The Mentor's Corner
Business and Marketing for ProsFrom Passion to Professional: The Real Shift
From Passion to Professional: The Real Shift
Most photographers start with a burning passion. The love of light, the joy of creating, the thrill of capturing something beautiful. Passion gets you in the game. But let’s be clear—passion is not a business model.
It won’t pay your rent, land you the client, or build the reputation you want.
The shift from hobbyist to commercial photographer doesn’t happen when you upgrade your gear or post a cool website. It happens the moment you stop thinking like an artist waiting to be discovered—and start thinking like a creative professional who gets hired to solve problems.
This mindset shift lays the foundation for everything that follows in your career. And no, it’s not about abandoning your identity as an artist. It’s about expanding your role.
From image maker to visual strategist.
From artist to asset.
From order taker to collaborator.
Step One: Understand the Client’s Perspective
Let’s get blunt. Businesses don’t hire you because you take “nice photos.” They hire you because you help them:
- Sell a product
- Tell a story
- Build a brand
- Solve a communication problem
That’s the job. That’s the gig.
Your camera? That’s just the tool. Your real value lies in understanding what the client needs—and delivering it with clarity, creativity, and purpose.
When you start looking at every assignment through the client’s eyes, things start to click. You stop shooting what looks good to you, and start building images that work for them.
Ask Better Questions, Make Better Images
Your job isn’t to push buttons. It’s to ask the right questions before you ever touch the shutter. Questions like:
- What is this image for? (Social? Print? E-commerce? Editorial?)
- What does the client need the audience to feel? (Trust? Hunger? Urgency?)
- What action should the image inspire? (Click? Call? Buy? Share?)
- Where does this image fit in the broader campaign or brand strategy?
When you have those answers, your decisions around lighting, styling, color, and composition stop being arbitrary. They become intentional. Strategic. Effective.
From Execution to Collaboration
Early on, most photographers are stuck in “execution mode.” You get an assignment, you deliver the goods. But professionals who thrive in this business don’t just take direction—they shape it.
Being a creative partner means contributing ideas, not just following instructions. It means thinking ahead, spotting potential pitfalls, and helping clients make visual choices that support their goals.
This is where your background as a visual thinker becomes a serious asset. You know how to read an image. You understand visual hierarchy, emotional tone, and storytelling. When you apply that knowledge to client challenges, you become indispensable.
The Bigger Picture (Literally)
Clients aren’t buying images. They’re buying outcomes. They want images that make people stop scrolling, lean in, take action. Whether it’s a food brand that needs to look fresh and delicious, or a tech product that needs to feel sleek and premium, your job is to craft visuals that perform.
That means knowing a bit about marketing, branding, and the buyer’s journey. You don’t need an MBA, but you do need to care about what happens after the image leaves your hard drive. Because that’s the arena where value is measured—and remembered.
We Call This Leveling Up.
Let’s squash the myth: Becoming commercially minded doesn’t mean you’re selling out. It means you’re finally getting paid to do what you’re great at—while helping people move their business forward.
You’re still an artist. But now, you’re one who knows how to make images that matter to someone else’s bottom line.
That’s the shift. And that’s the start.
Prompt for Reflection:
What do your last five paid shoots say about your understanding of your client’s goals? Are you solving problems—or just checking boxes?
Rethink Your Role
You’re not just a photographer. You’re a visual problem solver. Start acting like it.
This is the mental shift that separates the weekend warriors from the professionals who get hired again and again. Because clients aren’t looking for artistic expression—they’re looking for outcomes. And when you understand that, your entire approach starts to evolve.
- A bakery doesn’t need “art.”
They need images that make people hungry. Crust you can smell, icing you can taste, a photo that says bite me without using a single word. - A skincare brand doesn’t need “mood.”
They need clean, consistent visuals that say trust us in under two seconds. Texture, tone, and simplicity all working together to build credibility. - A design agency doesn’t need “portfolio fillers.”
They need collaborators—photographers who can hit the brief, stay on brand, and deliver without drama.
This isn’t about killing the artist inside you. It’s about giving that artist a job worth doing. One that makes your work more valuable, your pitch more effective, and your pricing easier to justify.
When you shift your mindset to focus on what the image is for, everything clicks into place. Your creative process becomes more intentional. Your client conversations get clearer. And your value? Obvious.
You stop being “the photographer” and start being the person who helps make things happen.
Recent Business Posts
MEET CARMEN BLIKE, PHOTOGRAPHER, ANTIBES, FRANCE
Meet Carmen Blike, an expat American photographer living in Antibes, France. She is one of my students and is really rocking photography in her little town by the sea. Carmen is a hugely dedicated and committed photographer and rarely does she not have a shoot day...
HOW TO FIND WORK TODAY
I recently posted this article at Petapixel. It is a simplified system based on my course Find Photo Clients NOW which is not for sale at this time. This is not new stuff, and it is not rocket science either. It is hard work, laid out simply for you to start today....
HOW TO DEFEAT GRAVITY
HOW TO DEFEAT GRAVITY I was noticing something day before yesterday as I stopped in a little slot canyon in the Escalante to make a photo or two. What I did, something we all do all the time, made me stop and think about how we have learned since we were very small to...
WITH GREAT RESPONSIBILITY COMES GREAT POWER
The Power of Responsibility "With great power comes great responsibility"... known as the Peter Parker syndrome. Actually, it dates from around 1500 or so. And that statement has been a part of a lot of philosophies through the ages. However, I tend to reverse things...
SPEAKING WITH THE ASMP MEMBERS, MAY 20, 2020
Keeping Focus and Moving Toward a Post-COVID19 World with Don Giannatti I am honored to be speaking to the membership of ASMP about my ideas on moving forward away from this "lockdown". My focus is on what has remained and what has changed and utilizing our vision to...
COFFEE SHOP PROMO REVIEW
COFFEE SHOP PROMOTION (COVER SHOT SHIRLEY YU) Wednesdays are review days for my students. I am up at 5 AM and uploading the images to take a look at them before I get into the live critiques that start at 9 AM sharp and continue on through about 12:30 PM. Three...
AN AIRBORNE TOXIN
"WHITE NOISE" A NOVEL BY DON DELILLO It has been several decades since I read Don DeLillo's "White Noise". I cannot say it was my favorite novel at any time. I found it less to my liking than my friend did when he insisted I read it. Some of the wordplay is...
Polishing Wood
WORKING WITH MY HANDS... ... has always been wonderfully enjoyable for me. I like to working with stuff to make something. Something new.Something better.Restore.Renew. Hands make it real. Whatever I am working with becomes an extension of me. My efforts. My strength....
WHAT MAKES THIS PHOTO GREAT: EPISODE TWO, ART KANE
https://youtu.be/xSyb4TlrNbc
HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY 3700% IN ONE YEAR
HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY 3700% IN ONE YEAR I first heard of the 1% growth principle through James Altucher on one of his podcasts. I think it was the first time, although it seemed very familiar to me so I may have heard it somewhere else. No matter. It made...
MOVING FORWARD IN 2021: A PHOTOGRAPHER’S PLAN
JUMP ON IN... AND GET READY TO SWIM LIKE NEVER BEFORE No more time to tread water, you have to make distance. Jump in and begin to push forward and know before you jump that the water has more resistance than it did before. That it may feel as though you are swimming...









