Air raised $69M to prove that creative asset management deserves its own category – one that Dropbox was never designed to serve.
ENTRY ANGLES
Build creative workflow platforms that simplify file management and asset organization for creators · Create operational tooling that reduces friction in existing workflows (similar to how Dropbox simplified cloud storage)
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Workflow simplification and UX design, File management and asset organization systems
AIR FOUNDER
“new standard for creative teams producing social media content.”
Don't let the apparent simplicity fool you: Air just raised $35 million in new funding, bringing its total to $69 million.
Air is a platform for managing creative operations – the workflows around producing, reviewing, and distributing images, video, and other visual assets.
The company argues that managing creative work is its own distinct operational category, which it calls "Creative Ops" – drawing a deliberate analogy to DevOps, the discipline that brought automation and structure to software development workflows. Just as DevOps spawned an entire ecosystem of specialized tooling, Air believes Creative Ops needs its own purpose-built platforms.
Air even claims to be "the only way to automate creative operations" – a bold statement, but one grounded in specific workflow types the platform addresses.
Asset management is the foundation: a single home for images and video, with strong cataloging, search, and permissions tools. On top of that sits an approval workflow layer – every asset can receive comments and feedback, carry a formal approval status, and move through a configurable review chain, automatically advancing once the previous stage is signed off. Version history is preserved throughout, so reviewers can compare iterations or roll back to any previous state. External sharing rounds it out: clients and other outside stakeholders can be given link-based access to specific assets or curated boards, with optional download permissions for originals. All access – internal and external – is visible to platform admins, so there's no ambiguity about who can see what.
Air offers a free tier for two users with 5 GB of storage. A small team of five with 300 GB runs $300/month; a larger team with 3 TB costs $600/month. Enterprise plans with API access and advanced auth are available on request.
Founded in 2020, Air now counts more than 2,000 companies as customers.
Air positions itself as a more purposeful alternative to Google Drive and Dropbox for creative teams – and it's careful to note that neither of those tools is at fault for being inconvenient. They were built as general-purpose personal storage solutions, not as workflow platforms for a specific type of work.
As one of Air's co-founders put it in Forbes: Dropbox can technically do everything you need, but it requires multiple steps and constant vigilance to not drop the ball. Air collapses those steps and bakes the agency's business logic directly into the platform.
Air's marketing leans into perennial designer pain points. The "five-minute feedback call" that turns into a 90-minute video conference – when a few comments on the asset in Air would have sufficed. The client who asks for all the images compiled into a Word file to show their boss, then tries to use the low-res exports for actual print production, and wonders why everything looks terrible – when a client board link in Air would have let them browse everything and download originals themselves.
That said, Air's claim of being the "only" platform in this category is the kind of thing that doesn't survive contact with a quick search.
Just in December, a [related review](/review/50-millionov-chelovek-bez-normalnoj-platformy-dlja-upravlenija-proektami) covered Plot, which raised $3 million for a conceptually similar creative workflow platform. Plot went through a pivot away from generic project management and settled on a sharper focus: a "new standard for creative teams producing social media content."
And there's an earlier example. Back in spring 2022, a [review here](/review/davajte-vytesnjat-universalov) covered Playbook, which raised $22 million for the same idea, marketing itself as "Dropbox plus Pinterest for designers." Playbook has since adopted more of the Creative Ops terminology itself.
The delightful irony is that Air is trying to do to Dropbox exactly what Dropbox once did to every other cloud storage service.
Dropbox's founder famously struggled to raise money because investors pointed to the many existing cloud storage platforms already on the market. What changed everything was a demo video showing how simple it was – drag files into a folder, done. Overnight, 45,000 people joined the waitlist. Then the investors came.
The point wasn't that storing files in the cloud was new. It was that Dropbox made it dramatically simpler. That reduction in friction changed the scale of the market entirely.
Creative Ops is following the same logic. Everything Air does can be done with Dropbox today – it's just slower and more error-prone. Air makes it simpler and faster.
And just as easier file storage attracted more users and spawned a wave of Dropbox competitors, a maturing Creative Ops category will support multiple players.
The creator economy is now a $2 trillion market employing nearly 50 million people – more than the entire global developer workforce, which sits around 30 million. A market that size needs dedicated operational tooling. And it's big enough to sustain more than one platform.
The immediate opportunity is straightforward: build creative workflow platforms. The examples in this review are a starting point, not an endpoint.
The more generalizable opportunity is building platforms that simplify other types of operations that currently require juggling multiple tools, a lot of manual effort, and a fair amount of hope that nothing falls through the cracks.
For inspiration, consider this story from the "Dark Side" archives: a team that built a product on exactly this principle and sold it for $200 million eighteen months after founding.
In 2013, most professionals had two email accounts – a personal Gmail and a work Exchange account. They spent their days switching between two apps. One person asked: "Why isn't there one good app for this?"
It wasn't technically complex. But the team obsessed over the interface – not to make it pretty but to ensure any task could be completed in at most three clicks. They literally timed workflows and counted clicks, then worked to reduce both. Eighteen months later, Microsoft bought the app for $200 million. The twist: Microsoft sent over the Outlook logo and asked them to rename it – the team had assumed they'd be improving the existing Outlook product, not replacing it.
On launch day, the new app had 3 million users. Three years later: hundreds of millions of monthly actives. As the founder admitted: "We weren't trying to reinvent email. We just decided to make it simpler." That was enough. It's the Dropbox story again – nobody invented cloud file sync, they just made it as simple as humanly possible.
Maybe you don't need to invent anything either. Take something that already exists in your market and make it the simplest version of itself that has ever existed.
So – what does your market have that you could simplify to that degree?