Home | Connectors | OpenText DAM (OTMM) | OpenText DAM (OTMM) - Airtable Integration and Automation
OpenText DAM (OTMM) and Airtable complement each other well when organizations need a governed digital asset repository paired with a flexible collaboration layer. OTMM is best suited for storing, versioning, approving, and distributing rich media assets at enterprise scale, while Airtable is ideal for planning, tracking, and coordinating the work around those assets across teams. Together, they support structured workflows that connect creative, marketing, product, operations, and content teams.
Flow: Airtable to OpenText DAM (OTMM), with status updates back to Airtable
Marketing teams can use Airtable to plan campaign deliverables such as banners, product images, videos, and social media assets. Each record can include campaign name, channel, due date, owner, and approval status. Once assets are finalized in OTMM, the DAM asset ID, preview link, and version metadata can be written back to Airtable so campaign managers can track readiness without searching the repository.
Flow: OpenText DAM (OTMM) to Airtable
Product teams and commercial operations can maintain a lightweight product launch tracker in Airtable, with fields for SKU, launch date, market, and required media. OTMM can push approved product images, packshots, and videos into Airtable as linked records or preview references. This allows teams to confirm which assets are available for each product and channel without granting broad DAM access to every stakeholder.
Flow: Bi-directional
Editorial and social media teams can manage a content calendar in Airtable while linking each post, article, or video slot to approved OTMM assets. When a new asset is approved or replaced in OTMM, Airtable can update the linked content item so planners always work from the latest version. Conversely, Airtable can send publishing dates and channel requirements to OTMM to help asset managers prioritize production and delivery.
Flow: Airtable to OpenText DAM (OTMM), with metadata synchronization back to Airtable
Museum and heritage organizations can use Airtable to manage collection records, exhibition planning, and conservation tasks. High-resolution photos and video documentation stored in OTMM can be linked to object records in Airtable, along with metadata such as accession number, artist, date, location, and condition notes. This creates a practical working layer for curators and researchers while keeping the master media files governed in the DAM.
Flow: Airtable to OpenText DAM (OTMM), then back to Airtable
Creative teams can use Airtable to manage review stages for photos, videos, and campaign graphics. Each asset request can move through draft, internal review, legal approval, and final approval stages. Once an asset is approved in OTMM, the final file version, approval date, and usage rights can be synced back to Airtable so project managers can close the loop and report on production progress.
Flow: OpenText DAM (OTMM) to Airtable
Organizations that capture photos and videos from corporate events, trade shows, or broadcasts can store the media in OTMM and publish selected asset references into Airtable for event marketing teams. Airtable can track usage by event, speaker, region, or campaign, and assign follow-up tasks such as editing, clipping, captioning, or social distribution. This helps teams turn raw event media into reusable content faster.
Flow: OpenText DAM (OTMM) to Airtable, with alerts and updates back to OTMM
Licensed images and videos often have usage restrictions, expiration dates, and territory limitations. OTMM can store the authoritative rights metadata, while Airtable tracks business-facing usage plans by campaign, market, and channel. When rights are nearing expiration, Airtable can trigger review tasks or update OTMM records to flag assets for renewal, replacement, or removal from active plans.
Flow: Bi-directional
For organizations distributing product images and videos to ecommerce, retail, partner portals, or broadcast platforms, Airtable can act as the readiness tracker for each channel. OTMM provides the approved master assets, while Airtable tracks channel-specific requirements such as aspect ratio, file format, language, and delivery date. As assets are approved or updated in OTMM, Airtable reflects the current distribution status and flags any missing channel variants.
Overall, integrating OpenText DAM (OTMM) with Airtable gives organizations a controlled asset system paired with a flexible operational workspace. The DAM remains the source of truth for media files and metadata, while Airtable provides the collaborative layer for planning, tracking, and cross-functional execution.