Key Takeaways:
- Editing is the biggest content bottleneck, even as AI accelerates content creation, post-production remains labor-intensive and costly for many creators.
- Adoption of AI editing remains low. Many still rely on manual workflows, missing out on tools that could drastically reduce post time.
- VIDIO’s founder Dr. Minseung Kim emphasizes that automation works best when it enhances a clear content strategy, not replaces it.
Demand for video content is surging. Wyzom reports that 89% of businesses now use it as a marketing tool, and 95% of marketers say it’s essential.
Yet despite AI streamlining much of content creation, video editing remains one of the biggest production bottlenecks.

Dr. Minseung Kim, founder and CEO of VIDIO.ai, is working to close that gap. His mission: build editing tools that automate the most tedious parts of video production without sacrificing quality.
In our interview, Minseung explained how AI is transforming video editing for creators, businesses, and studios alike — and why strategy still matters more than speed.
Who Is Dr. Minseung Kim?
Dr. Minseung Kim is the founder and CEO of VIDIO, an AI-powered platform that automates professional video editing to make it faster, easier, and more affordable. With 14 years of machine learning R&D experience, his career spans academic research, startup leadership, and applied AI innovation. Before launching VIDIO, Dr. Kim served as Director of Machine Learning at PIPA and held research roles at UC Davis, UC Berkeley, and Samsung Electronics, specializing in bioinformatics and deep learning. Under his leadership, VIDIO has processed over 400,000 videos for 200,000+ creators and is recognized as a member of both NVIDIA Inception and the AWS Accelerator programs.
The idea for VIDIO didn’t come from a pitch deck or a trend. It started with a personal frustration. Minseung needed to remove the background from a video but couldn’t find a tool that met his needs:
“In 2022, I began with a personal project — I needed to remove the background from my own footage. Without professional editing skills, I was looking for a simple and fast solution, but most tools online didn’t meet my expectations. That’s when I asked myself, ‘Could I build something better?’”
So he built the first version himself: an AI-powered rotoscoping tool designed to remove or change backgrounds with minimal manual work.
After validating that people were willing to pay for it, he spent two more months improving the tool beyond anything he had tried.
It worked. That original product still generates steady profit.
Instantly change your video background with text, just like the scene in Everything Everywhere All at Once! #VideoEditor#SDXL#AIpic.twitter.com/oHi8Un7QWY
— VIDIO (@vidioai) September 15, 2023
But more importantly, it exposed a deeper issue: while creating video is easier than ever, editing remains a barrier to scale, especially for small businesses and solo creators trying to keep up with rising content demands.
Why Editing Holds Creators Back
Today’s creators and businesses know they need video content, but most lack the in-house talent or budget to produce it efficiently.
“Meanwhile, video has become the single most important content format today,” Minseung explains.
The result is a familiar dilemma: overextend your budget to outsource editing or try to handle it yourself with subpar tools, leading to content that underperforms and drags down your brand.
And even when newer tools exist, many users don’t adopt them. Some businesses stick to conventional methods instead of exploring more efficient alternatives.
Often, that’s just inertia: teams continue using outdated workflows because that’s what they know.
VIDIO tackles that with intelligent automation — editing tools that save hours of time by handling complex tasks like trimming silences, jump cuts, and focus shifts, especially in long-form content.
That’s a game-changer in industries like wedding or event videography, where hours of raw footage are common.
AI Is Not a Replacement for Strategy
VIDIO’s AI is powerful, but Minseung is quick to note that the best results come when automation supports a clear creative objective.
“We help small business owners who once spent countless hours — or paid editors — to manually clean up footage,” he says.
But if your messaging or structure is off, no tool will fix that.
Studios that once outsourced 48-hour editing projects have reported cutting that time down to just two hours using VIDIO without compromising quality or increasing cost.
But the real value appears when automation unlocks creative consistency and speed-to-publish, which are crucial for platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram.
That’s why Minseung encourages creators to start small and track performance.
One common path: apply AI-assisted editing to a recurring format (like weekly vlogs or branded social clips) and measure the changes in output speed, cost, and engagement.
He also emphasizes the importance of watching the right metrics.
“For ads, you’d track engagement metrics like CTR, conversion rate, and ROAS. If you're promoting your business through social media, focus on how many viewers convert into leads,” he advises.
“Tracking this lead generation rate over time will help you refine your content strategy and allocate your efforts more effectively.”
AI Is a Partner, Not a Replacement
For Minseung, the future of video editing isn’t about replacing people. It’s about augmenting creative work with scalable, intelligent tools.
“Turning long, unedited videos into polished versions — like jump-cut edits — required extensive manual labor,” he says.
“At VIDIO, we’re dramatically reducing those hours with our AI-powered video editor.”
But speed alone isn’t enough, especially when businesses rely on partners How VIDIO is Transforming Video Editing for Creators.
Minseung believes choosing the right agency or collaborator matters just as much as the tools they use.
He’s also an advocate for expanding how the industry defines success.
“Fast financial growth isn’t the only measure,” he says. “Having control over your life, health, and happiness is equally important, especially for founders and creators juggling multiple priorities.”
Looking ahead, Minseung wants to stay close to the ground.
“I’d love to connect with more content creators and editors to better understand their challenges and see how VIDIO can continue to address their needs,” he says.