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”
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Failing to automate or document (billing, deliverables, revisions)
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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
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