Team Briefing
Who they are, how their business works, what they asked us for, why, and how ReelForge fits. Read this before the demo meeting.
01
Bright River is basically a photo factory. Brands like Zalando, Harrods, and Walmart send them raw product photos, and Bright River sends back polished, publish-ready images. Background removed, colors corrected, products retouched, shadows added — all the tedious post-production work that makes products look professional online.
They do this at an absolutely massive scale. Think of it like a conveyor belt: raw photos go in one end, and 40,000+ finished images come out the other end every single day. They've processed over 14 million images in the last year alone.
The secret sauce is their AI-Human hybrid workflow. AI handles the repetitive stuff (background removal, basic retouching), and human editors handle the nuance (complex retouching, quality control). This lets them offer the cheapest prices, fastest turnaround, and highest consistency in the market — simultaneously.
Key facts: founded in 2006 in Haarlem (Netherlands), PE-backed by Mentha Capital, dual HQ in Haarlem + New York, with production offices in Dhaka and Chennai. They're not a startup — they're a mature, profitable business with serious infrastructure.
Named clients include Harrods, Zalando, Walmart, Paul Smith, Frasers Group, NielsenIQ. These are massive accounts.
If we had to expand our in-house editing team to handle the work at the scale and level of quality Bright River provides, it would take us years. Matt Flowerday, Global Head of Photography, NielsenIQ
One important thing to understand: Bright River is not a creative agency. They don't do photography, creative direction, marketing strategy, or social media. They don't create anything from scratch. They take existing raw assets and make them look perfect. This distinction matters for understanding where we fit in.
02
Bright River started by doing one thing: editing photos. Remove background, add shadow, fix colors, done. Basic post-production at scale. That's still the core of the business (12M+ images per year).
Over time, they kept climbing the value chain — each new product captures a bigger piece of the visual content puzzle:
See the pattern? They started by cleaning up content someone else created, and over time moved toward creating content that never existed before. POSED creates on-model imagery from a flat product shot. Rendered creates 3D product views from a scan. Virtual Photography creates photorealistic product images entirely from CGI.
But notice where the chain stops: they've never entered social media content. They can edit a product video, but they can't create a hook, build a creative strategy, or make something designed to perform on TikTok. That's the gap we're filling.
| Product | Plain English | Scale |
|---|---|---|
| Editing | Remove backgrounds, fix colors, retouch products — the core business | 12M+ images/yr, 99.4% right first time |
| POSED | AI puts clothes/accessories on virtual models so you skip the model shoot | 900K+ images created, +14% engagement vs packshots |
| Rendered.AR | 3D product viewers + augmented reality (see the sofa in your living room) | 40K+ 3D models, +40% conversion |
| Real Estate | Photo editing, floor plans, video, virtual staging for property listings | 75% fewer re-shoots, 24H turnaround |
| Video Editing | Edit existing product videos (sizing, color, transitions, background knockout) | From $4.49/video |
| MRHI | Make product photos legible on tiny mobile screens | Up to 24% sales uplift (Unilever test) |
| Virtual Photo | CGI product images — no camera, no photographer, no studio | Fraction of traditional shoot cost |
| Content Enrichment | Clean up messy vendor-supplied imagery so your catalog looks consistent | — |
| Quickscan | Free audit: "your product photos could convert better, here's how" | Free — it's a sales tool |
03
Real estate is a dedicated growth vertical for Bright River — it has its own team, its own solution page on their website, and its own sales motion. It's separate from the e-commerce business.
Important nuance: they don't sell to individual brokers. They sell to real estate photography companies and agencies — the businesses that shoot properties at volume. It's B2B2B. The photography company is the client, the broker is the end user.
What they offer for real estate:
Their two signature differentiators in RE are day-to-dusk enhancements (convert a daytime photo to golden hour) and rain removal (fix weather-affected shots so the photographer doesn't have to return). These are genuinely clever — they eliminate reshoots.
Their onboarding process is smart: they run a "shadow production" period where they process your images in parallel for free, so you can compare quality before committing. Revisions are free, output is copyright-free. Very low friction.
Named RE team: Stanley Lalu (BD Director), Tommy Hulsbosch (Head of 3D & Floor Plans), Bert Brugman (CS Manager), Martijn van Weede (CS Director). Partner: Zibber (real estate tech platform).
04
Their core promise is deceptively simple: highest quality + lowest cost + fastest turnaround, at any volume, without trade-offs. Usually you can pick two of three. They claim all three because their AI infrastructure makes the cost structure fundamentally different from manual editing shops.
Their sales motion is a masterclass in progressive friction removal:
Every CTA on their site is low-risk: "Test for free", "No sign-up, no payment, no commitment", "Schedule a 20-minute call." They never pressure — they remove friction. This matters for us because our demo and pilot should mirror this approach.
Their language is metric-heavy, results-oriented, and never hypey. They say "lowest cost" not "revolutionary." They say "99.4% first-time-right" not "amazing quality." They're pragmatists. Keep this in mind when talking to them.
05
This is one of the most important things to understand about Bright River.
Every single KPI they track measures production quality — did they execute the editing correctly and on time? Did they hit the SLA? Was the rework rate low?
They deliver content and it disappears into the client's platform. The feedback loop stops at "did we deliver on spec?" — never "did the content perform?" They have zero visibility into downstream content performance.
This is relevant because the performance feedback loop is exactly what makes ReelForge different from just "a video editing service." More on this below.
06
From Thomas's sales conversations with the Bright River contact (Mar 25 strategy meeting):
Context that matters: Bright River services ~5,000 real estate brokers in the Netherlands. There are 11,000 active RE firms in the NL market total. They currently charge €3,500 per custom video hook for a broker — and they produce these manually.
The BR contact described creative ideas like "camera flies through the keyhole" and "cloth over the house, helicopter lifts it off." Thomas's assessment: "boomer stuff." There's room for us to bring genuinely good creative direction.
07
This isn't a speculative opportunity. There are concrete reasons Bright River is looking for this capability right now:
08
The simplest way to understand it:
Complementary, not competitive. Their output is our input.
ReelForge slots into their existing model almost perfectly — same SLA framework, same client relationship structure, same progressive sales motion:
| Dimension | BR Today | With ReelForge |
|---|---|---|
| Input | Raw photos uploaded to STREAM | Property assets + broker brand (already in STREAM) |
| Processing | AI-human editing pipeline | AI hook generation with creative intelligence |
| Output | Polished listing content | Branded social video hooks |
| Delivery | 24H turnaround, SLA | Same framework |
| Quality | 99.4% first-time-right | Hook performance data (NEW metric type) |
| Client | Dedicated CSM + monthly KPIs | Same CSM adds hook performance to the report |
| Sales | Free test → pilot → managed | Same progression |
Three capabilities that a freelancer can't replicate:
Important framing note: The data intelligence and optimisation loop are our competitive moat as the vendor — the reason they'd work with us instead of hiring someone. But the client shouldn't feel like they're operating a dashboard. They should get better hooks over time and see the numbers in their existing monthly CSM report. The system should feel like a production service, not a data platform.
09
Agreed in the Apr 1 sync — this is how we frame the demo for Bright River, mapped to language they already use:
| Domain | What We Show | Maps to BR's Language |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Cold-Start Data | Market research, TikTok benchmarks, cross-industry insights to inform initial hook decisions | BR leads with "let's talk numbers" — they respect data-backed decisions |
| 2. AI Hook Generation | Branded visual hooks with creative direction from property type + broker DNA | BR already does "AI-human hybrid" — same framing, new medium |
| 3. Self-Optimising | Performance data feeds back to improve future hooks per broker | BR already does "SLA + monthly KPI reporting" — optimisation is their language |
10
| Stage | Price | What It Is |
|---|---|---|
| POC | Free | What we're building now. 1-2 hooks, interface prototype, 1-2 CI templates |
| Pilot | €3,000 – €10,000 | Production-ready pilot across multiple properties and hook types. Skin in the game |
| Full Build | €10,000+ | Automated system, API integration, ongoing retainer |
| Ambitious | Up to €80,000 | Thomas's ceiling estimate for the full app |
11
We need to be honest about these internally. Thomas explicitly flagged: don't promise what we can't deliver.