Third Light Chorus is a digital asset management (DAM) platform positioned as a single hub for all multimedia files within an organization. It is designed for the growing need to manage assets such as images, videos, and documents, helping teams store, organize, find, share, and collaborate on content in one place. The source text says Third Light was founded in 2002 and is headquartered in Cambridge, UK. It has served more than 500 global companies, with customer examples including Southampton FC and Royal Albert Hall.
The core idea behind Chorus is to bring files scattered across multiple platforms and tools into one centralized system. It supports separate workspaces for different teams, allowing each team to tailor its environment to its own needs while the organization still maintains a unified platform. For sharing, users can send content of any size to teams, the entire organization, or external partners, and recipients can participate even if they are not Chorus users. The platform also emphasizes fast search using file-associated data and supports “magic folders,” whose contents can change automatically based on metadata. The text also mentions files being in stages such as creation, approval, or final version, suggesting that Chorus includes workflow and approval capabilities.
The crawled content provides a relatively clear base price: fully hosted, 1TB of storage, unlimited users, priced at €5900/year. For organizations with many users, the unlimited-user model may offer good value. Third Light also offers a 30-day free trial and allows users to test all features with their own files and users, which is important when evaluating a DAM system. The source text says the full English site includes information on different pricing packages and modules such as authentication and workflow, but does not disclose module-level pricing.
The strengths are its clear positioning and focus on core DAM needs: centralized management, search, team spaces, and secure sharing. The unlimited-user package is well suited to organizations with many collaborators, and the free trial appears fairly comprehensive. The drawbacks are that the public text lacks key details on third-party integrations, APIs, granular permissions, compliance certifications, backup strategy, and similar areas. Its security capabilities are only described at the level of “secure sharing.” In addition, pricing is in euros, which may be a relatively high entry point for smaller teams.
Chorus is better suited to brand and marketing departments, sports clubs, performance venues, media teams, enterprise content hubs, and other organizations that need to manage large volumes of image and video assets. It is less suitable for small teams that only need a basic cloud drive or lightweight document collaboration. Information on access from China, payment methods, and local support does not appear in the text, so these remain unknown. If using it from mainland China, it is advisable to use the 30-day trial to test network speed, upload/download stability, and the cross-border collaboration experience. Comparable DAM products include Bynder, Canto, Brandfolder, and Adobe Experience Manager Assets; depending on requirements, local enterprise cloud storage or content management alternatives may also be worth evaluating.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on thirdlight.fr official site.
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