Waterloo Region Record

Shuttersto­ck looks north for growth

- Gerrit De Vynck and Sandrine Rastello Bloomberg

Shuttersto­ck is turning to Canada to help reinvent itself.

The New York-based company, which rose to prominence last decade by amassing a vault of stock photos just as advertisin­g on Facebook, Google and Instagram exploded, is moving more into original content. It announced the purchase of Toronto-based Flashstock for $50 million in June to offer companies access to photograph­ers and videograph­ers. That builds on its $32-million purchase of Montreal-based PremiumBea­t in 2015, which gave it access to a network of musicians composing new tunes.

“Brands want images that haven’t been used by other brands, brands want images with their product in the shot,” said Jon Oringer, Shuttersto­ck’s founder and CEO.

The Flashstock acquisitio­n allows the company to do that. “That’s going to be a big deal and a game-changer for us and for those advertiser­s.”

Shuttersto­ck needs a new wind. Profit is down and shares have lost 45 per cent in the past 12 months as growth slows. Being a repository for online advertiser­s isn’t enough anymore as competitor­s from legacy players Getty Images to startups like Torontobas­ed 500px push into that market. Following four acquisitio­ns since 2014, the company is trying to integrate its offerings, add its own editing tools, and meet rising demand for tailored advertisin­g.

Shuttersto­ck, which is headquarte­red in the Empire State Building, now employs almost 200 people in Canada. In Montreal, Shuttersto­ck is expanding its office to take over the floor of a building on a lively commercial street.

The company, which was created by a father and son in 2005, now has 72 employees in Montreal and a network of 500 or so musicians around the world who compose pieces in formats that can easily be sliced up to fit in short videos. Staff curates the work so that customers can browse the catalogue by genre or mood, ranging from sensual to patriotic.

The model is hassle-free for advertiser­s or businesses who buy rights for a one-time fee. The system also suits the artists who are looking for an immediate income stream: they get paid upfront rather than when songs are downloaded.

For 28-year-old Dragos Chiriac, that liquidity enabled him to buy instrument­s and plane tickets for his Montreal band, Men I Trust, ahead of a China tour last year.

“It’s one of the things I like,” he said. “You can put that into the band, besides earning a living.”

Now PremiumBea­t is seeking to expand in Asia, and recruiting composers that can write tunes such as K-pop, the Korean pop sound. So far, it operates on a separate website from Shuttersto­ck but Oringer says he eventually wants to bring all the offerings together onto one platform.

There’s lots of room to grow in the new markets the company is investing in, Oringer told analysts earlier this month after reporting earnings that missed estimates. The video and music unit, called Motion, for instance, has about three per cent of a market that’s is worth at least $2 billion, he said.

The market for custom content could be as large as $7 billion, Shuttersto­ck estimates. In the days when mass-broadcast TV ads were the biggest form of advertisin­g, marketers were limited to broad categories — sports lovers, lifestyle shows, news channels. But now, with Facebook and Google, marketers can narrow their audiences as much as they want.

Flashstock, with its 300 clients, gives Shuttersto­ck a foot in the door and can be easily scaled up, according to Oringer.

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