WHEN YOU NEGOTIATE FROM KNOWLEDGE, YOU CAN WIN

TAKE A CHANCE AND SPELL IT OUT

… and it is true.

Names have been changed a bit to keep client/photographer privacy.

I had lunch with a photographer a while ago. We had met to go over plans for a big project and chose “The Vig” for delicious sandwiches and salads. What has that to do with the story? Nothing, I just wanted to tell you where I ate so it is kind of an Instagram moment.

He recounted this story from earlier in the year:

A prospective client had been in touch with him 5 times in the past two years about shooting his property, a twenty-six unit hotel in North Carolina.

Each time my friend sent him the same bid: $6000 for 16 finished images and usage of two years.

Recently the hotel owner called and was totally dismayed. “Why so much?” I hired a guy last year and he only charged $800.”

“How did they turn out,” my friend asked? “Since you are calling me today, I am guessing they didn’t do the job.”

The hotel owner was nearly apoplectic. “They were horrible, terrible pictures and didn’t do anything for my business. But you are ten times more expensive.”

“Actually, my images won’t cost you a thing. They will even make you money.”

The hotelier was now very curious… “What do you mean they won’t cost me anything”?

Most of the hotelier’s business came from website bookings. Internal and external research shows that the most important thing a consumer looks at is the photographs of the hotel… even before price in many instances. Having better photographs means getting more bookings.

My bud explained that in detail and then asked: “What is your profit per room, per night”.

The answer was something like $55 after costs of maintenance and pro-rating insurance etc. The hotelier KNOWS these things. Profit is not what he makes… it is what is left over.

“Well, my photographs are going to cost you .50 a piece per day. That’s $8 a day for 16 images that will help you book a room for $55. A net gain of $47. Even at two bookings per week, your costs will be paid. If the images bring in one more booking per day, your costs will be paid in a few months, and then it is pure profit after that.”

$16 per day / $2920 per year / $5840 for 2 years.

“If the images bring in 2 additional bookings per week, that is $110 per week or $11,440 for two years – nearly double what the images cost,” the photographer explained. “How many more bookings would you expect with really great photos”?

The hotelier explained that his chain estimated that great images could add an additional 5-10 bookings per week.

“Let’s say the images make it possible for you to book 6 more rooms per week,” my friend was really going after those numbers now. “That would be an additional $34,320 with just 6 more bookings per week. And I think we both know that can certainly go up when we make your place look crazy good.”

An hour later, my bud received the go-ahead. The shoot was booked three weeks out, shot in a day, and delivered in three days.

The hotelier was so pleased he has shown the photographs to his chain representative who was also fascinated by the breakdown of ROI that my friend had presented.

“It just came to me,” he said over lunch. “I was sitting there and looked at the calculator and thought… oh, what the hell.”

Are there ways you can use out of the box thinking to explain cost/benefit to YOUR clients?

I bet there is… and there is a calculator built into your phone.

Make the case for better by showing them how much more better can produce.

BTW, the hotelier reports much higher bookings as a direct result of the images my friend did.


Recent Journal Posts

IN ORDER TO WIN WE HAVE TO EMBRACE FAILING

IN ORDER TO WIN WE HAVE TO EMBRACE FAILING

One of the things about riding a big motorcycle is that is hard to go really slow. The motorcycle I ride weighs in at about 900 pounds with a full tank. Add my big ass to it and we are well over a thousand pounds. Physics, like inertia, balance, motion,...

read more
FOCUS ON BEING DELIBERATE

FOCUS ON BEING DELIBERATE

I could barely make out the song playing in the little bar in Ouray. I knew the melody, but it was damned hard to hear it over the clanking of glasses, conversation, and the air conditioning. The chorus did it for me, and I smiled big enough...

read more
“YOUR LIGHTING SUCKS”- MY GUT WAS CRUSHED!

“YOUR LIGHTING SUCKS”- MY GUT WAS CRUSHED!

OK, she didn't exactly say that, but it is what I heard. I was standing in her little office - 'her' being the art director of a major retailer in Los Angeles. The transparencies were scattered over her lightbox and she was looking at them very closely....

read more