Creatopy, a startup he uses to automate the creation of digital advertising, has brought a new CEO: Tammy Nam.
Nam was previously COO and CMO at the beginning of the editing of Picsart’s photos, and before this CEO of Video Streamer Viki. She told Techcrunch by email that Creatopy was looking for a US -centered executive who knows how to escalate the early phase, worked with European founders (the product was first developed in Romania), and understands marketing technology.
“Fortunately, I fit this bill,” she said.
Nam is also joining the Creator Board, while the earlier CEO of starting Dan Oros has entered into an advisory role.
The beginning announced a $ 10 million series led by the European 3VC VCS and the nine point last year. In a statement, the 3VC partner Eva Arh described Nam as “one of the best operators I know.”
Between February 2024 and February 2025, the company claims to have increased medium market revenue and the enterprise by 400%, with most of that growth coming in the last six months. Customers include astrazena, Nascar and The Economist.
“What is extraordinary about creation – especially for a relatively unknown company – is our ability to reduce customers of the main enterprises in industry required as Pharma and Banking,” Nam said.
She added that customers love the product for “our intuitive interface, unique product skills and excellent customer service.” In fact, she suggested that while large language patterns become “ubiquitous”, the Creator distinguishes herself based on her “ability to understand the needs of the client and offer-irony-values highly touching it”.
Nam also described brand safety as a “main advantage”, with marketing managers loading brand boxes during account configuration, and those sets, ensuring that any ads generated by it is abstained in their brand instructions.
“Our one does not replace strategic thinking; It strengthens it, “she said.” Some of our customers have reported a 10x or more productivity growth because we eliminate the tedious, manual work of generating hundreds of advertising changes in size, formats, languages, etc. “