Both healthcare and media production face the same operational challenge: managing a large, specialized workforce under volatile, high-stakes demand. In hospitals, patient inflow unpredictability strains staffing, while in media production, fluctuating project pipelines drive overtime, budget overruns, and resource conflicts. Healthcare has already solved this problem at scale using predictive census AI—forecasting demand with >90% accuracy and optimizing staffing in real time. Media production follows a structurally similar pattern: patient flow mirrors project flow, departments mirror production units, and clinical resources map to crew, studios, and equipment. By adapting healthcare’s proven architecture—time-series forecasting, ensemble models, and visual operational dashboards—media companies can shift from reactive scheduling to proactive workforce management, unlocking significant reductions in overtime, idle time, and budget variance.
Signiant – The Real Cloud Strategy in Post: Flexibility, Not Absolutes
There is this dream in our industry that eventually everything in post will live in the cloud; apps, storage, workflows, the whole pipeline. A clean, centralized model where local infrastructure becomes obsolete.
It’s a compelling idea, and in certain corners of the industry, it’s already happening. But for the vast majority of post teams we work with, things are more layered, more distributed, and more hybrid.
MASV – Who Is Troveo?
Troveo is a video licensing platform helping creators monetize unused footage: Content owners, creatives, basically anyone with unused video can license their content libraries for AI training. The company provides a new revenue stream for content owners, while enabling AI companies to develop high-quality, legally compliant content models.
LucidLink – Cutting Carbon, Not Creativity: The Role Of Cloud-Native Workflows in Media’s Future
Media never sits still. In the past decade, we’ve swapped tape for digital, cable for streaming and edit bays for global remote workflows. Every shift opens new doors for creativity and new challenges for how we work.
But behind every blockbuster, ad campaign or streaming series lies a cost the industry has often swept under the rug: the carbon footprint of media production. Terabytes of footage are duplicated, stored and transferred across multiple facilities and networks.
How Haivision is Powering the Next Phase of Media Efficiency
In today’s fast paced media landscape, efficiency is no longer optional, it is essential to staying competitive. From contribution to cloud-based workflows, broadcast and media organizations are under constant pressure to deliver content faster, smarter, and more cost effectively. Tried, field-tested, and trusted by the world’s leading broadcasters, Haivision’s comprehensive portfolio of live video solutions power the highest quality, lowest latency broadcast workflows with maximum reliability. Haivision’s pioneering video transmitters, encoders, receivers, and cloud solutions enable broadcasters to deliver pristine quality live sports, news, and events over any network from any location to productions on premises or in the cloud.
Imagine Products: Automating Camera to Edit Workflows
When it comes to on-set media management, there’s no such thing as a one-size-fits-all solution. Every production, from short-form commercial shoots to large-scale projects, faces its own unique challenges. Despite differences in scale, crew structure, camera types, delivery formats, and timelines, there is always a critical need to offload your camera originals safely and get them to your post team as quickly and efficiently as possible.
And yet, this seemingly straightforward goal is often a source of stress, friction, and delay.
IABM Technology and Trends Roadmap – 2025
The IABM Technology and Trends Roadmap isn’t just for industry technologists to use as a reference. IABM has discovered industry execs using it as a starting point for their keynote speeches: product line managers are using it to plot their own products; and corporate board members get a better understanding of where the company’s products sit on the adoption curve, hence a better grasp or risks vs gross margins. This also assists marketing activities by giving an indication of how best to promote products within M&E and adjacent/vertical market areas.
Calrec – Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
Covid taught the broadcast industry many things, and the requirement to quickly adapt to new ways of working is perhaps its lasting legacy. As broadcasters scrambled to get content on air, it was a stark reminder that companies need to ensure their business, supply chains and technologies are agile and flexible enough to be able to withstand different kinds of widescale disruption.
Since then, companies across the industry have come to value the importance of collaboration as a key business driver. As Henry Ford famously said, “Coming together is a beginning, staying together is progress, and working together is success”. He should know, he forever revolutionized the transport industry and his legacy of affordability and reliability is still standing strong.
Telos Alliance – Next Generation Audio: The future of broadcast audio is here, today
Audiences today expect higher quality media, whether content is being viewed on a television, mobile device, or streaming platform. Listeners now anticipate consistent, high-quality audio that is clear, personally engaging, and available in their preferred language. Advances in media delivery have ensured that audio experiences are more immersive and enjoyable, meeting the expectations of modern viewers. With immersive technologies like Dolby Atmos and MPEG-H, viewers can expect more dynamic home entertainment. Content creators and platforms should deliver audio that meets these expectations, including consistent loudness, clear dialogue, and support for personalized standards. Enhanced audio quality boosts engagement, making content more enjoyable and effective. For broadcasters and streamers, this translates to loyal viewers, valuable audiences for advertisers, and sustainable subscription revenues.
Projective – Wrangling the wild west of post-production
For decades, post-production has been a crucial and dynamic component of the media supply chain. From editing and sound design to color grading and visual effects, post-production ensures that the final product aligns with creative visions and meets industry standards, enhancing the overall viewer experience. Yet for many professionals in the industry, it can feel like the “Wild West.” This phrase frequently comes up in conversations with technology buyers, at trade shows, and during countless discussions about workflow challenges. It’s a fitting analogy—a lawless, chaotic environment where workflows are anything but streamlined, resources are scattered, and collaboration suffers.
But it doesn’t have to be this way. Post-production, while complex, can transition from disorder to structure with the adoption of thoughtful creative project frameworks.