Evergreen Playbook: Marketing Strategies and Ideas that Stand the Test of Time

David Göz - HEXAGRAM CREATIVE

Evergreen Playbook (formerly Brands of Value) is for CMOs, Heads of Growth, founders, and strategy consultants who want an effective, efficient path to marketing growth and business strategy. I’m David Göz, a science backed strategy consultant. In each interview I follow my curiosity to unpack a guest’s evidence and experience into clear processes you can apply: GTM, brand strategy, positioning, pricing, product marketing, distribution channels, demand generation, retention, and the 4Ps. Expect punchy questions, respectful debate, and practical checklists you can share with your team tomorrow.

Episodes

  1. Why Bad Briefings Waste Marketing Budget: Prof. Dr. Sebastian Wolf

    Jun 10

    Why Bad Briefings Waste Marketing Budget: Prof. Dr. Sebastian Wolf

    Bad briefings waste marketing budget long before the creative work starts. In this episode of The Evergreen Playbook, David Göz speaks with Prof. Dr. Sebastian Wolf about creative briefs, marketing briefings and the hidden cost of unclear direction. Sebastian argues that the brief may be the most important document in marketing because it shapes the quality of the work before strategy, creative development, feedback rounds and execution begin. We discuss why poor briefings create rework, subjective feedback, longer timelines and wasted marketing spend. Sebastian explains why briefing is less about filling out a template and more about thinking, translation and decision-making. A good briefing helps teams understand who the brief is for, what needs to be delivered, why the work matters, how it should be done and when decisions need to happen. This conversation is useful for founders, startups, marketing teams, strategists, agencies, creative directors and anyone who wants better marketing work with fewer feedback loops. In this episode, we cover: Why bad briefings waste marketing budget Why creative briefs are more than templates How to brief agencies, freelancers and internal teams more clearly The five questions every marketing brief needs to answer: who, what, why, how and when Why unclear objectives lead to weak creative work How rebriefings improve the translation between client and agency Why teams should ask “What was the brief?” before judging creative ideas Prof. Dr. Sebastian Wolf is Professor of Advertising and Strategic Brand Management at Stuttgart Media University. He has worked for more than ten years as a copywriter, creative director and strategist, and is the founder of Meisterbriefing, where he helps companies, agencies and creatives improve the quality of their briefings. More about this episode:https://evergreenplaybook.com/episodes/sebastian-wolf-briefing/ Read the full playbook:https://evergreenplaybook.com/playbooks/sebastian-wolf-briefing/ More about Sebastian Wolf:https://www.meisterbriefing.de/ Resources mentioned:https://www.betterbriefs.com/https://www.strategyfinishingschool.com/ The Evergreen Playbook is a marketing and strategy podcast for founders and startups hosted by David Göz. Each episode covers the long-term fundamentals behind stronger brands, better marketing decisions and more valuable businesses. You can book David Göz for keynotes and as a panel moderator. If you want to be on the show, please contact me via the email provided on www.evergreenplaybook.com. This episode is supported by Creative Connection, a programme of the City of Stuttgart. www.kreativ.region-stuttgart.de/news/creative-connection/

    1h 9m

About

Evergreen Playbook (formerly Brands of Value) is for CMOs, Heads of Growth, founders, and strategy consultants who want an effective, efficient path to marketing growth and business strategy. I’m David Göz, a science backed strategy consultant. In each interview I follow my curiosity to unpack a guest’s evidence and experience into clear processes you can apply: GTM, brand strategy, positioning, pricing, product marketing, distribution channels, demand generation, retention, and the 4Ps. Expect punchy questions, respectful debate, and practical checklists you can share with your team tomorrow.