Both platforms are built for packaging artwork management. The real question is whether your team wants a growing ecosystem of connected tools or a single, unified environment built around how packaging teams actually work.
For years, the benchmark for packaging artwork management software was simple: does it handle approvals and compliance? Today, most platforms do. The conversation has moved on.
Packaging teams are now asking harder questions: Can we onboard this without a six-month implementation? Will we need to learn three tools to do one job? When regulations change, can we update our compliance rules without raising a support ticket?
How a platform is structured turns out to matter as much as what it can do. And that's where Esko WebCenter and ManageArtworks Enterprise diverge most clearly.
Esko’s Approach: A Growing Ecosystem
Esko has developed a broad packaging ecosystem centered around WebCenter, its artwork management and collaboration platform. The platform helps teams centralize packaging assets, manage workflows, review artwork, and maintain compliance across packaging operations.
In recent years, Esko has expanded aggressively through acquisitions and new product launches:
- WebCenter Enterprise - flagship platform for large-scale organizations
- WebCenter Go - SaaS version launched in 2025 for growing brands
- WebCenter Pack - launched in 2025 for packaging converters
- Blue Software - acquired in 2018, label and artwork management
- Artwork Flow - acquired in 2024, AI-driven artwork review and approvals
- Global Vision - acquired in 2026, proofreading, barcode, braille, and print inspection
For enterprises already invested in Esko's prepress and structural design tools, this breadth has real value. But for packaging teams evaluating the platform for the first time, it raises practical questions: Which product do we actually need? Where does Artwork Flow end and WebCenter begin? What happens when two acquired tools have overlapping features?
There’s also an operational consequence that’s easy to overlook during evaluation: there is no seamless upgrade path within Esko’s ecosystem. If your needs grow or your workflow complexity increases, moving to a more capable product means switching products entirely. A new interface, different behavior, retraining your team, and re-establishing the processes you’ve already built. What looks like flexibility at the portfolio level can translate into disruption at the team level.
ManageArtworks' Approach: One Platform, Configured for your Scale
ManageArtworks takes a different structural bet. Rather than separating capabilities across multiple products, it positions itself as a single unified platform — with compliance, copy management, approvals, dielines, and 3D visualization all operating within the same environment.
Teams don't choose between a "compliance module" and an "artwork review product." They choose a configuration like Growth, Pro, or Custom based on workflow complexity, SKU volume, and regulatory requirements. The underlying platform stays consistent. As your needs grow, so does your configuration, without changing the system your team already knows.
This matters operationally. When compliance logic, copy approvals, and artwork versioning live in one system, teams no longer need to manually transfer approved text into design files or reconcile versions across different tools.
Where the Difference Shows Up in Practice
Copy Management
Packaging workflows are heavily driven by copy — ingredient declarations, regulatory text, multilingual variants, claims, warnings, tables, and market-specific requirements.
ManageArtworks’ Copy Manager is built specifically around this complexity. Approved copy lives in a structured, version-controlled environment with multilingual support and role-based approvals. The Adobe Illustrator plugin lets designers pull approved copy directly into artwork files, eliminating the copy-paste step where most labeling errors actually originate.
Esko's Adobe integrations connect Illustrator to the broader ecosystem, but the structured copy workflow is not where its architecture is centered. For teams managing hundreds of SKUs across multiple markets, that distinction is meaningful.
Compliance Validation
Compliance validation has become a major focus area in packaging artwork management, with AI-assisted checks now playing an important role in helping teams improve accuracy and reduce errors. Both platforms now offer AI-assisted compliance checks — labeling rules, allergen declarations, logo placement, font requirements, brand rule enforcement. The Artwork Flow acquisition means Esko has meaningfully closed the gap here.
The differentiator for ManageArtworks is integration depth, not feature presence. Because compliance validation shares the same environment as copy management, approval workflows, and SKU-level versioning, checks happen continuously within the workflow
For teams in regulated categories like pharma, cosmetics, or food, where a missed allergen or incorrect regulatory claim is a genuine liability, that workflow continuity reduces risk in ways a standalone compliance layer cannot easily replicate.
Dielines & 3D Visualization
Esko has deep structural design capabilities through its ArtiosCAD, a desktop application that packaging engineers use for precise structural design work. The tradeoff is that ArtiosCAD operates as a separate, installed tool outside the artwork management workflow, which means dieline work and artwork reviews don’t naturally share the same environment.
ManageArtworks focuses on making visualization directly accessible within the artwork development process — a library of 3,000+ editable dielines, built-in 3D pack shot generation, and workflow-connected previews before print production, all within the same web-based platform your team is already working in. For growing brands and lean packaging teams that need visualization capability without a standalone structural design workflow, this is a more practical and integrated entry point.
Which Is the Right Fit?
As packaging operations grow more complex, businesses are increasingly looking for platforms that simplify workflows, improve visibility, and reduce the operational overhead that comes with managing artwork across teams, regions, and systems. That’s why evaluating how a platform fits into your day-to-day packaging processes matters just as much as the feature list itself.
The best packaging artwork management platform isn’t necessarily the one with the broadest ecosystem — it’s the one that helps your teams work more efficiently while supporting the way your organization operates. For businesses looking for a more connected and configurable approach to packaging artwork management, ManageArtworks is a strong platform worth considering.
Frequently Asked Questions
ManageArtworks is often better suited for growing teams looking for faster onboarding, lower operational complexity, and scalable workflows within a single platform.
Yes. ManageArtworks scales through configurable plans and workflow customization without requiring teams to switch platforms.
Industries like food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, chemicals, and consumer goods benefit significantly from packaging artwork management platforms.





.webp)














