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Graphic design request form template (27 questions)

graphic design request form

At a glance

WHAT this is

A structured intake form that captures all essential project details - from design type and brand guidelines to deadlines and approval workflows - before creative work begins.


WHO this is for

Marketing agencies managing multiple client design requests who need to eliminate scattered briefs, reduce revision cycles, and ensure designers have complete information from day one.


WHEN to use this

Send this form whenever a client submits a new design request, whether it's their first project or part of ongoing work, to standardize intake and prevent miscommunication before assignment.


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Your designers are drowning in Slack messages, email chains, and half-baked briefs. One client forgot to mention the deadline. Another sent "inspiration" as a blurry screenshot with no context. The result? Missed details, endless revisions, and projects that drag on for weeks when they should take days.

A graphic design request form fixes this chaos. It captures every critical detail upfront - project goals, brand guidelines, target audience, deadlines, and approval workflows - before work even begins. This post covers what a graphic design request form should include, how to implement it at your agency, and a free template you can customize today. Let's dive in.

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Questions to include on your graphic design request form

Contact Information
Collect primary contact details to route updates and approvals quickly.

  • What is your name?
  • What is your email address?
  • What is your phone number?
  • What is the name of your company or organization?

Project Overview
Set the brief at a glance so scoping and creative direction stay aligned.

  • What is the name of this design project?
  • Please provide a brief description of the project.
  • What is the purpose or goal of this design project?
  • Who is the target audience for this design?

Design Details
Capture specs and brand constraints that will drive file setup and visual decisions.

  • What type of design work do you require?
  • Are there any specific dimensions or formats required for the design?
  • Do you have any preferred colors or color schemes?
  • Are there any specific fonts or typography preferences?
  • Do you have any existing branding guidelines or materials to follow?
    Dimensions, formats, and brand assets affect production time, export settings, and brand consistency; getting them upfront prevents rework.

Content and Imagery
Clarify content ownership and asset sources to define scope and licensing.

  • Will you provide the content or do you need the designer to create it?
  • Are there any particular images or graphics you want to be included?
  • Do you need any stock photos, and if so, what type?
    Content responsibilities and stock needs drive copywriting scope, image licensing, and lead time.

Competitor and Inspiration
Ground creative direction with market context and references.

  • Who are your main competitors and where can we view their designs?
  • Are there any specific designs or styles that inspire you? Please provide references or links.
  • Is there anything you dislike or want to avoid in the design?

Timeline and Budget
Set delivery expectations and resource allocation.

  • What is the deadline for this design project?
  • Is there a specific timeline or schedule you would like to follow?
  • What is your budget for this design project?
    Hard dates, phased milestones, and budget ceilings determine feasibility, staffing, and revision limits.

Feedback and Approval Process
Define who decides and how feedback cycles run.

  • Who will be the main point of contact for feedback during the design process?
  • How many rounds of revisions are you expecting?
  • Will there be anyone else involved in the approval process?

Additional Information
Leave space for edge cases and future opportunities.

  • Is there any other information or special requests you would like to provide regarding this project?
  • Do you have any other ongoing or future design projects you'd like to discuss?

Tips to get the best results

  • Attach a visual brief template to your confirmation email: After a client submits the form, send them a one-page visual summary of their responses - especially the design type, target audience, color preferences, and timeline. This gives them a chance to catch anything they missed and ensures everyone's aligned before you assign the project to a designer.

  • Use the competitor question strategically: When clients fill out "Who are your main competitors and where can we view their designs?", don't just file it away. Share those competitor examples with your design team during kickoff, then actively discuss what to avoid versus what resonates. This turns vague requests like "modern but professional" into concrete direction.

  • Pre-populate the form for repeat clients: If you're working with a client on multiple projects, send them a pre-filled version with their company name, branding guidelines reference, and approval process details already completed. They'll only need to fill out project-specific sections like design type, deadline, and content requirements - saving time and reducing friction for ongoing work.

How to use Content Snare for your graphic design request form

Break complex requests into digestible pages

Your graphic design request form covers a lot of ground - from project goals to competitor research to approval workflows. Organize questions into logical pages like "Project Overview," "Design Specifications," and "Timeline & Budget." Clients can focus on one section at a time instead of facing a wall of questions. They'll complete the form faster and with fewer mistakes.

Show relevant questions based on design type

Not every project needs the same information. A logo design requires different details than a social media campaign or print brochure. Set up conditional logic so when a client selects their design type, they only see questions that matter for that specific work. Someone requesting a digital ad won't waste time answering questions about print dimensions or paper stock.

Add visual examples to clarify what you need

The "Are there any specific designs or styles that inspire you?" question works better when clients see what you mean. Drop in a few sample images or a quick video showing different design styles. Same goes for the file format and dimensions section - upload a visual guide showing common sizes for social posts, banners, or business cards. Clients give you better information when they understand exactly what you're asking for.

Pre-fill details for returning clients

You already know the company name, branding guidelines, and approval process for clients you work with regularly. Pre-populate those fields before sending the form so they only answer project-specific questions like design type, deadline, and content requirements. Less friction means faster turnaround and happier clients who appreciate you valuing their time.


Why use Content Snare

Email threads and shared documents turn into chaos when you're collecting design briefs from multiple clients. Information gets buried, deadlines slip, and you waste hours chasing down missing details. Content Snare eliminates the back-and-forth. Clients fill out structured forms, you get automatic reminders to follow up without being the bad guy, and everything stays organized in one place. Thousands of agencies worldwide rely on it to collect information faster and more professionally.

Content Snare is ISO 27001 certified and trusted by marketing agencies managing sensitive client data. It integrates with tools you already use like Slack, Zapier, and Google Drive, so collected information flows directly into your workflow.

Beyond graphic design requests

This form is just one way agencies use Content Snare. You can also collect:

  • Website content and copy from clients launching new sites or campaigns
  • SEO questionnaires covering target keywords, competitor analysis, and content strategies
  • Campaign briefs for paid ads, social media, or email marketing projects
  • Client onboarding information including brand guidelines, access credentials, and goals
  • Case study details when gathering results and testimonials from successful projects

The platform has hundreds of 5-star reviews across G2, Capterra, and Trustpilot. Agencies love how it transforms client communication from scattered and stressful into smooth and professional.


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