Home
FREE Ebook
Photography Website
FREE Newsletter
Amateur Photographer
Photography Lighting
Photo Galleries
Photography Ebooks
Part-Time Photography
Photography Props
Photography Books
Photographer Basics
Digital Photo Editing
Photoshop Tutorial
Site Map
Photography Niche
Photography Links
Marketing Resources
Contact Us
Photography Blog
Photo Ebook Guide
Marketing Tools
Freelance Photography
Stock Photography
Start A Photo Biz
Photography Portfolio
Wedding Photography
Boudoir Photography
Photography Store
Studio Photographer
Event Photographer
Family Photography
Pet Photography
Portrait Photography
About Author

[?] Subscribe To
This Site

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Add to Newsgator
Subscribe with Bloglines

Stock Photography Articles

Stock photography is sometimes explained as similar to the ‘gold rush.’ For photographers, that can be good news and it could be bad news. The good news is that there is a considerable amount of money involved in this photography niche. The bad news is that similar to ‘gold rush’ times, a very, very small amount of people found ‘gold.’

In stock photo business, you must separate reality from the hype. One of the resources that provide such clarity about stock photography is author Rohn Engh. He is responsible for my understanding of the stock photo business. These pages are

articles by him about different aspects of stock photography:

  1. The Stock Photography Industry Articles
  2. Stock Photography Niche and Specializing Articles
  3. Law: Copyright, Model Releases, Photo Theft Articles

These articles will provide you with a very solid foundation and a feeling of confidence regarding your rightful place in the stock photography market.

Stock photography shouldn’t be a gamble or a guessing game. Research is the key. Start with these digestible and informative articles. Stock photography is real.


Is Stock Photography for you?
Do you want to know?
Maybe, just maybe, you want to get your feet wet?
Are you ready?

Are you new to the internet business? Would you like to see what others just like yourself have successfully done on the internet? Click here and be pleasantly surprised.
One of the key elements of being successful selling stock photography online is your ability to do research. Search engines are used by most internet users. Search tools are used by the power searchers. Here is a search tool developed for the power searchers. It’s powerful! It’s simple to use! And, it’s free! Are you an event photographer? This is the perfect resource for you. They provide great resources for the event photographer. You take the photos, upload them, set the prices (and the markups) and the process is automated. Great resource! They offer a two week trial period.
ProImageGuide.com offers a free fully operational web site for three months (no popups or advertising). Take them up on their offer and learn how to operate a photography web site. Trust me, they offer a fully operational web site for free. This is a great resource.
Publish your photography work with an ebook. Ebooks are very profitable. Click here for more information on ebooks Sell your Stock Photographs This is a great resource to learn the basics of stock photography.
I first got a clear understanding of how to start and operate an online business from a course sold by The Internet Marketing Center. This course is the #1 selling course on the internet. They guarantee to double whatever profit that you’re making in one year, or they will pay you two hundred dollars!
Upload your photos Right Now and start selling Today! This leads to Smugmug.com. There are many sites that allow you online galleries - Smugmug.com offers unlimited space for your photos and they offer the greatest customer service. They offer a free trial. This is a good resource if you want an online photo gallery. You've heard about email marketing - what is it about and what's in it for you? You need answers! Don't you? Click here... Click here....

Your Photos: Look At Them As Deposits to the Bank
By Rohn Engh

Few photographers imagine their photos are worth much more than the immediate compensation they receive from a magazine, book publisher or assignment client.

Also, to save filing space, many photographers have thrown out extra "baggage" of "outdated" negs, and transparencies, and of course, digital images. Little do they realize they are tossing away a gold mine. In the early days, some photographers had special agreements with their publishers or newspaper and magazine editors, that ownership of photos purchased, could revert back to them (the photographers) after three years. In some cases the agreement would state a shorter period of time. (This was in the days before the revision of the Copyright Law decreed that copyright ownership now stays with the photographer. In its earlier form, the Copyright Law transferred copyright to whoever bought a "use" right to a photo.)

COPYRIGHT MATURITY

Unfortunately, in those earlier days some photographers didn’t take advantage of an agreement provision to keep their copyrights.. They were busy with their other projects and went on to other things, as the photo industry matured. Their original negs and transparencies, lying dormant in files at book companies, newspapers, and magazines, were sometimes discarded by a junior assistant or inexperienced clerk, to make room for contemporary work. What could have been an annuity for a photographer, disappeared into the dumpster.

Of course, some organizations had the foresight, manpower, and funds to catalog and save everything. One example is TIME-LIFE. Their files of photos chronicle the life and times of America since 1936. Their latest count of images was 21,000,000, kept in their climate-controlled library at the base of Rockefeller Center in New York.

When the former director of the TIME-LIFE library, Beth Zarcone, gave me a tour of their collection, I saw youthful pictures of Muhammad Ali (13 books have been written about him in the last decade), Frank Sinatra, astronaut John Glenn, Eleanor Roosevelt, and countless others. These were pictures taken by long-gone photographers who never thought about the legacy they were creating on film.

Recently, I had a talk with Flip Schulke, famed photographer of the Martin Luther King, Jr. era, and the subsequent years of political unrest.

He said, "As a young photographer in the 60’s, I didn’t throw anything away. After all, I thought of my pictures as my kids. Who gives their kids away?" As a result, Flip has a deep selection of outtakes from his assignments and self-assignments.

"Today, I’m making more money from those pictures than I did back when I took them," says Flip.

His books and photos on Martin Luther King Jr. have earned in the six figures. A recent sale to a major TV network for a TV special, netted $24,000 in one month.

Flip also is authoring a St. Martin’s Press book about Muhammad Ali. He is working with The University of Minnesota and Macalester College (where he graduated) in St. Paul MN, on a CD-ROM featuring his photos of Dr. King.

"Stock photographers should realize that their editorial photos serve as a pension, an annuity, as you get older. When you’re an editorial stock photographer, everything becomes history," he said.

Flip pointed out that many photographers might not have the time or funds to produce their own archival CD series. One way of getting around this is to donate your collection (with limited copyright) to a university, college or museum that has the budget to edit, conduct a selection process, catalog the pictures, produce a CD, and promote it. The institution and the photographer then share in the profits.

"Some schools, however, don’t always have the funds to follow through on the complete process. If they don’t, the pictures will sit around in a box, the same way they did at your studio. Choose carefully."

DISK SPACE IS CHEAP

For present-day photographers, Flip warns that despite the convenience that digital cameras offer to photographers and publishers, the process can backfire. In many cases, a city desk editor will take a memory card from a digital camera, choose only one or two shots from the photos on it, say of a fire scene, then zap the card – and then hand the disk back to the photographer. This may save disk space, but it destroys the outtakes that might prove valuable to the photographer’s historical collection.

Flip Schulke warns that every photo has historical significance. "Hold on to your photos. They are your future social security.

Rohn Engh is director of PhotoSource International and publisher of PhotoStockNotes, Pine Lake Farm, 1910 35th Road, Osceola, WI 54020 USA. 1 800 624 0266; Fax: 1 715 248 7394. http://www.photosource.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rohn_Engh

Stock photography just may be your niche. It's worth a look!



footer for Stock Photography page