Emily Tan
Apr 11, 2014

MavSocial signs with Getty to offer content on top of social management

SINGAPORE - Social-media-management platform MavSocial has signed a publishing agreement with Getty Images, granting its users access to more than 16-million images and illustrations.

Matthew Holden
Matthew Holden

Playing in the same space as Hootsuite, San Francisco-based MavSocial aims to have an edge by supporting content creation as well as management. 

The platform currently enables its clients to manage digital content, create social media marketing campaigns and to publish in social media networks including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, Tumblr and Chinese networks such as Sina Weibo, YouKu and Ren Ren. in Asia, it has offices in Singapore and Hong Kong. 

The deal with Getty adds to the platform's pre-existing access to Shutterstock-owned, BigStock's images which gain MavSocial users access to images at a highly reduced rate. 

“If companies are to succeed in social media they need to leverage the power of strong images,” said Matthew Holden, founder and CEO of MavSocial. “Every single picture-based social media post must instantly grab and hold a viewer's attention. Having Getty Images available within our software platform ensures that our clients can make demonstrable and long-lasting impression with their followers.”

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

7 hours ago

APAC is a market of inspiration: OMD's George Manas

In a conversation with Campaign, OMD's worldwide CEO George Manas and APAC CEO Charlotte Lee discuss everything from managing agency operations to cookie deprecation to Gen AI, diversity and more.

7 hours ago

Google delays cookie deprecation again: APAC adtech ...

Google will now phase out cookies entirely in 2025 after being told the concerns around Privacy Sandbox still need to be addressed.

10 hours ago

Cheuk Chiang assumes CEO role at Bastion's ANZ ...

Chiang moves from his position as APAC CEO of Dentsu Creative.

17 hours ago

Having the balls to check: How a pregnancy test ...

An Ogilvy-backed campaign’s 40-second ad features a pair of gonads — Tano and Nato — who take a pregnancy test and find out they are negative for testicular cancer.