March 2026 — Manage it Pros
What is Creative Ops Anyway?
If you work in marketing or creative teams, you’ve probably heard the term creative operations tossed around more in the last few years. Sometimes it sounds like a rebrand of project management. Sometimes it sounds like a fancy ops role no one quite owns. And sometimes it feels like “that thing our best PM just does naturally.” So what is creative ops, really? And how is it different from a creative project manager?
Let’s break it down.
Creative Ops, in Plain English
Creative operations is the function that designs how creative work runs, not just how a single project gets delivered.
It’s the system around the work:
- How requests come in
- How briefs are defined
- How work moves from idea to launch
- Who reviews what, and when
- How capacity is planned
- How tools are structured
- How decisions and changes are tracked
The goal isn’t control or bureaucracy. It’s repeatable, predictable delivery without burning people out.
Or put more simply:
Creative ops exists so creative teams can focus on creativity, not chaos.
What Creative Ops Covers (Practically Speaking)
In real teams, creative ops usually includes:
- Intake & prioritization
Making sure work enters the system with enough clarity to actually start. - Workflow & process design
Clear stages, handoffs, and review cycles that reduce confusion and rework. - Tools & systems
Structuring platforms like Asana or Monday.com so they reflect how teams actually work. - Capacity & resourcing
Understanding who’s overloaded, where bottlenecks are forming, and what’s realistic. - Stakeholder & approval management
Defining who gives feedback, when decisions are made, and how changes are handled. - Continuous improvement
Looking for patterns, not just putting out fires.
None of this is flashy. All of it is essential.
So How Is That Different From a Creative Project Manager?
This is where things get confusing, because the best creative project managers already do a lot of this.
The difference isn’t capability. It’s scope and durability.
A Creative Project Manager
- Runs individual projects end to end
- Owns timelines, tasks, and day-to-day coordination
- Focuses on delivery: this campaign, this launch, this asset
- Solves problems as they arise
They live inside the work.
Creative Operations
- Designs the system all projects run through
- Sets standards, templates, and ways of working
- Prevents the same problems from repeating
- Thinks across teams, time, and scale
They live above the work.
A simple way to think about it:
A creative project manager delivers the work.
Creative operations designs the environment that makes delivery sustainable.
Where the Lines Blur (And Why That’s Not a Bad Thing)
Here’s the honest truth:
Great PMs naturally do creative ops work. Especially today.
As we wrote in a previous blog From PM to project leader: How involved should you really be?, modern PMs aren’t just tracking tasks. They’re expected to:
- Read the room
- Translate strategy into execution
- Clarify priorities and tradeoffs
- Protect teams from churn
- Spot systemic issues early
When a PM fixes a broken intake, introduces a template, clarifies approvals, or restructures a project so it actually works, that is creative ops.
And in many organizations, the PM becomes the de facto ops function simply because someone has to do it.
The Risk: When the System Lives in One Person’s Head
This is where things get fragile.
When creative ops lives only inside a strong PM:
- The system works because they’re there
- Knowledge stays implicit, not documented
- Processes aren’t shared or governed
- Teams rely on heroics instead of structure
And when that PM leaves? The system often collapses with them. That’s not a failure of the PM. It’s a signal that the ops work was never made durable.
Why Creative Ops Is Becoming a First-Class Function
As teams scale, produce more work, and collaborate across more functions, relying on individual excellence stops working.
That’s why we’re seeing:
- Dedicated creative ops roles
- Clear ownership of workflows and tools
- Standardized intake and approval paths
- More investment in system hygiene
Not to slow teams down, but to protect creative quality and team energy.
Creative ops turns:
“This PM makes everything better”
into
“This is how we work here.”
Where Manage it Pros Fits In
At Manage it Pros, we sit intentionally in the overlap.
Like any good project managers, we:
- Stabilize delivery
- Run the work
- Lead with clarity and strategy
But we also know that a system that only works while we’re present isn’t a good system.
So when we improve a client’s workflows, we:
- Make the process explicit
- Document decisions and standards
- Build templates and playbooks
- Teach teams how to run it themselves
- Design systems that don’t rely on us to function
Our goal isn’t to be the glue forever. It’s to leave behind clarity that sticks.
The Bottom Line
Creative operations is about making creative work sustainable at scale.
It brings clarity to how work enters a team, how it moves, who decides, and how priorities are balanced. When done well, it reduces friction, protects creative energy, and allows teams to focus on producing great work instead of constantly fixing the process.
Great project managers often contribute to creative ops naturally, especially as the PM role continues to expand into strategy, facilitation, and leadership. The difference is that creative ops makes those improvements repeatable, documented, and shared, so the system doesn’t depend on one person to function.
That’s the shift teams are making:
from relying on individual excellence, to building environments where excellence is the default.
