Posts Tagged ‘photography marketing’
“I work so hard to get where I am today….”
“Exertion makes weak people strong, sloth makes strong people
weak.” ~Socrates~
In this recent photography marketing newsletter, I received this response
email from Simone….:“….omg this is soo true.can I put in a really good topic suggestion in which personally i need help in myself.I would love to know how to deal with so-called photographers who think they know it all but their work is worse than minei.e quality and composition..mainly composition and they get ten times more work than I do and I have also been in the industry 2 more years than they have.It kinda hurts me..I work so hard to get where I am today and then these random GWC comes along.I just can’t cope with big-headed guys who think they know everything and think they can have a full-time job in photographyyet I can’t.
I do beleive there are many people in my situation. I know I could be jealous that they get workbut I don’t understand how they can get work and I can’t and their work is a lot worse of mine.
I would so love your opinion on what you think. Simone.”Simone, thanks for the comments and your ideas. Let me address each of
your observations and give you and my readers a complete and honest
(would I give this any other way) analysis.What I have to say I feel is very key and very important to anyone
in business or anyone who wants to grow and expand.Life is all about growth. Expanding, and becoming the best
and most productive person you were meant to be. And in business
we have an excellent vehicle and opportunity to become the best
we were meant to be. At least we should be passionate and filled
with conviction about what were doing, in order to tap into
these passions. Business is an outlet. A form of expression.I assume you, and most other so called photographers are also
passionate about photography and business.Your first point:“I would love to know how to deal with so-called photographers who think
they know it all but their work is worse than mine
i.e quality and composition..mainly composition and they get ten times more
work than I do and I have also been in the industry 2 more years than they
have…”You are stating four things here:*they think they know it all*their work is worse than yours
*they get ten times more business*you’ve been around longerSee it?Are you sure they think they know it all? Usually people
who think they know it all manifest this in some way, AND,
we all know, they really know squat.They are all talk.But, you say they get ten times the work,
AND, with an inferior product. (or at least not as good as yours)So, they must know something. Since, they are out there
doing it, making something happen. No?Do you see where I’m going with this? The key could
be you. Maybe it’s something you’re doing, or, not doing.
There is a built in contradiction.Listen, one of the best, most poignant words of advice I ever
heard in business was from my mentor, Dan Kennedy. And this
point is relevant right here and now. Here it is:
“The key to success in business is by becoming completely immune
to criticism.”I’d like to add to that that one of the worst forms of
criticism is our very own. Self-criticism. Much of what you say about what the
other photographers are like could be coming from you. But let me
give you the benefit of the doubt, and assume they are acting like
they know everything yada yada…..I still say: “Who cares?”You shouldn’t. Become immune and stay centered and focused
only on what you are trying to achieve. Everything else is a waste of energy
and may seem like sour grapes to the outsider.The fact that you’ve been around longer is irrelevant as well. If they
are getting ten times the work, there has to be a reason. Their must be!After all, they’re getting the work. Doesn’t matter who’s better. People
buy for reasons we often aren’t aware of. I always said that marketing is the key.
What is it they are doing? Something has to be working in their advantage.I also have been saying for years that it takes much more than just being good.
Long gone are the days when one could open a photography studio up, hang a
sign, get some gear and a business card and business would come. Business
will not come to you, no matter how good you are or how long you been in business.That’s arrogance and laziness. One has to have goals that are clear, passion filled,
exciting and worth shooting for. And then act on them. Again, and again.In my opinion, the best way to deal with those photogs is to ignore them
and focus only on what you do best. And have a clear plan and the willingness
to act on those plans.For me, my personal experience has been to out-work, out-market, out-perform
and out-produce the competition. I am willing to go the extra mile.When you do this, you feel good about yourself. You don’t waste much timeon what others are doing, unless you see them doing something right.It’s all about what Gene Landrum talks about in his books on
success and power, namely, having a “Locus of Control”.“Individuals with a high internal locus of control believe that events result primarilyfrom their own behavior and actions. Those with a high external locus of control
believe that powerful others, fate, or chance primarily determine events.Those with a high internal locus of control have better control of their behavior,
tend to exhibit more political behaviors, and are more likely to attempt to influence
other people than those with a high external (or low internal respectively) locus of
control. Those with a high internal locus of control are more likely to assume that
their efforts will be successful. They are more active in seeking information and
knowledge concerning their situation.”There’s more to it than that, but the key to remember is in that last paragraph.
yours in photography,Robert ProvencherP.S. Read past issues of photography marketing gold HERE
The number one business killer
the heating system of the heart.”
28 seconds long….
for, well, you guessed it, servicing.
they’re thinking?
over here. So go away. Don’t bug me. Besides, that’s not my dept. We’re in
products, not service. You scumbag! I’m not even going to lift my head and say hi,
back to Solitaire…..”
invisible. The two people that were there had their heads glued to their monitors.
partly because I wanted to show you.
You might call it bad service. Although that is true, there is a bigger picture.
(before they became my client) and no one called them back. For shame.
simply don’t give a crap. Ok, maybe they do. Inside. Way deep down,
if I cornered them and forced them to answer, they probably would say,
yes, I care.
they’d do something about it. Like what they do when they train wait staff
at our favorite restaurant. You KNOW they are well trained. NO ONE ever,
ever, never gets ignored at this restaurant. And it’s because the owners care,
and have taken the time to implement strategies into their day to day
operations that reflect this. Break the rules, and you’re fired. Why? Because
clients matter most. And we must SHOW them. Not just talk it up.
No other reason comes close statistically.
as you walk in. And when you walk in, a smiley, pretty young lady
asks: “How are you?”
photography studio?
last year. How? Well, now I walk in, and now there’s a dude, in a suit! yucchhh!!
Some dude with a beard, older guy, my age. You know, executive
looking guy, grey beard. In a suit. Guess what he’s doing??
head is buried in the computer!! No way!!…way…..this sucks big time…
her about some banking stuff, and asked who he was. I figured maybe he was
some tech dude playing with the computer and doing tech stuff,…in a suit.
Or maybe the CEO of the bank, dropped in, and he had to check his facebook status
and update it to something like: “stuck at a bank with no computer
and had to use the customer service one…how bad is my day…my suit
is wrinkled too…waaa!!”
working!
He’s not even saying hello. And he’s wearing a freakin tie!!! What?? I’m supposed
to somehow be impressed by this dude? Gimme a break….
business when you can’t even take care of the very basics of good customer
service.
yours in photography,
P.S. Read past issues of photography marketing gold HERE
How to create the ideal price list for your photo studio.
having some new talent or opportunity presented to them. They have
developed the opportunity that was at hand."
~Bruce Barton~
How to create the ideal price list for your photo studio.
maze of confusion. I get the sense also that many photographers,
especially the newbs, treat the price list like a holy grail of marketing.
to clear the air on this one right now and give you some solid strategies on
creating functional price lists. And how to use it as marketing tool. (not marketing strategy)
strategy. For some other business's, it can be. Think about the restaurant industry.
and fine tune the menu to such an advanced level it has become an art form with a solid, measurable and technical strategy.
gateway to that experience. It holds the promise of magic, mystery and a
tantalizing journey of the tastebuds. It is very key!

for maximum results. It is a key instrument. It makes sense.
first big city wedding show. I was doing "research". Looking for ideas
on how to market my own photography business, specifically booking weddings.
that's where it stopped.
at their booths, jamming their prices lists in anyone's hands who passed by their booth.
into their bags. I'm convinced most never got read. They likely got trashed.
One studio was a high end industrial photography place, the other a high volume
franchise photographing portraits.
I created my own price lists, but I didn't truly learn how to create the best
price list for my studio until I learned about marketing.
*your price list is just a tool, not a marketing strategy. It does however have
some elements of design and marketing. Don't rely on it and only it
to grow your photo business.
away in these areas, and the price list becomes secondary. Useful, but secondary.
and how people respond to your prices and packages.
with a great price list alone. You need to go through the 101 smaller steps to earn
their complete and heartfelt trust. No one by passes this step. In time, with market
position, people don't question as much, since the trust is pre emptively earned.
client and their specific needs. IF one for maternity, one for fairy portraits, one
for families etc etc etc. This way, you get to use the price list as opportunity to
better communicate to that market and create specific offers and packages. IE You
may not offer large wall portraits for maternity sessions, opting for smaller,
more intimate products that make sense and use terminology that is consistent.
packaging approach. One way to describe this is: Bronze, Silver, Gold and
Platinum. The lower and higher priced packages are there to put the middle
packages, the "target" packages, in perspective and make them more attractive.
limitations and logical parameters, but overall, you get to decide. In other words,
don't go to your ten closest competitors, average out there prices, and make yours
a tad less. Or, worse yet, ask your clients: "What would you pay for this?"
A large part of what determines your price is your ability to sell. Your confidence
and ability to not blink when you quote your price plays a role here.
This is part of learning how to package and bundle your offers.
or exceptions will send doubt to your client. Careful not to create many mountains
or barriers. Your price list should create a clear, direct line of communication
with your client, and do this effectively. It, in a sense, becomes a sales tool when
used for maximum communication.
with me on this on, but I personally believe in being open, and generous
with my price lists. However, not in the sense of using it as a marketing tool.
For me, and my prospects and clients, it becomes secondary. A "oh, by the way,
here's the pricing menu.." sorta deal. I am open with them, but cramming it
in their hands and leaving it at that. I am not into hiding it, waiting and trying to
manipulate the client into coming into the studio first. I much rather focus on
creating a very strong market presence and position first. Sometimes the price
list is used as a qualifier. Scaring some away. But overall, my pricing is easily
accessible. Online, it's not "in your face", but available.
often neglected idea. A gifted product is far more valuable than a gifted, well
designed, super perfected price list. Don't you agree? Enough said.
less than four pages. One page prices lists are used for special event photography
such as fairy day:
See sample:

which you can SEE HERE.
pricing there are dates on them. See example of that here.
my wedding price list was over 24 pages long. AND, I had each one
bound in a black folio style paper binder. It make a wow impression.
And, I booked a LOT of weddings. Still do. I also used it as
a guide to follow when interviewing clients.
incongruities will create tension and confusion. A confused client
is a non buying client.
value aren't any good.
show you.
of gremlins or spam filters).
yours in photography,
Why I Don`t Photograph Teams, Schools and Clubs
longer, work harder, give more than anyone else.”
~Vince Lombardi~
anxious to pay the bills for my young and struggling photography
business, I took on just about every job that came my way. And I was
grateful.
what I loved, photography. No matter that I was up at 5:00AM
to shoot a hockey team before they had a 6:00AM practice.
If I were a lawyer, you`d call me an ambulance chaser. Someone
willing and eager to take on any job.
from the `bread and butter` side of photography than any other area.
I opened my studio? And shot ‘em for two more years
part time. I also waited on tables and disc jockeyed in order
to bring in extra income.You might say I was willing to do whatever
it took to make this situation work out.
So did the Simone‘s, way back when. (the Simone’s are in my opinion
the best portrait photographers on the planet, bar none.)
people throw away perfectly good opportunities because of
excuses and bad reasons. “buts” I call them.
let it in. Don’t slam the door with any buts such as fears, lack of money or
resources. With the right attitude on your part you will manage to put together the
right resources to make it happen. Being resourceful is far more potent and
valuable than having resources.
away chances to acquire big contracts with clubs and organizations or sports teams
and schools. Why? Because I have made the decision that it is not the type of
photography I want to do. Twenty years ago things were different and I took just
about everything. It all helped but I’ve progressed to where I can now pick and
choose.
You must find the market you want to dig for opportunities in and make sure it is
one that will be rewarding for you. Please note that a secret to success is choosing
a market that has potential for reward. Many make the mistake of deciding what
they want to do before picking the “who” they will serve.
of wisdom printed on it. I loved this quote so much, I grabbed one of my favorite
scenic images of an eagle in a tree, a silhouette, and copied this flyer, sandwiched
the two negatives together, and printed out copies for every room I worked in.
To this day I still have one in my office. If you ever watched one of my videos
shot with me in my office, you can see this flyer directly behind me.I also have
another in my studio work area.
I still believe in, and if you want to know the secrets to success, read every
word, every message, and take it seriously like I did.
ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initiative and creation, there is one
elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid
plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence
moves too.
All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have
occurred. A whole stream of events issues form the decision, raising in one’s
favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material
assistance, which no one could have dreamt would have come their way.
I have learned a deep respect for one of
Goethe’s couplets:
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it.
Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.”
-W.H. Murray-
But, as was for me, as is for them, they were at the time “opportunities”.
required me to focus on my futur, not on the present moment.
we’re going and it is an area that demands the most of us
in terms of faith, focus and, as Einstein believed in, creativity.
decide for us, for the wrong reasons.
and running your own photography business.
incomes through pensions, spouses or whatever. They are missing
out. Why? Because they don’t have to. They aren’t forced into being
innovative. They are at risk of being too “comfortable”.
ready to throw in the towel and get a real job tough (I been there a
few times), I read those lines again, and get clear.
When and what do you delegate your activities in your studio…and why?
environment in which you first find yourself.”
~Mark Caine~
motorcycle. You can follow my adventures and personal projects, if you
like, such as the Antigonish, Nova Scotia 5 Mile Road Race I just ran in in
Luna Sandals, and other craziness, by friendin me on facebook.
CLICK HERE
question lies the answer to growth success, prosperity and freedom.
how most people in business aren’t entrepreneurs (E=entrepreneur)
loud! This made too much sense.
He talked about how we’re busy, burning out, doing it, doing it, doing it, doing it,
doing it, doing it, doing it,…etc etc etc
The secret is to learn to delegate, and knowing what to delegate. In a nutshell
Michael states that optimally one should be spending 90% of our efforts on
strategy, and 10% on the hands on.
of the employee (bing! fries are done!), but mostly-this is how I understood
it anyhow- a large part of strategy is marketing.
be simple about this. It also includes not only the acquisition of clients
(which, in a nutshell is what marketing is all about), but in the aftercare,
the handling and on going maintenance of said clients, once you got em
in the door.
so to speak. I called it, for lack of a better name, the Marketing101,
marketing activitiss and strategies chart.
but I’m trying here. Bear with me.
always delegate.
and do all things, with the goals and complete intention of peeling away
these delegatable activities as soon as possible.
you guessed it, more marketing. Marketing is everything. Let’s always be clear on that.
what you do to bring your client to the door and what you do to keep
them coming back.

tasks. For instance, displays. The action of getting out there, creating
contacts to have awesome places to display, and the creation of said display
should not be delegated. But, once you have the strategies in place, then
by all means, free up your time by outsourcing and hiring minimum
wage help so you can better spend your time on the big picture
and further your marketing strategies.
Success in your photography business- How long should it take to achieve?
~Henry Ward Beecher~
posted the question about what to do when a client calls and only
wants the files burned onto a DVD, and they want t cheap. They felt
that they, since they were just starting out, and, they DID not
have a studio, they only attracted these kinds of calls.
bigger picture that this scenario begs to be questioned…..
inform them and let them go, not giving it another thought, unless we can
(and we try but don’t lose sleep over it-)help them
see the light.
…….it takes years to build a solid market position. And in this field, one needs to constantly work it. I do, all the time. And I didn’t become a success
overnight…hmmm, about 25 years so far, and the last 15 have been the sweetest.
But I never, ever take it for granted nor keep my eye off the ball. This has nothing to do with whether you have a studio.
If you moved into a studio next week, would that change everything? not much….
I say that, because we tend to look for external solutions. When the real
answer is
constant, steady marketing…takes time…..takes time….don’t assume any
success or profits any other way.
Rob…”
what I was speaking about.
millionaire mindset dude. (I subscribe to his blog. He’s a smart dude
and his observations are always bang on.)
“How long does it take to get to where you want to be?
The answer for most people is ‘Too long!’ In our culture of instant gratification, the
likelihood that it can take years to become a millionaire is enough to keep most
from ever trying.
The truth is few businesses make money in the first four years. In fact the average
business takes two years to lose money, two more years to pay back the money it
lost, and three more years to become profitable. In other words, it typically takes
seven years for a business to succeed.
For a lot of people that’s way too long, but for most fields of study, work, or
career, it takes about seven years to become a master. Seven years seems like a
long time, and in some ways it is, but in seven years how much older will you be
regardless?
One of the prime rules for success also happens to be one of the hardest to
swallow. I choked on it for a while, maybe because it’s so painfully obvious and
avoidable: that time is going to pass anyway. Seven years from now, seven years
will have gone by. Three years from now three years will have gone by, so
Secrets of Creative Genius
Secrets of Creative Genius
hockey. But I never played on an organized team. All my friends did, but me.
Instead, I grabbed my skates and stick and every day after school headed out
to the local rink and played “pick up” games.
back to play some more. It was what we did and loved to do.
the ball over and over.
we all did. Hockey players were my heroes. I had t shirts with
their caricatures and names on them, the way many girls have
Justin Beiber on their clothes. Players like Jean Beliveau, and my
favorite, the “roadrunner”, Yvon Cournoyer.
Cournoyer’s legs were so muscular that his pants had to be specially tailored to fit his legs. He constantly practised his shot using a lead puck that weighed more than four pounds and was soon known for his quick and heavy wrist shot.)
puck and made it over the blue line. He was fasssstttttt!! (I get chills to this day
when I think back to those days in our house, tee vee turned up, Saturday night, the Montreal Canadians played some other big six team, especially one their biggest rivals, the Boston Bruins, and Yvon got a breakaway….my mother would yell so loud the roof would raise a few inches. She being, in spite of 100 scottish descent, a hard core Montreal Canadian
fan like no other…)
participation, I don’t feel so bad for not being a team player.
is, according to Gene Landrums research, “introspective loner”.
snobbish, others creepy and still others may thing me a dreamer and
stuck in fantasy land.
extensively, likely more than any other success author out there, has created
a list of secrets of Creative Genius. Here is that list:
*tend to be introspective loners
traits? Has anyone ever tried to make you feel bad, less then, or critized you for
not “fitting in?”
drummer, as they say. Going alone and not conforming is not always
easy, since we feel pressured, we bend, break and conform. Sad.
states, “follow your bliss”…..
“If you follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been
there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is
the one you are living. When you can see that, you begin to meet people who
are in your field of bliss, and they open doors to you. I say, follow your bliss
and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were
going to be…”
There are no “secrets” to creative genius, but there are clues and hints,
and characteristics that we can look for, nourish, enhance, live and
encourage in ourselves.
this applies on so many levels. So take a good hard look at yourself,
look at that list, and go kick some serious butt. It’s what were here for.
There is no “EASY BUTTON” to success and marketing in your photography business.
possible.”
~Alexander Chase~

spring lawn….what gives!?
in the store (it was busy!) was becoming full time photographers and opening
up their studios soon, if they hadn’t already.
serious business owner, that it takes more, much more then being able
to create nice images and owning a camera and lens.
and keeps me and my steady flow of clients safe from attack.
is easy. Get some gear, create some cool images, and voila!
and part being lazy is human.
doesn’t it?
required, they contain the promise of easy pay off for less work.)
one purchased from Costco, in the hands of anyone, a child, my 86 year old
aunt, anyone, you simply turn the camera on, point, and shoot, and you
will “create” a great looking image, almost as good as what many full time
photographers were able to achieve on any given wedding day, back in the
film days, or better.
professional, say a Canon Rebel or Nikon whatever-they-have-that-competes-
against-the-rebel model.
that ability, that power and really ramp it up!
this phenom will help me, if I am smart.
easy, because the key is I need to be willing to constantly do what most
will never even clue into. And what most won’t even have the gumption,
the drive, the ambition and energy to put the action and plans
into place to truly make it work. Yes, in a sense it is easy, but the follow up
and follow through is where we separate the proverbial “men from the boys”.
whole universe that many don’t truly understand because they been have sold
a bill of goods based on, well, easy. Just pay the designer and you’ll get
awesome marketing. That’s the same old siren song.
is marketing, and truly understanding it, mastering it, implementing it,
and becoming a “marketer” vs a photographer, is the true path to success
and profits in this, or any other industry.
a digital camera and computer, more powerful than what was available
not so long ago, at tens of thousands of dollars cost back in the day.
thing.
Reality, so you can make accurate decisions, not decisions based on your ego
or pride, and false sense of success.
because of it. I believe the challenges, the struggles, the passions, and
ultimately the experiences one acquires through this path in life is one of
the greatest teachers. Business is the best guru.
achieve some success and take the call, the journey, the journey of the hero,
(you being the hero in case you missed that), you will expand even more,
blossoming into a new you, so to speak.
mindset and all the other stuff successful entrepreneurs are made of.
(it’s beyond me why so many do not read all the great books out there,
written by so many entrepreneurs who have been there. These books
are like diamond mines, free for the taking)
you do to bring the goods to market and the market to the goods.
Selling is what you do once the marketing has done its job.
and all things success based. When you take a good look and the reality
of being in business, a successful one that actually feeds and clothes an entire
family, not a professional “hobby”, you quickly realize that most folks with cameras
are so far from serious they hardly constitute a threat. It’s all an illusion.
swayed by the hordes of camera carrying “photographers” who are storming
the beaches of our industry. Not if I can help it.
I, or anyone can have in business is the relationship you have with your client.
clients. The iconic image and perception is an aloof, ego infested prima
donna.
to some degree or other, fit that image. No one stands out when they sing
and ask for clarification, I will send you to the photography marketing articles and
past newsletters and suggest you read em all. Start there.
and start dreaming. But do the work.
“It’s a bad time to be a photographer…there’s no money in photography anymore…”
you stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing which you think you
cannot do.”
~Eleanor Roosevelt~
on believing and beating the odds….a quick story
about one of the greatest women athletes, Wilma Rudolph…

weighed 4 1/2 pounds. The bulk of her childhood was spent in bed. She
suffered from double pneumonia, scarlet fever and later she contacted polio.
After losing the use of her left leg, she was fitted with metal leg braces when
she was 6.
medical care. She was from a large family. She was the 20th child of 22
children. Her father was a railroad porter and her mother was a maid.
Her mother decided she would do everything she could to help Wilma to walk
again.
every week on a long bus trip to a hospital to receive therapy . It didn’t help,
but the doctors said she needed to give Wilma a massage every day by
rubbing her legs. She taught the brothers and sisters how to do it, and they
also rubbed her legs four times a day.
By the time she was 8, she could walk with a leg brace. After that, she used a
high-topped shoe to support her foot. She played basketball with her brothers
every day.
Three years later, her mother came home to find her playing basketball by
herself bare-footed. She didn’t even have to use the special shoe .
She won three gold medals in the 1960 olympics….”
and hard work, your odds of success are severely limited.
that Jaco Fourie, one of the best wedding photographers I have
ever met, was coming to Canada to put on a multi-day workshop,
and that there was three spots left (me thinks he sold out, but
if you’re interested, click on the link and follow to his original
page…) That link again is here. Just go look at his work and tell me his wedding
images aren’t some of the coolest, high impact wedding photography you’ve ever seen.
After I emailed y’all, I received this email:
Isn’t it interesting, people ( like you) have resorted to selling “how-to videos” to make
money. Sandy Puc is known for this in the U.S. She tours all year and never takes a
single photo at her own “studio”.”
optimistic and up beat, and this was like a volley of stinging arrows,
so I got a little defensive….)
babies and families. I make another 5% through education, which I do through a
neurotic need to help others, and my other 5% through real estate investments, which
are largely long term investments, since I do NOT have a pension to rely on.
Your observations are dead wrong. Sorry. Jaco and many, many others I know are in
the same boat as I.
Your views are poisonous and likely the true cause of your frustration and/or failure, if
indeed you’re experiencing any- or frustrations. Just saying. You’re arrows and attitude
sucks. The truth is I am calling it the way I see it and I do want to help, but your
comments are wearing me thin. You can hate me now and unsubscribe in anger as
others who feel the same way have done.
respectfully,
Rob”
of Robin Hickman, who lives and works in Bozeman, Montana,
has a stay at home wife and three daughters. And, he’s totally crushing
it when it comes to running his photography studio.
it’s because he believes. And he has the right attitude.
myths that he chose to believe in, therefore painting himself
into a corner and creating his own reality.
information. (his email had a heavy dose of anti-information selling to it.
I know there are debates going on right now, with some photographers
believing that any selling is somehow wrong, tainted and takes away any
and all credibility from the information being delivered….uh? I don’t get it.
I want information and devour it. Without it I would suffer and get stale,
dull, whiney, and god forbid, maybe even negative. Heck, I don’t care what
your background is. You could be a mailman with great research skills
and if you brought to me, say, for example, the top 20 best all time poses
for brides and how to light them, and put all the energy and effort into this
product, and it was good, I’m buying it! Or should I say, “investing” in it.)
want to invest in it. I have boxes and boxes of cassettes and books, DVD’s, CD’s and
manuals all information on growing myself, growing my business.
have large teevees……
in his email. She cleared this up a while back in one of her recent webinars,
and here’s what she told me recently…….
At the max of my carer I was shooting 1250 session a year (by myself) and my staff
did another 750-950. We had 7 shooters, 38 employees. We were a high volume
moderately priced studio. It was that year that I reached my goal of 1.5 million gross.
(But I sold my soul to do it) The good news is that shooting that much volume, I
gained skills. To be fast and efficient
At that point (I was really burned out) So I decided to become a high end boutique
studio. To be honest, I was tired of killing myself. We raised our prices, changed our
look and tried to emulate the look and feel of success. We slowed our session count
but did not loose money in the process. Today, I shoot 4 days a week. Tuesday
Friday. I still shoot 7-10 a day (because i like that) I do not shoot weekends at all.
I have two other shooters. One that only works 3 days and does no more than 9
sessions a week and one that only shoots 1 day a week
we LOVE to work with each other and we LOVE our clients.
Changing my life has enabled me to share my knowledge with others. I love being an
instructor, but that will never take me away from my true love..Shooting.
Can you let (name withheld) know that I do indeed shoot more sessions that most
photographers do in a year. This year I will shoot about 350 (all by myself) in addition
my staff will shot another 750. It is true that we used to shot 2300 a year so we are
down, but that is a choice I made so that I could teach.”
in any business, the rules are the same. It takes hard work, risk, constant and steady
growth in the face of adversity (for many, these days, it’s the “economy”- but as Robin
mentions in his interview, in spite of a tough economic downturn in his area, he’s still
very busy.)
So don’t buy it, that….“It’s a bad time to be a photographer…there’s no money in photography anymore..”….nonsense.
Excellent interview with Robin Hickman
Special Notice from No Bs Photo Success co-founder Robert Provencher…
I’ve been doing interviews of other photographers for a reason.
Even though it’s audio, not a visual medium, the value is in the stories and ideas, and this month’s NO Bs interview with Robin Hickman is by far one of the best takes on how a photographer grows his studio, expands it into different markets, in this case boudoir (you really gotta hear this story! It’s amazing…)…
and the insights revealed.
Robin, in this interview, talks about how he grew and continues to grow a successful photography studio in the smallish town of Bozeman, Montana.
He lives with his wife and three daughters, all dependent on him to “bring home the bacon”, so to speak…..whoever says owning and running a successful photography studio is impossible is full of beans! This guy is the real deal, and all you need to do is follow his lead…..GO To the forum and LISTEN HERE
Yours in photography,
Robert Provencher







