Digital Asset Management

Digital Asset Management for the Enterprise

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

Corporate TeamAs digital asset management is becoming more and more integral for corporate marketing teams, companies of all sizes are adopting DAM systems. With the explosion of digital content, the need for digital asset management goes beyond marketing and creative teams and can impact corporate-wide workflows. From content generation to delivery, digital asset management is at the core of the digital supply chain, spanning departments and even divisions within a company. When deploying DAM for the enterprise, there are several key features to consider. These considerations apply regardless of the deployment model: SaaS, licensed, or in-house system.

What is Enterprise Digital Asset Management Software?

Simply put, enterprise digital asset management software is a special type of digital asset management software that can be implemented across an enterprise, accessible by associates of an organization such as employees, colleagues, partners, and customers,. It’s designed to meet the specific needs of larger organizations, across departments and divisions: a large user base, workflow integration, data security, accountability, among other things.

Key Features of Enterprise Digital Asset Management Software

When exploring digital asset management software solutions for implementation across an enterprise, here is what you should look for:

  • Role-based permissions: When working within different departments and divisions in a company, roles become critical. An enterprise digital asset management system provides the ability to specify permissions based on real-world roles within the digital supply chain. For example, distributors need access to retrieve content while the marketing department needs to manage the content.
  • Security: In the past decade, digital files transitioned from a luxury to a mission-critical aspect of any business. To keep a company safe, enterprise digital asset management software must be the guardian of organizational data. This means providing appropriate safeguards to protect both user information and digital assets from misuse and also data backup/disaster recovery adaptable to any situation.
  • Scalability: Enterprise-level companies can grow very quickly, especially in today’s 24/7 global economy. Enterprise digital asset management software must accommodate this, providing the scalability to grow with a business, whether it’s located in one building or across the world. That means the ability to handle anywhere from thousands to millions of files based on the needs of the organization. However, it’s not just processing the files, it’s also about granting access — a worldwide corporation might require thousands of simultaneous requests, and good enterprise digital asset management software must be able to handle all of it without losing availability or data integrity.
  • Reliability: For any business, downtime can bring things to a screeching halt. This is amplified umpteen times at the enterprise-level– the more users, the greater potential for lost time and money. This means that an enterprise digital asset management software solution must be mature and stable, ensuring high availability and uptime. For organizations choosing to outsource, the proper research must be performed so that the selected vendor comes with a solid track record.
  • Integration: Intranets, content management systems (CMS), and other core organizational systems are an everyday part of enterprise-level business. That means that good enterprise digital asset management software must flow with this, not against it; workflow integration with systems are absolutely necessary so that users get a seamless experience. To achieve this, enterprise digital asset management software often offers plug-ins to other enterprise software applications or open APIs to integrate with custom systems.

The digital business world is continuously evolving, making digital asset management software a requirement for today’s business. At the enterprise level, it can be more than just a requirement — it can be the central nervous system that binds and unites the organization’s entire workflow. Each of the aforementioned points is a key piece to the puzzle that is a digital asset management solution. And just like any puzzle, it’s not complete without all of the pieces in place.

Digital Asset Management Software: To Build or To Buy

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Within the digital asset management (DAM) community, return on investment, or ROI, is a hot topic. Businesses know they need a DAM, but clearly showing ROI to upper management isn’t always straightforward. Consultants and analysts have deconstructed the debate over and over. At WebDAM, we often hear a slightly different perspective – not so much a debate on ROI, but rather a case of paying an outside vendor for a solution (“buy”) vs. internally developing and maintaining a solution (“build”). DAM is becoming business-critical thanks to the exponential increase in digital media and most companies recognize the need to invest in it. These days, companies spend their time exploring the different ways to incorporate DAM. Should they create an in-house solution with complete control over features, workflow, and interfaces or should they use an outside vendor and focus solely on their core business? That’s the true dilemma facing companies these days – hence, buy vs. build.

Upon first glance, the “build” option seems to be a better way to go. After all, it’s a tailor-made solution developed and maintained by a company’s internal staff for total control. But upon closer inspection, choosing to “build” doesn’t quite seem as practical. Here’s a look at the key differences involved between “buy” and “build”:

Upfront development cost

Build: Building any type of software means an upfront investment in hardware requirements and software development – especially internally developed software designed to meet company specifications. It can be very difficult to estimate the total costs involved in development of a sophisticated software application, such as a DAM, especially when you consider the logistical side, such as facilities and personnel (project managers, engineers, testers, etc.).
Buy: Purchasing DAM software involves licensing fees or subscription costs (SaaS) and often a setup or installation fee. The costs are well-defined and known upfront.

Upfront development time

Build: Many companies quickly recognize the downside of development time. After all, it’s not just about writing the application’s code and testing it. There are meetings upon meetings for planning and design, proof-of-concept development, hardware/software coordination – all of that before the application goes into its first round of testing. Each stage could take anywhere from weeks to months, and the launch version could be several iterations away depending on the number of critical bugs discovered.
Buy: When you buy a DAM solution, the product is ready and the only requires a time investment for training.

Ongoing software maintenance

Build: A software application becomes outdated the moment it is released. That’s why updates and patches are released – not just to fix bugs, but to improve functionality and update features. For internally developed software, that means overhead cost for development, testing, and design as software becomes stale, systems evolve, or hardware demands grow. If a company doesn’t invest in this, it could lead to further problems down the line, just like a car that’s gone years without maintenance or oil changes.
Buy: When you buy DAM software, updates and maintenance are the responsibility of the provider. SaaS solutions often have the added benefit of rolling out new releases without additional licensing fees.

Software maturity

Build: Software takes time to reach a stable level, especially internally developed software. The term “mature” software applies when the application has a minimal amount of bugs, but this can take years of development and maintenance to achieve. It’s a continuously moving target that requires the effort of many engineers to overcome.
Buy: When you buy a DAM solution, it should arrive with a mature level of quality (assuming it is published by an established, reputable vendor).

Real-world issues

Build: Companies reorganize. Budgets get cut. Software engineers move or change jobs. When only a handful of people hold the keys to your internally developed DAM solution, any of these changes can represent a seismic shift in your application. How will you make the appropriate updates when budgets don’t allow for it or the lead developer leaves the company? These situations are impossible to predict and almost as difficult to adapt to.
Buy: When you buy a DAM solution, the provider’s business focuses on that product. It’s not merely an internally developed tool, it’s their source of revenue. Thus, significant resources will continue to be devoted to it regardless of personnel moves or organizational structure.

When you put it all side by side, the benefits of buying over building become clear. Of course, the built solution is totally customized, meaning that it is tailor-made for your internal workflows (assuming IT delivers upon expectations); there’s no need to shift or augment the way things are done. Bought solutions may require a company workflow to slightly adapt, and while this might provide an initial hump to overcome, staff members often prove more than capable of integrating a bought solution into their everyday tasks. Thus, when you lay out all the pros and cons, purchasing a DAM system can save time, money, and resources when compared to the effort required to build an in-house system.

Those DAM Hashtags

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Business colleagues reading a textTwitter is an interesting phenomenon. At first sight, it seems a bit pointless. Upon closer inspection, you become intrigued by the tiny bits of industry news that you can gather with just a few glances. Before you know it, you are sucked into the twittosphere.

If you have made it to the other side, then you are well familiar with hashtags: keywords added to tweets and prefixed with a hash symbol (#). Like photo metadata, hashtags add context and search-ability to your tweets. For instance, if you are interested in tweets about Software-as-a-Service, you can search Twitter for #SaaS. Hashtags, however, are driven by the Twitter community. In other words, there are no real conventions or standards for using hashtags. This makes it a little tricky to know which tag to use for a given subject matter. In addition, it often leads to inconsistencies. For instance, one can find tweets on cloud computing tagged with #Cloud and #CloudComputing. In another example, the hashtag #DAM has dual meaning. It is often used within the Digital Asset Management community to tag DAM-related subject matter. More commonly though, it is used as slang.

The website hashtags.org tracks Twitter hashtags and reports metrics such as usage frequency. However, like most user-generated content, there is a lot of information to sift through when you are looking for specific subject matter. So I have compiled a list of hashtags related to the Content Management industry. Enjoy!

#Accessibility
#Adobe
#Cloud or #CloudComputing
#copyright
#CMS – content management system
#DAM – digital asset management
#EXIF
#InDesign
#Interoperability
#IPTC
#License
#LinkedData
#MAM – multimedia asset management
#metadata
#Opendata
#OpenSource
#Photoshop
#Privacy
#ROI
#SaaS
#SemanticWeb
#Storage
#Usability
#UserAdoption
#WCM – web content management
#Workflow
#XML
#XMP

What is your favorite DAM/CMS-related hashtag? Comment below!

Spitfire Photo Pro Changes Name to WebDAM Solutions

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

New name reinforces WebDAM brand as an industry leader in digital asset management

SAN FRANCISCO, CA. February 10, 2010 – Virtual Moment, LLC today announced the change of its DBA name from Spitfire Photo Pro to WebDAM Solutions. The move is part of the company’s overall shift to completely focus on WebDAMTM, its successful Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) digital asset management application, while reinforcing the WebDAM brand as a market leader.

As a completely hosted, 100% web-based solution, WebDAM has seen rapid growth due to its ease of setup, predictable costs, and intuitive interface – attributes commonly overlooked by traditional DAM vendors and their applications. Utilizing a SaaS approach, WebDAM makes it easier for creative teams to do business by providing 24/7 availability of digital media across an entire organization for storing, managing, archiving, searching, retrieving, and collaborating. When combined with a dedicated support staff and a host of professional services, WebDAM sets the industry standard for digital asset management from beginning to end.

“Since WebDAM’s launch as an enterprise solution two years ago, we’ve experienced tremendous growth across many different sectors,” says Jody Vandergriff, VP of Marketing and Sales. “As we move beyond photos to complete digital asset management, it is the appropriate time to re-brand our company name to meet this new standard.”

Current WebDAM customers – including such notable names as Stanford University, USC, University of Washington, American College of Rheumatology, Temple University Health System, Inter-American Development Bank and Sodexo Corporation – will experience a seamless transition during the rebranding process. All existing credentials will remain the same while company and support emails will shift to the new domain name of webdamsolutions.com.

The most tangible benefit of the WebDAM Solutions rebrand is a company-wide re-organization to focus solely on DAM-related activity. This includes an expanded development team that creates new innovations and improvements at a faster rate, and a support staff dedicated to the needs of asset managers and content creators within businesses of all sizes.

“The digital asset management community has spoken loud and clear about their needs,” says Vandergriff. “The response to WebDAM has been tremendous. Organizations want a completely hosted, no-hassle solution with 24/7 web access, and that’s exactly what WebDAM delivers.”

About WebDAM Solutions
Formerly Spitfire Photo Pro, WebDAM Solutions is a leader in digital asset management, revolutionizing the way companies manage and share digital media. Our flagship application, WebDAM, provides creative teams with online tools for storing, managing, archiving, searching, retrieving, and distributing digital files throughout an organization. WebDAM has been implemented across industries such as academia, nonprofit, travel and tourism, manufacturing and government. Our clients include Stanford University, USC, University of Washington, American College of Rheumatology, Temple University Health System, Inter-American Development Bank and Sodexo Corporation. For more information, visit www.webdamsolutions.com.

Media Contact:
Jody Vandergriff
VP of Marketing and Sales
jvandergriff@webdamsolutions.com
415-227-4886

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Get Organized in 2010 with DAM

Monday, March 8th, 2010

It is a little known fact that “Getting Organized” is considered one of the ten most popular New Year’s Resolutions year after year. After all, an organized life promises to save time, improve focus, and reduce stress. Well, the same can be said for your digital assets. When organized, your digital assets work for you – helping you complete projects efficiently and bring products to market. When they are not organized, however, your digital assets can actually hinder your product pipelines, acting as bottlenecks and fragmenting your workflows.  Here is a list of the top 5 ways DAM gets you organized and saves time:

1. Find what you need, when you need it: Centralizing your digital assets means you will always know where to find your critical images, designs, and other assets exactly when you need them. DAM provides a framework to quickly search and browse through thousands of assets, a nearly impossible task if your files are scattered on hard drives, PCs, and DVDs. Web-based solutions for Digital Asset Management, such as WebDAM, further improve this benefit by ensuring your assets are accessible 24/7 anywhere in the world.

2. Reuse rather than regenerate: Hundreds of hours have gone into generating your digital creations, all to be used once, and then buried within the confines of a designer’s computer. Not anymore. With DAM, your assets are readily available and tagged with important meta-data such as how, when, and where a given file was used within your marketing campaigns. Easily find related images and image source files to promote reuse and allow you to more easily repurpose your hard work.

3. Remove the gatekeeper: If you are like many organizations, one department, or often times even a single individual, is responsible for fulfilling image requests coming from a number of sources including internal departments such as the web team, marketing, and PR to external associates, such as media professionals. There are three potentials pitfalls with this approach. First, you are relying heavily on the knowledge of a few individuals about where your files are located. What happens when they leave the company or change positions? Second, as your requests grow, it becomes impossible to fulfill each and every one while meeting deadlines. And last, once the requested assets are located, how do you deliver them to the recipient? Burning CDs or emailing large image files consumes enormous amounts of time. With DAM, image requests can be “self-fulfilled” by directly searching the DAM database and instantly retrieving exactly what is needed. Most DAM systems also include tracking capabilities to keep you on top of how your assets are being used and distribution tools to provide several mechanisms for efficiently delivering the digital files to the recipient.

4. Watch those copyrights: If you are handling rights-managed digital files, such as photos, knowing your usage rights is critical. Breaking copyrights is a costly mistake that no organization wants to make. So what do you do when you locate a photo but don’t know the terms upon which it was acquired? After much effort tracing the purchase, you will most likely opt to play it safe and purchase a new license. With DAM, you are not only tracking your digital files but also the critical meta-data associated to your files, such as copyright terms.

5. A race to the finish: From the previous four points, you can probably guess why DAM helps you meet deadlines and get products to market faster. Organizing your digital assets and the associated meta-data, means less time searching and more time producing. Many DAM tools go a step further by providing workflow integration and collaboration tools to actually facilitate your project pipelines. For example, WebDAM provides an online collaboration environment, called a Lightbox, enabling individuals to share project-specific files and swap notes and comments, resulting in faster collaborative turn-around.

In a future post, we will break down the DAM Return on Investment, or ROI, to see just how much time and money DAM can save your organization. 

Software-as-a-Service Approach to DAM Implementation

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

You have probably heard the term Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) floating around the internet by now. But what does it mean in terms of Digital Asset Management solutions? You have many options for DAM vendors, but one important consideration is whether to license DAM software and run it on in-house servers or to implement a full service solution, a SaaS approach. Let’s take a closer look at the differences:

Deployment Time – SaaS solutions are often times turn-key. Since the vendor is providing the setup and hosting for the service, there is usually a minimal amount of time needed to deploy your DAM solution. After all, your SaaS vendor is an expert in working within their IT environment and with their own software. In the licensed model, you will need to install the DAM system on your own servers which means you first need to identify and purchase your servers, configure them, and then finally install a complex database-driven application. You may opt to hire your vendor to install the application onsite, but this premium service is certain to include a premium price tag. The entire process can take months or even years to implement versus a few weeks for the SaaS solution.

Scalability – Scalability refers to the ability for your system to handle growing numbers of assets, users, and bandwidth usage. SaaS companies maintain complex and expensive architectures specifically designed with scalability in mind. However, when implementing an in-house system, scalability often depends on your own server and hardware investment. This means you run the risk of outgrowing your system over time.

Upgrades and Support – A huge benefit of a Software-as-a-Service, such as a hosted DAM system, is that they almost always include such perks as ongoing support and regular system and feature upgrades. Since the DAM system is hosted by the vendor, upgrades are usually seamless and transparent for you (ie- very little if any downtime). In the case of licensed software, your license may or may not include upgrades. Often times, you will have to purchase a new license for the latest version of the software only to be tasked with the difficult job of installing the update. In addition, support plans are usually expensive add-ons to licensed software.

Security – Security and data protection are top priorities for SaaS companies. In order to provide an excellent service level, they usually have round-the-clock monitoring of your data, regular security scans, and 24/7 onsite surveillance. To implement a similar environment onsite would be a costly and complicated undertaking.

Reliability – SaaS often includes a Service Level Guarantee which specifies an uptime assurance among other things. Implementing a system architecture onsite that can provide the same level of uptime is extremely expensive and a difficult task.

Overhead – There is a huge overhead with adopting and installing an in-house DAM system due to two, often times overlooked, requirements – hardware and IT. The cost of the server requirements alone often times far exceeds the price of a SaaS subscription, not to mention the enormous IT expense in order to install, maintain, upgrade, and support the system. Even in the case when your company already has an IT team to handle this work, it is often times not a high priority and can be difficult to get things done in a timely manner.

Total Cost of Ownership – After reading through the above points, it should be very apparent that SaaS is a much more affordable approach. SaaS costs are usually bundled into a comprehensive subscription price whereas the costs for in-house implementations include a number of factors such as licensing and upgrading the software, ongoing support, servers and hardware, and IT resources.

Don’t let the low costs fool you though. SaaS systems are packed with just as many features and functionalities for managing your digital asset workflows as licensed software. And since SaaS is based entirely on web technologies, it is far easier for users to navigate and use.

At WebDAM, we are seeing more and more companies and institutions of all sizes adopting SaaS solutions over in-house implementations due to its ease-of-implementation, use, and ongoing support.  But before you choose a SaaS vendor, be sure they are a true SaaS provider.  In an upcoming post, we will explore the differences between hosted software and SaaS.

A DAM Introduction (Digital Asset Management)

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

By now you have read the articles, heard the buzz, and are ready to jump on the DAM bandwagon. But what is Digital Asset Management really and how do you know if you need it? If you are like many professionals today, you generate and/or use digital media on a weekly, or even, daily basis. Yet, your still photos, graphics, documents and other types of digital content are distributed in no particular way among hard drives, servers, and DVDs throughout the offices within your organization. How do you find digital content when you need it? How do you track the usage of your digital content? Once you do locate an asset, how do you know who owns the copyright? Can you use it? Has it already been used in a marketing campaign?

If you have found yourself asking these questions, then Digital Asset Management is the solution for you. DAM provides an efficient means for centralizing, tracking, managing, locating, and sharing digital content within your organization. It is a one-stop shop for your colleagues, employees, partners, customers, and any other important players in your corporate pipeline to locate and retrieve digital media.

DAM is a broad term that covers a full spectrum of technology solutions from personal software for managing music files such as MP3s to enterprise server solutions for managing heterogeneous files types within a company. However, most DAM solutions include the following core capabilities:

  • Storage – How your assets are ingested, stored, and backed-up.
  • Retrieval – How your assets are accessed. This usually involves some sort of search and meta-data support. A DAM solution may also provide a taxonomy or classification system to facilitate consistent storage and the ability to browse assets by a well-defined vocabulary.
  • Delivery – How your assets are shared or delivered to clients, colleagues, and other interested parties. Many DAM solutions provide tools to facilitate sharing and distribution of your assets.

These core capabilities just scratch the surface of what a DAM can do for you. Many enterprise-scale solutions offer the following extended capabilities as well: Workflow Automation (streamlining your digital workflow), Archival and Backups (disaster-proofing your digital assets), Usage Tracking (how, when, and where assets have been used both within and outside your organization), and E-commerce (selling your assets from a secure, online shopping cart).

Digital Asset Management software comes in many flavors from home-grown systems to completely hosted and web accessible services (SaaS).  In a future post, I will explore some of the pros and cons of these various approaches.