About

Tag: ‘behind the scenes’



Why I Sell Digital Photos.

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

floppy disc digital photos importance of physical prints

Let me begin this post (which I’ve been thinking about for a very long time) by illustrating a very popular point of view among photographers. Remember these? Floppy discs? I barely can; I think I last used them in the second grade. Didn’t they only hold about 2 MB of data? They were one of the very first forms of portable digital storage, and my point in bringing them up is to show just how quickly they’ve gone the way of the dinosaur. If I handed you one and said your images were on it, you’d probably laugh. Would you even be able to look at the photos?Among all the sophisticated computer equipment I own, I’d be at a dead end! I honestly think I’d be calling various imaging businesses around town, going through Google (not the phone book) page by page until I could find someone who has a floppy disc reader. And in ten years from now, I don’t think I’d have any success.

My point is, digital photos are risky business. Storage methods come and go, electronic devices crash and take data with them, and a rouge spill of water can destroy everything. It’s scary – and sad. In our digital age we rely on digital photos for so much, often without realizing that they’re so fragile.

 

What solves this problem? Physical photos, of course! I think prints and canvases (and my new Enhanced Print line, more to come on that very soon) are truly beautiful, in a way with which digital images just can’t compete. There’s something so wonderful and powerful about seeing a stunning enlargement of a favorite photo, and hanging it on your wall to see every day. Personally, for me, a beautiful photo, surrounded by a thick white mat, and finished with a classy black frame with just the right amount of detailing – gosh, it just does something to me inside. It’s timeless. I can’t get enough of it! In my ideal/future house, prints like that will be lining the walls! (Well, with a few exceptions of canvas gallery wraps. They’re my husband’s favorite, and I think they’re pretty great too.)

 

Of course you can argue that physical products are subject to fire/flood/any natural disaster, but the point is, you can look through your grandparents’ wedding album just as easily as you could have 50 years ago – and as you can in another 100 years. I think printed products are necessary, they’re arguably more important than their digital counterparts, and I’m not the only photographer/image-maker out there that’s concerned about an all-digital mindset. Will people be able to view the DVD of your wedding images in 50 years? Laptops (like the MacBook Air) are already being made without disc drives, and they’re getting more and more popular. USBs certainly aren’t guaranteed to stick around forever. So that’s why I encourage my clients to think about prints, canvases and books, and not just be content with the digital images.

 

Now, that being said – I still love digital photos. I really do. The up-side to this digital revolution is that storage methods are getting safer, sharing photos is getting easier, and there are plenty of fun ways that are emerging to use digital images (did you know you can make your own personalized stamps??). We recently had our photos taken by a fabulous photographer, and quite honestly, I wouldn’t have been nearly as interested in the session if she hadn’t made all the digital photos available for purchase. In fact, the images were included in the session fee! I knew I’d be getting them all! I was thrilled, and once we saw how great the photos all were, I wouldn’t have wanted to think about not having all the digital copies. We just don’t have the wall space to hang up every one, so that wouldn’t have made sense – but in some way, it just feels very satisfying to know that I have access to every single one of those images of me and my husband. That’s important to me! This is my family, and I want access to every one of those pictures! It’s as simple as that.

 

To take that one step forward, since I have creative control over my business, I want to run it in a way that makes sense to me. Therefore, I make sure to offer digital images, and I offer them at a price that (quite honestly) is well below the industry standard. I’m not ashamed to admit that (anymore). The price doesn’t mean that I value the photos less than other photographers value their work; I think they have all the value in the world, and my clients consistently tell me so. That’s not the reason behind my prices: more than anything, the reasoning is that I want my digital images to be accessible, to be attainable. I don’t want to price a DVD the same as a mortgage payment, or more (as some photographers do); simply because I value so highly giving my clients access to those images. Maybe that’s why the DVD has always been my most popular product. But for the above reasons, I don’t want it to be anyone’s ONLY purchase. I think there ought to be a balance between the digital and the physical! I don’t think they should be in some sort of fictional competition of “which is better” between them, because they’re SO different, and really, when you think about it, they serve altogether different purposes. At the end of the day, I want screensavers and backgrounds and Facebook photos, but I also want to physically see and touch my photos 50 years from now. Because if I know anything, it’s that I know I’ll still love photography then. And I’ll still love looking at photos of my family – and, of course, my dog.

 

I’d like to end this post with one of the images our photographer created, because for most of you, there’s no other way for you to see it!  :)

 

My Business, and The Shark Tank ~ Pensacola Pet Photography by Allison Shamrell

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

I got back from a photography conference called Imaging USA less than a week ago. I spent three very long days (starting before the sun rose, and ending hours after it set) learning about how to best run a photography business – from the most brilliant photographers in the country. It was an absolutely incredible experience for me, and since the business side of my business has been on my mind ever since, I have a feeling the next few blog post are going to be highlighting a few of the back-end processes of things, instead of the usual peeks at the final product for any given client. Because while those kinds of posts are important too, they’re only specific to each family I work with. The way I run and grow my business (even the way I think about my business) affects everyone I come in contact with. So I think it’s worth a few blog posts!

 

One of my absolute favorite shows on television is Shark Tank on ABC. It was introduced to me by my friend Lina, and I can’t thank her enough for it! To introduce you, I was hoping to grab a video from YouTube to embed in this post. Unfortunately, that didn’t work, so I have to make you click over to Facebook to watch the trailer for this season (https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10151185590135103) and a great (pet-related!) example of what happens to everyone on the show: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10150169908923204. Seriously, go watch them! They’re very short clips. I’ll wait till you’re done.

 

Back? Great! So as you can tell, this show is all about business owners proving the value of their product, their company and themselves. The sharks are filthy rich and could afford to invest in every single one of the contestants, but they don’t – they’re entering legal contracts to do business with these people for the forseeable future. While my heart breaks for the people who’ve mortgaged their house multiple times, dipped into their kids’ college funds, and maxed out their personal credit to fund their company’s product – and yet the sharks still say no – there’s definitely something to be said for the realism of the show. So of course, watching this (in between yelling at the contestants and the sharks, alternatively) I get thinking about Allison Shamrell Photography. Would the sharks invest in me?

 

I can test myself by the questions the sharks most-often drill the contestants about:

  • Have you made any money?  Well, thank goodness, the answer for me is yes. But the costs of running a pet photography business are far more extensive than I expected when I first started almost a year and a half ago! I thought the only expenses I’d have would be new equipment and treats for the dogs I’d photograph. Ha! Looks like I was forgetting a few things: insurance, professional associations’ fees, lab fees, product costs, website hosting, blog redirecting, online data backup, advertising materials, digital templates, product packaging materials, and a whole lotta postage. To name a few things. Plus, since this’ll be the first year I’m not reporting a loss on our tax return, I hear there’s a significant amount of income tax I’m about to owe. You’ll probably hear the scream when I find out how much. So, making money: definitely not a given. But at least I can say I have.
  • How many units have you sold?  Since Shark Tank has a primarily product-based premise, and my business is service-based, this question doesn’t entirely apply. But, I can say that I’ve been blessed with enough clients to keep me busy every day (and some nights!) for the majority of 2011. Of course, there are times when things are slow – like February, when the weather is just blegh and it’s generally too cold to be comfortable outside for a three-hour session. But that’s normal; every photographer has a busy season and a slow season. And since I’m a one-woman show, I’ve been selling enough units – wait, yuck, I hate how that sounds, I don’t “sell units”, I do custom sessions – I’ve been doing enough custom sessions to keep me working at capacity! Which, honestly, is how I like it. I’m one of those people that’s happiest when they have too much to do. Go figure!
  • What’s your plan for the future? Ha! I kind of giggle when people ask me about the future. With a husband in the military, and orders that could come literally any day (oh yes – we’re living the dream!) and take us across the country, the future is something I just can’t spend time worrying about. Since I don’t know where we’ll go, I can’t exactly plan to do much, and without knowing when this will happen, I see no reason to act as if it’ll be soon. It’s not ideal, but hey, it’s okay – and for the time being, I’ll keep doing what I’ve been doing, almost as if a cross-country move wasn’t even going to happen. Whenever we do get relocated, it’ll be a struggle. I know that. I’ll be starting over with no client base, no networking contacts – basically nothing but a website and business cards. Yikes. Maybe I would have thought that was enough to start a business a year ago, but now I know that I can’t do anything alone. Relationships are everything – in business as well as life, I think – and that’ll be what the future of my business depends on.
  • What’s proprietary about your company? That’s a very good question. There’s usually a specific reason why a new start-up business grows and succeeds: they have something no one else does. Something no one else can copy (usually because it’s trademarked or copyrighted). They focus on a weakness of a pre-existing product and turn it into a strength. Can I tell you something? Back when I first started, I remember designing my website and writing things like “Contact Us” and “We appreciate your business”. I didn’t want to touch my About page (that I knew I really should write) because I was embarrassed to admit that it was only me over here. No one else. I felt like no one could trust me if they knew I was doing 100% of everything; as if I needed a staff or even a partner just to run a halfway-reputable business. Wow. It’s embarrassing to admit that now… but my attitude has turned 180 degrees! Now I know that what’s proprietary about my business – what gives it its strength – is me! I’m literally the reason this business is what it is: I’ve made the big decisions about what to photograph, what products to offer, what I want my website to look like, and how to conduct myself in my business. (I would give credit to its general success, though, to my husband: he’s talked me down from some pretttttty bad ideas!) So I suppose that’s why my business is named Allison Shamrell Photography – is because it’s all me. When you decide to have a session, you get my time, my talent, my experience, my effort, my everything. And – sometimes this still surprises me – my clients don’t seem to mind that I don’t have employees. They’re okay with this one-woman operation. Thank goodness, because now I know I shouldn’t hide it, I should shout it from the rooftops!

 

Well, since I think this is one of the wordiest blog posts ever, I should stop there. Shark Tank is on Fridays at 8, plus it’s all over YouTube and Hulu. I can’t give it a higher recommendation. Go watch it and thank me later! And in the meantime, thanks for supporting this (very) small business.

 

I noticed when I was writing this that Bailey wasn’t napping in her usual spot in my office. I went to see where she was… and found the image I’ll leave you with today.

 

 

 

~ Dog Photography by Allison Shamrell in Pensacola, Florida ~

 

 

All Images Copyright | Blog Theme Created by LJP & SLR Lounge