How To Make The Jump From Amateur To Professional Photographer

What makes a pro a pro? How do you do it, do you just wake up one day and the photo gods anoint you a pro? Do you have to pass the pro photography exam and get some sort of certificate? I studied photojournalism at San Francisco State University where I learned a lot about the technical side of photography, ethics, work ethics, and  storytelling. What I didn’t learn much about was the business the side of things. I knew in my second year of college I wanted to be professional photographer but I had no clue how to make that happen. The industry is constantly changing and universities can only teach you so much.   The challenging part isn’t becoming a pro, the hard part is having the confidence to make the leap and make it work.

I made the leap about a decade ago and it hasn’t always been easy but I made it happen the old fashioned way, hard work and persistence. Now I own a commercial photography and video production company, a destination wedding photography business, and I shoot as an editorial photographer as well.  When I teach workshops or meet budding photographers at events the most common question I get asked is how to become a pro so I decided to put my advice into an article.  Everyone has a different path in their journey from amateur to pro but I hope these tips will help steer you in the right direction.

 

Talent Isn’t Everything

I wasn’t the most talented student, but I worked my butt off and stayed committed. Don’t let the narcissist professionals tell you it’s all about talent. Becoming a professional photographer is like anything else, hard work pays off in the end.

 

Commit

Make sure you commit to making it work no matter what, through the good photos and the bad, for better or worse.

 

Don’t Let Contests Be Your Measuring Stick

Photography contests are a huge business and most of them are purely for them to profit from your entry fee. Don’t measure yourself by how many contests you’ve won, your clients won’t care much about that. I’ve never had a client ask me about contests. Sure, enter them and have fun doing so but don’t stress if you haven’t won anything.

 

Shoot Even When You Aren’t Paid To Shoot

I’m not saying to go out there and work for free but practice and shoot whenever you can. If you want to learn about portrait photography gather your friends and do portraits of them for fun. Borrow lights if that’s your thing and figure how to use them.

 

Get A Proper Portfolio Website

A Facebook gallery isn’t a website, a Flickr account isn’t a website, an Instagram account isn’t a website, you get the picture.  Your website should have portfolio galleries in your specialties (example; weddings, portraits, products). You need a contact page, and about page, and a simple logo. Of course, having social media accounts is important but use those outlets to draw attention to your portfolio website where potential clients can see your work and hire you.  I use Squarespace, they are super easy to use, very professional customized templates and they won’t break the bank.  Another great option is Photoshelter, they are great resource for business advice and to manage your archive.

 

Equipment

Don’t be intimated by photographers with lenses on top of lenses and mounds of gear. Get a simple kit that you can afford. It’s easy to think “oh if I had that $4K camera I’d be much better. Get better by practicing and learning not by spending. Now I have expensive equipment true, but when I started I shot with one lens and one camera for an entire year’s worth of assignments and I got by just fine. Here is a link to my favorite gear and yes some it is really expensive but buy what you need and what you can afford.

 

Treat Yourself Like A Business

When you first start off you are the head of marketing, sales, accountant, etc. Understand the basics of these positions and apply them to your business.  Download basic contracts and invoice templates and customize them as you grow larger.

 

Commit

Wait dude, you already said that. Well, it’s worth mentioning twice so there, I said it. You will have moments when you will be bummed out because of a slow month(s), photographer’s doubt I call it, but stay with it and use that down time to focus on positive things like practicing and learning something new.

 

Don’t Be An Ass

This applies to all professionals I suppose but I feel many photographers can, well, be asses.  Don’t be insulted when you get low ball offers or asked to work for free. Let me rephrase that, you can be insulted, just don’t show it and don’t burn bridges. Understand your value, the market, and politely explain (not in condescending way) why your fees are the way they are.

 

Don’t Expect It To Be Easy

I’ve met a lot people that get into photography because they are lazy and it sounded better than a 9-5pm job.  I said it, writers and photographers are some of the laziest people I know and the ones who get work hustle and have ambition, the ones who don’t are lazy it’s pretty simple. When they aren’t shooting, they are bitching online about other’s work, hanging out in café’s not getting anything done. When I’m not shooting, I’m clocking in and putting full work days into my business, marketing, sales, research, etc.

 

Stack The Odds In Your Favor

For many editorial photographers their personal work/projects is their portfolio. Spend a lot of time on your projects and do them right. If photographer A spent 1 week on his personal project and photographer B spent 2 years on theirs, photographer B has a huge advantage. Most editors aren’t looking at how long you spent shooting your projects, they are looking at the final product and that’s it, so spend time on your project and get it right.

 

Crowd Funding

I bet you think I’m going to tell you that this is a great resource. I heard a panel directed at young aspiring photographers teaching them about crowdfunding as a business plan and it upset me, ok it pissed me off.

Don’t rely on others money to start your career, it’s like asking for donation for a charity and there are people in need a lot more than your friends funding you to travel to Africa to take pictures. Don’t be an ass like I said before, work and save and fund yourself. I get it for Kickstarter and places like that where you are trading special editions of a book, or selling prints, and stuff like that, I just mean don’t make this your only source of income. It’s not sustainable and your friends/family will get sick of funding you to travel around and take pictures.

 

Having A Book Doesn’t Make You Good

I see people rush to publish a book as if that solidifies their place as a pro. Anyone can self publish a book, it’s very easy to do. I can go out this afternoon, take selfies of me taking selfies and title it self reflection and have my book published by this evening. Does that make me a pro, does that make me good, no it makes me a narcissistic weirdo.   It can be expensive  and time consuming to publish your own book so wait until you have a body of work or project that you feel is worthy of a book and then do it right.

 

Understand The Market And The Competition

It’s very important to understand the market and your competition, so damn important. Look at the work of photographers in your market, see what they are doing right with their branding, marketing, etc and learn from them. I’m not saying to copy everything they are doing, just use them as a measuring stick for you and your business.

 

 

Make An Announcement To The World

Walk out of your house or apartment right now and scream to the world “I’m a professional photographer!” Ok, don’t do that but rather when you meet people in the real world introduce yourself as a photographer rather than “oh I work in the cooperate world and sometimes I take photos of this , that, and the other thing.” See yourself as a photographer and others will see you the same way. Do the same in the social media world as well.

 

Have A Content Strategy

I work with great content strategist named Brandon Chew. He’s taught my a lot for all my brands and helps me strategize on social content. We think carefully how each social media outlet identity and purpose  and how each outlet fits into the brand scheme of our marketing strategy. For example, I use Instagram to tease content that’s on my website, things like that. It’s also important to budget and strategize on how you target and boost posts. Email Brandon if you want to take your business to the next level. brandonbradchew@gmail.com

 

Related Article

This is a great article about photographer Eric Kim and how he makes over $200,000 from photography. Click here.

 

I hope these tips were helpful and if you have any questions or thoughts please use the comments section below.

 

Bliss In Bali | A Recent Photography And Video Campaign For Afini

We were recently commissioned by Afini, a new player in the luxury destination travel market, to shoot a complete visuals campaign, both stills and video production. The shoot took place in Bali, Indonesia spread out over two of their amazing villas.
Many of our clients the past couple years have hired us to shoot dual campaigns (both stills and video). Besides this obviously being more work for my business which is always a plus I feel it’s a great way to insure the visual style remains fluid throughout the brand.
To achieve this fluid style we are unique in that we typically couple one of our photographers, also trained cinematographers, with our director on the shoots. The style and overall look and feel end up having a consistent look across the brands entire visual campaign.
afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_001 afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_002 afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_003 afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_009 afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_010 afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_019 afini-mott-visuals-bali-photography-_026

Before You Hire A Photographer, Read This

This article is for large multi-national corporations, small businesses, anyone looking to hire a photographer for any type of commercial shoot, big or small. Even photographers looking to venture into commercial photography can learn something here. Be warned, this is a bit long but I‘m confident that if you stick it out you’ll learn something valuable in the end and you will absolutely be more prepared before your next shoot.

Hiring a photographer to shoot for your business can be an intimidating process. It’s a new language to most people and understanding what is the industry standard can be a never-ending labyrinth of confusion. Does your photographer use natural or artificial light, do I need models for the shoot, what should it cost, what format does the photographer shoot in RAW or JPEG, does it matter what camera the photographer uses?

Your images will be your first impression to your potential customers and they will act as the face of your business for years to come so it’s imperative you understand the basics and you know what you’re talking about.

I’ve been a commercial photographer and director for over a decade living and working in SE Asia and my business Mott Visuals has shot for some of the largest companies in the world including Nike, Intercontinental Hotels, Siemens, Holiday Inn, Unilever, Hyatt Hotels, Accor, and Bosch to name a few (don’t take my word for it, check my references).

I shoot for a variety of industries but to keep things consistent throughout this article I’m going to use hotel/resort shoots for most of our case references but just about everything below can be applied to all industries.

 

Natural or artificial light?

It’s important to understand the differences between a photographer using natural light or artificial light and even more important to know which style suits your shoot and to find the right photographer for that style. I know so many gifted photographers that take beautiful shots in a studio with artificial light but when they go out and shoot with only the sun their pictures are uh, let’s just say not so beautiful and yes the opposite is true as well. If you aren’t sure about the difference or which style is right for your business, just look at the photographer’s work that speaks to you the most and that suits your brand and ask the photographer if those shots were done with natural or artificial light, easy as that. If you aren’t sure which style is right for your shoot, start by understanding the difference between these two types of light.

Natural light and ambient light

We use natural light (the sun) for most of our resort/hotel shoots because I want our images to come off believable and yes, natural. Our style is not only defined by the fact that we use natural light but it’s also how we use it on our images. We also use a lot of ambient light for our night shots, such as lamps in the room, general room lighting, etc. I’ve found our resort/hotel clients want their images to feel more real and not have that CGI look that they can get from a graphic rendering. To achieve this look we use predominately natural light and minimal post-production. For resorts this is a lot easier because they tend to obviously be in tropical places with plenty of sun. For hotels, we tend to use some artificial light but we still use mostly natural light using deflectors and just being patient and calculated on the timing of our shots.

Pros

-Believable

-Natural

-Faster to work with resulting in more total images

-In my opinion flat out more beautiful

-Cheaper

Cons

-Weather dependent

-Limited latitude in post-production

-Not always great for highlighting products or brand names

 

Artificial light

Artificial light has its own look and it offers a lot more latitude in post-production (more on post-production later), meaning you can do more to the file in Photoshop without ruining the file. Often, artificial light can look fake but it can work well for the right campaign. For example, when you want to highlight a product in your shot you can do so easily with artificial lighting or if you are doing a studio shoot.

 

Pros

-More latitude in post-production

-Not as weather dependent

-Great for highlighting brand names or products

-More control of the entire scene

Cons

-More time consuming to set up and shoot

-Can look artificial

-Not as beautiful as I mentioned but that’s a personal preference.

-Can often be more expensive

This isn’t to say that it’s as clear as black and white. Some photographers balance artificial light and natural light quite beautifully and there are of course exceptions to the rules that I listed above. Bottom line, you should always look at portfolios of photographers that have different styles and if you aren’t sure if they use natural or artificial or both just ask them.

 “Just Photoshop It”. What level of post-production is included by the photographer?

For many photographers hearing the client say “can we just Photoshop it” can make them cringe. It’s important to understand the difference between color toning and DI (Digital Imaging) and you must understand what you need before the shoot happens and have a clear agreement in place with the photographer. I’ve found many of our clients have a very loose understanding what goes into post-production (or as many people just refer to as simply Photoshop). This is a complicated topic and just about every photographer or agency charges differently for this so I’m going to simplify things by splitting this into two categories, DI (Digital Imaging) and basic color toning (color balance, color correction, cropping, dust removal, etc.) Think of color toning as applying make-up and combing your hair and think of DI as a face-lift, nose job, Botox, and a hair transplant (yes I’m bald and no I haven’t considered this.)

Digital Imaging

DI involves things like green screen, special effects, image composites, adding or removing major parts of the images and things like that. DI is its own art and it can get expensive, they typically charge by the hour so if you hired a photographer for a shoot don’t assume this is all included in the fee for the shoot, most likely it is not. You can get an estimate from the photographer or studio beforehand if you have a rough idea of what will need to be done but again don’t expect this to be an open-ended amount of work that is included in the photographer’s quote.

Color Toning

This basic post-production is the best option for most businesses. This means adjusting the color tones of the image, removing noise, cropping, adding or reducing contrast and just overall making the images look sexier but not adding or removing aspects of the image. The cost and time for doing this is significantly less expensive than DI but it is still its own art and requires time. For about 95% of shoots this is enough for our clients. This isn’t to say we don’t do our best to accommodate our clients, we do moderate things like removing cranes from a skyline or if we need to remove a small distracting object from a shot we will, but if we needed to add an entire new skyline to an image that wasn’t there originally or add people to a shot that would be considered DI and we would charge a lot more for that.

 

Do I need DI or just color toning?

You will always need color toning done unless you have an in-house graphic designer but even then, I would have the photographer do it because most photographers have a certain style to their toning and their images were shot a specific way to match that toning style. Some photographers include it as a line item in their quote some just include it in their creative fee. Either way it shouldn’t be nearly as expensive as DI.

If you are doing a global AD campaign for a billboard for example and you foresee a lot of special effects to the image you will need DI. Some AD agencies will include this in their total fee if it’s a big budget shoot but if you are hiring the photographer directly just communicate what you think you’ll need and get a rough estimate from them.

To understand this better let’s take a resort photoshoot as an example. For a room shot looking out to the beach color toning would include adjusting the sky to make it nice and blue and the making the colors in the room pop, and brightening up underexposed areas and things like that. DI would be changing the carpets to a new pattern, adding a person in the shot, adding a completely different view, etc.

Have a clear understanding of what you need.

We often have clients come to us and ask us to provide a shot list. The shot list should come from the you, only you know what you have in your existing library and what needs to be updated. Go through your existing images and see what you are lacking and what you already have in order to save time and cost down the road. Before you ask for a quote you should have a rough outline of a shot list to present to the photographer or agency. Of course, the photographer can help guide you with ideas for shots and it can’t hurt to ask them their opinion about some of your existing images but this process needs to start with you understanding what you are looking for and why. It’s also important not only to communicate what shots you need but the mood you are trying to achieve.

Know your brand standard

Many big companies have a photography guideline, make sure you know them inside and out and that your photographer knows them as well. If you hire an agency they should know this as well but if you hire a photographer directly and you are acting as the creative director, then you need to show them your brand standard and make sure each shot follow it carefully. If you are a small business and you haven’t thought about this yet, sit down and think about what fits and what doesn’t for you brand. Think of things like for hotels to always have tables set, models not wearing graphics on clothing, room shots with or without pamphlets, etc.

Do photographers charge pr/day or pr/picture and how do I know how many pictures to expect each day?

It depends on the type of shoot, the photographer, agency, and the logistics. The most important thing is to find a photographer you trust, and then trust your photographer’s advice. If you’ve hired a reputable photographer (read above about checking references) they should be honest with you about the time they need to create X number of photos at the quality, they are conformable with. For our pricing, we use days as a baseline but there are many other factors such as shots with or without models, logistics, DI or basic color toning, output of images for print, web, etc.

I have the occasional client that tries to save money by saying can we just double the shots pr/day thus reducing the total days and fees by half? Nice try, but this is a bad approach. The reason is that rushed shots will result in poor and inconsistent quality. It’s not worth it in the end trust me. For hotel/resorts shoots I typically recommend 5-7 scenes pr/day and I work a variety of angles and postures in those scenes to get the best shots. For example, a day’s worth of shooting might include, 2 rooms shots, pool with models, lobby with staff and models, beach set-up, and a dining shot with models. Your photographers should know what he/she needs regarding time to get the quality of images you hired them for so trust them.

 

I’ve got good looking friends; do we still need professional models?

The short answer is yes, yes you do. I know so many clients that try to cut costs here and it can be a costly mistake.  Budgets are always a huge factor and every shoot is different so I’ll try to present here a basic case for when to and when not to hire models. For product shots, obviously, this doesn’t apply, just use this section for when you think you will need people other than staff in your shots.

For our hotel/resort shoots we often have a mix of days with and without models. For the days, we need models I highly recommend you go with professionals. It’s the same reason you hire a professional photographer and not Bill from accounting who just bought a sweet new camera. You’re not only hiring their lovely appearances but just as important you are paying for their experience, professionalism and overall talent. My business handles full production so we hire the models directly for our shoots and do all the casting and styling bundled as one package to make things easier for our client. I can’t emphasize how important it is to have professionals that are cast accurately for your brand and styled accordingly. I’d love to take all the credit for my images but it’s a team effort and if it’s not done correctly it can gravely sacrifice the overall quality of the final product.

A quick story for you, one of our huge resort clients decided not to take our advice and go with professional models and said they would take care of it themselves. We strongly advised against it but what can we do, they are the client. We showed up at the remote location and the model they chose was about 20 years older than their brand’s key target demographic (remember what I said about knowing your brand standard). In addition to that she could only work a few hours a day and the hours she couldn’t work were the hours we needed her most. At the last minute, they realized the problem and we had to scramble to cast and get professional models there on 24 hours’ notice, luckily we pulled it off.

The point is, that was almost a disastrous situation that ruined the entire shoot. In addition to models, styling and wardrobe is a lot of work both before and during the shoot.

The relationship between the photographer and model is key, it’s a team effort to get the best quality images. Professional models know how to position themselves within my frame, they understand what I’m trying to achieve and they help me achieve it. If your photographer is teaching your model on the shoot how to model, then he/she can’t focus on being creative at what they do best. I’ve done loads of shoots with professional models and plenty without and the difference is night and day. Our portfolio is a great example of the difference, just about every shot we use to represent our brand is with professional models.

Of course, for smaller budget shoots if you can’t afford models I understand you have to make do. A compromise might be if you are on a limited budget then reduce the total number of shots with models to only the absolute necessary shots. Or if professional models are completely out of the questions get the photographers advice on casting and prepare yourself on what goes into wardrobe, managing the models, and consult with the photographer about how much time they will need with the models.

Another thing to consider is contracts, when you hire a professional you have a clear contract so you don’t have to worry if you’re friend model has a falling out with you or goes and works for the competition or all sudden decides he/she doesn’t want you using the pictures for whatever reason.

Pros

-Professionalism

-Quality

-Clear Contracts

-Peace of mind

Cons

-Cost

Do I need an AD Agency or should I just hire the photographer directly?

Shh, look both ways and don’t tell agencies I’m telling you this but agencies can charge you a lot of, let’s call it what it is, bullshit fees and upcharges. Not all of course but many do and you also must consider the culture in Asia of kickbacks and bribes (more on that below) so you’re not always getting the best photographer for the job but rather the best photographer for that agencies creative director’s bank account.

This isn’t to say I haven’t worked with some great agencies that have contributed to improving the overall shoot but for the most part of I’ve found wasted money and a case of too many cooks in the kitchen sort of thing.

It boils (see what I did there after the cooking reference above) down to the type of shoot and the photographer you choose. Some shoots we work with agencies and some we don’t. Our business is different than most photographers in that we can handle full production including casting and hiring models, styling, photography, and conceptualizing the entire shoot. You can save a lot of money going directly to the photographer but many photographer’s need to be managed and many don’t handle all the above mentioned or at least don’t do it well. Look at the portfolios of the photographers you like, pick out your favorite images and ask the photographer if that was done alone or with an agency and ask if they conceptualized the images or if it was a creative director. Some photographers have an advertising brain and are masters of conceptualizing a shot that suits your brand’s need and some amazing photographers definitely need to be directed and managed, everyone is different. In the end factor in what you think you and the photographer can handle collectively for the shoot and if you can’t achieve it on your own be honest with yourself and go with an agency or find a photographer/production combination team like ours J(sorry for the self-plug).

 

Quality control

Most photographers I know are honest but I’ve come across a few during my 10 years here in Asia (both local and foreigners), that drastically embellish or flat out lie about their client list and some even steal other photographer’s pictures and represent them as their own. Photography in general is a saturated industry and many people want to take shortcuts to get paid work.

Some fall into a grayer area, but it’s still wrong and not someone you want do business with. For example, a photographer might take a shot of a well-known global hotel chain while they are on vacation or on assignment for a local magazine and then claim that the image was shot for that client or perhaps even imply that it was shot for them when it wasn’t. You might think, well if they shot for “insert big hotel chain here” they must know what they are doing and if it’s good enough for them it’s good enough for us. You might even think well if the pictures are good then who cares if it was on an actual shoot for that client. You must consider; do you want to do business with someone with those ethics and you also must think how would that photographer do under the pressure of working on a detailed shot list under the pressure of a commercial client.

How can you check this and is it worth? This is very easy to police, get multiple references from the photographer’s clients they’ve worked for and ask them to show you some tearsheets of work they’ve done for those clients (most photographers have these readily available). This might seem like overkill but it’s so easy to lie about your resume and extremely easy to steal other photographer’s work and represent them as their own. Finally, make sure their work is showcased not just in a pdf, an attachment, or a private gallery. Check their actual website, photographers are less likely to showcase stolen work on a public website.

What’s a normal process for payment?

Every photographer/studio/agency is different but we have two payment structures, a 50/50 and a 50/40/10

The 50/50 is what we do for most shoots. This means a 50% deposit before the shoot to secure the date and the remainder 50% paid upon completion.

We use the 50/40/10 for longer shoots or shoots that are done in segments that require a lot of money out of pocket for expenses. For this we take a 50% deposit before the shoot, 40% on first day of the shoot and the final 10% upon completion of the job.

Every breakdown is different but you must understand why photographers need a deposit. If they are in demand and a client locks in your date without a deposit and they turn down another job, then you postpone or cancel they’ve lost a lot of money. Be sure about your dates and understand the contract so you know the penalties associated with canceling or changing your shoot dates. We try to be flexible as we can but you have to understand the photographer’s perspective for charging you fees for cancelling or postponing.

Is bigger better? Does it matter what camera my photographer uses?

Photographers will argue endlessly about the quality of certain cameras compared to others. Chances are your photographer will be using a professional grade camera but it still doesn’t hurt to ask. Don’t be concerned about the size of the camera or the megapixels, that isn’t as important as you think it is. Sensor size is a lot more important, a medium format sensor that is only 20mp is exponentially higher quality than a small sensor camera phone sensor that is 50mp.

If you are doing huge prints such as a billboard campaign you might want your photographer to use a digital medium format camera but some of the high end DSLR’s can print that large too. Communicate with the photographer regarding how the final images will be used and ask their advice on the right camera for the job. A good photographer will know the right camera for the job and if they don’t own that camera they can rent it for your shoot.

Small piece of advice, don’t judge a photographer by their camera, judge by their work. I’ve seen some awful photographers shooting with $40,000 cameras and some elite photographers shooting with $1000 cameras.

Bribes and kickbacks

I live in SE Asia and unfortunately a big part of the business culture here is bribes and kickbacks. I’m not saying this doesn’t happen in other countries, I’m just saying I’ve noticed it happens a lot more here compared to our western clients. Yes, even for reputable international corporations and agencies with offices here it still happens. You might be thinking; well I work for an American company and I don’t personally do this so it doesn’t apply to me. You might not but your staff underneath you might and chances are you probably don’t know they are doing so. No one wants to admit this happens but it sure as hell does. Don’t worry, I’m not going call out anyone but we’ve been asked by marketing managers, creative directors at respectable agencies, marketing directors, etc. for kickbacks and we’ve lost jobs for not doing so. And no I don’t THINK we’ve lost jobs because of this, I’ve been told so.

We don’t play this game and we don’t give out bribes so if you were thinking of asking us don’t bother, not our style. Even if this is against a company’s policy many employees do this with photographers and production houses directly without anyone above them ever knowing. We’ve been on the bad side of this where it was obvious the client’s boss wanted them to hire us and they wanted to go with another photographer/production company because they make their usual their kickback from them and nothing from us. In fact, many were so bitter they even tried to sabotage the shoot looking for reasons not to like us but we are too lovable for that to happen, okay they probably still hated us but oh well. Besides the obvious horrible business ethics of these kinds of practices you also don’t necessarily get the best photographer/production company for the job and instead of your full budget going towards overall quality of the creative shoot it’s going into the pocket of your staff.

This is hard to keep track off and I don’t know how you can stop it completely and some of you reading this are taking bribes and mad that I’m putting this out there, sorry.  My best advice is to be cautious of any of your staff being overly pushy towards one specific photographer/production house and of course communicate the consequences if they are caught taking bribes.

If you think I’m making this up or exaggerating read this great article from someone in the agency industry in HCMC, Vietnam.

Should I care if the photographer shoots RAW or JPEG format?

RAW and JPEG are the type of files that your camera saves your images as, think of them as the modern-day film. RAW is a larger file and can be manipulated more in post-production without sacrificing as much quality. Most photographers shoot in RAW, edit the images in RAW and then when they are done editing they convert and save the image as JPEG to be delivered to the client. You will only use the JPEG for marketing purposes, high resolution for printing and low resolution for printing. You might want to own the RAW files or at least have copies of them as well in case farther down the road you want to do your own editing to them so negotiate those terms before the shoot as most photographers shoot in RAW but only deliver the images in JPEG to the client. Typically, you must pay more for the RAWS.

RAW files can be converted to JPEG but JPEG can’t be converted to RAW later so insist on shooting in RAW and delivering in JPEG. To make things easy for you have your photographer deliver the final images the following way; create a folder for high resolution JPEGs that you will use when you need to print the file and another folder for low resolution files that are optimized to be used for web use only.

Backing up your images

If you remember one thing from my article let it be this. When you receive your final images from the photographer be meticulous about backing them up. Use multiple hard drives and keep them in multiple physical locations. Yes, most photographers keep copies of the images but they aren’t obligated to do so and many charge a processing fee if you they must resend you the files. The fee isn’t what you need to worry about though, if you lost the files and the photographer didn’t have them either then you are screwed.

I recommend first off having them on 3 separate hard drives in at least two different physical locations. One or two in the office and one at home or at another office. Lastly, have a copy in the cloud somewhere such as Dropbox. Things happen, office fires, theft, and more common hard drive failures, so just be safe.

Should I hire a local photographer or fly someone in?

This is a very broad question and it truly depends on talent and who is available and most important who is the right fit for your shoot. If you can find a local photographer that works for you then go for it, but don’t do it solely off cost. I often see clients are scared off by the pricing for flying someone in. Often for our shoots the flights are just a fraction on the total cost so analyze the total cost of the job compared to the flights and make a rational decision. If you are doing it just off cost and it’s not done right think about the cost of having to do the whole shoot again or living with photos that you aren’t completely happy for years.

Usage terms

I could do a whole separate article on this but I’ll go with the short version because I’ve been a little long winded already. It’s so important that you first understand how you need to use the photos and for how long. Most photographers and agencies offer different pricing terms for different usage terms. Meaning, do you need the photos for internal use only(cheaper) or more likely do you need them for external use. Do you need them for print and web or just web? Do you need the images for billboards and if so do you need them for just one country, region, or worldwide? Models and photographers charge more for these things so only pay for what you need and negotiate terms and make it clear in your contract. The industry is changing quickly and there is no standard format but understand that more usage and more time typically equals more money.

Thank you for reading this long article, I hope you found it helpful. Every photographer and every shoot is different; this is just meant to be used as a basic guideline for businesses looking to hire a photographer for a commercial shoot. If anything is unclear or you have any follow up questions, please don’t hesitate to ask me in the comments section below. If you know someone who might find this article useful please share it with them.

DELICIOUS FILES – A PRACTICAL PRAISE OF THE CANON 5DS R

Full disclosure, Canon Asia is the sponsor of the TV show I’m on and I do a lot of work with them. However, they have never asked me to write any reviews of their products and I was a Canon user long before my TV show every happened.

I’m not a very technical guy so I don’t discuss much on technical specs nor will you find any charts, Bunsen burners, or lab coats in my reviews. I go off of feel, intuition and real assignment experience.

A little bit about me, I work independently as a photojournalist (most notably for The New York Times), I own a destination wedding photography business, and a commercial photography and video production studio. You can see all my work here.

For the sake of simplicity I made the review revolve around resort photography(even though I use it for all my commercial photography), but I’m sure you can see the benefits of it in numerous genres of photography.

Why I Bought It?
I purchased the 5DS R solely for my commercial business. We shoot a lot of luxury resorts all over Asia and beyond and I was looking for a high-resolution camera for these shoots. The 5DS R packs 50mp on a full frame sensor so you can see the appeal. I wanted a camera with great files because I’m always looking for more details and beautiful colors and when my clients need to print the images huge, I want those images to look stunning.

The Good
The best thing about this camera is the delicious files it produces. You still need to take nice pictures with your eye and brain but if you do get a nice shot you will be wildly impressed with the file, wow, just wow. The details and colors are like no camera I’ve ever used before, simply amazing.

For resorts I shoot a lot of inside out, meaning balancing light in a gorgeous room with the rooms view of the beach. You could always light the room and expose for the outside but I’m all about natural light and I try to avoid artificial lighting at all costs to maintain a sense of reality. The camera has a built in HDR mode, like a lot of new cameras, but I still prefer to get one middle ground exposure and then move the file in post production to get a more natural feel. The files on this camera can move a ton in post-production without compromising quality.

Here is a sample of a room shot we did for Intercontinental Pattaya, no artificial lighting at all we just ran the image through processing twice in Lightroom. This is all from one file, this isn’t a multiple exposure.

5dsr review photo

For cropping, you can crop in so close and the files still look amazing, see below. This comes in handy more than you think. This image was shot last week for Intercontinental Sun Peninsula Danang.

The Bad
It’s not as fast at processing as the Canon 5D Mark 3 or obviously the 1Dx series but I don’t need it to be. If you are firing off shots quickly the camera lags a little bit and takes that extra second to buffer. Put it up against medium format cameras and I’m sure it crushes them. If you are use to a performance action camera like the above mentioned the one extra second it takes will annoy you a little bit at the beginning but you’ll get over it.

The other thing is this camera is not a beast in low light. You can’t crank it up to 4K or 8K ISO like the 1D and expect the files to be crisp. It’s not horrible in low light but obviously it doesn’t compare to the Canon 5DM3 or the 1DX series.

This camera eats memory because the files are gigantic. It’s not a huge deal but get used to big files.

Ok this isn’t really the camera’s fault but I shoot predominantly with primes so I use a two two-body camera system. This camera destroys others with the files and I couldn’t match it up with others so went back to shooting with one camera at a time.

Some Advice
Buy the fastest cards you can get, I am a huge fan of SanDisk cards. Pay the extra money for the fastest cards, time is money.

I don’t recommend this camera as a one camera for wedding photography because the files are so huge and unnecessary but if you dial down the file size to Camera RAW medium then it becomes a fantastic number 2 camera, I use it all the time.

Who Needs This Camera
Obviously anyone working in commercial photography will love this camera, but it’s not just for professionals. Anyone interested in fashion, portraiture, pre-wedding, landscape, fine-art, food photography, basically anyone that loves color and fine details at any level will adore this camera.

Conclusion
I’d buy this camera again and again. Even when I shoot commercially I’m rolling around in the sand, dirt, trees, etc. so I’ve put this camera through the stress test and after over 100,000 shots and it still performs flawlessly. It’s a medium format camera packed into a DSLR body and not at a budget breaking medium format price. If you love gorgeous colors, printing your images, and fine details you will be hooked on this camera the second you load the files into your computer.

I use to hate when people say to me, wow those are nice images you must have a great camera. I have to admit that still annoys me but with the 5DS R I do have to give credit where credit is due.

Here are some of my favorite images, all shot with the 5DS R, from my commercial assignment last week for Intercontinental Hotels at Intercontinental Sun Peninsula Danang.

290A6064 (1)

To see more images shot with the 5DS R please visit Mott Visuals.

5DS R Specs
• 50.6MP Full-Frame CMOS Sensor
• Dual DIGIC 6 Image Processors
• Low-Pass Filter Effect Cancellation
• 3.2″ 1.04m-Dot ClearView II LCD Monitor
• Full HD 1080p Video Recording at 30 fps
• 61-Point High Density Reticular AF
• ISO 100-6400; 5 fps Continuous Shooting
• 150,000-Pixel RGB+IR Metering Sensor
• User-Selectable Shutter Release Time Lag
• Anti-Flicker Compensation

Purchase Online 

Holiday Inn Maldives Brand Film and Photography

Check out our recent work for IHG shooting video,stills, and aerials at the Holiday Inn Maldives.
Our unique advantage is we handle full production including casting, wardrobe, editing, creative, scripting, etc for our clients creating a one stop shop for all your visuals. Having the same team shoot your video and photography creates a fluid visual style.
Here are some photos for Holiday Inn Maldives:
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia
Cave Art Indonesia

Latest work of MOTT VISUALS in Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La, Vietnam

Last month, our cinematographer, Colin Elphick has came back from Australia and took in charge a new Mott Visuals Commercial project for Ban Phuc Nickel Mine in Son La, Vietnam. Those BTS shots would help you to know more about our job and its process.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

Ban Phuc Nickel Mine project area is located some 180kms west of Hanoi in Son La province, 80km east of the border with Laos and 150km south of the border with China.” – announced by Mancala.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

Colin focusing 100% on his work…

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

… make sure he would get the most impressive frames for video production.

BTS shots of Ban Phuc Nickel Mine, Son La. Cinematography by Colin, Mott Visuals.

Advice On The Business Side of Photography

JustinMott_stock_corbis
I’ve made almost every mistake a photographer can make in running their own photography business from running up credit card debt to doing jobs without contracts.  The biggest leap I made was when I decided to stop acting like a freelancer giddy just to get an assignment and started being proactive thinking like a small business owner trying to build a brand sustainable for the future. I never worked in actual office so I got a late start but better late than never.
I’ve had the privilege through festivals, photography events, and workshops to meet a lot of young and old aspiring photographers and what I’ve found are missing from these workshops and festivals is an injection of reality and education about the business world of photography. So I’ve decided to inject, if you don’t want to be injected, stop reading (sorry that really sounded gross and I promise not to use the world inject for the rest of this blog).
Here are some pointers, some big and some small,  that I’ve come up with for all of you who want to make a full-time living off of photography. No matter what genre of photography suits your fancy, this advice should apply to you. For any of you not in the photography world this is going to sound bizarre because you will think all of this is pretty damn obvious. I’m not claiming to reinvent the lens here (see what I did there) but sometimes we all need a reminder.
Retirement Plan
No matter how old you are start a retirement plan today!!! Open up an IRA, Roth IRA, or Self-Employment IRA account, it takes just a few minutes to sign up. I have a Self-Employment IRA through Vanguard,  https://personal.vanguard.com/us/openaccount and the money automatically comes out of my bank account every month and is invested in a mutual fund. If you are in your 30’s ask your friends with corporate jobs how much is in their 401K retirement plan already, the number will astound you. It’s not too late; you will need this money one day I guarantee it,  so sign up now.
Health Insurance
This applies mostly to expats but if you live abroad you need something to cover your ass in case of an emergency. I used a broker in Hong Kong and got a plan from Allianz http://www.allianzworldwidecare.com/  that works for me. One bad accident could bankrupt you.
Savings
Injuries, death in the family, emergencies, etc. you need to have money in case things go wrong. A lot of financial planners will tell you to have about 3 months worth of living expenses in liquid savings account as a bare minimum.
Taxes
Stay on top of this, know what is acceptable to write off and keep good records either with a program like QuickBooks or hire an accountant.
Contracts
For every job you do should have a contract signed before you do anything. Contracts are negotiable so remember that and don’t get bullied, unless of course you are working for in that case just sign the contract J. Templates are available online or hire a lawyer to draft you one. I hired a lawyer then made necessary adjustments. A good contract will save you and it will let your clients know you are serious about your work. Even with friends have a contract; it’s not about trust it’s about having something in writing signed so that you won’t have any confusion later on. I work with some of my closest friends and we have contracts that we mutually negotiated signed leaving no room for misinterpretations.
Credit Card Debt
Bad
Trademark
If you want to be more than an individual and build a brand, trademark your company. Your lawyer can do it for you and this will protect you from someone stealing your name and logo after you’ve built that successful recognizable brand.
Bank Stuff
Separate your business from personal bank accounts. I have a company credit card and bank account for my business and only those accounts are used for business transactions. Come tax time this will make things a lot easier and it will be easier just in terms of understanding your financials.
Be On Time
This might seem like an obvious one but I see it all the time. People like to make that joke about “I’m on (Insert Country Here) Time” or “I’m an artist” excuse, screw that. Be on time for all meetings, shoots, conference calls, and deadlines. Don’t forget photography is  subjective so things like being professional and being likable can always help later on when it comes time for the client to approve your work or hire you again. 
Rewards Programs
If you travel a lot get rewards programs for airlines, credit cards, hotels. Use them all time, they add up to great deals and will save you a lot of money. This dude has a website that offers advice on this, bookmark it. http://thepointsguy.com/
Get a Deposit
Don’t do any wedding or commercial work without an f’ing deposit. For editorial work it’s damn hard to do so because they are so last minute. For everything else don’t reserve your time, book airfare/hotels, and turn down other jobs until you get a deposit. We do a 50% non-refundable deposit, that at least covers expenses and more importantly covers our ass from a client canceling last minute. Without a contract or a deposit it’s really easy for a client to be flaky but it’s amazing how much they respect your time when they’ve paid you a significant amount already. I’ve helped a friend or bended a few times and guess what, those are the times I got burned so just don’t do it. Make it company policy and make sure friends and good clients understand it’s not personal. Sometimes a company will plead with you saying they can’t get you the money in time, guess what,  they can if they want you. They can pay their lease, pay their employees, etc. so they can pay you. Can’t and don’t feel like it are two different things. Be strict on this one, it’s a normal practice.
Final Payment
Don’t give up the goods until you see the $$$. It’s easy for client to say after they received the final high-resolution images to come up with excuses for a discount or delayed payments. We get our final 50% before we give any high-resolution images or video files. Again, we’ve made this mistake. We’ve had clients love the images and say so in an email only to delay 6 months to pay us or try to weasel a discount because image 27 wasn’t what they had in mind. Some will just make things up just to get a deal, not often but it happens.  It’s a pretty fair and simple system we use. We set up a locked online (We use Photoshelter and love it) web resolution gallery of images for the client to review. Once they sign off and pay us the remaining balance we send them the high-resolution images or video within 24 hours of receiving the payment via online gallery. Don’t do anything until you see the actually money in your account, just be safe. It’s a fair system for you and your client and put these details in your contract and terms up front.
DI (Digital Imaging)
Save yourself a whirlwind of trouble and establish what is included in the price and what isn’t in your quote and in your contract. Unless it’s a large scale advertising shoot of just a couple images our price covers cropping, color correction, color balance nothing else.  Additional work such as removing objects costs additional money. Also make it clear again on the shoot right away. Every shoot we do someone from the client side will make a comment on the first shot “oh he can just Photoshop that out” and yes many things are possible with Photoshop. I politely correct them right away to manage expectations.  There is a huge difference between changing someone’s hairstyle in 200 wedding pictures compared to changing a white sky to blue and removing a dust spot. Most people don’t understand how much work goes into retouching, they think there is just a button on your computer that says “Photoshop” and you press it and it just fixes things. They don’t understand it’s an art and time consuming. It’s not their fault for thinking like that and we can’t change that way of thinking but what we can do is clear up those misconceptions in our contracts and on the shoot. For our wedding work we include color correction, we don’t do smooth skin toning or removing of objects. Yes you see that in our portfolio but you also see that in our contract .  We’ve had small commercial clients put 30 retouching notes on a single image and gigantic global clients get the first round of edits and not ask for anything else, they were perfectly satisfied. It’s all about educating your clients from the beginning on what is possible and what’s not and what’s included in their price and what’s not. Set the tone early (pun intended).
Know Who You Are And What You Are As A Brand
Learn how to sell yourself and believe in what you do. Understand your product and the market for your product. Don’t market yourself as a guy who sometimes will do food shots or weddings if he’s asked to. Do you want to hire that guy/gal?
Get Organized
I’m not an organized person but we started using Dropbox and it simplifies my life. All of our company documents  there and are accessible no matter where I am. Every job has a job number and relevant files in a dedicated folder so it’s all right there when I need to access it.
Trade and Barter
I typically avoid barter deals for things I don’t need like luxury purchases such as a nice hotel room or whatever it is. Don’t get caught in that trap of a potentially large client not valuing your work and your time. They might want to trade you few nights for some hotel shots but then they will never hire you for a paid job. I’ve traded with a client at a hotel before and will do it again but only have I’ve worked with that hotel on a paid job and only if I see true value in staying there. I’m not saying don’t trade, just be strategic about it.  For example trade with a lawyer, take their company profile shots in exchange for  some advice and contract work. Just be clear, make them understand your true value from the start. Make a proper quote so they see your prices and then it will be a clear trade. I traded a wedding shoot with our graphic designers Croc and Plover. I couldn’t afford them at the time and it proved to be an amazing deal I hope for both of us.
What Is Your Budget?
Ask your prospective client “What It Your Budget?”. This is probably the best piece of advice I can give you. You’d be surprised how many clients will just be upfront with you. This isn’t an opportunity to overcharge but it can help a ton with assessing your quote. If the budget is higher for a video for example we can rent a crane or use our drone, if the budget is smaller then we might need to skip these things and shoot less days. For a photo shoot it could be a matter of terms and usage of images. The commercial quoting system is the wild west, just ask their budget and then work from there on how to give the client the most value and best product for that budget. This question will also save you time and effort if the two of you aren’t even close on pricing.
Portfolio
Have a professional site, Facebook or Flickr don’t count and never show your work to prospected client on your phone.
Dress The Part
Rolex and an Armani tailored suit for every shoot and meeting, no exceptions. Just kidding, but something between that and board shorts , T-Shirt, and flip-flops should suffice. 
Crowd Funding
I don’t knock you for trying and for some it works well but the key word there is “some”. When I hear this at panel discussions to new photographers as a viable solution to how to make a living in photography it kills me. The people talking about doing this in panels have a huge number of followers and at some point even those followers will get sick of donating money. Before I get angry looks at the next documentary photography festival and shunned from the scarf totting community that I feel like I’m a part of, I get it that it works for some of you but it’s not a realistic business plan for most. I have a few friends who make this work and I respect them for it but even they will admit it’s a struggle.  Try it out, but don’t rely on it as a way to be a professional photographer.
Get Of Your Ass And Go Get It
Work isn’t just going to flow in because you are a talented photographer or because you won a big award. You have to be proactive and go get it yourself. I get shit for OP(Over Promoting)  and at times maybe I can OD on OP’ing but I’m fine with that. I like getting paid to take photos for a living and promoting on social media helps me do that. It works for me, it helps clients remember our diverse business and hopefully they think of us when they need visuals because they remember that picture we posted on Facebook that is relevant do their business.
Most photographers don’t want to talk business because they feel it takes away from their art or their vision. I’ve personally had multiple photographers angry or weary of me for being a businessman. Not a shady business, but just a businessman. This doesn’t mean I’m lurking down alleyways making shady deals and trying to trick people and rip them off, ha ha gotcha!!!  I sell other photographers for weddings and commercial assignments and guess what I take a percentage just like an agency does. We both make money, to me this is a good thing.  My business has employees, offices, marketing expenses etc. and all that costs money but that’s what generates assignments. I’ve had people try to belittle my work as a documentary photographer because I also shoot weddings and commercial work. Shooting weddings and commercial work doesn’t somehow magically make you a bad photojournalist; I’d argue it makes you a better photographer.  My background as a photojournalist and as a documentary photographer helped created who am I today as a photojournalist, wedding photography, cinematographer, and commercial photographer. I personally love weddings, resort shoots, editorial assignments because I love photography.  I realize not everyone is like this and this is just what works for me personally. My point isn’t that everyone out there should shoot weddings, commercial, and editorial work , my point is that if you want to make a living as a photographer you need to start thinking like a business owner. You don’t have to be rich but you do need to survive long term financially. Don’t be ashamed of being a businessman or businesswoman(politically correct points) in whatever path of photography you choose. Embrace it and you perhaps you won’t have to Crowd Fund your retirement plan.

I hope this advice was helpful and please post your own useful tips in the comments section and yes I’ll accept a few wise-ass comments.