
Tech unicorn Canva picks up Sydney startup MagicBrief
Perth-founded tech unicorn Canva is buying an Australian AI-powered creative intelligence startup as it pushes deeper into the enterprise and marketing sector.
Canva said the acquisition of Sydney-based MagicBrief would build out its Visual Suite offering for marketing and creative teams.
MagicBrief was founded in 2022.
Its creative analytics and research platform uses AI to help marketers better understand and respond to their advertising content strategies, formats, and messages that perform best with audiences.
The tools are already being used by thousands of global brands, marketers and agencies to analyse and inform creative development and have to date analysed more than $6 billion in ad spending.
The purchase price was not disclosed.
Canva co-founder Cliff Obrecht said the deal marked a major expansion of the company — which bills itself as 'the world's only all-in-one visual communication platform' — and introduces a 'powerful' new layer of creative intelligence to its recently upgraded Visual Suite.
'We've spent the last decade empowering millions of teams to create impactful and engaging visual content,' Mr Obrecht said.
'Now, with MagicBrief joining Canva, we're entering the next frontier by powering the entire content and marketing workflow, from ideation and creation to deployment, measurement, and now analysis and optimisation.
'In today's visual economy, winning brands are those that know exactly what creative works, where it works, and why. By combining MagicBrief's AI-powered insights with Canva's Visual Suite, we're giving every team the tools to not just create great content, but drive stronger results.'
George Howes, co-founder and chief executive of MagicBrief, said the startup would continue to operate independently while its technology and team integrate into Canva.
'We started MagicBrief to give creative teams smarter tools to move faster and make better work,' Mr Howes said.
'Joining Canva takes that vision to the next level — helping us reach more marketers and turn great ideas into high performing creative.'
Canva was launched from a Dianella loungeroom in 2013 by Mr Obrecht and now wife Melanie Perkins, who met while she was studying at the University of Western Australia.
Now based in Sydney, the private company which has been backed by some of the world top tech investors, has enjoyed exponential growth to more than 240 million monthly users across 190 countries, with annualised revenue of $US3 billion ($4.6b).
The company is now reportedly worth almost $49b — putting it ahead of the market capitalisation of big names such as Rio Tinto, Fortescue, Woolworths and Coles.
But its founders has remained tight-lipped on a time frame for long-running rumours of a float in the US.
A listing would likely bring in fresh capital that could be used for product development and further acquisitions.
Mr Obrecht and Ms Perkins were recently placed sixth on the Australian Financial Review's annual list of Australia's richest people, with an estimated combine et worth of $14.1b.
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Dateline has spoken to multiple suppliers to Mosaic Brands, not just in Australia but in China, Bangladesh and India, who all said they faced similar payment delays and mounting debts. At least one factory owner in Bangladesh, one agent in China, and one factory in India say they have also lost their businesses due to Mosaic Brands' late payments and related issues. It's cost hundreds of jobs — and income for many more family members. Several other large and mid-size factories spoken to in Bangladesh, which employ thousands of local workers, say they are now also on the brink of collapse. Last week, administrators for Mosaic Brands issued a preliminary finding that the company may have been operating while insolvent for four years before the company's collapse. Insolvency is when a company can no longer pay its debts and it's illegal to trade under these circumstances, according to the Corporations Act. There are serious penalties for allowing a company to trade while insolvent. Mosaic Brands' directors are yet to comment on the findings of the report. However, the report acknowledges that the directors sought to rely on safe harbour and COVID-19 provisions at times. If established, these protections could amount to a defence against any potential director liability for trading whilst insolvent. A release issued on behalf of the Mosaic Brands board of directors last year, in response to previous reports the company had been using safe harbour protections, said its directors take their duties seriously, and did seek advice on the applicability and compliance with the safe harbour provisions. For Annabell, the FTI's latest report doesn't go far enough. "This failure did not begin with COVID. It began in 2018, when Mosaic acquired Specialty Fashion Group — a large and aggressive expansion that placed enormous pressure on cash flow and supplier relationships," she said. "What happened to me — and to so many other suppliers — was the result of sustained financial mismanagement ... and decisions that transferred risk down the chain while protecting those at the top." Annabell said she raised her issues with the Australian Competiton and Consumer Commission (ACCC), Small Business Ombudsman and Australia's Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) as early as 2019, which all amounted to nothing. She said the outcome has been a bitter pill to swallow. "We are not collateral damage. We are the people who made this supply chain work. We fulfilled contracts. We trusted in good faith — and we were left unpaid." Dateline contacted the ACCC, which said it currently has a matter before the courts with Mosaic Brands anad does not comment on complaints or potential investigations. The Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman said it can't comment on the detail or outcome of individual cases. It also said the information Annabell Mehic provided them at the time helped "the advocacy work undertaken by ASBFEO on the Payment Times Reporting Scheme and our advocacy for improved payment times to help cashflow issues". An ASIC spokesperson said they are aware "that Mosaic Brands Limited went into external administration in October 2024 and of the Report to Creditors issued by the external administrator, FTI Consulting, on 13 June 2025 and they continue to monitor the matter". Watch now Share this with family and friends