Design

Digital Asset Management Stakeholders: Creative Operations

Here, we discuss the unique challenges and priorities of the Creative Operations team and show how a DAM initiative aligns with their goals.

Jeffrey Bates

January 28, 2019

Jeffrey Bates

Creative Director

4 min read

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In this series, we’re highlighting some of the common stakeholders we see involved in a DAM project, discussing their unique challenges and priorities, and showing how a digital asset management initiative aligns with their goals.

With the primary goal of making creative production as efficient, productive, and compliant as possible, Creative Operations is responsible for formally defining and streamlining the creative process. They work to optimize workflows for producing, revising, and approving creative assets to meet deadlines and stay on budget.

Creative Operations is responsible for optimizing people, technology, and processes to deliver the maximum output of creative production. With an increasing need for personalization at scale, they identify tools to minimize gaps in asset production and work with technology vendors to implement new initiatives.

In this post we will cover

Goals and Challenges of Creative Operations

Creative Operations typically focuses on these three primary goals to achieve success:

Creative Operations

1. Getting creative projects completed on time and on budget

One of the most important factors in Creative Operations is project deadlines. The organization relies on the Operations team to effectively set timelines, implement processes, and set milestones that enable the creative team to complete a high volume of projects on time and on budget.

In order to achieve that, Creative Operations need to anticipate and recognize bottlenecks or inefficiencies and eliminate them before they jeopardize project milestones. They also need to identify and implement technologies and workflows that would allow the team to work at maximum efficiency.

2. Tracking relevant KPIs and metrics

Tracking the impact of the creative team on the company’s bottom line can be critical for securing budgets for technology platforms, additional headcount, or structural changes. Creative Operations is often responsible for setting these trackable metrics for the creative team, like Lead Time Per Project, Estimated vs. Actual Project Time and Budget, and Satisfaction Ratings. This assigns accountability, analyzes process efficacy, and proves successes. while allowing Creative Operations to present the impact of new technologies, processes, and team members on the organization’s bottom line.

Creative operations tracking is about finding growth opportunities, improving productivity at both the team and personal level, maintaining the minimum standards of quality delivery, and elevating customer (and leadership) satisfaction across the board.

3. Enabling creative teams with effective tools and resources

To improve the creative team’s metrics, Creative Operations needs to provide creatives with everything they need to focus on production. This may include access to image libraries, the latest brand or product assets, creative platforms, and workflow tools. The Creative Operations team is responsible for ensuring the continuity of projects, so when someone is sick or away on vacation, the rest of the team can deliver projects on time. If the company is running a 24/7 creative production schedule, then Creative Operations need to ensure that projects can be easily transitioned from one region to another, while maintaining visibility into the project’s status and latest versions.

Creative Operations Impact on a DAM Project

While a digital asset management initiative is usually initiated by the marketing department, the creative team is often impacted by the DAM platform and should be included when analyzing use cases.

As the advocate for content creators, Creative Operations looks to evaluate technologies that have the ability to improve production, without making drastic changes or disruptions to the team’s existing process for building content.

Here are questions for Creative Operations to consider when making decisions about a DAM initiative:

1. Can the marketing team easily find and leverage the assets produced by the creative team? Are they easy to download and share?

2. Is the creative team enabled to meet the demand for a growing volume of creative content? Are project timelines jeopardized because of delays in creative production?

3. Can the creative team easily access and share relevant visuals for projects? Are they able to collaborate effectively?

4. Can you ensure all assets being created are upholding brand visual standards?

5. Is there a risk of high-value asset loss (photography originals, investor content, etc.) with the current asset management practices?

Benefits of a DAM for Creative Operations

When the Creative Operations team is involved in a digital asset management initiative, it’s important to understand how the creative team will be impacted. Here are some benefits to consider highlighting:

Accelerated Creative Processes: A DAM provides workflow and collaboration features that allow the creative team and marketing to work more efficiently together. It removes bottlenecks and eliminates administrative tasks, like responding to image requests. Most DAMs also provide integrations into Adobe Creative Suite, enabling designers to access their asset library from inside their creative tools.

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Improved Collaboration: Teams in different divisions and locations can work together on projects, eliminating challenges faced when sharing large media files. Previous and current projects can be easily accessed, created, and shared with teams.

Brand Consistency: A DAM allows users to quickly find assets that are on-brand and pre-approved by marketing. All teams are able to search for the assets they need within a single library and transform them into a variety of file types and sizes (such as from a JPG to a PNG). Creatives can quickly find the assets they need for projects, instead of relying on team members to share them.

Increased Scale: With a DAM, content creation becomes more scalable, as the latest versions of assets are instantly available to all users. This scalability increases as asset updates get connected to existing systems, like the company’s CMS, via integrations. Content updates or large projects are massively accelerated by a DAM and can quickly be rolled out to multiple regions, teams, and users.

Easier Accessibility: A DAM aggregates every media asset into an easily accessible location and makes them easily discoverable by users. Assets purchased or created across different locations can be easily browsed or searched. Remote creative teams can easily access work-in-progress projects and marketing can quickly access completed projects.

DAM platforms can be incredibly versatile and provide benefits to a number of teams and divisions within an organization. Don’t forget to also look at the priorities of the CMO and the VP of IT.

Here’s some other helpful content, to help you build the business case for DAM project across your organization:


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Marketing

4 Tools to Build Impactful Visual Content

In this post, we share 4 of our favorite marketing tools that help us stay on brand and create impactful visuals.
Jeffrey Bates

May 28, 2018

Jeffrey Bates

Creative Director

3 min read

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It’s no secret that the future of marketing is content-rich, and diverse, visual content creates the opportunity for marketing teams to connect with their audiences, create long-lasting engagement with their brand and, ultimately, drive revenue and stand out from their competitors.

The demand for unique content in a variety of formats keeps growing. What’s not growing is the budget or headcount of the creative departments. While every piece of marketing material and digital campaign needs visual elements, there are ways to ease some of the workload for the design team and stay on brand.

At MediaValet, we rely on a number of tools to help our marketing team create great visual elements for a variety of digital and social channels. In this post, we’re sharing 4 of our favorite marketing tools that help us stay visual without overloading our graphic designers.

1. Canva

Canva is a hyper-intuitive design app with an easy drag-and-drop interface and a multitude of templates. This tool allows you to layer photos, frames, graphics, and text, making it a great tool to use for social images, printouts, and even presentation slides.

Canva has thousands of templates that make it easy for even the least design-savvy person to create beautiful, attention-grabbing visuals. With a premium package, you have access to resizing, custom fonts, 400,000 free illustrations and photos, and more, but even the free version gives you more than enough functionality to create beautiful designs.

Canva screenshot

We mostly use Canva for our social media posts and any time we need to add text to visuals, like holiday posts. Canva also allows us to make small adjustments to images (such as adding a logo or doing some make-shift cropping).

2. Pexels

Our favorite website for finding high-resolution, high-quality photos and videos is Pexels. The visuals found on this site aren’t typical, cookie-cutter stock photos. You’ll find a wide variety of images of nature, cityscapes, and authentic, everyday life images, and the entire site is free (with an option to donate to talented photographers).

Pexels Homepage

We use Pexels to find high-resolution images and videos for our presentations, social images, and blog posts. You can even find some in 4K!

3. Unbounce

Up next on our list of tools is Unbounce, a conversion platform that helps marketers build beautiful landing pages with A/B testing functionality. Unbounce has built a reputation for giving those without any HTML or design experience the ability to build flawless, high-converting landing pages, and they don’t disappoint! On the site, you have the ability to start from scratch or build from thousands of template options, giving you endless design options for any industry. There are plenty of training modules and stand-by support to help you to master the tool, but once you get the hang of it you can build landing pages in as little as an hour.

Unbounce Screenshot

At MediaValet, we use Unbounce for, of course, our landing pages! The ability to quickly build clean and well-designed landing pages allows us to experiment with designs, A/B tests, and, ultimately, deliver the best experience to our visitors.

4. Office 365 PowerPoint

Not many people notice this, but the latest version of PowerPoint actually has the ability to suggest professionally designed layouts to fit the content that you’re pulling in. Put simply, PowerPoint can auto-place your images into an awesome, pre-designed template. You can give this feature a try by activating “Design Ideas” within the Design ribbon.

PPT without icon

This function enables our team to create beautiful presentation decks without distracting our design team from new and creative projects. We also have a handy integration that allows us to quickly pull in images from our own MediaValet library and insert them directly into the PowerPoint slide.


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