New Platform Coresee Looks to Redefine the Way Production and Creative Teams Work

New Platform Coresee Looks to Redefine the Way Production and Creative Teams Work

Remote collaboration is no longer a temporary solution. For creators and production teams, particularly in the film and entertainment world, it has become the default.

Trailers and movies are reviewed by teams spread across multiple cities. Editors, producers, and clients weigh in from different time zones. Live events, brand launches, and webinars are produced virtually or in hybrid formats, often under tight timelines. Content and media move continuously between creative partners, stakeholders, and audiences, yet much of this work still relies on tools that were designed for conversation, not creation.

Video calls, screen-sharing, and file links may connect people, but they often fall short when it comes to moving media, maintaining visual quality, and preserving context. Meetings end, links expire, and decisions are lost in follow-up emails.

As the creator economy expands and production becomes more distributed, a new category of technology is beginning to emerge: enter Coresee by Like Minded Labs. Coresee is a virtual post-production workspace and conferencing platform that also supports live, audience-facing events.

Coresee, is designed to move beyond “view-only” collaboration by giving professional teams shared digital environments where media can be reviewed, refined, and presented, in high-resolution. Whether the audience is a small production crew or thousands of viewers.

Coresee was built for professionals who need proof, continuity, and clarity, not just a quick way to show a screen. 

At the heart of this approach is a simple idea: creative work doesn’t happen in isolated meetings. It unfolds over time, across projects, and often culminates in moments where that work needs to be shared publicly.

Instead of treating collaboration and events as separate experiences, virtual post-production platforms bring them together. Teams work inside persistent digital rooms where content, notes, and decisions remain intact between sessions, and then use the same environment to produce polished live events, launches, or broadcasts without rebuilding workflows from scratch.

For creatives and production teams, this continuity matters. Campaigns often move from internal review to external presentation quickly. Being able to move media seamlessly, from creative collaboration to live delivery, reduces friction and preserves quality. Visual accuracy, branding, and timing are maintained, even when teams and audiences are spread across locations.

These platforms also reflect a shift in how events themselves are produced. Rather than relying on one-off streaming tools, teams increasingly want studio-grade control in browser-based environments. That means managing visuals, playlists, and audience interaction with the same precision used in post-production. Without specialized hardware or complex setups.

The broader trend is clear: entertainment collaboration technology is evolving from temporary communication layers into permanent creative infrastructure. Virtual post-production studios are places where teams meet, make decisions, and ultimately share their work with the world.

Remote collaboration may be here to stay, but the tools behind it are finally catching up, giving creators, producers, and event teams something they’ve been missing all along: a shared studio, built for how modern work actually happens.

 


The A.V. Club editorial staff was not involved in the creation of this content.

 
Join the discussion...
Keep scrolling for more great stories.