Use cases

Creative agencies

TL;DR

The Problem

  • Every project runs through too many tools. Source media lives in storage, review happens somewhere else, and delivery gets assembled in a third place. Every handoff is another chance for the wrong version to move forward.
  • Freelancers and clients never quite fit the workflow. Ad hoc invites, expiring links, and side-channel threads get the job done until someone opens the wrong file or the link expires mid-review.
  • Feedback ends up everywhere except on the frame. Notes arrive in Slack, email, and exported PDFs with no clear connection to the edit they were meant for. Someone has to piece all of it together before the next revision can start, and that someone is usually doing it off the clock.
  • Delivery becomes its own project. Once a round is approved, producers rebuild the handoff from scratch: pulling selects, re-exporting files, and assembling a client presentation that should have been one click away.

What Aspect Does for Creative Agencies

Aspect replaces the patchwork of storage, review links, and manual delivery packaging with one system. Producers spend their time moving work forward instead of managing files.
  • Keep every client's work completely isolated. Scoped permissions mean editors never see each other's projects, even when they're working in the same system on the same day.
  • Tie feedback directly to the frame it belongs to, so the reconciliation work that turns revision rounds into non-billable hours goes away.
  • Turn the approved working set into the client delivery.

The Solution

Guest Collaborators and Permissions

Creative agencies are one of the few production environments where a single team simultaneously manages completely separate permission structures for dozens of active clients. An editor working on a pharmaceutical brand in the morning and a consumer goods campaign in the afternoon cannot have those clients see each other's work. Most platforms treat this as an edge case. For agencies, it is the baseline requirement on every project, every day. Guest access and scoped permissions let agencies bring freelancers, editors, retouchers, and clients into the same system, limited to exactly what they need. A client sees their campaign. A freelancer sees their deliverables. Internal teams see everything they're assigned to, and nothing else. This compounds over time. Instead of building a new permission setup for every client and every project, the agency builds it once per role and applies it everywhere. Onboarding a new freelancer takes minutes instead of a back-and-forth about which Dropbox folder to send them. Inviting a client to review takes one link instead of a manual export and a covering email with context that should already be visible.

Comments, Markup, and Version Stacking

The average creative project goes through three to five revision rounds. When feedback arrives disconnected from the asset — in Slack, email, or a PDF — producers spend significant non-billable hours piecing notes together before a single change gets made. At an agency running twenty active projects, that work adds up fast and becomes hours every week that the agency absorbs without billing for them. Frame-accurate comments and markup tie feedback directly to the asset it belongs to, on the exact frame and version. Version stacking keeps every round connected: V1 through final in one thread instead of a new folder, a new link, or a new Slack message asking which file is current. Reviewers see exactly what changed from one round to the next. Nobody is confused about which version they're approving, so rounds that used to restart because of version mix-ups just move forward. And when a client asks to go back to something from round two, everything is already there.

Branded Delivery and Presentations

Agencies care about two things: the quality of the work and the experience around the work. A polished client presentation at delivery is part of the product, but most agencies assemble that presentation manually after every approval round. The last thing the client sees before signing off is often the most chaotic part of the process: a raw download folder, a string of Dropbox links, or a WeTransfer that expires before the client's legal team gets a chance to review it. Branded share links and presentation-style views turn the approved working set into a polished client-facing handoff without leaving the system the work was already reviewed in. The agency's brand is on the delivery, and the assets are organized the way the client expects to receive them. How an agency packages final work is part of how clients decide whether to come back. A delivery that feels considered and professional says something about the agency itself.

What a Workflow with Aspect Unlocks

The BottleneckHow Aspect Solves ItWhat Your Team Gains
Every new client and freelancer requires a new permission setup, usually through ad hoc invites and shared foldersScoped permissions give every collaborator exactly the access they needOnboarding is repeatable, and access management stops being a producer's side job
Feedback arrives in Slack, email, and PDFs with no connection to the asset, forcing producers to piece notes together before every revision roundFrame-accurate comments tie feedback to the exact frame and versionRevision rounds get shorter, non-billable hours drop, and version mix-ups stop derailing approval cycles
Client handoffs get rebuilt manually after every approval round, with raw folders, expiring links, and long covering emailsApproved assets become the client presentation — branded, organized, and ready to share from the same system the work was reviewed inThe agency's final impression matches the quality of the work

Does Aspect Fit Your Creative Agency?

Agencies that get the most from Aspect usually share a few of these patterns:
  • Producers spend time every week piecing together feedback from email, Slack, and PDFs before revisions can start, adding to non-billable hours
  • The team manages multiple active clients simultaneously and needs those clients completely isolated from each other inside the same workflow
  • Freelancers and outside collaborators are part of every project and currently get access through ad hoc invites, shared folders, or side-channel workarounds
  • Client delivery is assembled manually after every approval round instead of flowing directly from the reviewed and approved working set
If your producers are absorbing that coordination as non-billable overhead and your delivery workflow doesn't match the quality of the work, book a demo to see how Aspect can replace the patchwork. Book a demo

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