
Adobe Experience Manager Assets
Digital asset management software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is Adobe Experience Manager Assets
Adobe Experience Manager Assets is an enterprise digital asset management (DAM) application used to store, organize, govern, and deliver rich media such as images, video, and documents. It supports marketing, brand, and content operations teams that need centralized asset libraries, metadata management, and controlled distribution across channels. The product is commonly deployed as part of Adobe Experience Cloud and integrates with Adobe creative and web experience tools. It emphasizes enterprise governance features such as permissions, workflows, and content delivery integrations.
Enterprise-grade governance controls
The platform provides granular permissions, role-based access, and audit-oriented controls suited to large organizations. It supports workflow-driven review and approval processes to standardize asset handling across teams. These capabilities help enforce brand and compliance requirements when many contributors and agencies are involved.
Deep Adobe ecosystem integration
It integrates closely with Adobe Creative Cloud applications and other Adobe Experience Cloud components, supporting common creative-to-publish workflows. This reduces friction for teams that already use Adobe tools for creation, web experience management, and campaign execution. Integration can simplify handoffs between creative production, asset governance, and downstream delivery.
Scalable asset delivery options
The product supports structured metadata, renditions, and delivery patterns that fit multi-channel publishing needs. It can be used to manage large libraries and distribute assets to web properties and other endpoints through configured integrations. This is useful for organizations operating multiple brands, regions, or digital properties.
Complex implementation and administration
Deployments typically require specialized expertise for configuration, information architecture, and workflow design. Ongoing administration can be demanding, especially when integrating with identity, web platforms, and downstream delivery systems. Smaller teams may find the operational overhead higher than lighter-weight DAM tools.
Higher total cost profile
Licensing and required services for enterprise deployment can be significant relative to mid-market DAM offerings. Costs can increase with additional modules, storage, environments, and integration requirements. Budget planning often needs to account for implementation partners and long-term platform operations.
Best fit within Adobe stack
Organizations not standardized on Adobe tools may realize fewer benefits from the product’s tight ecosystem integrations. Connecting to non-Adobe content, marketing, or delivery systems can require additional integration work. This can make the solution less attractive for teams seeking a more vendor-agnostic DAM footprint.
Plan & Pricing
| Plan | Price | Key features & notes |
|---|---|---|
| Prime | Custom pricing — contact Adobe sales ("Get pricing") | Ready-to-use DAM for targeted use cases; search, discovery, collaboration; Adobe Creative Cloud connections; storage: up to 30 TB; expandable across the enterprise. |
| Ultimate | Custom pricing — contact Adobe sales ("Get pricing") | Enterprise DAM including all Prime features plus comprehensive APIs, Adobe Experience Cloud connections, Dynamic Media, advanced options; storage: no limit; additional license-type options (Power users, Collaborators, Limited users). |
Seller details
Adobe Inc.
San Jose, California, USA
1982
Public
https://www.adobe.com/
https://x.com/Adobe
https://www.linkedin.com/company/adobe/