This avoids disruption to the team and does not signal that anything has changed. Risk: if the dynamic between the two parties is visibly strained, other team members may notice and speculation may follow before HR has concluded its review.

**Option B — Reschedule the meeting.** This removes the immediate risk of an uncomfortable or escalating situation. It requires a neutral reason to be communicated to the team. Risk: if rescheduled without explanation, this may prompt questions.

**Option C — Proceed with meeting but restructure the agenda** to remove any items that require direct collaboration between the two parties. This is the lowest-disruption approach if a full postponement is not possible.

**Recommended Action**

HR should be consulted before Thursday on whether proceeding with both parties present is consistent with their review process. If HR advises caution, Option B or C is recommended. A decision is needed by end of day Wednesday to allow any rescheduling to be communicated.

Please confirm preferred course of action.

*Prepared by: [Name / Role]*
*Date: [Date]*
*Distribution: Deputy Editor only*

## Known Limitations
- The assistant works only from the information you provide — it cannot assess interpersonal dynamics, legal exposure, or organisational politics that you have not described.
- For briefings involving live legal proceedings, active HR investigations, or regulatory matters, have the draft reviewed by legal or HR before sending. The assistant's output is a drafting aid, not legal or HR advice.
- The neutral tone produced by this skill may feel too restrained in situations that genuinely require urgency. If urgency needs to be conveyed, state this explicitly in your input and the assistant will adjust accordingly.
- Briefing notes for external audiences (regulators, press, government) require a different register — this skill is optimised for internal management communication only.

## Related Skills
- [press-release-writer](../../../pr-communications/press-office/press-release-writer/SKILL.md)
- [cold-email-writer](../../../media-business/pitching/cold-outreach-email-writer/SKILL.md)
- [broadcaster-one-pager](../../../tv-documentary/business/broadcaster-pitch-writer/SKILL.md)
