The decision to invest in dedicated video asset management software is usually triggered by a specific pain point that has finally become intolerable: a major client project delayed because no one could find the approved footage, a compliance breach caused by content distributed past its rights window, or a content operations review that revealed the team was recreating assets they had already produced and simply could not locate.
Whatever the trigger, the decision to evaluate platforms puts you in a market that has expanded significantly in recent years. The challenge is no longer finding a solution — it is selecting the right one from a large and often confusing array of options. This guide walks through the criteria that matter most.
Start with Your Own Requirements
Every evaluation should begin with internal analysis before it looks at any vendor. The questions worth answering first:
What volume of video do you currently manage, and what is your growth trajectory? A system that works for 500 hours of archived footage may not perform at 5,000 hours. If your production is growing, build to your three-year expectation rather than your current state.
How many people need access, and with what permissions? A team of five with broadly similar access needs is a very different implementation problem from a global organisation with editors, rights managers, compliance reviewers, channel managers, and external agency partners all requiring different permission levels.
What formats and codecs do you work with? If you produce across broadcast, social, and digital signage simultaneously, you need a platform with broad codec support and automated transcoding. Not every platform handles every format equally well.
What does your production workflow look like? The best software integrates with how your team already works — feeding into the editing tools and distribution platforms you already use — rather than requiring everyone to change their workflow around a new system.
The Core Feature Set to Evaluate
Once you have mapped your requirements, you can assess platforms against the specific capabilities that matter for video.
AI-powered search and tagging is now table stakes for serious video asset management software. The platform should be able to search across content — what is shown, what is said, what is written on screen — not just filenames and manually entered metadata. Auto-tagging that analyses ingested footage and applies structured descriptive metadata dramatically reduces the manual cataloguing burden and keeps libraries organised as they scale.
Version control must be purpose-built for video, not adapted from document management. You need to be able to track every iteration of a project, with timestamps, author attribution, and approval status, and to establish a clear chain of custody from raw footage to final approved deliverable.
Rights and metadata management determines how safely you can distribute content. The platform should allow you to attach rights information — licensed duration, permitted territories, approved use cases, talent release references — directly to the asset, with automated alerting when rights windows approach expiry.
Transcoding and format management removes one of the most significant time drains in most content operations. The ability to generate any required output format from a single master file, either on demand or automatically on ingestion, eliminates the manual conversion work that consumes hours of editor time.
Integration breadth is increasingly the differentiator between platforms that slot into a modern content stack and those that create a silo. Look for native integrations or robust API access for the tools you already use: editing software, CMS platforms, social publishing tools, and whatever else sits in your workflow.
Evaluation Process Recommendations
The most useful evaluation step is a structured pilot. Identify a representative sample of your current library — ideally including some awkwardly named legacy files, some content with complex rights, and some recently produced assets — and test how each shortlisted platform handles them. The real-world performance on your actual content is far more informative than any vendor demo.
Involve the people who will use the system most: editors, content managers, and whoever handles rights and compliance. Their friction points are what the system needs to solve. A platform that satisfies the IT team but frustrates the creative team will not be adopted consistently, and inconsistent adoption destroys the value of any asset management system.
Finally, weight the vendor’s approach to AI development seriously. The gap between platforms that have invested deeply in AI-assisted workflows and those that have bolted on superficial features is significant and growing. The platform you choose now will define your content operations capability for several years. Choosing one with a strong AI roadmap is an investment in future productivity, not just present capability.
The right video asset management software does not just solve today’s organisational problem. It builds the foundation for a content operation that can scale cleanly as production volumes grow, teams change, and the demands of distribution continue to evolve.






