What is JumpStory? A platform that provides unlimited access to millions of authentic stock images, that can be used to: Boost a content library with access to millions of stock images, vectors, icons and illustrations. Use JumpStory's simple photo-editor to crop and resize images, insert text, adjust contrast or insert your own logo. JumpStory's AI TextMatch helps users save time searching for images, by letting the AI find relevant images to match…
$25
per month
Upland Kapost
Score 7.9 out of 10
N/A
Kapost is a content management platform with planning and workflow tools built in to create and market branded content, a publishing system to push content to dozens of other platforms, and reporting/analytics to measure and track the content’s performance
The main reason for the low rating is that I was charged without my permission / want, when my supposed free trial ended. At no point was I warned about my free trial expiring soon, nor was I asked whether I want to continue with a paid subscription. In my opinion, that is a very unprofessional and unethical business model, which basically equals fraud.
Kapost has potential to be a great asset in small and large orgs. If you're not producing a great deal of content, or coordinating across a large team, there's still tremendous value, but it scales as your org scales because it makes it easier to coordinate and manage large teams and large content archives.
Filtering: If you make the most out of your custom details and custom fields, you can gain newfound access to materials that may have long been lost in the ether. It's really easy for us, for instance, to see all of our videos at once. Or everything targeting a certain buying stage. Or you can keyword search to see everything on one topic.
Workflows: It's really nice to lay out "who sees what when" in a digital way, because everyone involved on an asset can easily see what stage things are at. You can also set deadlines to tasks, which seems a bit more firm than a casual email, because you can visually see how meeting your deadline fits within the whole timeline.
Calendars: The calendar feature is nice for us because we have a blog, so we can see when everything is (supposed) to go live. It's easy to see when I, as a copy editor, should be expecting work, so I can align my day accordingly. Way better than the old-fashioned "mental note" system.
Social media distribution needs improvement. Specifically a calendar for planned Tweets and a better way to schedule multiple shares of the same content.
System performance is somewhat slow.
Should be an easier way to make changes, like adding custom fields or publication destinations, to all content types, rather than one at a time.
We are using some other systems that might have replaced Kapost, but none of them had the workflow functionality we were looking for. So, we're sticking with Kapost for now.
The calendar view is a great feature and so are the custom views. It is relatively easy to see a clear view of what content the user is responsible for and then the due dates associated to it. The ability to create and update workflows for the team is easy to navigate and keeps us on track.
The customer support did not try to resolve my issue with the accidental charging and the refund I requested. Although they were quick to answer my email.
The reputation of the product matches up to its reputation as one of the leaders in the space. I love that you can share and access content at your fingertips from anywhere. The downside is that it does not have the prettiest interface but you can get over this with its functionality.
We decide to try JumpStory because of the free trial we were offered. Pexels outperforms JumpStory in: - Quality of photographs & videos available - Usability of search tool and website in general - NOT charging for free trial Shutterstock outperforms JumpStory in: - the selection of images available - pricing & the option to pay per image downloaded
Workfront has a lot of great features, but Kapost was the right tool for what we needed at the time. With a team of our size, we had to make sure we weren't biting off more than we could chew and the project never got off the ground. We had to be thoughtful with how we rolled it out.