Archive for January, 2010

The Cost of a Wedding

Friday, January 29th, 2010

There are several reports out this time of year looking at the average cost of a wedding. BridePop came out with this chart listing their average cost for a wedding and honeymoon at $38,466. In this study, the photography portion their average wedding was $2,283. Another report from The Wedding Report shows that the average wedding cost from 2008 was at $21,814 and that spending in 2009 dropped 10.2% to $19,581. The good news for many of us is that spending on photography rose by 16% according to The Wedding Report.

Averages rarely tell you the whole story. Different markets are going to have different averages. And similarly, different clients are going to have different budgets based on their tastes and the emphasis they put on photography. I’ve been part of weddings that even a large package was only a small percent of the overall budget and weddings where a basic package was one of the largest expenditures of the day. But as a photographer and an entrepreneur, none of that should matter. What should matter is whether or not you are pricing yourself so that you can enjoy what you are doing, are fairly paid for your services, can reinvest into your profession and so that you can survive to continue to offer your services to your clients. In the coming few ‘Pricing’ posts we’ll explore some different ways of calculating your pricing.

Feature Photo of The Week: Cigar Smoke

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Is there anything better than a newly married man sharing a male-bonding experience with his groomsmen? This great image of 5 men smoking a cigar was shot and created by Chicago-based photographer Jai Girard and her fabulous designer Dean R. Peters.

To see more of Jai’s beautiful photography work, check out her website at http://www.jaigirard.com

Click on image to enlarge

All images provided to Zookbinders by Jai Girard Photography
All Rights Reserved
To obtain image permission, please e-mail:weddings@jaigirard.com

Now is a Great Time to Sell Albums

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

I don’t know about you, but first quarter has consistently been my second busiest time of year for selling albums. Since not as many people get married in the northern climates during winter, I use this time to offer an annual album incentive to get my clients from the last year or two in the door get their albums ordered.

Now I do know all of the benefits of pre-designing albums but not all clients like this, nor do all photographers, and sometimes, even if you pre-design, a client may delay approving their order. After the first of the year I’ll get in touch with all of my clients who haven’t ordered their albums yet. I let them know that the price of albums has gone up but, if they order by a specific deadline, they can get the previous year’s prices and a special incentive.

Incentive offers can include extra images or pages for their album, a cover upgrade, or now, with the PhotoBook and Sort Cover Press Book packages Zookbinders offers, you can offer discounted or even buy-one-get-one-free parent albums at great prices. This is great for you too because when you order a PhotoBook or Soft Cover Press Book package at the same time as a PhotoBook Plus, Zook Book or Matted Album, you get an additional 10% off the already reduced package price. Offering one or a couple different incentives always helps me drum up a little extra business, up sell some parent books, improve cash flow, and complete several couples’ books every winter. Give it try.

Scott Patrick, Marketing and E-Community Planner

Feature Photo of The Week: Nutcracker Suite

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

The Feature Photo of The Week is an image from the famous Nutcracker Suite. We thought this was a beautiful image of the sugar plum fairies of this classic fairy tale-ballet. This image was taken by GK Photography from River Ridge, Louisiana.

To see more about photographer George Kuchler, owner of GK Photography, you can check out their website at http://www.gkphotography.com/

Click image to enlarge

All images provided to Zookbinders by GK Photography
All Rights Reserved
To obtain permission, e-mail gkorders@yahoo.com

Are There Too Many Wedding Photographers?

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

This is a question that has been weighing on the minds of many of us in the industry the past few years. Last week, long-time industry professional, educator and Zookbinders client David Ziser tackled this very topic on his Blog, Digital ProTalk. What Ziser found by interviewing several key people within our industry is shocking to some and sadly old news to others. Comments he collected include the following:

“The wedding profession is going through its biggest disruption ever!”

“Budgets are half what they used to be.”

“It’s impossible to survive as a wedding photographer only these days!”

“There are mass quantities of mediocre “Crap” out there these days masquerading as wedding photography!”

Ziser finishes his first post on the subject by stating, “What I read here speaks to the “death-knell” of wedding photography as we’ve known it.”

But as with many complex issues, there is no one person, institution or event to blame. Look at what’s happened to the industry over the past few years. Digital photography has made it quicker, cheaper and easier to take photos and output images. The Internet has let everyone post images and promote themselves to the entire world. The “mystique” of creating a photograph has all but disappeared. The expectations for “quality photography” have dropped. Our culture has become more interested in flash than substance. And the faltering economy has cut the photography budgets of consumers and pushed many who are out of work or underemployed into photography to “earn a quick buck.”

In my opinion, however, all is not lost. The economy will turn around. “Weekend warriors” will realize that good wedding photography takes more than just a few hours on a Saturday, a $1000 camera and a DVD burner. Brides will realize they are being short changed by these nonprofessionals and brides’ expectations for more and better products and services will swing the pendulum back toward that of the true professional.

The professional of tomorrow though, will not be the same as the one of the pre-digital revolution. Tomorrow’s professional photographer will still need to master the craft of photography but they will need to be much smarter business people and marketers. They will also need to be well versed in the needs of the modern bride and how she finds her vendors through the Internet and social media. Her needs will include full service from planning to photography to various presentation options; receiving over-the-top customer service; quick turn-around; great value for her dollar; and, being fully integrated into all aspects of social media. There will always be those consumers who only look at price and don’t care about quality, but those won’t be the customers that will allow true professionals to survive.

Scott Patrick, Zookbinders Marketing and E-Community Planner

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