Standardization in creative production is the set of rules, templates, and workflow steps that let you produce high volumes of work with consistent brand execution, even when priorities change and timelines tighten.
Why this matters for brands and in-house agencies
If you lead a brand team or an in-house agency, you already see the same tension. Stakeholders want faster output and more versions. Your team still has to protect brand consistency, accuracy, and approvals.
What Christi Simoneaux’s operating reality shows
Director, Creative Special Projects at Oldcastle APG, describes production at real volume across a complex brand portfolio. “Our in-house creative studio provides a crucial function for our marketing team. In 2024, we ran over 1,600 projects through our team in support of 17 of our brands. – Christi Simoneaux, Director, Creative Special Projects at Oldcastle APG
The question you should ask your team
If your volume doubled for the next six weeks, what breaks first: briefing, templates, approvals, or resourcing?
How demand shows up in real operations
Rising demand is not only about more channels. It shows up through refresh cycles, reskins, brand changes, and shifts in strategy that create unavoidable production work.
“Several of our brands have quite a bit of sales enablement collateral that gets refreshed or redesigned annually. We also regularly go through brand refreshes for one of our brands or a change in marketing strategy that requires a good deal of existing work to be reskinned or revamped with new messaging or branding.”- Christi Simoneaux
Practical step you can take this week
Make a list of repeatable update work you already know is coming in the next 12 months:
- Annual refreshes
- Reskins and messaging updates
- Brand refreshes
- Sales enablement updates
- Packaging and merchandising updates, if relevant
Why standardization comes before automation
Automation only helps when inputs are consistent. Standardization creates that consistency.
What standardization fixes first
Standardization reduces variation in four places:
- Brief quality and structure
- Template usage and version control
- Review steps and approval ownership
- Brand execution across formats and teams
Why this becomes non-negotiable at multi-brand volume
When you support many brands and handle high throughput, inconsistency multiplies fast. Christi’s numbers, over 1,600 projects and 17 brands, show why teams need consistent ways of working.
Define what stays in-house, and what moves out
Standardization is not only templates. It also means clear operating decisions about ownership and external support.
For our tier-one brands, we do have external partners who lead higher level creative strategy and larger initiatives. Those relationships are managed by the brand team, but we maintain a close partnership and handle a good bit of the execution. However, the overwhelming bulk of the creative and production work is done in-house. During higher volume windows, we rely on external production. Those production relationships are managed by our team.
What this means for an in-house agency
If you rely on external production during high-volume windows, you protect consistency when your team owns:
- The workflow steps
- The files and templates
- The review path
- The production partner relationship
What this means for brand leaders
Define the split early so you do not renegotiate it during a peak:
- What stays in-house
- What goes to external partners
- Who owns the relationship
- What the handoffs look like
Operating model checklist
- Define which work is strategy-led and which work is execution-led
- Assign ownership for each category
- Define handoff rules, file formats, templates, and review steps
- Define who owns external production relationships during peak periods
The standardization playbook you can run in 30 days
This plan fits both brands and in-house agencies.
1. Standardize briefs
Require these fields every time:
- Objective
- Audience
- Channel and format
- Mandatory brand rules and constraints
- Single approver
2. Standardize templates
Build templates for the work that repeats most often:
- Sales enablement formats
- Email layouts
- Retail merchandising updates
- Packaging changes, where applicable
- Core social sizes and variants
3. Standardize reviews
Set one review path per asset type:
- Who reviews first
- Who reviews last
- What checks are required
- Where feedback must be submitted
4. Standardize brand rules
Create one source of truth for:
- Brand identity
- Voice and messaging
- Packaging rules, where applicable
- Do and do not examples
Where automation fits, and how to start without losing control
Once you standardize, automation becomes useful because it works inside defined constraints.
Start with repeatable work
Good starting points:
- Versioning and resizing
- First drafts for repeatable copy formats
- Workflow routing and status updates
- Template-based asset creation
Keep a simple expansion rule
Expand automation only after you can show these outcomes over a 30-day period:
- Approval time stays flat or improves
- Revision rounds stay flat or improve
- Rework decreases
- Brand compliance issues do not increase
What you should take from Christi’s perspective
Christi’s view reflects how production runs inside complex brand portfolios:
- You manage refresh cycles and reskins
- You respond to new initiatives and sudden volume spikes
- You use external production at times
- You protect brand control through consistent ways of working
Standardization is what lets you stay fast without losing control.
Download the 2026 Industry Voices report
If you want the full set of leadership perspectives across operating models, automation, and future skills, download the 2026 Industry Voices report here.




