Posts Tagged ‘IPad’

Set up for Blogging Seccess : Podcast 174

Monday, October 10th, 2011

Detroit Creative Labs Logo

This week: Ideas about how you can keep on top of your blog.

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What is your ‘and’ ?

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Professional photographers have spent the last few years struggling with the reality that their industry has changed. Amateurs are struggling with how to make a career of the new-found opportunities in photography. The answer for both is discovering your and.

It’s not just the photography industry struggling to find success. Writers, designers, accountants, retail stores, and businesses at every level have found success in this challenging economy.

Technology has lowered the barrier to entry and learning curve for many disciplines and industries.   Consider the publishing industry.  Anyone can be a publisher. The local newspaper spends a lot of money to print words on the byproduct of dead trees to provide information you saw  yesterday on Yahoo.  Why write a letter to the editor with the slim chance it will be published when you can freely and instantly comment on our favorite blogs and social media sites?

Borders bookstores across the country are liquidating everything because you can download your next book to an e-reader  at midnight from the comfort of your bed. Many book publishers, who have resisted keeping up with the times, are not far behind. It doesn’t take much effort to publish your work and sell it to the world via Amazon, Google, or our own affiliate program.

Consider the last time you went to a print lab to process your photographs. It’s been a while, hasn’t it?  If you want to learn how to do just about anything, open a browser and ask Google.  As we all know, millions of people have asked Google how to be a better photographer.

So, what’s the good news in all this?

The photographers who are surviving this transition are the best in the world at what they do.  They are the top 10 percent and many of them are purists.  They make a living solely as a photographer. The rest of us need to add the and to our job title.  The and will help you create a niche that you can dominate. If done correctly, the and will make competition irrelevant.

Now and in the future most photographers will be a

  • photographer and writer
  • photographer and designer
  • photographer and teacher
  • photographer and videographer specializing in a particular niche

There may be only a small community of people who need or desire your specialized service.  Ten years ago, this would have been a problem.  It would be too expensive to research, solicit, and cater to such a small group around the world.  Today, the Internet and social media have removed this barrier.

Technology is producing opportunities at incredible speed.  It was just a few years ago that I wrote about e-paper (The Next Revolution and The future of Visual Media) and how it would change the way we read the news and interact with the world.  One of the major results of this technology is the iPad, one of the hottest products on the market.

What specialized services can you offer using the iPad?  I have no idea what your and will be.  I can tell you that I think of at least five or more good ideas every day.  I’m sure you do, too.

The key is to remember (keep Evernote at the ready) and then act immediately.  If you don’t act now, it will be just another idea you see someone else doing a few months or years from now.   If you are uncertain, test your idea on a smaller scale before a big launch.

Think of all the companies that have not invented anything, but are hugely successful because they combine existing industries, technologies, philosophies or concepts. There is no need to list them all here, business books are littered with over-used examples. To give you an idea, think of  Zappos, Apple, 37 Signals and Southwest Airlines.

Warning: Combining price or service as your and is the quickest path to failure.  Being the cheapest option doesn’t work.   It’s a race to the bottom of going out of business.   Service is fine to include in your business plan, but if you need to tell everyone you have great service, you probably do not have great service.

The and is the foundation and future of a creative professional’s success.  I work in a building full of creative people.  Many of them are designers who have a nice D-SLR camera and a couple of Alien Bee lights in their office. For many, this is their and.  If they are going to hire you, offer something they can’t do.

Everyone must start with core talent.  This is your strongest skill.  Never stop learning and challenging yourself to improve your core skill.  Once you have great skill, start to develop your and. Look for patterns of need. Sometimes you will find your and by accident.  For many, it will take some research to find a niche.  Some people have multiple ands, but I recommend you start with one and build.

Your new career is not the job you had before the digital revolution and economic crisis. If you discover your and, you can make a living doing what you love in this economy.

The New Generation of Social Media

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

The first generation of social media is well-established.  The early adopters are moving on to the next thing in social media.  I’ve put together a list of new social media websites and technologies that are part of the next generation.  Some have been around for a while, but are now coming into their own as the best ways and places to connect.

WordPress —-> Tumblr

For a long time WordPress was the dominant blogging platform.  Recently Tumblr.com took the lead and for a good reason.

WordPress is a deep site, perfect for active long-form bloggers.  The plug-ins and widgets allow people to let their imaginations run wild.  A WordPress site is almost unlimited in its functionality.  This has made it a great base for web designers.

Tumblr.com is very easy to use and perfect for the growing mobile community.  A large number of the Tumblr blogs are supplied with content delivered via smart phones.

Facebook —-> Google+

Google+ is a clean and easy-to-use social media platform.  The ability to place the people you connect with in custom circles makes it easy to send the right message to the most interested people.

The Google+ video hangout feature is the future of communication.  With a few clicks you can open a video chat area for a specific circle or share with the public.  It has a good chat client,  real-time updating stream (think of the Facebook wall) and makes sharing photos and video from you phone extremely easy.

If you have a Google account you will find it easy to connect and more efficient than logging in and out of other social media sites.

Flickr —–> 500px

500px.com is how the photography sharing site flickr.com would be built if it was invented today.  This site offers a great presentation platform for your photographs and makes no claims of ownership to your images. Nice.

500px is a great place to find photographic inspiration and connect with other photographers.  If you enjoy sharing your expertise there is a built-in social media wall and blogging platform to share your wisdom with your followers.

500px also has a nice website upgrade option complete with templates and Google analytics.

Evernote ——> SpringPad

Evernote is the place to store everything online.  Web links, photos, and random thoughts all have a place on Evernote.  SpringPad does many of the things Evernote does, but with a little more organization and a cleaner design.

My favorite SpingPad feature is the to-do check list. You can search for information and products online from the SpringPad search box. I find I still like Evernote more for some of my online and business activities.  Both have features that outshine the other. Currently, we are in the middle of a dog fight.

E-commerce website —–> Facebook page

Although the personal Facebook page has currently taken a back seat, the business page is more important than ever.  Early in 2011 Facebook opened up the API for their Pages to allow iFrames. This gives developers a universe of options to create dynamic pages that can be used for e-commerce and promotion.  With 750 million people on Facebook. a high-end Page must be a standard in your marketing plan.

E-mail —-> Twitter DM

I was pleased when Twitter released its platform upgrade last year.  I found the new direct message  (DM) system to be excellent.

For someone to send a Twitter DM to you,  they first must be approved. If you don’t like what people are sending you it’s as easy as unfollowing them.  Every time you click on a person’s icon in the DM section of Twitter, all the messages you have sent and received are displayed below the current message.

The way Twitter handles direct messages is how e-mail should have been developed.

Laptop —-> iPad

I use my laptop for e-mail, searching the Internet, and as a tool when giving presentations.  I can do it all a lot easier and better on an iPad.  The heavy lifting– such as processing and touching up photos — is usually done on my desktop computer.  These days many laptops are actually powerful enough to replace the traditional desktop for many tasks.

For now, I prefer a powerful desktop computer and plan to use the iPad for my day-to-day activities.

Yahoo Answers —-> Quora

In the past, Yahoo Answers was a good place to share your knowledge.  Now there is a new generation of question-and-answer sites with Quora.com as the lead favorite.

If you are trying to establish yourself as an expert, Quora is an excellent place to be. I don’t spend a lot of time there. When I have a question  for the public or want opinions from others. I’ve found the information and interaction with other people extremely valuable.

Some social media websites and technologies are still solid in their dominate positions.  Facebook has a long way to go before it is toppled. Twitter is the best media stream, in my opinion.  Although, like Facebook, Twitter will find some competition from Google+.  Linkedin is still the standard for business networking and I don’t see a solid competitor yet.

What do you see coming in the next generation of social media technology?

 

 

 

 

 

Three Links: Photoshop tips, large files and a reader for the iPad

Sunday, March 27th, 2011

Smashing magazine has 30 Photoshop retouching tips, send large files fast and free with Sendoid and photographyblog.com shares a compact flash reader for the iPad.

30 photo retouching tips you don’t know yet.

Move large files fast for free.

Here is a compact flash reader for iPad

Are we in the post-PC era?

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

A year ago I described the unveiling of the iPad as the day publishing changed.  After selling almost 15 million iPads in less than a year, Steve Jobs returned to the stage today to release the specs on the all-new iPad 2.  As he left the stage he declared that we are now in the post-PC era.

Do you agree?

Each month I review client analytics.  I do see an aggressive upward trend in the use of mobile devices. I’m not overly concerned about mobile computing taking over personal computers this year, but it’s coming.

Photographers must address issues related to the new mobile devices.  Screen sizes, screen quality, functionality and the creation of applications are all concerns.

The end of the PC era many not be today, but you should start planning for the inevitable.

Rosh