The creative industry has always been slower to digitize than sectors like finance or retail—partly because creative work is deeply personal and partly because most software felt built for spreadsheets, not sketchbooks. That's changing fast. Artists, photographers, illustrators, and galleries are now running entire businesses from their phones, and the software behind that shift is becoming a serious market of its own.
We sat down with Tarun Nagar, Founder and CEO of Dev Technosys, to talk about what's driving this shift, where the real opportunities are, and what businesses need to know before investing in a platform for the creative economy. Dev Technosys has spent the last several years building software for artists, marketplaces, and creative platforms, and Tarun had a clear, practical view of where this space is heading.
Q: Let's start with the big picture. Why is the creative industry suddenly such a hot space for app development?
Tarun Nagar: A few things converged at once. Creators went independent—fewer artists are waiting for a gallery or an agency to represent them; they're building audiences directly. At the same time, buyers got comfortable purchasing art, photography, and design work entirely online, sight unseen except through a screen. And digital ownership became a real concept, not just a niche idea, once NFTs entered the picture.
Put those together, and you get a genuine demand for
Art and Design App Development Solutions that didn't really exist a decade ago. It's not just about digitizing a portfolio anymore. It's about giving creators tools to sell, license, collaborate, and build a business—all from an app.
Q: When a creative business comes to you wanting an app, what's usually the first thing you ask them?
Tarun Nagar: Who is this actually for? That sounds obvious, but it's the question most founders haven't fully answered. An app for independent illustrators selling prints is a completely different build than an app connecting galleries with collectors, which is different again from a tool that helps design studios manage client feedback and revisions.
Our Art and Design App Development Services work covers all of these, but we never start with a generic template. We start by mapping the actual workflow — how a piece moves from creation to discovery to sale — and build the app around that specific journey, not a one-size-fits-all marketplace shell.
Q: NFTs came up already. Is that still a meaningful part of this space, or has the hype settled?
Tarun Nagar: The hype cycle definitely cooled off, but the underlying use case didn't disappear—it matured. Serious artists and collectors are still using blockchain-backed ownership records because they solve a real problem: proving authenticity and provenance for digital work. What changed is that people stopped building NFT platforms just because they could and started building them for actual creator communities with a reason to exist.
We do a lot of work in this area through our dedicated NFT Art Marketplace Development Company practice, and the projects that succeed now are the ones tied to a real artist base or gallery network, not speculative trading platforms. NFT Marketplace Development today is less about chasing a trend and more about giving digital creators a durable way to monetize and protect their work long-term.
Q: Photography seems to be having its own moment right now too. What's changed there?
Tarun Nagar: Two things, really. First, booking and business management for photographers used to be a mess of spreadsheets, email threads, and phone calls. Second, AI has genuinely changed what's possible in post-production and even in the shoot itself.
On the business side, we built a
Photographer Booking App Development Company practice specifically because photographers kept telling us the same thing—they were losing bookings simply because their scheduling process was too clunky. A clean booking flow, calendar sync, deposit collection, and automated reminders can meaningfully grow a photography business without the photographer touching their craft at all.
On the creative side, AI Photography App Development is opening up things like automated background editing, smart cropping suggestions, and style-matching tools that used to require hours in an editing suite. We're seeing strong demand from both solo photographers and studios who want AI baked directly into their client-facing apps.
Q: How real is the AI piece? Is it actually useful for working artists, or is it mostly marketing?
Tarun Nagar: It's real, but it has to be scoped honestly. AI is genuinely good at speeding up repetitive tasks—background removal, color correction, resizing for different platforms, and generating variations of a composition for client review. Where it gets murky is when platforms try to position AI as a replacement for the artist's judgment rather than a tool that supports it.
The apps that get this right treat AI as an assistant, not a decision-maker. It suggests the artist approves. That distinction matters a lot to creative professionals, and honestly, it should — their whole value is their taste and judgment, and a tool that tries to override that isn't going to get adopted, no matter how impressive the technology is.
Q: Let's talk marketplaces specifically. What makes a creative marketplace app succeed where others fail?
Tarun Nagar: Trust and discovery, in that order. Buyers need to trust that what they're purchasing is authentic and that the transaction is secure. Creators need to trust that they'll actually get paid and that the platform isn't just going to bury their work under thousands of other listings with no way to be found.
Good Marketplace App Development Solutions solve both sides of that equation at once. You need strong search and categorization so buyers can actually find relevant work, transparent pricing and licensing terms, secure payment processing, and a rating or review system that builds confidence over time. A lot of marketplace apps get the buyer experience right and completely neglect the seller experience — and creative marketplaces live or die by whether creators want to keep listing new work.
Q: A lot of this sounds similar to general e-commerce. How different is it, really?
Tarun Nagar: More different than people expect. Standard Ecommerce Shopping App Development Solutions are built around commodity products—items where one unit is functionally identical to the next, and pricing is largely driven by supply and demand. Creative work doesn't behave that way. Every piece is unique, pricing is often subjective, and licensing terms can vary wildly depending on whether someone's buying a print, a limited edition, or full commercial usage rights.
That means the backend has to handle things standard e-commerce platforms don't think about — variable licensing structures, edition tracking for limited releases, royalty splits if multiple collaborators are involved, and provenance records for higher-value pieces. We borrow a lot of the reliable infrastructure patterns from e-commerce—cart flows, payment gateways, and order tracking—but the data model underneath has to be built specifically for creative goods.
Q: What about collaboration features? Is that something creative apps need to think about, or is it mostly a solo-creator space?
Tarun Nagar: It's growing fast, especially in design. Design studios and agencies need real-time feedback loops — clients marking up drafts directly, version history so nothing gets lost, and approval workflows that keep a project moving instead of stalling in an email chain. That's a very different feature set from a marketplace, but it's just as much a part of art and design app development as the selling side.
We've seen client demand shift over the past year toward platforms that combine both — a portfolio and sales presence for public-facing work, plus a private collaboration space for client projects. Building both well inside one app is a real technical challenge, but it's increasingly what studios are asking for.
Q: Any common mistakes you see creative businesses make when they first invest in an app?
Tarun Nagar: Underestimating the payment and licensing complexity, mostly. People assume it's "just like Shopify" and then discover halfway through development that they need to support royalty splits, multiple license tiers, or region-specific tax handling for digital goods. That's a scoping failure, not a technical one—it happens when the requirements aren't mapped out properly at the start.
The second mistake is neglecting mobile performance for image-heavy content. Art and photography apps are visually dense by nature, and if image loading is slow or inconsistent, users bounce immediately no matter how good the underlying platform is. Performance optimization for high-resolution visual content has to be a priority from day one, not something addressed after launch.
A third mistake, and one I'd call the quietest killer of these projects, is launching without a real content strategy. Founders spend months perfecting the app and then open it with almost no listings, no artist profiles, and no reason for a visitor to come back a second time. A marketplace or portfolio app is only as compelling as what's actually on it, so we always push clients to line up a critical mass of creators or content before launch rather than treating that as a post-launch problem.
Q: Looking ahead, where do you see this space heading over the next couple of years?
Tarun Nagar: I think we'll see AI move further into the creative process itself—not replacing artists, but giving them faster ways to iterate and present variations to clients. I think NFT and blockchain-backed ownership will keep maturing quietly in the background rather than being marketed loudly, because that's where the real utility is. And I think the line between "portfolio app," "marketplace," and "collaboration tool" is going to keep blurring, because creators want one platform that handles their whole business, not three separate apps stitched together.
I'd also add that discovery is going to become a bigger differentiator than people currently expect. Right now, most creative apps rely on basic search and category filters. Over the next couple of years, I expect visual-similarity search, style-based recommendations, and AI-assisted curation to become standard — helping buyers find work that matches their taste even when they can't articulate exactly what they're looking for. That's a much harder problem than it sounds, and the platforms that solve it well are going to pull ahead of everyone still relying on keyword search alone.
The businesses that win in this space will be the ones that understand creative work isn't a commodity—it has to be built and marketed differently from the ground up. That's the philosophy we bring to every art and design project we take on.