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Brightcove

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American software company
Brightcove, Inc.
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryInternet video
Founded2004; 21 years ago (2004)
Founders
HeadquartersBoston, Massachusetts, United States
Key people
  • Marc DeBevoise (CEO)
  • Rob Noreck (CFO)
RevenueDecreaseUS$201 million (2023)[1]
Number of employees
670 (2023)[2]
ParentBending Spoons
Websitebrightcove.com

Brightcove, Inc. is an American software company based inBoston, Massachusetts, that produces anonline video platform. Founded in 2004 byJeremy Allaire and Bob Mason, the company went public in 2012, and in 2025 was acquired byBending Spoons.

History

[edit]

Brightcove was founded in 2004 byJeremy Allaire, who served as Executive Chairman until April 2016,[3] and Bob Mason. The company was named after a harbor where the founder liked to kayak named Bright Cove Harbor inCape Cod, Massachusetts.[4]

In March 2006, Brightcove acquired Seattle-based Metastories, makers of StoryMaker, a publishing tool for video, audio, images, and text. In May of that year, it established a distribution partnership withTiVo[5][6][7] and acontent delivery partnership withLimelight Networks.

Coinciding with a series of deals withUK media companies, Brightcove opened an office inLondon in July 2007.

In November 2009, Brightcove was named as one of the top two U.S. video platform vendors.[8]

In April 2010, it was reported that Brightcove raised $12 million in fourth-round funding, nearing a total of $100 million, but still barely breaking even with the projected $50 million in annual revenue.[9]

In August 2010, Brightcove announced a content delivery partnership withAkamai Technologies.[10] Along with Akamai Technologies, its other partnerships include the ones withSitecore, Cleeng,[11] FreeWheel, YuMe, Conviva, Oracle,DoubleClick, and other organizations.[12]

As a public company

[edit]

Brightcovewent public in February 2012 with their stock priced at $11 per share. The price of the stock during the summer of 2017 was $7 per share, with the stock down 38 percent in the past year.[13]

In July 2017, the company announced that CEO David Mendels agreed to step down as of July 31, 2017.[14] Andrew Feinberg, previously Brightcove's president and chief operating officer was named acting CEO[14] until April 2018 when Jeff Ray was appointed as the new CEO.[15]

Internet TV partnerships

[edit]

In December 2005, Brightcove partnered withReuters to create a program tosyndicate customized news video players.[16]

In 2006, Brightcove completed Internet TV partnership deals with a number of large media companies including The New York Times Company (NYTimes.com andAbout.com),[17]Discovery Communications (Discovery Channel,Travel Channel), andSony BMG among others.

In 2007, Brightcove capitalized on a trend of magazine and newspaper publishers expanding into online video[18] by signing deals with print media companies includingTime Inc.,TV Guide, andWashingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive.

Since then, a number oftelevision andcable media companies have begun to use Brightcove as an alternate, non-exclusive distribution channel for their video content.[19]

Acquired by Bending Spoons

[edit]

Bending Spoons, an Italian technology company agreed to acquire Brightcove for $233 million.[2] The acquisition was completed in February 2025.[20]

Brightcove Studio

[edit]

The Brightcove Studio was home to the Brightcove Internet TV platform. Geared toward professional video publishers, the studio was used to create, customize, distribute, andmonetize video player widgets. Videos, lineups, players, and onlinechannels were all created and managed through acontent management system called theBrightcove Console, anAdobe Flex-based internet application. Monetization was achieved through video sales and advertising.

Former services

[edit]

Brightcove.tv

[edit]

Brightcove.tv was a video website dedicated to promoting Brightcove content. Every publisher who created a Brightcove account was assigned achannel, their own page on Brightcove.tv.

Publishers could customize their channel through the Brightcove Console. Simple details like the channel's name, logo, and description could be updated in the user's profile. The content of a channel was defined by changing the settings of individual titles, lineups, and players to allow distribution and promotion on Brightcove.tv.

On December 17, 2008, Brightcove shut down Brightcove Network accounts that had not been upgraded to paid Brightcove platform accounts. At the same time, they shut down the Brightcove.TV website (which is separate from the corporate Brightcove website).[21]

App Cloud

[edit]

In May 2011, Brightcove announced its App Cloud online product that was targeted at the development of mobile applications.[22] App Cloud allows companies to develop apps once using its online interface, and then deploy them as iPhone and Android native apps.[22]

App Cloud was made generally available in November 2011.[23]NBC used App Cloud to power its NBCU Screen ItEmmy screener app for theiPad. The app allows 15,000 members of theAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences who vote on theEmmy awards to gain authenticated access to view NBC's programs.[24] The App Cloud was terminated in early 2013.[25]

Products

[edit]
  • Video Cloud
  • Video Marketing Suite
  • Enterprise Video Suite
  • Brightcove Campaign
  • Brightcove Continuum
  • Brightcove Engage
  • Player
  • Live
  • SSAI
  • OTT Experiences
  • Zencoder

Management

[edit]

In November 2014, Brightcove brought on its newChief Financial Officer Kevin R. Rhodes.[26] He was later replaced by Robert Noreck, who had previously served as a Senior Vice President. Noreck assumed the role of Executive Vice President as well. In July 2017, theCEO David Mendels stepped down, after a year of poor stock performance. Andrew Feinberg who was the president andchief operating officer of Brightcove earlier, was the acting CEO until Jeff Ray was named CEO in April 2018.[27][28] Upon his retirement in February 2022, Ray was succeeded byMarc DeBevoise, former president of CBS Interactive and Chief Digital Officer of ViacomCBS.[29][30]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"2023 Annual Report (Form 10-K)". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. February 22, 2024.
  2. ^abChesto, Jon (November 25, 2024)."Video company Brightcove sold for $233 million to Italian app developer".Boston Globe.
  3. ^"Brightcove Appoints Gary Haroian as Chairman of the Board of Directors (NASDAQ:BCOV)".investor.brightcove.com. Archived fromthe original on 2017-07-23. Retrieved2017-07-26.
  4. ^Maffel, Lucia (2018-11-01)."The Stories Behind Your Favorite Boston Startup Name".BostInno. Retrieved2018-11-08.
  5. ^Lieberman, David (2006-05-09)."TiVo Hooks up with Internet Video and Ad Sales Service". USA Today. Retrieved2010-04-26.
  6. ^Wingfield, Nick (2006-05-10)."TiVo to Offer Video From the Internet In Brightcove Deal".The Wall Street Journal.
  7. ^"TiVo Links with Brightcove as PC-TV Lines Blur".CNET. 2006-05-09. Archived fromthe original on January 30, 2013.
  8. ^"Brightcove a top online video platform vendor".MBI(UK):Broadcast. 2009-11-10.
  9. ^"Brightcove raises $12M on way to IPO: More money down the online-video drain?".VentureBeat. 2010-04-05. Archived fromthe original on 2010-04-07.
  10. ^"Akamai & Brightcove Announce Global Alliance".Brightcove Blog.
  11. ^"Cleeng Partners with Brightcove For Video Content Micropayments | Archives, Technology | Cablefax".Cablefax. 2011-05-05. Retrieved2017-08-21.
  12. ^"New Brightcove Video Player Receives Broad Support from the Video Ecosystem".comScore, Inc. Retrieved2017-08-21.
  13. ^O'Brien, Kelly J. (2017-07-26)."Brightcove CEO David Mendels steps down".Boston Business Journal. Retrieved2017-07-27.
  14. ^abMartin, Dylan (26 July 2017)."Brightcove CEO Resigns After Facing Investor Pressure".The Business Journals. Retrieved21 May 2024.
  15. ^"Brightcove Appoints Jeff Ray CEO".Reuters. 11 April 2018.
  16. ^"Reuters video to get mass distribution".CNET. 2005-12-20. Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2012.
  17. ^"The New York Times partners with Web-video firm".Crain's New York Business. 2006-02-08.
  18. ^Lieberman, David (2007-02-12)."Magazines start studios to join online video craze".USA Today. Retrieved2010-04-26.
  19. ^Schneider, Michael (2007-06-17)."Fox locks deal with Web TV service: Brightcove pacts with company".Variety.
  20. ^Aloe, Jess (February 5, 2025)."Bending Spoons closes Brightcove acquisition". Boston Business Journal.
  21. ^GigaOMNewTeeVee.comArchived 2008-11-07 at theWayback Machine (11/03/2008)
  22. ^abDevindra Hardawar, VentureBeat. "Brightcove steps into app creation biz with App Cloud." May 24, 2011.
  23. ^Lawler, Ryan (November 30, 2011)."Brightcove launches cloud-based mobile app platform". Archived fromthe original on 4 April 2012. Retrieved26 March 2012.
  24. ^Richmond, Will (March 16, 2012)."Brightcove Powering NBCU's New Emmy Screener iPad". Retrieved26 March 2012.
  25. ^"Brightcove AppCloud FAQ" (Press release). June 20, 2013. Archived fromthe original on 2 March 2013. Retrieved20 June 2013.
  26. ^David Harris, Boston Business Journal"Brightcove taps PlumChoice exec as new CFO." November 10, 2014.
  27. ^"www.bizjournals.com/boston/news/2017/07/26/brightcove-ceo-david-mendels-steps-down.html".www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved2017-08-22.
  28. ^"Leadership | Brightcove".Brightcove. Retrieved2018-07-30.
  29. ^Maas, Jennifer (2022-02-09)."Former ViacomCBS Digital Chief Marc DeBevoise Named Brightcove CEO".Variety. Retrieved2022-02-10.
  30. ^Coster, Helen (2022-02-09)."EXCLUSIVE-Brightcove names former ViacomCBS exec Marc DeBevoise CEO".Nasdaq.Archived from the original on 2017-12-19. Retrieved2022-02-10.

External links

[edit]
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