Posts Tagged ‘Website’

Understanding your competition: Podcast 150

Monday, April 25th, 2011

This week:  Understanding your competition.

  • New Media Photographer: A photographer who publishes to the web.
  • Time: 22:00
  • Podcast hosted by Rosh Sillars
  • This podcast is about new media, social media and digital marketing for the photographer.
  • This week’s show notes: Sunny Detroit, Food photography is picking up, Search Engine Optimization, Social Media and SEO, Just spell the name right, Review your competition, The blog is your personality, Video is the standard, How use Google Reader, iTunes, Spying on your competition, Digital Marketing Blog, How to make more money as a photographer.

New Media Photographer photography SEO resource pool:

Your site should be here.

 

Play

Where should photographers start in social media?

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

Your new photography client

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Web designers often include photography as a line item in their estimates and budget proposals.

It’s true.

I see it all the time. Unfortunately, it’s a line item that says, iStock photo.

Web designers want quality photography.  Stock photography is easy and cheap. This is why you must make it easy to do business. This is why you need to offer great images that make cheap photography look cheap.

Network with designers and Web firms.  Develop an easy and understandable pricing plan.  A good per-image pricing plan will do the trick.  High hourly rates will scare and confuse them.  Businesses don’t want unknowns when developing a client estimate.

Working with you should be the path of least resistance. A path that makes the Web marketing team look really good.

Give them a list:

Standard executive portrait: $xxxx
Each additional image: $xxxx

Table top product on white: $xxxx
Each additional image: $xxxx

Stylized product photography $xxxx

Exterior architectural image: $xxxx
Interior architectural image: $xxxx

The above rates do not include props, models, and location fees. All photographs delivered within 72 of creation via Photoshelter gallery (or your favorite online delivery method).

An online gallery allows clients to download the images as needed, just like stock photography.

Consulting $ xxxx

Yes, consulting.

Many designers like to dabble in photography. Give them an easy option for the times when an assignment gets over their head or goes bad — you will be the helpful and friendly option to fix the issue and save the day.

Develop partnerships and create image samples for the design firm’s Web site.  A gallery of your work on their site builds loyalty and the ability to sell your photography as a part of their packages.

Thousands of quality professional Web sites costing $5,000 to more than $50,000 are developed every day. Making these sites look more customized and professional is worth an extra $500 to $2,500 or more. This is especially true if it earns the firm more business.

It’s not like the old days when you worked your way into a couple of advertising agencies or magazines to make a career. The work is still there, but now it’s housed in thousands of smaller design shops, marketing companies, and public relations firms.

Go get ‘em.

Rosh

Three Links: Photography iphone app, Linkedin Labs and pumpkin pie

Sunday, October 17th, 2010

This week the link list contains an iPhone application that has promise, Linkedins’ new website  and a recipe for pumpkin pie (because I’m in the mood for pie).

Instagr.am :iPhone users can follow peoples photograph streams with this application.  Hopefully it will be availalbe for Andrioid soon.

Linkedin Labs: Linkedin has created a new site to share its employees ideas and innovations.

Pumpkin Pie: It’s that time of the year!

The best keywords for photographers

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

After looking at my website analytics, and learning that someone landed on my site in search of the best keywords for photographers, I decided it’s time to tackle this issue head on.

Where to start?

The best place to begin is not with who you are, but with what you do, the type of photographs you create or the services you provide. If your website  only states your name or the name of your company, you have a search engine optimization, or SEO, problem.

Vanity searches are not impressive. They mean very little when marketing for new clients. You want to attract the people who don’t know who you are. You need to draw the people who are looking for what you offer.

One of the first stops when researching keywords is to do what I did for this post. Look at your analytics and search for key words on which to focus. These are the low-hanging fruit. If people are finding your website with specific, valuable keywords even if you have not optimized for them — It should take little effort to improve those results.

Next use tools such as Google’s Insights for Search and Keyword Tool, which is found in AdWords. Both tools offer excellent insight into what keywords people are submitting to search engines.

Take a look at the source code and tags of  successful websites using your desired key words. Find out what  your competition is doing.

In most cases I recommend making your site location specific. As I’ve crowed about over the last few weeks, I’m ranked No. 1 on Google for keywords, people photographer. That’s great, but most of my work comes from Detroit people photographer or Michigan people photographer.   You want to rank based on where you live. Make sure those keywords are part of your SEO plan.

It is important to test. Early on I learned a valuable lesson when I focused on the keywords: Michigan photography. I was able to place well in the rankings, but people bounced off my site quickly.

Why?

Eventually, I realized that people searching Michigan photography were looking for pretty pictures of Michigan – not my people, food or interior images.

Be specific. Focus on one theme per page. Google indexes web pages, not websites. So every page is an opportunity to focus on a new desired set of keywords. Optimize every page.