Posts Tagged ‘The And’

The successful photographer in 2012

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

What is success?

Success is subjective. It means different things to different people.  I divide photographic success into two distinctive areas.

The first area is the opportunity to create beautiful images.  For many photographers, successfully finding and taking advantage of great opportunities to create beautiful images means they win.  Once you decide to make photography your career, the story changes.

For photographers who wish to make a living, success still involves finding great opportunities.  The difference between the amateur and the professional in developing photographic opportunities is marketing.

The second measure of success for the photographer is all math.  Your income should be greater than your expenses and your net income should be enough to live a comfortable life.  Once again, the measure of what is comfortable is subjective.  The basic math of income over expense is not.

A successful photographer knows how much he spends each month on studio space, location fees, insurance, assistants, professional fees, equipment, and repair.  He knows how much he needs to make each day to generate a profit and achieve his income goals.  Do you?

Add up every fixed business expense, to the best of your knowledge, that will you encounter over the next year.  Then add how much you realistically need or want to make as your annual income.  Then divide the total by the number of jobs you had last year or a realistic number of days you will work this year.

You might be surprised by how much you really need to charge to stay in business.

You cannot afford to work hourly.

When the average person thinks about hourly rates, she envisions $25 – $50 dollars an hour as a professional rate.  This is not realistic.  Here’s why: Most photographers don’t spend 40-50 hours a week photographing for clients. To meet her expenses and income goals, a professional photographer needs to charge more per hour on average.

Unfortunately for the hourly photographer,  photography production takes less time than it did 10-15 years ago.   It is more important than ever to focus on the value of the image.   Pricing per image is the way to go.

The only type of photography that can practically employ hourly rates is event photography.  The photographer is required to be at the event for a specific period of time.  An event photographer can’t get out early because she thinks she “got the shot” or worked efficiently.

Great, now that I’ve explained how you may be losing money doing what you love, how do you find more photography opportunities?

 Marketing

When it comes to marketing, it is important to discover and understand your competition. In the photography industry it may be easier to figure out who is not your competition, because everyone is a photographer. 

If everyone  is a photographer, you must understand what the average photographer does.  What is considered average and make sure you are not average.  If someone is going to hire a photographer, that person needs to feel she brings value beyond what they can do to the table.  Great value.

One way to help make the competition less relevant is to find your And.  Create a valuable product, service, or style that no one else or very few photographers are offering.

Create demand

You may offer a wonderful service, but if no one knows about it you will have trouble making a living.  You need to develop a 2012 marketing plan.  This plan must involve digital marketing and social media.

Many photographers still resist digital marketing.  These new marketing ideas are not new anymore. They are standard and effective.  This does not mean traditional marketing techniques do not work.  Many are less effective than they once where, but if you executed them well you will earn positive results.

Cost is one of the major factors limiting the use of traditional marketing for the 2012 photographer.  Quality and effective direct mail, Workbook advertising, in-person meetings, lunches, events, posters, and traditional public relations are all expensive.  In the past, good marketing was more about the photographer’s financial budget.  In 2012 it’s a combination of money and time.  The photographer must decide which is more available and how to balance her assets.

The solar system

To keep your marketing in focus, you need to develop a plan.  I recommend using my solar system model.

Start with your website.

A photographer in 2012 who does not have a website is not in business.  A photographer’s website needs to be clean and easy to use.  The photographs must be the very best work, not a catalog of your career.  There is nothing wrong with having a photographic catalog on your website, but it is important for your portfolio section to contain only the top 10-20 images that represent your vision.  Always make sure you have contact information on every page.  It is important to make sure visitors know what steps to take next.

Your website is the foundation of your marketing in 2012.  This is where you sell.  Everything else is designed to drive traffic to your website.  Circling near your sun is your blog.  Your blog is your personality.  This is where you share outtakes, commentary, personal projects, behind- the-scenes photos and videos.  This helps photography buyers understand who you are as a person as well as a photographer. It is also excellent for attracting visitors to your website via the search engines such as Google.

The next orbit of planets are your inner planets.  These are content-sharing multi-media sites such as YouTube, Flickr and 500px.   Your outer planets are social media sites such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Google +.   This is where you engage and develop your community.  It’s not as much about selling as it is educating people about what you do and developing referrals.

Note: I share more support information about my solar system marketing model in my book The Linked Photographer’s Guide to Online Marketing and Social Media.

Business in 2012 is still about people and relationships.  The difference is that relationships are now developed and reinforced online.  Social media does not replace in-person relationships. Social media and digital marketing doesn’t replace anything, it is a valuable addition to what already works in your marketing.

Digital marketing is not all social media.  Direct marketing such as e-mail and search engine marketing must be considered for your plan.  These direct marketing tools are like asteroids in your solar system and lead directly to your website for the conversion.

What is a conversion?

A conversion is the person visiting your website doing what you want them to do.  This could be a phone call, e-mail or filling out a form.  Once you get people to your website it is all about your sales funnel.  A sales funnel is the steps it takes to complete the sale.  What does your funnel or workflow look like?

An example of a broken sales funnel is all those business cards in your desk drawer.  Many business people collect the cards, but don’t do anything with them.  Another example is all the traffic coming to your website without conversions.  If you don’t know where your traffic is coming from you are losing opportunities. Take action to fix the funnel and make it more efficient so your sun doesn’t turn into a black hole.

Don’t let your sun turn into a black hole

The great thing about digital marketing is that you can test it.  Testing makes your solar system more efficient and ultimately generates more successful conversions and sales.   What do you test?  Everything!

Different keywords attract different qualities of traffic in your search engine optimization (SEO) and search engine marketing (SEM).  Your favorite photograph is not always the best image for your front page.  Often our favorite photograph has personal and emotional value, but it is not our best photograph to sell our services.  Test headlines in your e-mail campaigns and blog posts.

A successful photographer in 2012 never stops testing and experimenting.

Speaking of experimenting, a successful photographer strives to improve his photography every day.  Techniques and styles continually change.  Yours need to develop and grow, too.  Never stop learning.

Keep track of your successes.  What worked last year may not work today.  Some activities that worked in the past may have gotten lost in the shuffle.  Test them again, they may still work.

One thing that always works is to show appreciation to the people who hire you.  Thank clients and reward people who generate valuable referrals online and in real life.

Photography is an easy career in get into, but it is an extremely hard industry to stay in.   In 2012 a photographer cannot build a career just on the love of the craft.  She must have a vision, understand business and marketing,  separate herself from the competition, and continually educate and update.

What would you add?

Rosh

Digital technology and the new professional

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

A professional is someone who can accomplish things within their field above and beyond the average person.  Unfortunately, in the digital age, anyone can Google how to do what you do and do it themselves.

I’m not suggesting that by searching the Internet for instructions, anyone can do what you do well, effectively, properly, or legally.  If I wanted to learn how to perform heart surgery, had the aptitude and means, I could figure it out.  I could find the needed equipment online and — dare I suggest? — the heart, too.

Please don’t interpret this as permission to break the law.  I’m merely pointing out that you are not alone.  Many professions have been affected by advances in technology.   While this is not new, the pace has increased substantially.  Professionals are finding it hard to adjust.

What can a professional do?

The answer for most is to develop a plan to render the competition irrelevant.

How to you do this?

One way is to employ the and Combine your specialty with another craft, technique, philosophy, or technology and become the inventor, guru or go-to expert on the topic.  In the past, this was hard to do on the small-scale most professionals are engaged.   If the development of an and becomes too narrow of a niche, there would not be enough clients to sustain a career.

Most professionals of the past were also limited by geography.   Today the world is open to everyone with an Internet connection through social media and digital marketing.  If you develop an expertise in a niche area by combining two disciplines,  you can test the idea in your hometown and then share it with the world.   Even if there is only one person in each town who can use your service, you now have a much better chance of gaining access to them.

The new professional is a specialist.

Not every new professional creates a niche using the and. Some professionals limit their specialty to a narrowly defined  niche within their profession. However you develop your niche, average will not work.  Today there is too much competition to just be an everyday accountant, financial planner, photographer, writer, designer, printer, or business coach.

 

Twitter preload experiment – results: Podcast 164

Monday, August 1st, 2011

This week: Rosh talks about the results of his Twitter preload experiment.

Member of the Current Photographer Podcast Network

Play

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.