This article says it all, pretty much. I’m including it in my marketing materials that I provide to my clients.
10 Reasons Professional Photographers Charge What They Do
By Lori Osterberg
10. Professional photographers are in business, and as a business, need to make a profit. Because they make their career, they dedicate themselves to becoming the best they can be, and share that knowledge with their clientele.
9. Professional photographers have to buy professional equipment. Nope, they don’t just pick up a point-andshoot from Wal-Mart and declare themselves a professional. They spend thousands upon thousands of dollars getting multiple camera bodies, the finest lenses, flash equipment for every situation, tripods, light stands, backdrops, props, carrying and storage cases. And then when you think you have it all – you need to get backups for everything to make sure you never miss an image.
8. Professional photographers continue their education, and learn as much as they can about the business. They join groups like Professional Photographers of America or the National Press Photographers Association. They attend seminars and training by some of the best names in the business. They concentrate on becoming the best they can be.
7. Professional photographers don’t just snap a picture, they create a photograph. They understand positioning. They understand lighting. They understand placement. You’re not just paying for the ability to place a finger on the trigger and snap a picture. You’re paying for the years of experience it took to create the perfect image.
6. Professional photographers can spend hours producing one professional photograph. Time can include:
creating the marketing
answering emails and phone calls
meeting with the client to talk about the event
setting up for the event
drive time to and from the event
time for the actual photographing
running to and from the lab
meeting with the client for previews and decisions
processing the image
retouching the image
mounting the image
framing the image
packaging the image
dropping off final images
production work
follow up work
Add it all up, and you can see why one portrait session may include hours worth of work. It’s impossible to stay business if you only make a few pennies per client.
5. Professional photographers have to be more than photographers. They have to be CEOs and marketers, and bankers, and salespeople, and production workers, and janitors, and buyers, and negotiators, and networkers, and drivers, and organizers. And photographers. That’s a lot of skills for one person to master.
4. Professional photographers will do it all. Want to get married at the top of a 14,000 foot high mountain, where the only way up is a 30 minute ski-lift ride? A professional photographer will be there. Want a portrait running through the waves on a Southern California beach? A professional photographer will be there.
3. Professional photographers aren’t just order takers, they provide total customer service. Professionals photograph dozens or even hundreds of clients a year. They understand what looks good, how to put together albums, and how to group multiple photographs together. Their goal is to provide you with what you need and what’s best for you – not just have you sign on the dotted line.
2. Professional photographers watch for the newest, most innovative, creative products available. They stay up to date on industry news, and find things that perfectly match their clients taste. They don’t try and fit you into something you don’t like – they find out what you want and search the world over for the perfect things. They are the professional.
1. Professional photographers have the knowledge and the skill to make you look the best you can be. I can buy a hammer for a few dollars at the hardware store. Yet I spent hundreds of dollars for a handyman to repair my deck. I can buy a needle and thread for a few dollars at the fabric store. Yet I spent over $100 on alterations at local tailor. It’s not about the tools; it’s about the outcome.
Sure, anyone can buy a camera and take a picture. You can head down to your local discount store, wait several hours and have a minimum wage clerk place you on an X and snap a few pictures. But they can’t get what a professional can get. They won’t concentrate on expressions. They won’t advise you on outfits and locations.
They won’t provide 110 percent customer service. You won’t get a professional portrait.
Isn’t it time to see a professional?
Animoto
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I would suggest (for what it is worth) writing it from customer perspective and keep it to a short 3-5 items list that makes a solid value proposition. Customers do not care about a business’s cost, they pay for the service for the value they get. I also remember what marketing guru Ted Levitt said about Kodak and photography, “Kodak is not in film business, it is in memory business”. You are also in memory business not photography business.
Here are my gratuitous comments ( you should get a professional copywriter, not me, if you use these in your marketing communications)
10. drop this – does not convey value message
9. We only use the best in class equipment because your memories cannot be captured by anything less
8. We are continuously trained in the state of the art etc etc so we serve you better
7. We don’t just snap pictures, we capture memories …
6. Our work does not end at photoshoot, it starts there as we perfect the image of your memories to deliver you the best archive ( clumsy wording, of course but you get th idea)
5. drop this. it does not matter to your customers that you balance your own books fix your computers.
4. For capturing all your life’s best moments
3. It is a relationship focused on delivering you the complete service.
2. drop this. already covered by 9 and 8
1. this needs rewrite , something like, “You would believe just hammer and chisel were used to sculpt David from marble. It is not just the equipment, it is the artist who wields them” (again needs several rewrites)
Hi Rags,
Thanks for your input! I appreciate you reading and commenting on the post! The article was actually written by Lori Osterberg. She is a photographer, also. I agree with you – we are also in the memory business! Photographs are the most valuable possession many people own, in my opinion. If my house was on fire, I wouldn’t care about any other possessions except my photos, because they are memories and irreplaceable.