The Mentor's Corner
Business and Marketing for ProsRetainers Rock, Dudes and Dudettes
Why Retainers Might Be the Smartest Play in Your Photography Business
Let’s be real: one-off gigs are exhausting. You pitch, you shoot, you deliver, and then… you start all over again. There’s no rhythm. No predictability. Just a hamster wheel of hustling.
That’s where retainers come in. And no, they’re not just for agencies or consultants. Photographers can—and should—be thinking about recurring work as part of a sustainable, scalable business model.
📦 What Makes a Good Retainer Client?
Not every client is a fit. But some are practically begging for a consistent photography partner—they just don’t know it yet.
Think:
-
Product-based brands launching new SKUs every month
-
Restaurants refreshing their menus every season
-
Agencies juggling campaigns but lacking in-house shooters
-
eComm shops that burn through visuals for ads, email, and social
These folks need content all the time. What they don’t need is another cold email from a stranger offering “a shoot.”
What they do need is a solution that saves time, keeps their brand looking sharp, and lets them stop reinventing the wheel every quarter.
🔁 Why Retainers Work—for You
Here’s what retainer work unlocks:
-
Predictable income (finally)
-
Creative rhythm with fewer feast-or-famine gaps
-
Deeper trust with repeat clients who stop micromanaging
-
Operational ease, since you can batch shoots and streamline delivery
You’re not just shooting more—you’re building long-term momentum with clients who value your brain as much as your camera.
⚠️ But There Are Pitfalls
Not every retainer plan is smooth sailing. Common friction points:
-
Over-promising and under-delivering (don’t overload your calendar)
-
Letting scope creep slide because “they’re a regular”
-
Failing to automate or document (billing, deliverables, revisions)
-
Becoming the discount photographer instead of the trusted partner
Retainers aren’t about charging less—they’re about offering more structure and support, so both sides win.
Bottom line: if you want to move from freelancer to business owner, retainers help you build the bridge. You become part of your client’s process, not just an occasional vendor.
The Retainer Plan: Build Predictable, Ongoing Work
✅ Step 1: Identify Your Ideal Retainer Client
These are clients who:
- Create content regularly (monthly or seasonally)
- Launch new products or menus often
- Need consistency in branding and visuals
- Are currently hiring photographers often (or wish they could)
Examples:
- Direct-to-consumer brands (skincare, supplements, snacks)
- Local restaurants with seasonal menus
- Small agencies that outsource photography
- Content-heavy eComm shops
✅ Step 2: Design Subscription Packages
Keep it simple. Offer 2–3 clear tiers, such as:
Starter
- 1 shoot/month
- 8 final images
- One setup
- Ideal for solo products or social media
Growth
- 2 shoots/month
- 20 final images
- Two setups or styled scenes
- Includes verticals for social & email
Brand Partner
- Custom/monthly plan
- 30+ images
- Multi-location or styled scenes
- Quarterly planning session
Optional Add-ons: rush delivery, extra images, styled motion, BTS content
✅ Step 3: Create a Retainer Pitch Kit
Put together a short PDF or webpage that includes:
- Who it’s for
- What they get
- Why it helps them save time/money/stress
- A few visuals from past projects
- Pricing starting points (or call to customize)
Bonus: Include client testimonials that speak to consistency, reliability, and ease of working with you.
✅ Step 4: Warm Up Existing Clients
Start with past or current clients who’ve hired you more than once.
Email/DM Script Example:
“Hey Jordan, I loved working on the packaging shoot with you! I’ve been working on a few retainer-style packages for brands like yours that need visuals throughout the year. Would you be open to a quick call to see if it’s a fit?”
Don’t overcomplicate—start the convo.
✅ Step 5: Offer Incentives for Long-Term Commitment
You don’t need to discount heavily—but reward consistency:
- Priority booking
- First access to seasonal shoots
- Complimentary strategy consults
- A few extra images per quarter
✅ Step 6: Use a Simple Agreement & Auto-Billing
- Create a basic 3–6 month service agreement (use Bonsai, Honeybook, or custom contracts)
- Automate billing monthly (Stripe, Wave, PayPal)
- Outline:
- Deliverables
- Dates (or flexibility)
- Rescheduling policy
- Cancelation terms
✅ Step 7: Make It Easy to Scale
Once you get your first 1–2 retainer clients:
- Set boundaries on how many you take
- Batch your shoots smartly
- Consider outsourcing post if needed
💡 Bonus Tip: Sell the Problem You Solve, Not Just the Photos
Clients don’t want a “monthly shoot.”
They want:
- Weekly content off their plate
- A visual partner who understands their brand
- Fewer vendor headaches
Speak to that.
The Retainer Playbook for Phtographers
Recent Business Posts
Initial Collateral Design for Professional Speaker
My partner Robin and I have just completed a gig for Health Care Specialist Kelli Shepard. Robin is a Branding Expert (www.robinbramman.com) and she put together a brilliant brand strategy for Kelli. I am doing the photography and graphic design. Web design may be...
15 Free “Urban Color” Images for Bloggers/Designers
Free for personal or commercial use, these urban color closeups can be used for backgrounds, textures or simply bits of color. See the whole group of them here. You can also download the entire set as a zip file in the page. Enjoy.
Are “Brands” the Next Big Trend in Photography?
They are indeed, according to Paul Melchor. The influence of social media and brand identification are quite a powerful force. And where once editorial ruled the sensibilities of the advertisers, it is now "brand" photography that is engaging the ad world. Images...
The Marketing Roller Coaster… Get Off of It
Many of us struggle with the roller coaster of marketing then getting busy - when you are busy you don't market, so then you get not busy and start marketing - cycle up again. The key is to create a working plan, commit it to a calendar and then MAKE those commitments...
Gatorade’s Campaign for Exclusionary Positioning
Gatorade Tells Huge Demographic to Get Lost This is a very interesting commercial. They are actually telling a large demographic that they do NOT want their business. If you aren't someone who works up a sweat, their product is NOT for you. There are a hell of a lot...
CONGRATULATIONS TO JIM BRENNAN (MENTEE)
A BIG CONGRATULATIONS TO JIM BRENNAN FOR PLACING IN THE GOLD DIVISION: GRAPHIS PHOTOGRAPHY ANNUAL, 2019.Yeah - in all caps.I have been working with Jim and developing his commercial portfolio, marketing materials, and website.Jim is a remarkable creative with a very...
QUARTERLY PUBLICATION: Q1, 2019
I am committed to making a magazine each quarter of my life from now on. I will fill it with creative ideas and images and designs that I work on throughout the previous quarter. This is my first publication and features images from a road trip through...
WHY YOU SHOULD MAKE A BOOK EVERY YEAR
Why You Should Make a Book EVERY Year I remember being in a wonderful little book store in La Jolla one summer's day. There were shelves after shelves of photography books. Monographs, portfolios, personal albums, anthologies... just about every sort of...
THE MYTH OF “PERSEVERANCE WINS”
The Myth of "Perseverance Wins" YouTube is full of them. Facebook memes fill your inbox. Books, articles, and myriad Ted Talks discuss them. The ones who are now great but once were not. We all know the stories, almost legends. Einstein failing math class....
OWN YOUR CREATIVE EDGE – ESCAPE “GOOD ENOUGH”
Where the magic is. One of the things I see too much of is “like them” shooters cloning or borrowing heavily from other photographers in order to create a faux style of their own. What may even be worse is the group of photographers who are presenting...
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY AS A BUSINESS CAN KICK YOUR ASS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4D3rCQawKdM










