The Difference Between Traditional Stock Agencies
And
Micro Stock Agencies
Selling Pictures To Traditional Stock Agencies
Selling to traditional stock photography agencies,
they usually want anywhere from
100-500 pictures, slides or digital pictures before they consider accepting
you. Be aware if your submitting digital pictures you will be expected to
be using only the best digital camera's like Canon's 1D Mark II or 1Ds,
costing thousands of dollars and that's not including the lenses which
should be 'L' quality lens also costing thousands of dollars. The
traditional stock agencies don't want a few good pictures, they want
100's of saleable pictures.
Selling Pictures To Stock Agencies:
What They Want
Selling to traditional stock agencies, they look at
pictures differently than the
photographer does. Simple pictures that have space for a logo for
advertising is what they are looking for. Landscapes can't be ordinary
they must be extraordinary.
If your selling good stock pictures, they will have wide appeal and can be used in
different ways. Cloud patterns, rainbows, ocean shots, flowers, must
have room for advertising.
Pictures must be tack sharp, well composed, correctly
exposed, no dust, scratches and for digital, no noise.
Pictures will need to be captioned with your name and brief
description of the image: location, species (must have scientific name)
anything that tells what is happening in the pictures.
Next decide if you want to be selling pictures to a large agency or one just
starting out. The larger agencies get more requests for pictures but
they also have many photographers so you need to be really good to be
accepted.
Before selling ask questions. Ask whether the stock company publishes a catalog and
what they will charge you to be in it. How about a research fee, usually
$50.00-$75.00. This pays the photo researcher to pull your pictures for
the client. Find out if this fee is figured into your commission. Find
out the length of time you would be under contract with the, usually 3-5
years. Find out if the contract has a renewal option should you wish to
be selling to different agencies. Find out how you get your pictures back. Most agencies
take a long time to get your pictures back to you...maybe years. Find out
if you are working for them exclusively or can you be selling your work, that they
do not take, to other agencies.
Selling Pictures To
Stock Agencies: Once You Sign Up
This is not a hobby. The more pictures you have on file the more
money you make. In order to make money from stock photography you must
continually submit pictures to them...several hundred tack sharp,
well exposed, perfectly composed photographs monthly.
Selling Pictures To
Stock Agencies: Income
A typical income from selling to these agencies is $1.00 per photograph per
year. However, it can take 12-18 months before you make any money at
all.
The number of pictures you need on file depends on what you shoot.
People and lifestyle pictures tend to be selling better and there are
fewer photographers taking them so 1,000-2000 good quality pictures could
make you a lot of money. Landscape and travel has a lot more competition
so selling fees per image will be lower. You may need 10,000 images and up to
make similar money.
Each submission you wish to be selling will be reviewed by the staff no matter what type of
stock agency you use. Cover your subject from every angle using
telephoto to wide angle and if your shooting slides always shoot at
least two every shot as dupes or duplicates. If a copy of the original
has to be made it won't compare in quality. Always dupe in the camera.
Selling Pictures To
Stock Agencies: Sell Your Own Stock
If you are selling your own pictures you set your own price and you get 100% instead of 50% usually paid
to photographers by stock agencies. HOWEVER, you now get to do what the
stock agency did, marketing, clerical, etc. You won't get lost in the
crowd as happens in large stock agencies and there's no competition. You
will know exactly where your pictures will appear. On what product or
publication you will permit you pictures to appear in. You get to run
the whole thing, from the shot, marketing it, negotiating and selling of
your photograph. There is one major drawback to running your own stock
company. All of a sudden you have changed from a photographer to a
business man. Maybe not your cup of tea. There is management time
involved in running a stock company. You will have overhead, limited
market, you will not have the wide range of buyers to be selling to until you are very
well established.
If you really want to do it selling yourself but don't really want the
management part, there are companies now that find the buyers but you do
the work. You negotiate with the buyer and you split is much better. If
this interests you, check out Photographers
Direct, Photo Source
International and Photo Gain.
If you decide to have a stock agency selling your
pictures don't limit
yourself to one agency, if possible. The usual approach is to give the
agency selling the most, first refusal. After the agency has
picked the pictures they want, what is left can be offered to the next
agency.
Another option is to shoot different subjects for different stock
agencies. Do not be selling the same or very similar pictures to more
than one agency. Actually do not sell the same or similar image to
anyone in the traditional stock agencies, magazines, calendar publishers
unless it is a royalty free image. More on that later.
Your best resource for selling stock photographs is Photographer
Market which comes out yearly at any book store. It is a wealth of
information for selling your photographs.
Don't get involved with a stock agency that requires it's
photographers to hand over any kind of payment up front for catalog
insertion fees or for every photography of yours they post on their
website. Any fees should come out of your commission check from selling
your pictures.
Most photographers make their money on only a small number of
pictures and the rest never achieve a sale. Let the stock agency
determine what are good pictures. Submit all (remembering tack sharp,
perfectly composed, etc) because it usually is the photograph you don't
care all that much about that makes the sales and the one your in love
with languishes, never to be used.
With companies like Corbis and their library of 3,500,000 images on
file how does the average person with the average camera stand a chance
selling pictures...well they don't with these companies but there is something new
in stock companies. They are called Micro Stock Agencies. You still have
to take good pictures, use the best equipment you can, but this is an
area you can compete in and win.
Selling Pictures To
Stock Agencies: Rights Managed vs. Royalty Free
Right Managed is the traditional way of doing business usually
through larger agencies such as Corbis and Getty. This would be for high
end pictures. The fees are much higher and are 'per use'. If the client
wants to use the photograph more than once, they have to pay the fee
again. It is per use not per image.
Royalty free is the newer way to do business and has lower end
pictures. The fees are much less and are 'per image' not 'per use'. The
buyer can use the pictures as many times as he wants. The fee is determined
by the image size. The buyer is not actually buying the image, it is
still yours. He can use it, he can't change it, it is still owned by you.
Selling to the traditional stock agencies with their huge libraries,
are becoming
increasingly picky as to the pictures they accept and the
photographers they work with so as a new photographer if you choose
selling through an agency it will probably be a Royalty Free Agency.
Micro stocks as they are called are the easiest way to
be selling pictures, you
sign up and upload your digital stock pictures. They analyze them for
the same thing the traditional stock agencies do, however, they are not as
picky. They still have to be in focus, sharp and no noise. This is the
fastest way to start your photography business or just make some money
as a hobby. Micro stock agencies are actively looking for images from
anyone and everyone. The best thing about micro stock agencies is that
they aren't exclusive. You can upload the same image to as many agencies
as you like. Sign up is free so sign up with as many as you like and see
which agency works the best for you.
Selling Pictures To
Stock Agencies: How Much Can I Make
On average you make about $10.00 per photograph per year. So you can
figure how many pictures you need to take and submit to make the kind
of money you are looking for. Selling part time or full time...it's up to
you.
The traditional stock agencies selling to large companies who demand high
quality from professional photographers using very expensive equipment.
So where does the mom and pop business get the advertising pictures.
Certainly not from the high price stock agencies. Small businesses can't
afford them. That is where the micro stock agencies come in...and you,
too.
Selling Pictures To
Stock Agencies: Equipment You Need
To be selling stock, you need good pictures of every subject you can think of. Just look
through their sites to get ideas. First you need a good 2 mega pixel or
high (the higher the better) camera. Each agency will list on their site
their requirements. Second, a computer and internet service to upload
you images. If you are reading this you are 1/2 way there. No camera phones
unless you get a breaking news story and are signed up with http://www.scoopt.com/
or http://www.citizenimage.com/
Micro stock agencies charge per download or per month. One company
charges customers $139 a month for 750 images so there are people
constantly downloading pictures. If you were selling here and made 20 cents per download
and you had 100 pictures that would $20 a month now multiply that by
more pictures and selling to more agencies. This is money coming in
every month, month after month.
The more pictures you submit the more money you make. This is one
of the fastest growing industries in the world and it's open to anyone
with a camera and a computer. Every subject is stock material from
coffee to cars to cats. Once an image is uploaded it can be selling for years
and on multiple micro stock sites. Unlike traditional stock agencies you
can get your pictures back simply by logging into your account and
deleting them.
I hope this has given you a better idea of what is needed in
selling your photos between these two
competing categories of stock photography.


|