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Meep-morp launches Resolve workflow tool for editors

Wed, 1st Apr 2026

meep-morp has launched a software platform for professional video-editing workflows aimed at DaVinci Resolve users.

The software is designed to automate post-production tasks, including exporting, metadata tagging, and distributing video files across multiple channels. Offered as software-as-a-service, it focuses on the later stages of production, where editors and production teams often still handle rendering, file preparation, and delivery manually.

The launch comes as video producers face growing demand from social media, streaming services and corporate communications teams. As output rises, more editing teams are seeking tools that reduce repetitive work without changing the core editing process.

meep-morp's software works as a native bridge for DaVinci Resolve, a non-linear editing system widely used by professional editors. The integration is intended to automate file export and upload while allowing users to retain control over the data and metadata associated with each asset.

The company is positioning the platform around what it calls "Radical Transparency", its term for visibility into operational costs and data handling. That places it in a part of the market where workflow software is judged not only on automation, but also on how clearly it shows users what happens to media files and associated information.

Workflow Focus

Post-production has become a pressure point for many video teams as commissioning cycles shorten and the number of delivery formats increases. Editors are often required to prepare the same content for multiple destinations, each with different technical standards, metadata rules and upload requirements.

By targeting those steps, meep-morp aims to serve both independent editors and larger production houses. It argues that automating repetitive delivery work can help users increase output without adding the same level of fixed cost.

The platform also reflects a broader shift in the creator economy, which has expanded beyond individual online creators into a more structured professional market. Agencies, in-house media teams and specialist post-production firms are under pressure to make internal processes more predictable as content volumes grow.

In that context, interoperability has become a key selling point for software vendors. Rather than replacing established editing tools, newer entrants often aim to integrate with existing systems and remove friction at specific stages of the workflow.

Francisco Hernandez, director of meep-morp, described the company's position in those terms. "The current software landscape is often a black box for creators. With meep-morp, we are not just providing an automation tool; we are establishing a new standard of transparency in how creative assets are processed and delivered. We believe that professional-grade automation should be accessible, ethical, and, above all, transparent regarding its operational costs and data handling."

Industry Pressures

One of the company's main arguments is that manual delivery work now creates avoidable publishing delays. News organisations, social media teams and corporate communications departments all face situations where speed of distribution can affect audience reach or operational relevance.

Its system is intended to reduce that lag through direct-to-cloud and direct-to-platform uploads. The software is also designed to unify parts of the final production pipeline that are often handled through a mix of separate export tools, file-transfer services and platform-specific upload processes.

That message reflects a wider push in media technology to reduce pipeline fragmentation. For many teams, the problem is not a lack of editing software, but the number of disconnected steps required after the creative work is complete.

Hernandez made that case in a second comment on the product's role in post-production. "Our goal is to return time to the creators. By automating the 'invisible' part of the job-the transcoding, the watermarking, and the multi-platform uploading-we allow editors to focus on the storytelling. We've built a bridge that doesn't just connect software, but connects the creator's vision with their global audience more efficiently."

Global Scope

The service is built for use across North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. According to meep-morp, the software-as-a-service model allows teams in different markets and time zones to use the same workflow structure while adapting to local professional requirements.

meep-morp also positioned the product within the wider debate over automation in creative industries. As artificial intelligence and machine learning tools become more common in production and post-production, software suppliers are increasingly trying to reassure users that automation will not remove editorial control.

The company says it supports a human-in-the-loop approach, with the editor remaining responsible for the creative result while the software handles repeatable technical tasks. "We are looking at a future where the technical barriers to high-end production will disappear. meep-morp is the first step toward that future, providing a robust, interoperable, and scalable environment for anyone who takes video editing seriously."