Posts Tagged ‘professional photography’

Nik Software for ‘Debbie Digital’ – What Do You Think?

Friday, August 6th, 2010

In a recent article in USA Today, Nik Software CEO Michael Slater says he dreams of taking his tools designed to help photo professionals and promote them to another breed of photographer: “Debbie Digital.”

The article says, “Nik is planning software next year aimed at the consumer market: programs that won’t be attached to Photoshop but will offer the same ability to quickly enhance photos, with more precision and control than currently being offered.”

“We want to provide an extraordinary experience beyond the camera that’s for anyone who takes pictures,” Slater says.

Do you think this will be good for the industry? Will it now mean more and more people will be able to create effects and enhance images and take the mystique away from professional photography? Will true professional photographers be able to communicate that great photography is more than camera and computer effects? Will the consumer listen? How might this affect you, your workflow, your business?

Skip College – Make Money

Monday, July 26th, 2010

In a recent article posted on Yahoo, Susan Johnston posts the “7 Jobs to Skip College For.” Freelance photographer made the top of this list. While Ms. Johnston fully acknowledges that these aren’t just easy jobs for drop-outs and they do require a specialized degree, from my perspective, this is just another shot at our industry that you really don’t need much more than a camera and a bit of interest and you’ll be making, as the article says, a median salary of $47,800.

Now I don’t know about you, but I don’t know many photographers, taking home over $45,000. Sure our gross can be several times that but after cost of goods, fixed expenses, equipment investments, employees, taxes and the like, I don’t think many photographers are taking home that kind of money. The ones who are do have at least a degree in photography and many years of experience.

Photography is (or at least was) a craft as well as an art. It takes years to learn and do well. Running a business, is also a skill, to make a living in photography you need a solid business education. Articles like this, in my mind, make light of a serious and challenging profession. Check out the article for yourself and let us know what your background is and if you are taking home this kind of money.

Bridal Ambassadors

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Do you have your Bridal Ambassadors lined up for 2010? You don’t? What’s a Bridal Ambassador? Well, in taking a cue from our friends who photograph high school seniors, an Ambassador is someone who talks up your talents and the wonderful experience they had working with you. Until recently it was tough to send your wedding clients out with your work because the only book they could show was their own large book. Today, with the ability to make quick and affordable, press printed, album clones, you can arm your clients with beautiful little books and send them to out sing your praises while showing off their own wedding images.

While you can wait and make a sample of your clients finished album months after their big day, we recommend that you create a highlights album, where you choose the images and get it made immediately after the wedding. This sample album will feature the images that are most important to you and your artistic vision. After your client’s wedding, we suggest that you have a small album template pre-made so that you can easily download one or two dozen images and order this special book within a few days of her wedding. With Zookbinders’ PhotoBooks and Soft Cover Press Books, you can have a high quality, small album back within a week. This book can cost you as little as $49 for soft cover book and $59 for a hard cover book.

You’ll also want to have referral cards made so that your client can hand them out to their friends and so that you can track who gave the referral. This card can be self printed or you can order them from a print house. You can personalize the card with an image by printing them yourself or ordering a sheet of wallet photos to adhere to the front of the card. You can imagine how excited your brides will be to be able to carry with them and show off a few of their wedding images so quickly after their wedding. With the right materials, they will be referring all of the brides-to-be they know. And for less than $100 per event, you can realize thousands of dollars in new business. Give it a try.

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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