A PROPOSITION:
We all struggle these days. Sometimes it is from the confusion so prevalent in the world today. Sometimes it is simply a personal issue that is weighing on our shoulders. Often it is because of the nature of our business. One fraught with challenges that are so different than the regular 9-5’er has to deal with that it is a bit difficult to relate.
And for them to relate to us.
There are a lot of solutions offered out there:
Meditation.
Going Offline.
Forming new habits.
Finding a mentor.
Accountability partners.
Eating right and getting the right sleep
… and many more.
After doing this for so many years, I would like to take the time to break it down as I see it.
The number one way to get known as a photographer is… to get known as a photographer.
Let’s examine some of the ideas we already know about.
Three contacts per day.
These can be casual or formal.
A phone call to someone who was introduced to you, or an email to an old client are easy and comfortable things we can do.
Sending a well-designed email is formal, attaching a photograph to a personal email is less so.
Both can be effective.
We can print a greeting card on our printer and send it out to a specific person with a specific message, or address 50 at a time for a drop to our list.
So many ways to mix and match these “contacts” that it should be easy to do. In only a few minutes per day.
But so many don’t.
And to those folks, I can only say; you must address this as soon as possible because it is holding you back. Ask yourself what it is. Then figure out a way to stop doing that.
It isn’t easy. It’s necessary.
Being social is part of being a photographer – well, a commercial photographer anyway. We are never going to be able to live in our hidey-holes and keep out the public.
The public is who hires us, or at least indirectly by reacting positively to the work we do.
We talk about shooting for our portfolios.
Let’s put a number to it.
24 exposures a day. Equal to one roll of fillm.
Or perhaps we can do 50 every other day.
This is not a lot of images to make.
A product or still life shoot on Tuesday will result in at least 50 exposures. So if Monday is spent on setting it up and getting everything ready, the number of images is certainly enough for our needs.
Heading out to go across town for an errand? 20-30 images shouldn’t be that hard to come by. Take a few on your daily walk, on the errands you run, and when you take your lunch.
There are images everywhere. When we are attuned to them they appear before us.
And by having that camera in our hands when we are out and about, relaxing at home, or on a casual walk we are reminding our brain that we are indeed photographers.
Does it have to be a DSLR? No.
Can a smartphone count? Yes.
To a point.
Training ourselves to actually BE photographers may also include training our brains for what that means. Having an iPhone in our hand does not automatically remind us we are photographers. Having a camera – even a P&S digital – does.
Being able to attract the images by being open to them revealing themselves may also include a bit of cajoling by the brain and the context of being “ready” for those images.
To me, an iPhone says ‘reactive’ photography. We see something and we react with the closest item we have to capture what we see.
A camera produces a deliberate photograph… responsive instead of reactive.
We want to be responsive more than reactive.
Now let’s consider what else we can do to step it up.
Introducing Collections III: Fall 2022
Introducing The Collective III: Fall 2022We are a group of photographers who have binding love of the photographic medium, and a desire to share our work with all who love the magic of photography. All of the photographers in this book are members of Project 52 Pro...
TEN WAYS TO STAND OUT IN THE CROWDED FIELD OF PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY
Everyone tells you the same things… here are a few different approaches. There are more photographers than ever before. And while I do not believe that is necessarily bad, it does create a lot of marketing “noise”. Our mission is to raise ourselves up above that noise...
SEEKING THE “PERFECT” IMAGE MAY BE COUNTER PRODUCTIVE
Sometimes we get focused on the things we think will make us better and ignore the simple things that will indeed make us better. Recently I wrote about not taking enough photographs, now I will take on the idea of the ‘perfect’ image… or exposure or composition....
POLAROID PORTRAITS AROUND 1985
Back in the mid ’80s, I was shooting a lot of fashion and beauty work in my Phoenix studio, and occasionally in New York and Chicago. Those were heady times with shoot schedules coming back to back for weeks and months at a time. My work at the time was mostly focused...
SO YOU’RE A PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER… WHY SHOULD ANYONE HIRE YOU?
“Why should I hire you to shoot this job for us?” This is one of the most challenging questions you will ever get. It happened to me once and I had no answer. None. My brain simply stopped doing anything as I sat there wondering what in the hell I was supposed to say?...
BLACK FRIDAY
THE ANNUAL BLACK FRIDAY EVENT RECORDINGS NOW AVAILABLE I have been doing this for several years. My Black Friday stuff is always free, always entertaining, always informative. Everybody else wants your money, I only want you to be better at what you do. THIS YEAR'S...