
Adobe is a technology company first and foremost, but big
ideas have led to some of its major innovations, said company CEO Shantanu Narayen, in a conversation with Publicis CEO Arthur Sadoun on the Debussy Stage at Cannes Palais des Festivals Wednesday
morning.
Narayen, a 27-year veteran of Adobe (he’s been CEO since 2007) was honored the previous evening as Cannes Lions inaugural Creative Champion
of the Year, in recognition of his long-term dedication to providing the creative community with state of the art tools to excel at their craft.
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The company’s shift to cloud-based products
started with an internal idea that company engineers should have the ability to collaborate and deliver new tools and products “whenever they wanted to,” without delays that could often be
months or years, said Narayen.
Creative and marketing was one of the last areas to be automated at an enterprise level, he said. Now the marketing technology stack, built for
personalization and at scale “is our North Star.”
Sadoun noted that he has “never been so pleased with what we can do for clients,” adding that it is the combination
of platforms and service that drive client success today.
Narayen said the company’s mission goes well beyond product development. With clients, he said, “we’re an open book.” The
company not only trains customers how use products but “shares what we are doing” to derive maximum benefits.
“We are passionate about enabling people to express their creativity and
enable them to bring their ideas to life.”
Pictured above at Cannes (l to r): Narayen, Sadoun.