Knute Nelson See how Knute Nelson drives marketing efficiency with a DAM Who is Knute Nelson? Knute Nelson is a non-profit organization with a vision to provide innovative solutions that empower individuals to thrive; serving over 8000 clients throughout their continuum of care in 2021. Their mission as an organization is to enrich the lives of everyone they serve, and foster customer-focused, holistic, and inclusive experiences to meet their customers’ needs. The Challenges Before a DAM Before implementing MediaValet, Knute Nelson used a private server to store all their assets and ensure the privacy and security of their customers. Here are a few areas where they experienced challenges that lead them to their search for a DAM: Organization: After functioning without a single source of truth to keep their assets organized, they realized they needed a centralized solution to allow for easy content distribution, sharing, and publishing for all users. Accessibility: Along with several challenges with providing access to outside team members, they didn’t have a space where access could be quick and easy for the hundreds of individuals needing access to their assets at any given time. Duplication: They lacked a ticketing system for managing requests and ended up with a lot of back-and-forth emails trying to get the right information. Additionally, there were several repetitive tasks which often lead to duplicate work being done amongst the team. The Use Case Finding a Solution As Knute Nelson began to grow as an organization, challenges began to add up just as fast. They were finding Band-Aid fixes that only led to more challenges down the line, and quickly grew out of their to-do list as a very small team. This eventually led them to realize they were in need of a true project management system. After months of researching and testing, Wrike checked all the boxes that we needed and today, we know that we couldn’t function without it.” After taking a closer look at all their assets, Knute Nelson realized they didn’t need to share any documents with personal health information. Instead, they simply wanted to share their product and service collateral and needed a secure, user-friendly, single source of truth to do just that: digital asset management. Our goal was to make the end user experience as personalized and as simple as possible: access had to be quick and easy for the hundreds of individuals needing access to the DAM at any given time. MediaValet checked those boxes for us and so many more.” The Result Connecting Wrike and DAM As Knute Nelson looked for an additional solution, a significant selling point for MediaValet was the option to integrate with Wrike. Once we felt like we had a good foundation and understanding of MediaValet, we turned on the Wrike and MediaValet Connector and our team loves the convenience of it.” As soon as an asset is approved through the production process, Knute Nelson can select their document in Wrike, and it will upload directly into MediaValet without ever leaving the application. Instead of traditionally downloading an asset, saving it temporarily to the desktop, and having to re-upload it to multiple locations for others to access, this time-consuming process is made easy with the Wrike and MediaValet Connector. The three main benefits Knute Nelson experienced when connecting Wrike and MediaValet include: Improved Organization: After launching the connector, users were able to set up filters and save searches within MediaValet to allow them to easily access only the assets that are relevant to them. This not only helps individual users stay organized, it also helps Knute Nelson as an organization keep everything in order. Enhanced Discoverability: Between Wrike’s robust search and filtering options, and MediaValet’s specific tagging, attribute, and category features, Knute Nelson is able to “keep it simple” and find what they’re looking for quickly and efficiently. Increased Productivity: With hours of time saved and reallocated in a more productive way, the connection of Wrike and MediaValet has allowed Knute Nelson to produce better outcomes and higher-quality products. Wrike and DAM: Better Together With their Wrike and MediaValet integration, Knute Nelson is able to easily find the assets they need, improve collaboration with their end users, and publish and track their assets with ease by enabling users to publish approved assets to MediaValet directly within their Wrike tasks. We invested in these tools to allow us to personalize our experiences, making it as easy as possible for our teams and end users to make database decisions about our strategies. Because of this, we are doing more with less and are now able to scale as our industry grows by having the right tools to manage our work.” Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo
Art Bridges See how Art Bridges uses MediaValet to boost event management and overall organization. Who is Art Bridges? Art Bridges Foundation is a nonprofit organization founded by Alice Walton in 2017, dedicated to expanding access to American art across the United States. Based in Bentonville, Arkansas, it partners with museums and cultural institutions to share artworks through traveling exhibitions, collection loans, and community programming—especially in underserved areas. Its mission is to make American art more accessible, engaging, and inclusive for all. Location: Bentonville, AR Industry: Non-profit Company size: SMB Joined MediaValet: 2021 Features: Wrike Integration, Branded Portals The Challenges Art Bridges Foundation faced several challenges in managing its digital assets: Decentralized Storage Inefficient Sharing Limited Accessibility The Results By implementing MediaValet’s cloud-based Digital Asset Management (DAM) solution, Art Bridges achieved: Centralized Asset Repository Improved Collaboration Enhanced Efficiency Colin Carmichael Director of Web Operations, Art Bridges As a recently established nonprofit foundation, Art Bridges partners with museums and art organizations to make American art available to communities across the United States. When we had the opportunity to interview Colin Carmichael, the Director of Web Operations at Art Bridges, we were thrilled to learn about the role MediaValet has played in enabling them to host events and share information with event managers. This interview shares Art Bridges’ journey with implementing MediaValet and explains how MediaValet’s various features have helped Art Bridges transform the way they facilitate access to art across the United States. To start us off, can you please let us know more about the Art Bridges Foundation and yourself? “I am the Director of Web Operations for Art Bridges, responsible for our web presence and all our related technologies. The Art Bridges Foundation is a nonprofit arts foundation located in Bentonville, Arkansas. Our mission is to expand access to American art across the United States – especially in areas where there’s currently limited or zero access to art. We do this by organizing and traveling exhibitions to our 167 partner museums of all sizes — everybody from the Museum of Modern Art and The Met in New York to small regional museums, like The Museum Broken Arrow in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. We have a collection of almost 100 artworks available for long-term loans to our partners and we provide financial and strategic support for exhibitions, loans, and collection sharing. Our efforts include trying to get artwork out of storage and on the road, so it can be seen by people who normally don’t have access to art. Additionally, we support programming, audience engagement and evaluation work around those exhibitions and loans.” What was your initial goal with implementing a DAM? “When I first got to Art Bridges, we were a team of six working on a shared drive where all our assets were stored by individuals, usually with only themselves in mind. So, the way we organized assets wasn’t quite right, and it was difficult to find and share assets (we were sharing mostly through email). My initial focus was to find a platform that allowed us to effectively store, find and share all our photo, audio, and video assets. MediaValet has been a huge help with that. The platform is extremely efficient, making our assets very easy to find and share. Our ultimate goal is to have MediaValet act as our hub but have everyone access MediaValet from a connected platform so that no one actually touches the library itself.” How are you using MediaValet today? Is there anything that you can do now that you couldn’t before? “In our initial rollout, the exhibitions team immediately saw a use case for Branded Portals to make it easier for us to distribute information around our exhibitions to our partners. What was previously sent via email can now be posted into Branded Portals, allowing our users to easily access and download them from anywhere they can get an Internet connection. We’re also able to password protect assets and restrict downloads, when necessary, as we have some restrictions on artwork. Sometimes artwork is ‘Rights Managed’, so we can’t allow them to be downloaded. We are also able to expire each Branded Portal to ensure everything is kept current, clean, and archived, which has been a huge improvement over our previous manual method. Our current MediaValet platform has 3500 files and growing, and we’ve expanded to a team of 23 now from that initial six in about a year and a half. Another thing that is made much easier with MediaValet has been file organization. Since we are now able to share files within the system, we can ensure that there is one correct file for each asset, eliminating duplicates and protecting our files in one centralized location. We use MediaValet as our sole source of information and that’s helped to keep things clean. We’re also using MediaValet with our project management tool, Wrike. Since the two are connected, it makes it easy for our project managers to find and share assets through Wrike, instead of needing direct access to our MediaValet library.” Can you share a bit more about your integration with Wrike and how that works? “MediaValet and Wrike have an out-of-the-box connector that’s simple to set up. When we were looking for a project management system, we were already using MediaValet, so we really liked Wrike’s capabilities and ability to integrate seamlessly with MediaValet. We are able to push and pull files directly to and from MediaValet from within Wrike and use the integration to improve our process for receiving files from our partners. When our museum partners create assets, we want to make sure that we get a copy of them and that we’re able to archive the assets in MediaValet. To make sure of this, we have created a custom-built form in Wrike and hosted it on our website, so that our partner museums can send files to us through the form. When the form is completed by our partners, we are then tagged with a notification that allows our project managers to go into Wrike to review and approve assets before saving them directly to MediaValet.” You’ve also implemented an integration with WordPress. Can you tell us more about that? “MediaValet works with our WordPress CMS by acting as one central location where all necessary assets are stored. For example, when beginning a task, I first pick out all the files that we’re going to use, including any photos and videos, and add them into our MediaValet library. Then, from within WordPress, we pull the assets to the WordPress library. We make sure that our assets are not uploaded directly into WordPress in order to ensure that we have one correct file and that assets are not duplicated.” How has your DAM facilitated the smooth coordination of art exhibitions throughout the United States? “When we organize exhibitions, they typically have a lot of supplemental information that travels with them. This could include: Checklists, Educational information, Floor plans, Installation instructions, Audio files, Marketing images, Art Bridges logos, and/or Crediting guidelines. Since there is a wealth of information that travels with the exhibitions, the process has been made easier by sharing it all through Branded Portals. It simplifies the process and makes it easy for our partners to get online to download what they need and find it again if they need to. That’s been a huge success and we’ve had several partners share how much they like Branded Portals. It has worked really well for us.” What did onboarding look like at Art Bridges Foundation? “At the very beginning, I created a road map and tried to take meaningful steps towards the overall goal, knowing that I couldn’t do everything on day one. I thought of our exhibitions team as a pilot to let people see what was possible. I started by pulling everything in from our shared drive into MediaValet and tagging assets with basic information. While I was doing so, I was thinking about actionable ways that I could increase user adoption of the DAM by taking notice of inefficiencies and where people were wasting time. One of the first things I did when onboarding MediaValet was inform everyone about Branded Portals, explaining that it was a much more efficient way for us to share information, as opposed to what we were doing before. I also created a governance document that outlined the purpose of the DAM, giving general guidance to our staff, answering questions like: What’s the purpose of the DAM? What’s the vision for the DAM? Who’s responsible for what? I looked at the core focus, who it serves, and explained the type of files we were going to house in the DAM. Our team is pretty small, so there wasn’t a lot of difficulty with change management. I did ensure that everyone knew about MediaValet’s unlimited training to ensure everyone knew how to use the platform well.” Can you share how you’ve set up your taxonomy? “I’ve left that up to our individual teams. The exhibitions group, for example, has created a category for each partner. Within that category, they have a repeatable folder structure where they put in all the different information that is required for an exhibition, and it has worked well for them. Since the exhibitions group has seen such success using Branded Portals, our Collections team, in turn, started creating their own Branded Portals for each of our objects, within the last couple weeks. There is a lot of extended information around our objects and most of it is educational, but there’s also all kinds of requirements depending on the age and frailty of our objects that determine how they can travel. Branded Portals have been helpful in keeping everything organized.” What advice would you give to others going through a similar journey? “When looking at current processes for sharing things externally, I would note that the ability to do so with Branded Portals is really simple. You can use lightboxes for logged in users, of course, but for external users, Branded Portals are huge. Also, in terms of looking for opportunities to integrate with other systems, we have Wrike, WordPress, and we’re looking at Office 365 as a full rollout shortly and MediaValet has made the integration process seamless.” What is next for Art Bridges and MediaValet? “We are getting ready to start a discovery process for our new website. Our current website is well focused on who Art Bridges is and what we do, but we really need to create a website that makes it easier for our partners to work with us and really facilitates that interaction. We’re also creating a new intranet, so through both of those, we’re going to look for ways to integrate MediaValet and make it easy to move our assets from MediaValet into these systems. Additionally, we’re getting ready to fully launch on Office 365, so I think there will be quite a few people that are going to use MediaValet as their document storage. Those are the main things that we have coming up but we’re always looking for new ways to use technology to work smarter and MediaValet has been a huge help and a great partner in building that out.” Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo
Jane Goodall Institute See how the Jane Goodall Institute extends the value of DAM from marketing to scientific research. Location: Washington D.C, United States Industry: Nonprofit Company size: Enterprise Joined MediaValet: 2021 Features: Branded Portals, Audio Video Intelligence The Challenges Disparate asset storage: images/videos scattered across Dropbox, local drives, external hard drives—with high duplication and low discoverability During the pandemic, field access to imagery became even more difficult without a centralized system Needed a secure yet democratic asset management solution—balancing open access with control The Results Consolidated 60‑year archive (media + handwritten notes) into one DAM system, making everything searchable, accessible, and secure Enabled AI-powered features: auto transcription of 17 TB of paper notes and successful chimpanzee face recognition within field footage Facilitated global sharing via branded portals, supporting both marketing and scientific research worldwide This interview shares Shawn’s experience with implementing a DAM and using artificial intelligence (AI) to broaden its use case to facilitate both marketing efficiency and scientific discovery. When you think of the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI), it’s hard to not feel touched by the incredible research and advocacy work the institution has done over the years. When we got the opportunity to interview Shawn Sweeney, Associate VP of Communications & Policy at the Jane Goodall Institute, we were excited to share their story. JGI initially came to MediaValet with the challenge of preserving Dr. Jane Goodall’s 60-year legacy and distributing marketing imagery to various global chapters and stakeholders. However, they quickly came to realize that the advanced functionality available to them in MediaValet, would allow them to extend the use of the DAM to areas they hadn’t even dreamt of — scientific research. Curious where this took them? This interview shares Shawn’s experience with implementing a DAM and using artificial intelligence (AI) to broaden its use case to facilitate both marketing efficiency and scientific discovery. So, to start us off, can you tell us about the Jane Goodall Institute? “JGI is a namesake for Dr. Jane Goodall, famous for her groundbreaking observations of great apes in Gombe National Park. Jane started the Institute in 1977 to continue that research, as well as advance wildlife conservation. Since JGI’s inception to the present day, the organization has developed a few separate initiatives. The first is community-driven conservation. Around the late 80s, Jane realized that chimpanzees were critically endangered across the range in Africa and recognized that the poverty human populations living there experience, in part, was driving those issues. So, Jane knew that in order to save the chimpanzees – and other wildlife around the world – we needed to invest in and develop a model of community-driven conservation that also helped create sustainable economies for those communities. Today, we work with communities to identify what their needs are, diagnose threats to wildlife and work together with the community members on solutions. Another initiative is focused on youth empowerment through our Roots & Shoots program. The concept is really simple – to empower young people to identify an problem for people, animals or the environment they share in their community and implement projects to address it. We’re celebrating our 30-year anniversary this year, and we members active in over 50 countries around the world. I’m actually an alum of Roots & Shoots myself. The last part of our work is really Jane’s advocacy for captive wildlife. She started working on wildlife trafficking and finding homes for orphaned chimpanzees. We have the largest chimpanzee sanctuary in Africa and Republic of Congo. She’s also done a lot of advocacy for animals in zoos and labs. So, JGI really runs the gamut in terms of helping both captive and wild animals.” Can you tell me a little bit about your journey with JGI? “I’ve always been obsessed with great apes, and when I was 10 my grandma introduced me to Alan Brown, who did photography work for the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund. My grandma took me to his gallery and a bunch of his talks, and, when I met him, I told him that I would carry his camera equipment if he would take me with him on shoots. I ultimately ended up going to school for animal behavior, where I worked with capuchin monkeys for all four years of undergrad. I met Jane when she came to the college to give a lecture. She encouraged me to join the Roots & Shoots program, which I did, and here I am today! I started on staff with JGI in 2007 and spent the first six years on staff doing marketing and communications for Roots & Shoots and coordinating our youth leadership council and college program. I worked my way up to being National Director for Youth Outreach & Engagement and then, moved into a broader marketing position for JGI, which is now focused on communications and policy.” How were you operating before implementing MediaValet? “We weren’t operating in any efficient way whatsoever. We had assets all over the universe – Dropbox, OneDrive, our servers, local hard drives, external hard drives – you name it. And nobody really knew what we had, so there were a ton of duplicates. We had a lot of challenges that were really highlighted in the last year. Usually, we’d get new imagery regularly from our projects but, as you can imagine, getting imagery from the field is tough enough in regular times, let alone in a pandemic. Not having the ability in the field to retrieve hard drives has made access to imagery much more difficult. We also consider ourselves to be a “democratic” organization, and we were trying to both protect and curate our assets, which really has us walking a knife’s edge of exposing ourselves to too much risk. So, prior to using MediaValet, everything was locked down because that was the only way we could protect the assets.” What was the spark that initiated your search into DAM? “There were a few things that kick-started our DAM initiative: Reducing manual processes as much as possible, Increasing democratic access to the archive, and Continuing to onboard with new products in our digital transformation with Microsoft. Reducing Manual ProcessFirst, when I was installed in my current position, I became the custodian of our image archive. We were doing a lot of manual work to distribute our imagery and, as a lean team, we were never going to be able to serve all our various stakeholders at the rate or with the efficiency we would like. We needed to find a way to really minimize those manual tasks and processes. Secure Access to ArchivesPaired with that, we wanted to provide more open, democratic access to our archive of images, but also implement controls to it. Some people were asking for more content and others were giving us more content. Just keeping up was becoming an impossible task. Microsoft Digital TransformationAnother big spark was our digital transformation with Microsoft to support our science work. We wanted to continue to ride that wave, and it was important that any partner we brought on worked directly with Microsoft and could exist in the same cloud platform as the rest of our work.” Was there anything specific that made you choose MediaValet over alternative options? “Our top priority was to achieve democratic access to the system, and to do this we needed to be able to onboard a lot of users with some level of administrative capability within the system. We want to empower people to add assets, to edit metadata, etc. – it’s not something we want to centralize with just one or two people. For this to happen, we needed to be able to train people to use MediaValet, as well as have an unlimited number of users that could use the platform. With this in mind, MediaValet’s unlimited users (including administrators), user groups, and training structure was critical. What was also really beautiful about the relationship, was having the opportunity to interface with David MacLaren (Founder & CEO of MediaValet) and really align our values. He saw an opportunity with us to create a digital home for JGI’s archive and helped us to map out the full vision. I can’t tell you how many decades we’ve been trying to figure this out and it’s great to finally have the opportunity to do that. It started out as a project to find a spot for our imagery, but now, I think we’ve lost count of all the different applications – especially scientific ones – we can see for MediaValet.” Now that your vision is coming to fruition, can you describe more about how you’ll be using MediaValet? “Our goals with MediaValet are divided into three buckets: Marketing Material Distribution: Storing all assets used for storytelling purposes – the photos and videos from years of JGI initiatives. Scientific Research Distribution: Using the platform to facilitate our scientific research and discovery – the 60-years of handwritten notes, field videos, etc., which help researchers and scientists around the world understand great apes. Organizing Precious Archival Assets: Creating a digital home for the ongoing archiving of Jane’s global outreach past and present. A place where we gather and transcribe Jane’s digital recordings from throughout the year – making them searchable and shareable. Beyond organizing what we already have and bringing all of JGI’s legacy data into the system, we’re also getting our teams from the field set up to upload directly to MediaValet. This is a gamechanger, as much of this this data and imagery used to be brought back by our staff on external hard drives .” Can you tell us more about how you’ll be using MediaValet for scientific research? “We’re working to bring all of Jane’s long-term research onto the platform to help take advantage of the artificial intelligence tools that MediaValet offers, as well as to increase accessibility to not only view the assets, but contribute to the metadata. We’ve always wanted to be able to give more open access to that research, so students and researchers around the world could benefit from it. This is now possible using MediaValet. Our science strategy is really focused on artificial intelligence, so we’re looking for opportunities to speed the pace of conservation and science using MediaValet’s AI capabilities. Some specific applications include: Automatically transcribing handwritten research notes, and Using facial recognition to identify specific apes in field footage.” Transcription of handwritten notes“We have 60 years (equating to 17 terabytes) of paper records that include critical observations from the field. Many of these have already been digitized and imported into MediaValet, where the handwritten notes – in both English and Swahili – are automatically transcribed and added as searchable metadata. This makes these notes significantly more accessible and searchable from across the globe. Oftentimes, when researchers need to review a specific topic in these notes, they had to manually search them page by page. Even worse, they would have to physically go to where the paper records were located, open a filing cabinet, pull out the paper and read from that. So, now we’re giving easy access to this data that used to be so inaccessible – getting it into the scientists’ hands right away. Facial recognition of apesJGI has been working on a few different chimpanzee facial recognition projects for years now. We have terabytes and terabytes of footage and photos, and we’re hoping to train AI models to recognize specific chimps within these assets. Working with MediaValet, we’ve already had our first successful facial recognition from footage of a chimpanzee, so we’re optimistic about the work this could take off our plate. We also hope to eventually train AI models to detect behavior – for example, termite fishing. This would help streamline research of specific behaviors, as researchers could jump to specific video clips quickly. We’re adding thousands of hours (about 36 terabytes) of research footage from the field in Gombe to MediaValet. This is huge for scientific research, as researchers are going to be able to go to one single location to call up any photo, video or piece of research from any day to study them.” Can you share how you’re using Branded Portals? “We love using Branded Portals because they give us a lot of control – we can turn them off, change the contents or URL, password protect them or restrict downloads. We use them for specific distribution partners, who we don’t want to bother with registration. We’re experimenting with a few different ways to use them. For example, we recently pitched our research in Gombe to a video streaming service. The PDF we used was really data heavy and included a lot of video content, so we used Branded Portals to deliver the pitch in an easy and seamless way. What makes you most excited about this partnership with MediaValet? “Just the potential for growth, honestly. MediaValet has expressed really deep commitment and interest in our success and there’s so many different ways we can go. We have a lot of challenges that we’re finding solutions for with MediaValet.” Do you have any tips to give to organizations undergoing a similar transformation? “There’s definitely a steep learning curve, so be prepared for that. Change management and tried and true practices for new user training and adoption is the name of the game. It’s not a flip the switch and you’re online kind of thing. There’s a lot of upfront work to do. I’ve really just been trying to pace this out in a way where it’s digestible, so all users can feel really confident with the system before we just migrate everything over. Crawl, walk, run is the name of the game – I just can’t underscore this enough! Don’t just flip a switch – otherwise you could find yourself drowning.” Just one last question for fun – what’s your favorite movie and why? “Oh man, this is both an easy one and a hard one! I have a collection of favorite movies that all sort of fall into the same category, but my number one is Kinky Boots. I actually saw it at an independent theater in 2006 and immediately fell in love with it. It has two of my favorite actors in it, one of which plays a drag queen. My favorite movies are usually about more inclusive thinking and the importance of kindness. That’s a main theme of Kinky Boots in a lot of ways, but it’s also about innovation – being creative and saving your family business in a way that you wouldn’t normally think about so. I find it to be an inspiring movie about creativity, helping broaden people’s mindsets and welcoming more inclusive thinking.” Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo
Community Associations Institute See how CAI ensures a remote workforce, along with 64 community chapters, have access to the content they need with DAM. Who is Community Associations Institute? Community Associations Institute (CAI) is a nonprofit organization that provides education and resources to community association professionals and homeowners. They faced challenges in managing their digital assets, which were scattered across various platforms, leading to inefficiencies and difficulties in locating and sharing content. Location: Falls Church, VA Industry: Non-profit Company size: Mid-Market Joined MediaValet: – Features: Office365 Connector The Challenges Before adopting MediaValet, CAI faced several issues with managing and accessing digital assets: Disorganized Asset Management Inefficient Workflows The Results After implementing MediaValet’s Digital Asset Management (DAM) solution, CAI saw clear improvements: Centralized Asset Repository Improved Efficiency Cori Canady Creative Director , Community Associations Institute (CAI) How does a two-person graphic design team ensure a remote workforce, along with 64 community chapters spread across several countries, have access to the content they need to power stronger communities? This is the question we had for Cori Canady, Creative Director at Community Associations Institute (CAI). In addition to creating new, engaging brand content, Cori was spending up to 15 hours per week responding to asset requests from other departments. Without the right technology in place to support operations, it was becoming near impossible to respond to the growing needs of her organization and chapters. This interview shares Cori’s journey in making the decision to invest in a DAM, advocating for its use within the organization and the “aha” moments she’s experienced since implementing MediaValet. To start us off, can you tell us a bit about Community Associations Institute? “CAI, which stands for Community Associations Institute is a non-profit organization that was founded almost 50 years ago to address the growing housing model, primarily in the U.S. (but we have members around the world). We address the common interest, home ownership model where you purchase a home in a community, condominium or co-op, and pay monthly assessments to an association that then provides services to the homeowners. CAI’s members range from volunteers to professional community associations. Our goal is to provide them with education, ongoing certifications and designations, as well as an opportunity for people to network together throughout the year.” Can you tell us a little bit more about yourself and your background, and what you do at CAI? “As a graphic designer, I’ve been working in the industry for a long time – 30 years actually. I came out of school when things were mostly print-based. Through my career, I’ve worked on branding all kinds of marketing, communications, collateral and publications. I’ve seen the industry develop from one that was traditionally focused on print work, to one that’s taking on a surge of cross-channel digital work – in addition to what’s already being done in print. With CAI I’m actually on my second tenure. I was with CAI for four years right out of school, then I left and went to work for a marketing communications agency. I came back several years later to take advantage of some of the expertise that I gained from being away. Now, I’ve been back for close to 18 years. I have one other full-time staff person, who produces all our video and animated content. The two of us together kind of fill in the gaps. Then I have freelancers, who I work with from time-to-time on different things I’m managing.” How did the team operate and communicate before using MediaValet? What were the major pain points? “For years we’ve had an internal Windows server, where assets were stored in folders. People would just save files wherever they wanted to, so we had a number of duplicates. I was getting constant emails or phone calls: “Could you pull together everything we have on this and put it in this folder for me?” Then I had to drop what I was doing and go assemble all these files, knowing that I was probably making duplicates, or even triplicates – all because they didn’t have a way to easily find everything. I would say I spent anywhere from three to six hours per week on these types of requests, depending on what we had going on as an organization. If we were getting ready for a big event that probably would have jumped up to probably 12-15 hours. We had the opportunity to work with a leading visual content supplier to generate a library of royalty-free images on behalf of our chapters. As part of that process, they offered us access to a “Lite DAM” that we decided to try out. While the idea behind it was really compelling, the execution of the library was really cumbersome. It was a challenge for us to keep things organized and we had a hard time training our chapters on it. We figured out quickly that this specific product wasn’t for us, but we needed to find something similar. In 2018, I met the MediaValet team at AdobeMax and immediately knew this was what we needed.” What made you select MediaValet over alternative options? “For me, it really came down to knowing that in order to get people to adopt it, it needed to be very seamless and easy. What really enticed me was the Office 365 connector – how easy it would be to use. I felt like some of the biggest requests I was getting were from people putting together PowerPoint presentations. It was such a hassle for me to assemble everything and then sometimes they’d have to come back and say: “This is too big; can you size it down?” I could see the excitement on their faces when they saw how the Office 365 connector works. I didn’t really find that kind of ease of everyday use in the research that I did.” How did you get internal buy-in to implement MediaValet? “It was an easy sell – it costs way less, does way more, everybody can access it, and it’s easy to use. Those were all things that really helped me get it sold internally. Once we got people on board, I started the process by setting up a demo with my direct report and we went all the way through it to make sure it was a good fit. Then, I began building support with little groups of staff – just people that I thought would be helpful to get on board and say, “Look you don’t have to call me and ask where things are anymore. We can just build MediaValet the way we need it”. Every group that I showed it to was onboard, so once we got the ball rolling everybody was already up-to-speed and excited. It’s really resolved a lot of the headaches we were experiencing.” Can you describe the team that’s using MediaValet today? “We actually have a really interesting model. We have a headquarters office, but right now we’re all working from home (it’s been amazing to have MediaValet in place with everyone working from different places). Then, we have about 60 people across 64 chapters around the world. Those individual chapters function as their own local connection for CAI, so they provide some of the same local programming opportunities for people to network with people that live there. We’ve struggled for years with how we can support those chapters. We don’t have the bandwidth at the national level to create marketing collateral for them, but we’ve tried very hard to find ways that we could help equip them with some things that they need.” How are you using MediaValet today? How does it help you enable your 64 charters? “We don’t open licensed photography up to the chapters, but we’ve made everything else available. We have some chapters that are very eager to follow the brand, some who want to do what we’re doing, and others who just don’t have a lot of resources. From a brand management perspective, we really needed to get everything where everyone can access it. There’s a logo system that CAI is the head of, including a specific version of the logo for each individual chapter. As you can imagine, with print files for each chapter, just the logo files alone are a huge section of our storage within MediaValet. In the past we’ve manually provided them with graphics, content and logos that would help them promote national activities or events that the headquarters was spearheading. Now, this is seamless with MediaValet. We’ve really started to try to find ways in the most recent year or two to give them more content that’s not specific to the national organization, that they can use at any time. For example, we might create something that is more topical in nature, like parking issues around the holidays or when to tell people to take their holiday lights down. I really wanted them to feel empowered to come up with some new things on their own, as well. That’s hard to quantify and put any kind of number on it, but I feel like in the end it’s going to help us to have a stronger connection across the chapters and enable consistency.“ What kind of assets are you primarily storing? “We mostly store images and graphics at this point, such as ones we’ve created for social media or banner ads. We also use MediaValet for some print work and PowerPoints that we’ve created for chapters to use. We have a pretty large number of members who also sponsor things with us, such as certain events or activities, so we have a good collection of all of their logos. It’s made it very easy for us to be sure we’re only using the current logo, regardless of if they’ve gone through a rebranding. If someone sends us a new one, we just update it in MediaValet and we don’t have to worry about it again.” Is there anything specific that you can do now that you couldn’t before? “When we create a suite of graphics, some of them go into an email server, some go on social media, some might go on the website – different people are responsible for handling these things. I was really trying to get away from emailing attachments to all of those people. Now, I’ve been working hard to ensure completed graphics are added to MediaValet right away. Then, I just need to notify users that all the assets are there. I sometimes send a link to the gallery, just because that’s an easy way to access it, as well. But I’m really trying to reiterate “go to MediaValet”. Let that be their first source. Has MediaValet provided any unexpected outcomes? “We actually had a situation pop up this week. In our organization governance, we have three leadership councils. One of the councils offers an online course for service providers but had concerns about how to promote it. Our staff liaison reached out to several of us to assemble what we have to promote this course. What was so awesome is I didn’t even have to say it – someone else said, “Well, I just created a folder in MediaValet, let’s just put everything there”. Then, when our staff liaison shared that she didn’t want the chapters to have access to this while we’re still working on it, I explained that we could just hide the category from that user group until we were ready to reveal it. She was so thrilled that we could do that!” What’s the next step for you? “There are some people who don’t use it every day, and I want to find ways to get them using MediaValet more frequently and get additional value. I’m also trying to take advantage of the webinars when they’re happening to stay up to date with the new features that are coming. That’s one of the things I like about the platform – I feel like you guys are always looking at ways to improve and bring new things to light.” Is there any advice that you could give to someone looking to implement a DAM? “It can be overwhelming. One of the things that I found very, very helpful with MediaValet’s onboarding process is that the steps were broken down. There’s an old expression: How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. Keep your eyes on the end goal and work through it, step by step. I definitely found that once we had the basic framework in place and the system launched, it was very adaptable. We try to use the MediaValet recommended best practices and then adapt as we go. So, my biggest advice would be just not to get daunted by the process and that it’s worth the investment and time because it will pay off in the end. We’re still seeing the payoff from MediaValet and we’ll continue to see more as we learn new ways to use it.” The last question is just for fun: What’s your favourite movie and why? “This is a hard question, believe it or not, so I have two answers for you: My son is 18 and he’s about to graduate from high school and he is planning to study film in college. So, right now my favorite movie is whichever one I’m watching with him. If this were a normal time I probably wouldn’t see him very much this year – he’d be really busy and doing things out of the house. I’ve enjoyed having the opportunity to just spend some time with him. The other is the movie I will always stop and watch, even if I’ve seen it a million times – which is The Wedding Singer with Adam Sandler. I love that movie! It’s silly and just a fun one to watch over and over.” Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo
Canadian Blood Services See how Canadian Blood Services enables nationwide employees, partners and volunteers with access to on-brand marketing material. Who is Canadian Blood Services? Since 1998, Canadian Blood Services has managed Canada’s national supply of blood, cord blood, stem cells, and bone marrow. One of their most crucial functions is to recruit donors through marketing and advertising campaigns that bring in about 850,000 units of blood each year. The Challenge Canadian Blood Services was becoming increasingly frustrated with its outdated, on-premise database that could only be accessed from the head office. With a growing collection of digital materials, the marketing team was spending hours finding their assets, resulting in process inefficiencies and wasted time. Canadian Blood Services needed a more efficient way to manage its digital assets. They wanted a system that offered: Ease-of-use for both their team leaders and their non-technical volunteers Unlimited training, support and users, and Worldwide access to the system for their staff across Canada. The Solution With unlimited users, training, support and onboarding, MediaValet was uniquely equipped to handle Canadian Blood Services’ growing internal and external team, while still keeping the solution cost-effective. MediaValet’s easy-to-use, cloud-based platform also ensured their assets could be easily accessed from anywhere in the world. Canadian Blood Services found MediaValet so intuitive that they started uploading and tagging their assets before training and onboarding even began. The Results After choosing MediaValet as its solution, Canadian Blood Services was able to meet its 3 main goals: Save time and money spent on administrative tasks. Streamline team collaboration and the donor recruitment process. Give partners and volunteers access to the assets they need. [With our old system], we had to send each other emails with piles of attachments of materials, which was incredibly inefficient… Accessing and using our assets is so easy for us now – I don’t know why we waited so long!” Virginia GaffneyAdvertising & Digital Innovation Manager, Canadian Blood Services Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo
Pancreatic Cancer Action Network See how PanCAN manages its marketing assets in a library that's easily used by non-technical staff and volunteers across the country. Who is PanCAN? Founded in 1999, the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network (PanCAN) attacks the world’s toughest cancer on all fronts: research, clinical initiatives, patient services and advocacy. Since 2003 to 2017, PanCAN generated a total research investment of over $48M. Their advocacy efforts resulted in President Obama signing legislation into law requiring the National Cancer Institute to develop a scientific framework for pancreatic and other deadly cancers. The Challenge The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network stored their media assets on corporate servers and personal hard drives that were spread across the United States. With this outdated storage system, along with arbitrary taxonomies and keywords, the marketing team was in need of a more efficient way to manage their digital assets. The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network needed a system that was able to: Store thousands of assets, no matter where they were created, into one central library. Allow users to search for and find the assets they needed quickly and easily. Provide an efficient system for sharing assets with PCAN affiliates. Seamlessly scale to meet future storage and use needs. Ensure security for all assets and enable a flexible permission structure. Offer a cost-effective solution to a non-profit with a large user base. Be easy-to-use for the non-technical volunteer staff. The Solution MediaValet eliminated the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network’s pain points by delivering a solution that: Lives in the cloud, making the library easily accessible to anyone that needs assets. Scales seamlessly, allowing PCAN to grow as much as they need. Ensures enterprise-level security and asset protection. Is cost-effective and affordable, with unlimited users. Can be used easily by non-technical users. The Results MediaValet has helped PanCAN to continue its vital work raising funds and awareness to support families facing pancreatic cancer with a DAMS that provides: Accessibility: Staff and affiliates can now access assets when they need them, anywhere around the world. Streamlined Workflow: Volunteers can find the assets they need, when they need them, without having to ask staff members. Structure Permission and Control: The right people can access the right versions of assets with the appropriate usage rights. Easy Searching & Sharing: Assets are organized in one central library, where teams can quickly find and share assets, both internally and externally. Photos and videos are important tools in our campaign efforts. You can’t look at the faces of a thousand people – all sporting purple T-shirts or carrying purple light wands – see their hope, their determination, and not be moved. We can write reams about their personal journeys, but it’s the pictures that tell their stories.” Jenny IsaacsonVP, Strategic Partnerships and Projects, Pancreatic Cancer Action Network Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo
Almond Board of California See how the Almond Board of California enables hundreds of users worldwide and saves 50% on IT costs. Who is the Almond Board of California? The Almond Board of California was set up in 1950 to represent the Californian almond growers, who produce 86% of the world’s supply of almonds, in matters concerning agriculture, exports, marketing and more. The Challenge The Almond Board’s staff and marketing agencies were routinely frustrated with their in-house, legacy digital asset management system. Users couldn’t access the digital assets they needed efficiently and the Almond Board’s IT department was spending too much time on support tickets. The Almond Board needed a better way to manage its digital assets. They wanted a system that would: Be globally accessible and user-friendly for its staff and marketing agencies, and Greatly reduce the time the IT department was spending on support and maintenance. The Solution Created on Microsoft Azure, MediaValet was able to meet the Almond Board’s technical and user requirements, as well as their need for a cost-effective solution. With the help of MediaValet’ support team, the Almond Board’s new DAM was fully implemented and launched within a 60-day cycle, exceeding the expectations of the organization. The Results Today, roughly one hundred users worldwide are happily using a custom-branded version of MediaValet on a daily basis to access and share the Almond Board’s 2TB and growing library of digital assets. Since implementing MediaValet: The Almond Board spends 50% less on IT and administration costs, compared to their previous DAM. The manpower needed to maintain their DAM has reduced from 10-15 hours per month to zero. The time required to perform back-ups has reduced from 16-20 hours per month to zero. Help Desk tickets for DAM-related issues have been reduced by 95%. MediaValet’s focus on exceeding our needs has been ‘par excellence’. They come up with creative solutions wherever we face challenges and their support team has routinely gone above and beyond – doing things you normally wouldn’t get from a vendor.” John JoynerA.D. Corporate Technology, the Almond Board of California Let’s have a DAM good time Meet with one of our product experts. Book a demo