This document provides an overview of 10 core lessons in digital asset management based on the author's experience. It discusses how the idea of DAM is fragmented with different understandings across companies. It emphasizes that successfully implementing DAM requires defining its role within the organization, identifying key personnel to lead the effort, and determining needs versus wants when selecting a solution. It also notes challenges around integrating DAM across different channels like video, print, social media, and addressing issues like intellectual property rights management.
Constituent Relationship Management (CRM) Software for Nonprofits4Good.org
Is your nonprofit struggling with many communication channels, people who play multiple roles, and lots of different places to keep track of all that information? Constituent Relationship Management, or CRM, is your system for holding it all together. Underpinned by a database and a set of integrated communication tools, your CRM can streamline your work; it can improve results of fundraising, advocacy and marketing efforts; and it can increase your impact.
Choosing the right CRM software for your nonprofit can be a daunting task. While one or two large corporations dominate the nonprofit software market, there are dozens of other good choices, and it can be hard to differentiate between all of them.
After participating in this web conference, you'll have all the basic knowledge you need to assess return on investment for this type of technology, do some informed shopping, and feel confident in your decision.
This document provides guidance on planning for a successful CRM implementation and selecting the right CRM solution. It discusses:
1. The importance of planning for CRM success by aligning the CRM system with your business strategy and goals for growth, rather than just automating current processes.
2. Common business growth strategies that a CRM system can support, such as generating more leads, improving conversion rates, increasing customer retention and lifetime value, and leveraging customers for referrals.
3. The need to consider both high-level strategies and specific activities/changes required before selecting a CRM system, to ensure it can effectively support your plans for growth.
If your firm is a small to medium-sized firm experiencing or anticipating a period of growth, you may wonder how KM can help you with your firm's efficacy. This article, originally in Solicitors Journal, will explain.
Guide to telephony for Salesforce and Desk.comDaniel Plume
This document provides an overview of NewVoiceMedia's ContactWorld cloud communications platform. Some key benefits discussed include:
- Increased flexibility for employees to work remotely which improves productivity and hiring.
- Improved marketing capabilities like dedicated numbers, priority routing, and integration with CRM systems.
- Simplified call routing and recording to maximize sales and customer service.
- Lower upfront costs than traditional phone systems and easy scaling without large capital expenses.
- Reliability through multiple data centers and a 99.999% uptime guarantee.
- Quick and easy setup within a few hours or weeks without need for hardware or complex installation.
How to choose and use a CRM for your insurance businessARCSystems
To say that technology has changed the way we do business would be a drastic understatement. Computers, tablets, and smart phones have radically altered every aspect of our lives, including our businesses. Some of us may recall the days when we kept all of our client’s information in ledgers, notebooks, and folders. In fact, some of us may still be doing it. After all, it’s not always easy to adopt a new system, even when we clearly see that it has advantages for growing our business. While change isn’t, always, easy it can be good for us.
Practical Guidelines to Implementing a Talent Management SystemDrake International
The document outlines David Dineen's presentation on implementing a talent management system. The presentation covers the benefits of a talent management system, best practices, and a 10 step process to implement including making a decision based on ROI, educating yourself, identifying a system, partnering with an expert, analyzing current systems, defining desired outcomes, mapping gaps, implementing, change management, and training. It emphasizes the importance of partnering with a subject matter expert and having a thorough analysis and project plan.
Human Resource Lifecycle Management of People Works helps reduce costs, increase operational efficiency, streamline HR solutions and make you stand ahead of the competitors.
Constituent Relationship Management (CRM) Software for Nonprofits4Good.org
Is your nonprofit struggling with many communication channels, people who play multiple roles, and lots of different places to keep track of all that information? Constituent Relationship Management, or CRM, is your system for holding it all together. Underpinned by a database and a set of integrated communication tools, your CRM can streamline your work; it can improve results of fundraising, advocacy and marketing efforts; and it can increase your impact.
Choosing the right CRM software for your nonprofit can be a daunting task. While one or two large corporations dominate the nonprofit software market, there are dozens of other good choices, and it can be hard to differentiate between all of them.
After participating in this web conference, you'll have all the basic knowledge you need to assess return on investment for this type of technology, do some informed shopping, and feel confident in your decision.
This document provides guidance on planning for a successful CRM implementation and selecting the right CRM solution. It discusses:
1. The importance of planning for CRM success by aligning the CRM system with your business strategy and goals for growth, rather than just automating current processes.
2. Common business growth strategies that a CRM system can support, such as generating more leads, improving conversion rates, increasing customer retention and lifetime value, and leveraging customers for referrals.
3. The need to consider both high-level strategies and specific activities/changes required before selecting a CRM system, to ensure it can effectively support your plans for growth.
If your firm is a small to medium-sized firm experiencing or anticipating a period of growth, you may wonder how KM can help you with your firm's efficacy. This article, originally in Solicitors Journal, will explain.
Guide to telephony for Salesforce and Desk.comDaniel Plume
This document provides an overview of NewVoiceMedia's ContactWorld cloud communications platform. Some key benefits discussed include:
- Increased flexibility for employees to work remotely which improves productivity and hiring.
- Improved marketing capabilities like dedicated numbers, priority routing, and integration with CRM systems.
- Simplified call routing and recording to maximize sales and customer service.
- Lower upfront costs than traditional phone systems and easy scaling without large capital expenses.
- Reliability through multiple data centers and a 99.999% uptime guarantee.
- Quick and easy setup within a few hours or weeks without need for hardware or complex installation.
How to choose and use a CRM for your insurance businessARCSystems
To say that technology has changed the way we do business would be a drastic understatement. Computers, tablets, and smart phones have radically altered every aspect of our lives, including our businesses. Some of us may recall the days when we kept all of our client’s information in ledgers, notebooks, and folders. In fact, some of us may still be doing it. After all, it’s not always easy to adopt a new system, even when we clearly see that it has advantages for growing our business. While change isn’t, always, easy it can be good for us.
Practical Guidelines to Implementing a Talent Management SystemDrake International
The document outlines David Dineen's presentation on implementing a talent management system. The presentation covers the benefits of a talent management system, best practices, and a 10 step process to implement including making a decision based on ROI, educating yourself, identifying a system, partnering with an expert, analyzing current systems, defining desired outcomes, mapping gaps, implementing, change management, and training. It emphasizes the importance of partnering with a subject matter expert and having a thorough analysis and project plan.
Human Resource Lifecycle Management of People Works helps reduce costs, increase operational efficiency, streamline HR solutions and make you stand ahead of the competitors.
Whitepaper: Using Technology to Manage and Optimize Incentive CompensationIconixx
In today’s complex business environment, companies increasingly struggle to manage their plans across hundreds or thousands of product lines, customers, territories and employees. Consequently, companies from all industries are using Incentive Compensation Management (ICM) technology to manage and optimize their compensation plans.
With 2011 upon us and sales plans being finalized, it’s time to consider creative ways to generate leads and fill the sales pipeline early in the New Year. In this webinar, ClearEdge Marketing President Leslie Vickrey explores smart, effective ways IT services and staffing firms can tap into their existing resources for greater lead generation results.
For questions or details email lvickrey@clearedgemarketing.com or call 312.731.3149.
This document provides an introduction to aligning knowledge management strategies with people, processes, and technology. It begins with defining knowledge management and describing an approach that considers all three elements. The presenter then provides an overview of various knowledge management technologies and how they can address different types of knowledge and business problems. Specific technologies discussed include business intelligence, customer relationship management, learning management systems, and expertise location tools. Case studies are also mentioned.
Continuous Computing event - Hockey Hall of Fame_Lalonde presentationDaniel Lalonde
The document is an agenda for a meeting on high availability services. The first part of the agenda includes presentations on high availability services, business continuity solutions, and a Q&A session. The second part provides context on why organizations purchase high availability services due to issues like complexity, the need for continuous access, and the high costs of downtime. It then defines high availability and discusses HP's solution which includes technology, management practices, and services like Microsoft Authorized Premier Support.
Implementing CRM doesn't have to be painful if companies avoid common pitfalls like viewing CRM as only a technical problem, driving it from the top-down without involvement from impacted teams, or trying to do too much at once. The document outlines seven common pitfalls and strategies to address each one, such as defining customer processes before choosing technology, targeting areas with the highest adoption potential first, and ensuring business leaders rather than IT drive the initiative.
Improving Nonprofit CRM Data Management in 2019 - Build Consulting and Commun...Community IT Innovators
Join Community IT Innovators' partners Build Consulting's development, fundraising, operations, and CRM experts, for an “Ask the Experts” February 2019 webinar. We offer ideas and answer participant questions on how to take your donor data management to the next level.
Guide to turbocharging your marketing agencies performance with online collab...Kahootz
This guide is essential reading if you’d like to:
• Improve your communications with clients
• Improve client retention
• Devote more time to creativity and less to admin
• Widen your pool of creative talent
• Increase productivity and margins
• Win new clients and service more accounts
• Deliver better campaigns
This document summarizes an IMAB Tech Talk presentation about integrating technology to improve marketing and fundraising efforts. It discusses how organizations currently use different databases and systems that are not well integrated, making it difficult to get a full view of constituents and coordinate efforts. The presentation examines different levels of technology use from basic to complex and integrated. It provides a case study of an organization taking incremental steps to become more integrated by automating data syncing between its online and offline databases. Finally, it discusses the challenges a large, multi-location nonprofit faces in fully integrating its disparate systems and data into a single customer relationship management system over several years.
Getting to Yes with the Business Decision MakerHugh Taylor
Selling software to corporate clients typically includes the challenge of convincing a business decision maker (BDM) to say “yes” to an investment whose return is difficult to define. Making the all-important business case to the BDM requires software marketers to think outside of their IT comfort zones and get past technological buzzwords and the IT-centric sale. BDMs think differently from IT decision makers (ITDMs) about major software purchases. To reach them, we have to articulate a strong business value proposition for the technology purchase. In this paper, Hugh Taylor, a former IW Comms professional who now creates BDM-facing content for Microsoft, explores some proven techniques for persuading BDMs to invest in a long-term relationship with an IT vendor
Integrating Marketing & BD into Everyones JobDavid Blumentals
This document discusses the need for law firms to integrate marketing, business development, and client relationship management into everyone's roles. It outlines industry trends pushing collaboration and technology use. Firms face pressures to cut costs while expanding services. Cultural and structural challenges include siloed roles and processes not optimized for client needs. A common business platform is needed to provide a centralized place for client information, improve processes, and help everyone understand clients. Microsoft Dynamics CRM and xRM4Legal software can provide such a platform to streamline operations, gain insights, and better connect with clients.
Scalable Digital Asset Management for Maximum Digital Media MaturityCognizant
Now more than ever, a digital organization needs scalable digital asset management (DAM) systems to handle the huge flow of digital media. This brief guide describes step-by-step how to ensure scalability projects are a success in helping drive digital transformation.
Understanding True CRM Costs before Implementing an Enterprise Solutionwilliamsjohnseoexperts
The document discusses understanding the total cost of ownership (TCO) when evaluating and implementing a customer relationship management (CRM) system. It notes that TCO includes direct and indirect costs over the system's lifetime, not just upfront costs. When comparing options like building a system internally versus purchasing one, managers should calculate TCO by estimating development, maintenance, and opportunity costs, as purchased systems can have lower long-term costs. The document also stresses evaluating both costs and benefits through a return on investment analysis to properly assess different CRM solutions.
The 10 Most Important Questions to Ask When Selecting the Right CRM PartnerRedspire Ltd
The document discusses important questions to ask when selecting a CRM partner. It summarizes research that found common issues with CRM implementations like difficulties with deployment and planning, poor integration with business processes, and lack of appropriate technology. Selecting the right partner can help overcome these issues. The document then lists and explains 10 key questions to ask partners around their methodology, team, resources, experience, support, user adoption process, upgrades, benefits to the business, and service levels. It emphasizes that the right partner will be able to clearly explain how their solution will deliver benefits across the business.
The document provides information about the CIO Summit taking place from December 8-10, 2008 at the Boca Raton Resort & Club in Boca Raton, Florida. It discusses the roles and challenges facing CIOs, including deploying new technologies, designing solutions, managing projects, and aligning IT strategies with business goals. The summit will feature keynote speakers, panel discussions, case studies and meetings with technology providers to help CIOs address challenges like data storage, security, virtualization, and business continuity. Topics will include aligning IT with business strategies, innovation, compliance, outsourcing and more. The event is invitation-only and aims to facilitate networking among CIOs.
Dell uses a direct sales model and CRM strategies to build great customer experiences. It segments customers and tailors its offerings to meet different needs. Dell collects extensive customer data through its website and CRM software to better understand customers. This informs Dell's strategies across the customer lifecycle from pre-sales support and education to post-sales support. Dell provides personalized support for individual, small business, and large enterprise customers. Its goal is to deliver superior customer service and customize computers to each customer's specifications.
Collaboration in a flat world allows companies to innovate and create value through global partnerships and interactions. There are three steps to effective collaboration: 1) connecting teams to share information and make decisions, 2) streamlining processes through tools like project management, and 3) optimizing transactional processes using ERP and CRM systems. Microsoft technologies like Office 365 provide pervasive collaboration capabilities that can be used across an organization's value chain in areas like sourcing, R&D, operations, customer service, sales, and product delivery. Case studies demonstrate how collaboration tools have improved productivity, sped processes, and increased profits for many companies.
The document discusses Dell, a large technology company founded in 1984 by Michael Dell. Some key points:
- Dell is based in Round Rock, Texas and employs over 100,000 people worldwide.
- Michael Dell still serves as CEO and has a net worth of $18.2 billion according to Forbes.
- Dell utilizes a lean supply chain model, cutting inventory from 20-25 days to just 72 hours.
Digital Asset Management What to know before you go.pdfHeyEmbedMe
The document provides guidance on key considerations for organizations implementing a Digital Asset Management (DAM) system. It discusses understanding user needs and current digital assets, developing a metadata model and taxonomy, determining workflow processes, selecting a DAM vendor, and establishing long-term governance and management of the system. The goal of a DAM system should be centrally managing and enabling reuse of digital assets to increase organizational efficiency and profits.
Samsung is a large South Korean multinational conglomerate company with many subsidiaries that produce a wide range of products beyond just smartphones and TVs. These subsidiaries include Samsung Electronics (smartphones, TVs, medical equipment), Samsung Heavy Industries (ships), Samsung Engineering and Samsung C&T (construction), and Samsung Automotive. Samsung uses customer relationship management (CRM) strategies like understanding customer behavior, expectations, engagement, and a strong CRM software system. Their global strategy focuses on key regions and linking products via digital networks through various business units. Samsung aims to strengthen competitiveness through premium products and efficient implementation of business strategies.
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) is a strategy for managing all your company’s relationships and interactions with customers and potential customers. It helps you stay connected to them, streamline processes and improve your profitability.
More commonly, when people talk about CRM they are usually referring to a CRM system, a tool which helps with contact management, sales management, productivity and more.
Customer Relationship Management enables you to focus on your organization’s relationships with individual people – whether those are customers, service users, colleagues or suppliers. CRM is not just for sales. Some of the biggest gains in productivity can come from moving beyond CRM as a sales and marketing tool and embedding it in your business – from HR to customer services and supply-chain management.
Whitepaper: Using Technology to Manage and Optimize Incentive CompensationIconixx
In today’s complex business environment, companies increasingly struggle to manage their plans across hundreds or thousands of product lines, customers, territories and employees. Consequently, companies from all industries are using Incentive Compensation Management (ICM) technology to manage and optimize their compensation plans.
With 2011 upon us and sales plans being finalized, it’s time to consider creative ways to generate leads and fill the sales pipeline early in the New Year. In this webinar, ClearEdge Marketing President Leslie Vickrey explores smart, effective ways IT services and staffing firms can tap into their existing resources for greater lead generation results.
For questions or details email lvickrey@clearedgemarketing.com or call 312.731.3149.
This document provides an introduction to aligning knowledge management strategies with people, processes, and technology. It begins with defining knowledge management and describing an approach that considers all three elements. The presenter then provides an overview of various knowledge management technologies and how they can address different types of knowledge and business problems. Specific technologies discussed include business intelligence, customer relationship management, learning management systems, and expertise location tools. Case studies are also mentioned.
Continuous Computing event - Hockey Hall of Fame_Lalonde presentationDaniel Lalonde
The document is an agenda for a meeting on high availability services. The first part of the agenda includes presentations on high availability services, business continuity solutions, and a Q&A session. The second part provides context on why organizations purchase high availability services due to issues like complexity, the need for continuous access, and the high costs of downtime. It then defines high availability and discusses HP's solution which includes technology, management practices, and services like Microsoft Authorized Premier Support.
Implementing CRM doesn't have to be painful if companies avoid common pitfalls like viewing CRM as only a technical problem, driving it from the top-down without involvement from impacted teams, or trying to do too much at once. The document outlines seven common pitfalls and strategies to address each one, such as defining customer processes before choosing technology, targeting areas with the highest adoption potential first, and ensuring business leaders rather than IT drive the initiative.
Improving Nonprofit CRM Data Management in 2019 - Build Consulting and Commun...Community IT Innovators
Join Community IT Innovators' partners Build Consulting's development, fundraising, operations, and CRM experts, for an “Ask the Experts” February 2019 webinar. We offer ideas and answer participant questions on how to take your donor data management to the next level.
Guide to turbocharging your marketing agencies performance with online collab...Kahootz
This guide is essential reading if you’d like to:
• Improve your communications with clients
• Improve client retention
• Devote more time to creativity and less to admin
• Widen your pool of creative talent
• Increase productivity and margins
• Win new clients and service more accounts
• Deliver better campaigns
This document summarizes an IMAB Tech Talk presentation about integrating technology to improve marketing and fundraising efforts. It discusses how organizations currently use different databases and systems that are not well integrated, making it difficult to get a full view of constituents and coordinate efforts. The presentation examines different levels of technology use from basic to complex and integrated. It provides a case study of an organization taking incremental steps to become more integrated by automating data syncing between its online and offline databases. Finally, it discusses the challenges a large, multi-location nonprofit faces in fully integrating its disparate systems and data into a single customer relationship management system over several years.
Getting to Yes with the Business Decision MakerHugh Taylor
Selling software to corporate clients typically includes the challenge of convincing a business decision maker (BDM) to say “yes” to an investment whose return is difficult to define. Making the all-important business case to the BDM requires software marketers to think outside of their IT comfort zones and get past technological buzzwords and the IT-centric sale. BDMs think differently from IT decision makers (ITDMs) about major software purchases. To reach them, we have to articulate a strong business value proposition for the technology purchase. In this paper, Hugh Taylor, a former IW Comms professional who now creates BDM-facing content for Microsoft, explores some proven techniques for persuading BDMs to invest in a long-term relationship with an IT vendor
Integrating Marketing & BD into Everyones JobDavid Blumentals
This document discusses the need for law firms to integrate marketing, business development, and client relationship management into everyone's roles. It outlines industry trends pushing collaboration and technology use. Firms face pressures to cut costs while expanding services. Cultural and structural challenges include siloed roles and processes not optimized for client needs. A common business platform is needed to provide a centralized place for client information, improve processes, and help everyone understand clients. Microsoft Dynamics CRM and xRM4Legal software can provide such a platform to streamline operations, gain insights, and better connect with clients.
Scalable Digital Asset Management for Maximum Digital Media MaturityCognizant
Now more than ever, a digital organization needs scalable digital asset management (DAM) systems to handle the huge flow of digital media. This brief guide describes step-by-step how to ensure scalability projects are a success in helping drive digital transformation.
Understanding True CRM Costs before Implementing an Enterprise Solutionwilliamsjohnseoexperts
The document discusses understanding the total cost of ownership (TCO) when evaluating and implementing a customer relationship management (CRM) system. It notes that TCO includes direct and indirect costs over the system's lifetime, not just upfront costs. When comparing options like building a system internally versus purchasing one, managers should calculate TCO by estimating development, maintenance, and opportunity costs, as purchased systems can have lower long-term costs. The document also stresses evaluating both costs and benefits through a return on investment analysis to properly assess different CRM solutions.
The 10 Most Important Questions to Ask When Selecting the Right CRM PartnerRedspire Ltd
The document discusses important questions to ask when selecting a CRM partner. It summarizes research that found common issues with CRM implementations like difficulties with deployment and planning, poor integration with business processes, and lack of appropriate technology. Selecting the right partner can help overcome these issues. The document then lists and explains 10 key questions to ask partners around their methodology, team, resources, experience, support, user adoption process, upgrades, benefits to the business, and service levels. It emphasizes that the right partner will be able to clearly explain how their solution will deliver benefits across the business.
The document provides information about the CIO Summit taking place from December 8-10, 2008 at the Boca Raton Resort & Club in Boca Raton, Florida. It discusses the roles and challenges facing CIOs, including deploying new technologies, designing solutions, managing projects, and aligning IT strategies with business goals. The summit will feature keynote speakers, panel discussions, case studies and meetings with technology providers to help CIOs address challenges like data storage, security, virtualization, and business continuity. Topics will include aligning IT with business strategies, innovation, compliance, outsourcing and more. The event is invitation-only and aims to facilitate networking among CIOs.
Dell uses a direct sales model and CRM strategies to build great customer experiences. It segments customers and tailors its offerings to meet different needs. Dell collects extensive customer data through its website and CRM software to better understand customers. This informs Dell's strategies across the customer lifecycle from pre-sales support and education to post-sales support. Dell provides personalized support for individual, small business, and large enterprise customers. Its goal is to deliver superior customer service and customize computers to each customer's specifications.
Collaboration in a flat world allows companies to innovate and create value through global partnerships and interactions. There are three steps to effective collaboration: 1) connecting teams to share information and make decisions, 2) streamlining processes through tools like project management, and 3) optimizing transactional processes using ERP and CRM systems. Microsoft technologies like Office 365 provide pervasive collaboration capabilities that can be used across an organization's value chain in areas like sourcing, R&D, operations, customer service, sales, and product delivery. Case studies demonstrate how collaboration tools have improved productivity, sped processes, and increased profits for many companies.
The document discusses Dell, a large technology company founded in 1984 by Michael Dell. Some key points:
- Dell is based in Round Rock, Texas and employs over 100,000 people worldwide.
- Michael Dell still serves as CEO and has a net worth of $18.2 billion according to Forbes.
- Dell utilizes a lean supply chain model, cutting inventory from 20-25 days to just 72 hours.
Digital Asset Management What to know before you go.pdfHeyEmbedMe
The document provides guidance on key considerations for organizations implementing a Digital Asset Management (DAM) system. It discusses understanding user needs and current digital assets, developing a metadata model and taxonomy, determining workflow processes, selecting a DAM vendor, and establishing long-term governance and management of the system. The goal of a DAM system should be centrally managing and enabling reuse of digital assets to increase organizational efficiency and profits.
Samsung is a large South Korean multinational conglomerate company with many subsidiaries that produce a wide range of products beyond just smartphones and TVs. These subsidiaries include Samsung Electronics (smartphones, TVs, medical equipment), Samsung Heavy Industries (ships), Samsung Engineering and Samsung C&T (construction), and Samsung Automotive. Samsung uses customer relationship management (CRM) strategies like understanding customer behavior, expectations, engagement, and a strong CRM software system. Their global strategy focuses on key regions and linking products via digital networks through various business units. Samsung aims to strengthen competitiveness through premium products and efficient implementation of business strategies.
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) is a strategy for managing all your company’s relationships and interactions with customers and potential customers. It helps you stay connected to them, streamline processes and improve your profitability.
More commonly, when people talk about CRM they are usually referring to a CRM system, a tool which helps with contact management, sales management, productivity and more.
Customer Relationship Management enables you to focus on your organization’s relationships with individual people – whether those are customers, service users, colleagues or suppliers. CRM is not just for sales. Some of the biggest gains in productivity can come from moving beyond CRM as a sales and marketing tool and embedding it in your business – from HR to customer services and supply-chain management.
This document provides 17 rules of the road for choosing and implementing a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system. It emphasizes that CRM is a company-wide project, not just a software purchase, and customers can include both internal and external stakeholders. It recommends carefully planning a CRM implementation including defining goals, assessing needs, and preparing for product demonstrations. Choosing the right sized CRM system and ensuring proper training and testing are also highlighted as important factors for a successful CRM project.
Automotive C R M For Impatient Car DealersRalph Paglia
This document provides guidance for automotive dealerships on implementing a customer relationship management (CRM) system. It emphasizes that dealerships should first define their business objectives and processes before selecting or implementing any CRM software. Having clear goals and establishing effective processes are more important for success than the software alone. The document advises taking time to understand current practices and identify areas for improvement before automating processes with new technology. Planning and preparation are presented as key to achieving an on-budget and effective CRM system that meets the dealership's needs.
This document provides an introduction to implementing an automotive CRM system for dealerships. It emphasizes that CRM projects often fail due to flawed implementation approaches. The document recommends dealerships first define their business requirements and processes to improve before automating them with software. It also suggests implementing CRM in high-win projects to minimize risk and maximize momentum. Overall, the document provides guidance on taking a strategic, process-focused approach to CRM implementation for dealership success.
Automotive Crm For Impatient Car DealersRalph Paglia
This document provides an overview of implementing an automotive CRM system for a busy dealer. It emphasizes that CRM implementation requires a systematic approach focused on business processes and requirements, not just purchasing software. Dealers should define their business objectives, map out existing processes, and document business requirements to ensure the CRM supports their needs. The document recommends implementing CRM through a series of "high-win projects" that are low complexity and high return to minimize risk and build momentum. It identifies ten common beliefs that can undermine CRM projects if not addressed, such as viewing it only as an IT project rather than a business project.
This document provides an introduction to implementing an automotive CRM system for dealerships. It emphasizes that CRM projects often fail due to flawed implementation approaches. The document recommends dealerships first define their business requirements and processes to improve before automating them with software. It also suggests implementing CRM in high-win projects to minimize risk and maximize momentum. Overall, the document provides guidance on taking a strategic, process-focused approach to CRM implementation for dealership success.
Top 10 Mistakes When Implementing a DAM Solutiondatabasics
This is a report of some of the most common digital asset management (DAM) implementation mistakes, sourced from phone interviews with 32 companies that had implemented DAM in the last 5 years.
This presentation will cover the definition of Master Data Management, describe potential MDM hub architectures, outline 5 essential elements of MDM, and describe 11 real-world best practices for MDM and data governance, based on years of experience in the field.
Building digital product masters to prevail in the age of accelerations parts...Jeffrey Stewart
This document discusses the importance of building Digital Product Masters (DPMs) to help organizations adapt and succeed in today's rapidly changing environment. It argues that DPMs can help mitigate risks, reduce costs, and improve revenue. The document is presented in three parts:
Part 1 discusses how the world is accelerating and the new risks organizations face. It suggests that DPMs can help lower costs, mitigate risks, and create stronger customer lock-ins.
Part 2 explains what a DPM is and how it models activities, tools, flows, teams, capabilities, processes, technology, and people. It shows how a DPM can help align these different elements.
Part 3 will provide a case study
This document examines why CRM systems often fail to meet expectations. It outlines 8 common reasons for CRM failure, including that CRM systems are complicated, labor intensive, often provide more features than needed, and success is difficult to quantify. It also notes that turning a business into a truly customer-centric one is key to CRM success. While CRM can help when implemented correctly, lead management systems may be better suited and less costly for many companies to track and convert leads into customers.
8 Mistakes Insurance Brokers and Providers MakeInfoGrow
CRM software is forecast to grow substantially in the coming years, reaching $36.5 billion worldwide by 2017. While CRM can provide many benefits like improved customer service and increased sales, around 42% of purchased CRM systems are never fully utilized. Common mistakes that insurance brokers and providers make that lead to failed CRM implementations include using off-the-shelf software not tailored to their industry, poor planning, trying to do too much at once, and not getting full employee buy-in. To successfully implement CRM, companies should purchase a solution configured for their specific processes, involve all customer-facing departments, and consider adding complementary technologies like mapping.
Top cloud CRM overview. Part 1 - Choosing the right CRM solutionEugene Zozulya
Cloud CRM is a software as a service, hosted in a public or private cloud, that allows users to access application and their data remotely. Hosted CRM software can be either single- or multi-tenant. Single-tenant means that each of the vendor’s servers contains one organization’s data. Multi-tenant means that computing resources (servers, databases, etc.) are shared among many different organizations.
Choosing the right CRM solution always a challenge, especially for enterprises. For many small and medium-sized businesses always costs associated with purchasing, installing and implementing a CRM system can greatly overshadow the benefits.
Cloud CRM with free trial can be an easy way to try out you key CRM processes without upfront investments
This document discusses key factors to consider when evaluating customer relationship management (CRM) solutions. It outlines a 5-point checklist for organizations to use in determining whether an on-premise, on-demand, or hybrid CRM deployment option can meet their unique needs. The checklist examines whether solutions can satisfy operational requirements, enable a dynamic workforce, ensure data security, facilitate user adoption, and provide necessary flexibility. The document emphasizes the importance of choosing a CRM that can scale and adapt over time to support new users, processes, roles and business needs.
SiliconAlley Startup Services for InvestorsMiles Rose
SA|SAMS is a startup asset management service that assists investors in managing their startup investments. It provides services such as an unbiased second opinion on investments, daily management of startup operations, and access to vetted investment opportunities. For a fee, SA|SAMS handles activities like business strategy, product development, customer acquisition, and connecting startups to their network of investors. The company's team has decades of experience helping startups secure funding and succeed.
Similar to 10 Core Lessons of Asset Management (20)
1. Written
For:
Core Lessons of DAM1
Digital Asset Management Trends and Lessons [ DAM ]
April 12, 2016 5:15 PM
Digital Asset Management White Paper for Content Managers
Overview:
This is a report from my experiences of growing with the Digital Asset Management platforms and philosophies. It will help to provide potential information for further development of
current philosophy and business infrastructure related to Asset Management. I will provide you with ten core lessons of DAM architecture, trends and learnings from my experiences
over the years of being an Asset Librarian and DAM Server Administrator. This report assumes some familiarity with the Asset Management world.
Index of Information:
• Page 1 - Overview, Index and Summary
• Pages 2 to 14 - Section 1: Ten Core Lessons of DAM
• Page 14 - Conclusions
• Page 15 - Executive Recommendations
• Page 16 - Thank You
• Page 17 - Glossary of Terms
Summary:
More digital content exist today than ever before and it is growing exponentially. As more digital assets are created, employees are having difficulty locating relevant files which
hamper productivity. Digital assets are now stored in a range of locations including shared drives, cloud storage services, file servers, company wikis, and email inboxes. These
storage options are often used in conjunction with one another making file retrieval a time consuming, ambiguous and frustrating task. Estimates on the amount of time em-
ployees spend searching for information range from 6.5 to 8.8 hours per week1
. Digital Asset Management (DAM) offers the promise to take these storage options and increase
productivity by offering defined and search-able content across the organization. While DAM has been around for over a decade, it is still a developing sector within business and
many paths to DAM exist. This deck is a guide to the many options and issues within DAM for today, as well as offering predictions on its future maturity based on the lessons
learned form research and observations on current trends.
1. http://www.docurated.com - Cóbhan Phillipson
Content
Managers
Asset
Admin.
Production
Engineer
The CMO
Content
Strategy
2. Written
For:
Core Lessons of DAM2
Digital Asset Management Trends and Lessons [ DAM ]
April 12, 2016 5:15 PM
Digital Asset Management White Paper for Content Managers
Section 1: Ten Core Lessons
Titled: Lessons of DAM for Today
Not in any particular order, other than they are all important.
3. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM3
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 1: The Idea of DAM is Very Fragmented
• The idea of implementing a Digital Asset Management (DAM) platform is extremely difficult to navigate to find proper solution. Everybody has their own idea of what DAM is, and what they
want, which is usually specific to their experiences and company needs. It is so fragmented that 30% of vendors who call themselves a DAM solution provider do not even meet the basic
criteria of a DAM. [See the Top 10 criteria of a DAM on Page 10]
• There are many companies doing DAM at various levels of implementation. There are few companies doing it well, and for those that are, they have done it for years and have multiple
systems of DAM, MAM, CMS, PIM and other home grown sys-
tems to handle the various departments and workflows to create
best in class solutions. There are many more companies just be-
ginning to explore DAM today than there are companies who are
successfully using DAM in day-to-day operations. Still, far fewer
have implemented DAM solutions and embraced the philosophy
company wide to take full advantage of the single-truth potential.
Many lack a cohesive upper management and/or IT structure to
do so.
• Nearly all Companies have little expertise in-house to weed
out a new DAM solution and while there are a few consultant
companies who will offer help, very few are impartial and can
offer unbiased information to aid in the decision. This holds true
for MAM, CMS, PIM, DIS, KMS and PM solutions as well, which
are even more difficult to navigate because of fewer consultants
offering expert knowledge across these various platforms.
• Many companies in many industries that you would expect to
be leveraging a DAM to re-monetize assets or re-utilize internal
work, have not even started working on a solution.
• Using a DAM is as much about your process, management and
personnel, as it is about the platform you choose to implement.
A screen shot of a portion of the DAM solution providers is supplied
here by the Real Story Consultant Group as an example of how diffi-
cult it is for those new to DAM to sort out solution providers.
4. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM4
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 1: The Idea of DAM is Very Fragmented... [Continued]
The Idea of DAM is fragmented. Another Example of DAM solutions and how they are segmented across the various solution providers.
• DAM can be segmented into Cloud based, On
Premise or a hybrid between the two. What’s Cor-
rect? You need to know before selecting.
• Types of DAM can be determined by Open source
or Proprietary and cost can usually drive the
solution as well. A key factor here is support and
features needed for your business. What is correct
for you? You need to decide before moving on.
• Your key business needs can determine how you
think about what a DAM is for your solution. If
you are a broadcast house, your DAM may be an
internal MAM or a cloud based Video Delivery Ser-
vice (OVP) as opposed to an insurance company
who might think of a DAM as a hosted Document
Management System (DMS). What is your core
business need becomes more important than
isolated wants or external desires.
• The size and scope of your business can weigh
heavily on the vendor you pick. Some solutions
are more scalable than others, some are more
open than and follow standards better that different
solutions. Interconnectivity to manage and number
of users to support can be a determining factor to a
DAM solution.
A screen shot of a portion of the DAM solution providers is
supplied here by the Real Story Consultant Group as an
example of how difficult it is for those new to DAM to sort
out solutions.
5. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM5
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 2: How to Structure DAM within Your Organization
• The DAM is the CORE component to your Business Information. It is “THE SOURCE OF TRUTH” and the one place to find the safe and fully documented assets of your company. How
you implement your DAM can have a huge influence on the time to your ROI and expectations on its capabilities.
• While DAM is still in its infancy in many ways, it is project-
ed to grow exponentially in business adoption over the
next three decades. Business leaders often find it difficult
to find ROI with DAM systems, but its becoming more
recognized that DAM will be required to meet the needs
of responsive and nimble organizations.
• Enterprise data such as analytics, PIM, CRM and others
should be fed and feed into your DAM.
• DAM feeds your CMS systems, Marketing Automation
and Social Engagement Channels.
• Your DAM needs to be metadata rich, easy to navigate,
accessible for your employees and secure within your
infrastructure.
• Your Media Channels like Television, Print, Web, Mobile
and Social need to be tied into and synced to your DAM
to keep your intellectual property safe, provide a common
branding platform and give you the reporting you need to
quickly adapt and support your core business needs.
• Not implementing your DAM fully, or incorrectly build-
ing processes to utilize and leverage its information, is
seen as the largest loss of unrealized ROI for any DAM
implementation project. Good people and processes pay
for themselves.
DAM implementation slide by the Real Story Consultant Group.
6. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM6
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 3: You’re Unlikely to implement DAM Successfully without these People in your Organization
Staffing for the Information gathering, Project Management, Technology Infrastructure and the Business Rules of DAM will lead you to success if you can identify
and nurture these key personalities for the project. Without all of these people, your chance of success dwindles rapidly to below 12% with the loss of any three.
A successful DAM is about workflows and people with processes and governance:
The Consultant - The consultant is your source of knowledge. They help you navigate the uncharted waters of DAM vendors, your core needs and wants and help you
develop a plan to pick the best solution. They will need to be able to take your vision and document it in real terms that DAM vendors can understand. They can greatly
reduce the time it takes to pick your solution and keep you from making mistakes that will cost your organization large sums of money in re-work, scope creep and
failed expectations.
The Sponsor - This person funds and provides the vision for the implementation project. The sponsor if often the CMO/CIO or the CTO who identifies the need for Asset
Management and can see the problem solving abilities of DAM.
The Champion - who will lead the charge? This needs to be an internal person who has seen the light! They are passionate about the potential of the DAM, can readily
see its promise and can communicate the vision to the various departments within your organization. This person is often driven by production needs or Marketing needs
and is willing to role up their sleeves to work out the process and “get-ur-done”.
The Librarian - The organizer and tagger of all the information. This person is tenacious about finding the important company assets, networking with other departments
and offering the digital filing cabinet to the departments who can benefit from organization and data tracking. They are a collector who strives to provide order where none
existed before.
The Governor - This impartial person grants the access to the various systems. The governor is very responsible to make sure that the DAM remains the first and best
place for the company personnel to go for the relevant files they need, and they see only what they need to see. In large, complicated systems or publicly available DAMs,
this person is key to security and managing group access rights.
The Vendor - This is your integrator and your trusted ally that you have partnered with once you have picked the DAM system of your dreams. They will need to spend
many hours with you listening and asking questions in order to tailor the installation and implement your vision across the company. They will need to understand the
people, the hardware and software; or know those who know better than themselves to do the job right and attend to the details. In the long term, your vendor will be your
source of support and future integrations, so pick one that is looking for a “Long Term Relationship”.
From Mark Davey’s (President of The DAM Foundation) speech on DAM and Web 3.0.
7. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM7
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 4: Bringing DAM to the Omni-channel is Very Challenging to Integrate with Current Technologies
Fragmentation and lack of standards has lead to industry based segmentation in DAM. Companies that specialize in bringing messages to the Omni-channel will
have an extremely difficult time in structuring a DAM to handle the demands of Video, Print, Social and Mobile channels. There are NO centralized solutions at
present that handle all of these channels well, or even at all.
Video Challenges:
Most systems that handle video well are further segmented into: 1] Online Video Platforms (OVPs) offering streaming hosting, 2] Channel Distribution Networks (CDNs) that specialize
on handling the sending and tracking of video assets to broadcast stations while others 3] Media Asset Managers (MAMs) specialize in the seamless management of video creation
from Non-Linear Editing Platforms (NLE’s) to the internal video libraries that track video assets. All three segments have some to little crossover with each of the other segments causing
large amounts of work in re-keying information and managing assets across multiple systems. This does not exclude the time and money it takes to network these systems together with
Comcast, Netflix, YouTube and Brightcove being examples of the challenges for getting this content into the hands of consumers.
Print Challenges:
While print technologies and support for static file formats is by far the most supported and mature, there are still many examples of difficulties that exist in the DAM systems that handle
print workflows well. Print file formats can support the embedding of metadata for the most part (thanks to Adobe), but once an image has been released for use, there is little that can
be done to pull it back or remove it from outside usage. It is still difficult to track restrictions and rights information on composited images (Photoshop and PDFs) made from multiple
source images. And while PIM and Print DAMs are becoming more integrated, it has not been widely implemented in most companies. Another deficiency in print has been the ability
to gather relevant analytics to capture readership numbers, time spent on articles and follow-up to articles. In some ways, digital tie-ins to the print articles are being leveraged to bring
more data and social-like experience to print consumers.
Social & Mobile Challenges:
Many DAMs have limited or little access back and forth from the social channels and getting the feedback returned to the DAM for analytics. For those who have decided to build a DAM
based on Social needs, they do little with high resolution files and/or complex video needs and have no integration with production teams while leveraging marketing needs instead.
Intellectual Property Challenges:
Some DAM systems handle Intellectual Property Rights [IP] very well, but little else, and are designed to plug into other DAM and CMS architecture. The handling of IP in video and print
images can be very difficult because of the inability of metadata to travel within video assets and the compositing of multiple assets together to create final artwork. Most DAM systems
have some notion of IP but there is often an organizational disconnect between the financial departments, legal departments and the actual DAM librarians who input the metadata. In
addition, displaying the various types of restrictions in these assets can be difficult to tag across the final assets and track throughout the life cycle of the files on multiple systems. While
some major corporations are working with facial and product recognition technologies to help automate tagging the vast amounts of content that already exists, it is still very cost prohibi-
tive to implement these new technologies in-house.
Organizational Challenges:
In the next decade companies will be re-defining the departmental structures which can be a hindrance to implementing DAM properly. How this will be handled will be seen as a key
component to the success of the company and its ability to quickly adapt to the marketplace/omni-channel needs. Questions like: “Who is in charge of the assets?” and “What depart-
ment owns this?”, will help drive the internal philosophy of DAM. Already, some companies have moved away from an SVP for each market segment to having an SVP of Analytics and
of Content who report directly to the CIO. Other companies will utilize the role of the CMO to leverage the DAM within their organization. Corporations will restructure to bring DAM to
the forefront of the organization for marketing, PR, Legal, the monetization of assets, and core business responsiveness.
8. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM8
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 5: Sorting Out What You Need from What You Want
Everyones idea of Digital Asset Management is somewhat skewed to their own business needs and experiences. To an insurance company, a DAM may be noth-
ing more than a Document Management System (DMS), and a database of customers. When moving small amounts of data [under 30Mbs] a DAM can live in the
cloud. If you are consistently pushing large, high resolution files with evolved and varied content, your DAM should be on premise. Here are some guidelines for
sorting out a solution.
Limitations of Cloud Solutions: Speed, and then there’s speed, and – oh yeah – Speed. Always remember that the cloud is not some magical place where your data is saved. In reality, its
just someone else’s server that you are paying to use. And, like working remotely, it will only be as fast as your connection speeds and the limitations of networking. The big thing that is often
forgotten, is that its very difficult to build documents (Print, video & Presentations) in the cloud, because most programs want to link to file systems to build files and not web-links. Some cloud
based systems can get around this, and the landscape is evolving.
Difficulties of On-Site Solutions: Anything you purchase to live on-site will need to have adequate horsepower to deliver the assets quickly, manage the access rights and have 99.5% up-
time. Do not forget to staff internally for maintaining the system, the network, software updates, securing backups and make someone responsible to have the system meet your expectations.
If no one is in charge of the DAM hardware/software solution internally, it will never be the system you paid for or wanted. Factor this into the cost of maintaining a DAM. If you are not ready to
pay for a good person or team to make it a great solution, you might want to stick with cloud based systems. Don’t forget about turnover and aging equipment as well.
Video Platform Needs: Video offers a whole host of challenges, from trans-coding formats for distribution, to tracking and managing where the content lives and who has access. There are
many systems that do parts of this well, but I have yet to see a completely integrated solution for video from conception to distribution that exists. Beware of sales people who always say yes,
and stick to what your core business needs are for a solution. If you are a large video distributer, you may need to settle on more than one management system to fit all your needs.
Embedding Data: Does your system need to embed your data in the assets themselves or is the search engine good enough? If you plan on sharing assets between systems, companies or
with the public, you might want to considers systems that can embed the data into the assets for sharing (if the file formats will accept it).
Streamline Production Processes: If your production teams have to use the DAM to check licensing, search for files and projects, browse for ideas or pickup old projects to re-purpose
them, you would be wise to invest in DAM solutions that streamline these processes to the production process. This point becomes the difference in many companies who successfully imple-
ment DAM practices vs. those who use the DAM like a data warehouse. A living, useful, Asset Management system becomes much more relevant when it streamlines processes in production,
helps define usage rights, shows employees what they need and does not become relegated to old projects and archives only. This is where you will truly see and ROI.
Searching & Reporting: This is reliant on good metadata and possibly good file naming conventions. Though I greatly prefer metadata over naming, both can be useful. Always remember
that you need people in your organization to be responsible for both, beholden to all the other employees and have the ability to remember that the metadata they add is not just for today
when everyone remembers it, but for a year, to years later, when everyone had forgotten what was going on. Archiving of outdated files (ROT) is an critical consideration as well.
Social Media Tracking: Few systems do this well, few systems are really focused on Social Media, but it is evolving quickly. If this is your primary focus, keep an eye on your core needs
and partner with that vendor who will listen to your evolving business needs, seems to understand where social media is going and has a road map to improve.
Legal Issues: If the solution you are looking at does not handle Legal, Licensing and Intellectual Property issues well, and out of the box, don’t get it. This area of Asset tracking will become
essential as more companies realize the monetary potential of the assets they already own. You may have clients who have expectations on documented security needs, so don’t forget to
meet and exceed your clients expectations as well. Include your Legal Department in the decision making process.
9. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM9
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 6: How to Use DAM to Re-Monetize your Current Body of Work by Jason Lambert of Sony Corporation
Sony Pictures knew it had a problem. Apple called them when it was launching the first offering of its new iPhone and Asked “We are looking for video that has the actors saying “Hello”. Can
you tell us what you have?” After many days of work, they were only able to find 13 clips and out of those, Apple picked only one.
For any company working with, and monetizing media, program level metadata [data that defines the rights and descriptive information applicable to an entire program] has become an
essential component of digital distribution operations. But as media companies look for new ways to exploit the individual scenes and moments that comprise those full-length programs, pro-
gram-level metadata falls short. Time-based metadata [data tied to a specific scene, moment, or frame of a program] is key to unlocking the moment-to-moment context and secondary rights
of content at a second by second level.
• At this time, Sony had no current DAM
infrastructure and could find no products that
easily tracked the myriad of licensing rights to
a time-based motion picture tracking system,
they partnered with Wazee Digital, who had
developed a MAM IP tracking system to get
what they needed.
• Each video is tagged with talent rights, actor
identification, music rights, promotional rights,
product rights and its contractual information
across every second of video.
• Different rights and property licensing are
visually represented by color information on the
time-line to easily sort out the proper distribu-
tion rights and restrictions for each scene.
• With a fully tagged media library, requests
for specific promotion materials increased 40
times over what they were currently experi-
encing in internal use and revenue form the
re-licensing of current videos went up over
400%.
Taken from Jason Lambert, Executive Director of Content Licensing and Metadata Services, Sony Pictures Entertainment during the 2105 DAM LA show.
Image provided to me from Jason Lambert upon my request to keep a copy of his presentation.
10. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM10
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 7: The 10 Core Characteristics of a DAM [by the DAM foundation]
1. DAM systems ingest assets individually or in mass sets, and allow for the manipulation of those as-
sets and their metadata individually or with mass actions. This is accomplished in part by assigning a
unique identifier to each asset on ingest.
2. DAM systems secure the assets they contain. Security in a DAM extends to defining access control
lists (ACLs) for assets and defining roles for users accessing the system.
3. DAM systems store assets as both binaries and metadata. A DAM system can store multiple file
types, and allows for the customization of metadata fields and the metadata in those fields attached
to the stored files.
4. DAM systems render/transform assets on ingest into new forms, such as thumbnails or proxy files.
The new forms generated on asset ingest via transformation should all be stored as asset parts of
the original file uploaded.
5. DAM systems enrich assets through the extension of metadata and metrics regarding the use and
reuse of the asset throughout its life cycle.
6. DAM systems relate assets by tracking the relationships between and among an original asset and
versions/variants of the original. Version-ing and version control tools are central to an asset’s life in
a DAM system.
7. DAM systems regulate a structured process in the management, creation, and review of assets with
workflow tools. Via programmed workflows, DAMs allow for a decentralized work force to collaborate
together in a centralized system.
8. DAM systems allow for users to find assets and to retrieve those assets by facilitating search through
metadata, collections, workflows, and access control tools. By increasing the discovery of assets that
may not have been easily accessible before ingest, a DAM assists workers in leveraging existing
content for maximum work potential.
9. DAM systems have a preview function that allows users to view assets before downloading or open-
ing a file on their own device. By allowing users to take a look at assets in search quickly, without
download, DAM systems reduce the amount of time users must spend in search.
10. DAM systems produce/publish content by providing methods whereby assets may be shared, linked
to, or otherwise be distributed outside the system. This DAM function may be as simple as generat-
ing a URL on ingest or as complex as allowing users to build collections of items for sharing with a
work group.
The following list was ratified by the DAM Foundation Board in Q4 of 2014 as defining the characteristics
of a Digital Asset Management system. Systems that wish to gain a certification from the DAM Foundation
as possessing all ten characteristics may apply to have their systems evaluated.
ADAM
Aetopia
Apollon
Bynder
Brandworkz
Bright Interactive:
Asset Bank
Canto: Cumulus
celum
censhare
Comrads
Elvis: Woodwing
EnterMedia Software
eyebase
Fotoware
Equilibrium: Medi-
arich for Sharepoint
hyperCMS
IntelligenceBank
Marketing Content
Hub
MerlinOne
NetXposure
North Plains
Telescope
Nuxeo
OpenText
(Embeddable Metadata is a request)
Picturepark
Razuna
ResourceSpace
WAVE: Mediabank
WebDAM
Widen
Xinet
Note: Many brands
marketed as DAM
solution providers are
not listed here because
they did not make the cut
or did not wish to
be tested.
List of Vendors With 10 Core Certification
11. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM11
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 8: Standards are Seriously Lacking Within the DAM Community and in General, Everywhere...
What is a DAM? Right now the only place on the planet that I have seen any kind of a definition of what a DAM should be exists with the DAM foundation. They are
a small organization dedicated to bring DAM awareness to the corporate world with many resources at their disposal. The fact that 33% of the solutions providers
that say they have a DAM solution do not meet the basic criteria of a DAM is somewhat indicative of the lack of standards.
• Metadata: While the ISO has implemented many metadata field and best practices papers, many DAM vendors do not support them fully, nor do many of the implement metadata extraction
or embedding of metadata into their DAM solutions. The international community created metadata standards mostly for the tracking and documentation of journalistic activities and while the
standards cover much of what, who, where, when and why. The creation of custom fields, and for the most part, custom data resides as an island resigned to each DAM solution. Custom
metadata templates are difficult to implement and there is a disconnect between the way Google, Bing, Yahoo and other mainstream search engines find metadata and how DAM systems
structure data.
• File Format Support: Each DAM provider decides what file formats it wants to support. While this could seem burdensome to support a certain list of formats, the larger point is - Why
shouldn’t all file formats conform to a standard for previewing and storing metadata within themselves? If there was a common preview format and metadata space that every file had to con-
form to, visually representing and searching for them across multiple DAM systems and search engines would become simple to support.
• Web Standards: Web browsers should have a group of broad standards that display uniformly. Web plug-ins should also conform to standards. Mozilla, Apple, Google and Microsoft should
be forced to comply with the display and confirmation of HTML best coding practices based on the ISO. Websites should not have to be written multiple times to make themselves work on
Internet Explorer or Google Chrome properly and the same with E-mail coding.
• Video Standards: There needs to be an international body that conforms manufactures, down to the Editing software, to standards for Video coding and codecs. Today, each manufacturer
decides how to encode its raw camera video, metadata and compression algorithms. It is simply managed chaos. The only reason it works is because each manufacturer and each broadcast-
er dictates its specifications and creates plug-ins to decode their proprietary formats. In this major industry that moves terrabytes of data around daily, nearly 35% of industry time is spent on
handling proprietary video formats.
• Rights Management Standards: The ability to embed rights & licensing information should exist in every digital file format.
• OS Support Standards: We have seen the web become the great equalizer for support of multiple OS’s. The same needs to be true for file systems that work at the OS level. Apple, IBM,
Google and Microsoft as well as the Unix/Linux community need to develop and institute a modern universal file system approach for file access.
• Reporting Standards: Many DAM solutions offer poor tools for gathering analytics on file use, trafficking and file reporting functions. Many of the solutions providers will help create the
reports with additional cost and programming. This needs to be addressed. There should be a standard criteria that stipulates that all DAM’s can run fairly robust reports that are generated
from the database that drive their products.
• Implementation Standards: Easily accessible white papers should exist for those looking to implement DAM on the common things to look for, the personnel and the roles you will need
to have in place, support questions to ask and the cost of owning a DAM. They should illustrate the benefits and drawbacks to certain solutions and be easily digestible by a fairly educated
person.
12. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM12
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 9: Networking is Incredibly Important
This lesson has a double meaning that I will illustrate. On the IT side of this statement, the network is an extremely important part to the successful implementation of any DAM system. You
need to understand the difficulties of server workflows and not create undo difficulties on your user base to access their needs quickly. Also, you should have security systems in place so that
you can segment the different DAM libraries for each groups usage needs. While many large corporations have good networking and security systems in place, many smaller and mid-sized
companies do not.
The second meaning refers to networking with people in the DAM community. I witnessed how important it is for new-comers to the DAM community as well as the old-timers to share informa-
tion on what is going on in their companies like: how different their needs are for DAM and what they plan to do with it, what issues they are having, why they are looking at certain solutions
and how they plan to staff for managing their DAM. These discussions are invaluable.
The Company Network Infrastructure:
Invest in the key areas you need to be successful. If your DAM is largely cloud based, make sure you have access to high speed
bandwidth with dedicated throughput to keep your employees productive. If your using uncompressed video and high resolution images
in internal workflows, invest in fiber networks to maximize productivity and keep solid desktop/server/file permission structures in place
to secure your data and protect your IP. Network lines, routers, networking security and virus software are often overlooked as being
part of a well implemented DAM system.
The People Infrastructure:
Meeting and talking with representatives from The DAM Foundation, Sony Corporation, Disney, The Real Story Group, IO Integration
and other vendors is priceless. The ideas you are exposed to and the thought and thoroughness of many of the presentations can be
exceptional. Attend conferences and listen to consultants. Look to what other companies in your market have learned. You will find
many examples of those who have failed to implement DAM well, many who have overspent and still more that have not figured out the
correct staffing and procedures. This will lead you to an smoother implementation of the many ideas discussed in this document.
Image Credit (center left): Managed Services, Backup And Recovery, And Networking News From April 2015, by Mike Monocello, Business Solutions magazine
Image Credit (bottom left): Connecting With People That Matter To Your Business by Jason Aten. No original citation of the image was given in either case.
13. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM13
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Lesson 10: Accurate Metadata is Critical to Your Success
Just because you bought a DAM doesn’t mean that you are tracking the metadata you need to. Every company has its own acronyms, workflows, job processes
and legal requirements. You will need to have a carefully vetted metadata schema to capture the information you need on a daily basis and you will need to realize
that everyone should not have the ability to alter the data in the system. On top of that, not everyone needs to see the same information or finds it important for
what they do.
• Determine Your Metadata Needs
Work with your various departments to determine your metadata needs. Note that some departments may call the exact same title by a different name, or you may find that your various
managers are tracking projects very differently and it may need to be adjusted to bring consensus. Don’t be afraid to do what makes sense and helps to consolidate processes.
• Listen to Your Department Leads
Listen to your core business managers who tell you what they have to be able to do, and how they need to do it. Try to use the DAM system to replace and remove other forms of tracking
assets so that you can reduce time and paperwork. If the DAM is just another place to fill out redundant information, it will be a tough sell. Make sure they have vetted a list of requirements
from their staff before they present their needs.
• Keep and Compare a Metadata Schema with Your Department Managers and Your Clients
Keep an active list of the metadata schema you need to implement and work to keep it as small and simple as possible. Always remember to use defined lists of values wherever and
whenever you can so that the data stays consistent and easy to search on. The more open text fields that are used, the more ambiguity on how to add data and find assets you will have.
Work on bullet proofing your data and use taxonomy to help find relevant assets. Never forget that you are in business to serve your clients needs, not just your own.
• You Should be Able to Easily Edit Your Metadata Schema
Pick a system that allows your internal staff to edit the metadata structures easily so that you are not paying programmers and spending months setting up a good schema and metadata
templates. Your DAM System Administrator should have no problem doing this without consulting outside services. Changes will come to the metadata needs of your company, so be
prepared to update your information in a timely way.
• Set Up Metadata Forms for the Different Roles and Departments
Monitor the needs and priorities of the different departments so that they see and can edit what they are supposed to, and more importantly, they cannot change data they should not.
Keep in mind that the Legal Department may want to have a metadata form that is very different from a Production Artist or Asset Librarian. Make sure to pick a DAM system that can
accommodate the sharing of the metadata information but can tailor it to the users needs and your specifications. If this is a difficulty on the part of your solutions provider, you might want
to consider looking at other systems. Look to your metadata to reduce the amount of work these departments have to do in order to save them time.
• Stick to Metadata Standards
Stick to metadata standards whenever possible. The Dublin Core, EXIF and IPTC fields are interchangeable with many other systems and make it easier to share data to other depart-
ments, companies and to the public. If you need to use custom fields, you may want to consider these as in-house use only. If custom fields are mandated by your clients or your work,
keep in mind that it may be difficult for others to use and see this data. The easy exchange of custom data still has a long way to evolve before it becomes simple to use.
14. April 12, 2016 5:15 PM14
Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Ten Core Lessons in Digital Asset Management:
Conclusions: The Hopes and Realization of What DAM will Bring in the Near Future...
Better consensus on how the handle metadata across multiple search engines, databases and files for the future...
New metadata schema to work across all platforms. The future will bring contextual data together from disparate systems to create a common cohesive answer to queries. Programmed agents will search through
the schema and promote the weighted, relevant data to us providing the human experience to an un-centralized database. The Internet will become a relational database that the schema provides. This has already
started to come true and it will lead to the better portability of assets and easier integration of DAM systems as well as seamlessly adding new feature sets for the end users.
Integration of Financial, PIM, MAM, KMS, PM and DAM systems together...
There are extensible markup languages (XML) that exist today, but in the near future there will be complete integration to Financial, Project Management, Marketing Analytics Systems and automated transfers of
all this data into DAM systems through much simpler SDK’s that leverage English like programming to talk to each other 24/7/365.
Automation tools and Artificial Intelligence (machine pattern matching) to handle the tagging of assets...
In the future there will be easier and more automated tools for tagging assets. More and more tagging of the assets will come from the data embedded inside them. More systems will come online that “recognize”
faces, brand names, places, music rights, logos, emotional content and individual identities and will tag the files with this information automatically. It will then share the content out to the omni-channels in real time
with about 90% accuracy to start. Most likely this will be a cloud based SaaS.
More companies will be utilizing DAM as a central component to their business strategy...
Tighter Focus of DAM into organizations to realize the potential of DAM. Ubiquitous use of metadata and crowd sourced information to tie together multiple DAM systems. There will be more concise road maps
generated from the successful case studies of DAM implementations. Today, 60% of spending on DAM is done poorly. In the very near future, the spending on DAM will be concisely monitored and budgets on
each step in the DAM process will be defined based on track records representing decades of experience. This will bring the cost to implement down drastically while also increasing the transparency of the benefits
to DAM.
The buying of DAM solution providers by larger corporate entities will increase funding and focus on DAM solutions...
Recently, Esko (Pantone Corp.) purchased Media Beacon. This has already led to better support of packaging formats and is leading the way in revolutionizing packaging data printing and tracking. Northplains pur-
chased Xinet and we are still waiting to see how this will change the DAM industry. This trend will continue with some surprising partnerships being created to battle the Google/Microsoft/Amazon juggernauts with
most of the significant DAM providers being gobbled up.
Movement into cloud-based solutions...
While is it currently very difficult to leverage media production needs to cloud based DAM services, it is predicted to change. More DAM providers are offering cloud based solutions and partial cloud hybrid
solutions (think Google drive). The key component here is networking file systems (AFP, SMB, NFS) to HTTP protocols based on URL structures. Adobe has already made the leap to cloud based production and if
layout and video production tools are opened up to utilizing URL resources in a seamless fashion, your production server becomes the World Wide Web. In combination, all we need is an easy to integrate network
compression technology that maximizes speeds out to the central communications backbone. This will deliver wired 1000Base-T networking speeds anywhere in the world. This is being tested is Russia and Isreal
from the rumors.
The leveraging of Intellectual Property [IP] to maximize profit and visibility of assets...
Video, experiential, written, photographic and any examples of unique and worthy content will have its IP squeezed for every penny. DAM will be the center of tracking its usage and licensing to make sure that all
revenue sources are fully utilized to maximize the profit potential for every asset. The populace will loose patience for old/not-relevant data more quickly.
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Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Executive Actions:
Recommendations Based on Implementing DAM within your Company:
Its one thing to go and learn from the industry leaders on the latest potentials of DAM technology, but to apply it to in-house processes is the most important step to get the
greatest ROI from Digital Asset Management, and its also the hardest part.
• Build Relationships:
Use our current DAM, Production and Strategy personnel to create a team of technology minded stakeholders. Their job is to focus on DAM and reach out to the various
consultants and sources listed in this agenda to stay current with best practices and learn internally from each other.
• Ask for More Demonstrations:
Use your current partnerships and areas of interest to see the latest demonstrations. Bring in intersecting and thought provoking demonstrators to stay on top of the capabil-
ities of the software you own and leverage it better to reduce the costs of upgrading and augment current capabilities.
• Integrate Internal Systems:
Based on the lessons of the Real Story Consultant Group, integrate your DAM practices out to the CMS, Video and Documentation teams. Implement process
governance to streamline the transfer of metadata and IP management across your departments and companies. Leverage the “Single Source of Truth”.
• Staff for Success:
Make sure to have backup and cross-training between the various DAM/MAM/CMS administrators to find new ways of working, integrating and thinking about our “Sources
of Truth” across our companies.
• Keep New Developments Within Sight:
Keep practical and progressive thinking in place by following the DAM industry at the highest levels. Delegate internal staff to work together to keep you at the forefront of
developing software and cloud based technologies. Always have a pool of internal knowledge at hand, to handle new business and organic growth opportunities that exist
today, and in the near future. Push your current vendors to implement new feature requests that fit your business goals and your client needs as a group, at the top levels,
as opposed to departmental individuals with separate agendas.
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Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Thank You
I hope that you found this useful and can apply some of its ideas to your core responsibilities or at least
have something completely different to talk about at your next cocktail party.
“If you can’t figure out how to keep it, just DAM-it.”
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Lessons in Digital Asset Management [ DAM ]
Glossary of Terms & Acronyms:
Terms from this document and from the Asset Management Community:
AFP - Apple Computer®
File Protocol or Apple’s network file
sharing language.
Analytics - Tracking information that is the discovery, interpre-
tation, and communication of meaningful patterns in data.
Asset Librarian - A person or persons who’s task is to
organize, share and tag the metadata on company assets and
provide the relevant context of asset management.
The Cloud - A web accessed server that is maintained and
owned by a cloud service provider like Amazon or Google.
CMS - Content Management Systems: This used to denote
publishing systems that had the ability to re-code data to be
used across the omni-channel, but it has de-evolved into most-
ly Web Content Management. I consider this to be a generic
term with connotations in the Web Publishing business sector.
DAM - Digital Asset Management: A platform that allows the
end users to search, manage and centralize assets to create a
single source of truth in digital formats.
DAM Foundation - An organization dedicated to the develop-
ment and evolution of Digital Asset Management.
Dublin Core - A subset of 15 standard metadata fields that are
generic and usable in a wide range of applications.
DMS - Document Management System: A system that
specializes in the collection, tagging and production of office/
text based documents. Also called DIS (Document Information
System).
EXIF - Digital photography metadata standards which stands
for Exchangeable File Information Format.
Ingestion - the act of bringing an asset into a management
system for tracking.
IP - Intellectual Property: The legal term for any/all files and
assets that you have created or own the right to use.
KMS - Knowledge Management System: A generic term used
to describe many varied file/data systems.
MAM - Media Asset Management: A server devoted to the
creation and production of Video/Marketing content.
Omni-channel - The entire distribution and consumption of
content across all publishing markets including social media,
video markets, book markets, and electronic applications.
PIM - Product Information Management System: Platforms
that specialize in tracking and tagging of product information
and tying it to SKU/Serial/ID numbering to tie Engineering and
customer data together.
PM - Project Management: A system that organizes and helps
an organization track and manage its projects.
WCM - Web Content Management: A hybrid and subset of
DAM and PIM that allows for the publishing and development
of web browser based display of content.
Real Story Group - A consulting company that specializes
in the discovery and classification of Asset Management
Systems.
ROT - Redundant, Outdated and Tired information. It is a fact
of life that databases become inefficient by inaccurate, incom-
plete or just plain wrong information. This greatly reduces their
effectiveness and can undermine your entire effort.
SaaS - A software licensing and delivery model in which
software is licensed on a subscription basis and is centrally
hosted. It is sometimes referred to as “on-demand software”.
SaaS is typically accessed by users using a thin client via a
web browser.
Schema - A diagram or list of what your planning to im-
plement. This is used to describe a metadata plan for the
cascade of information and who has access to the metadata
forms and what rights they have to see/edit the information.
SDK - Software Development Kit: a set of tools for interfacing
between separate systems. Can also be called an API (Appli-
cation Programming Interface)
SMB - Microsoft Windows®
propriety network sharing lan-
guage, also called Samba.
NFS - Network File System: A distributed file system protocol
originally developed by Sun Microsystems®
in 1984, allowing a
client computer to access files over a computer network much
like local storage.
Metadata - Information about the content and assets.
IPTC - A set of standard metadata fields that was developed
by the International Press Communications Council.
OVP - Online Video Platform, i.e. YouTube and Vimeo are
great examples.
VDP - Video Distribution Platform: A system to display video.
Versioning - The mechanism to track the changes of docu-
ments and files over time as they are revised.
XML - A standard for exchanging metadata information via the
Extensible Markup Language.