How To MARKET YOURSELF As A PHOTOGRAPHER: GROW Your BUSINESS.

Поділитися
Вставка

КОМЕНТАРІ • 44

  • @billieweiss7681
    @billieweiss7681  3 роки тому +6

    How do you market your photo business?!

    • @jackcoil9389
      @jackcoil9389 3 роки тому +2

      One way I try to promote myself is LinkedIn, the format is very similar to twitter in which you can get a lot of eyes on one post because once someone likes or comments on your post that is also shared to their "connections" as well. I also use twitter and instagram but have found that I like to use my instagram for more personal use as I do not upload much of my work there except on my story.

    • @billieweiss7681
      @billieweiss7681  3 роки тому

      @@jackcoil9389 Makes sense, Jack! You're right - LinkedIn is a great way to get the word out.

    • @emilykeller5963
      @emilykeller5963 3 роки тому

      I use instagram. I also do a lot of photography for free and have my client tag me on their social medias. Many of the people I work with have bigger platforms and contacts that could be important for me in the long run. Also just having a good website is helpful. It is a good resource to have in case someone googles your name or business.

    • @joeclaymore
      @joeclaymore 3 роки тому +1

      I think this depends on your market and what style of images you are selling. I work with youth sports and many parents don't like you sharing what images of their kids on Social Media without their consent. So i have to get consent/permission first. Then, since most of my work are composites, I usually simply post on Facebook because that's where most of my mom's are. Some on insta, but most on Facebook. They share my images and tag my business as the location. Word of mouth, exceptional customer service, hand written thank you notes to key clients go a long way.

  • @BeeEZ88
    @BeeEZ88 2 роки тому +9

    People are literally charging hundreds of dollars to teach within weeks what you just taught in a few minutes. Thanks so much for being a genuine photographer who wants to help your community without a monetary incentive 👏🏾 these tips are gold! Thank you!

  • @kevinchen8204
    @kevinchen8204 Рік тому

    Hi Bill,
    I watched all your videos, and really helps me. I am new to sport photography and wish to enhance my skills. I took your advice and taking multiple sports (Marching Band, Football, Volleyball, Drumline, concerts, baseball) from high schools, and street moto sports, I also took Street photos and a lot of portraits. I also take your advice that "take a lot of photos" (get 1 really good picture from 10,000 pictures). I started from Sept 2022 and hit 100,000 pictures by March 2023. and posted 6000 pictures. I really see the differences and change I have made. I really appreciated your videos and advices. I am going to continue this momentane and continue to love shooting stories and benefit to my communities and wish to improve continuously.
    I had some experience in high school 30 years ago, but pick up cameras in digital world just recently. Thus I basically only shoot in manual set up mode at all time with (70-200 f2.8), (28-75 f2.8), (50 f1.2), (Canon 10-18 f4.5-5.6), and (18-400mm f3.5-6.3). It pretty much covers all I need now.
    Kevin Chen

  • @hadams3666
    @hadams3666 3 роки тому +3

    A lot of good information here - and I love getting something beyond just "create a constant stream of social media content." Thank you!

  • @bquinn722
    @bquinn722 3 роки тому +5

    This video came at a perfect time as I have been considering if I want to take my photography from a hobby to beginning to dabble into something as a side gig. In fact, I just rewatched your portfolio video last night as that would be my next step. I appreciate the insight.

    • @billieweiss7681
      @billieweiss7681  3 роки тому

      Thanks Brian, glad it was helpful. Good luck with the next steps, sounds exciting!

    • @joeclaymore
      @joeclaymore 3 роки тому

      I made mine a hobby that I get paid for doing. I would suggest giving that a try first then jumping right in as getting paying gigs for a living is really challenging depending on your market.

    • @bquinn722
      @bquinn722 3 роки тому

      @@joeclaymore thanks. Yeah, as much as I’d love to make photography a full time gig, I am going to start pretty small. I have another full time job so just dabbling for now and we will see where that goes over time. Sure is a hobby I absolutely love and making some money on the side would be great.

    • @joeclaymore
      @joeclaymore 3 роки тому

      @@bquinn722 Start with the pointers that Billie makes. Make sure you ask others for portfolio reviews and make sure you ask people that can be critical of your work. Friends and family will always tell you your images are great. Other photogs are usually critical. Good web design is just as important as your images, so make sure that your website is clean and easy to navigate.
      Also, ask yourself "What am I selling?". I see so many photographers who "do it all" and lost the customer with "who is this person". I suggest that you pick a genre and master it. If you do too much, kind of takes away from why someone would want to hire you. Think of most businesses, they work with many verticals but Ford sells cars, Nike sells clothing and shoes, Kraft sells food. You don't see Nike selling cereal, solar panels, and building supplies for a reason. There brand is in the quality of their shows. Maybe Billie will do a video on creating a personal brand.
      But if you look at his work, he's a story teller. His images tell the story, and while a lot of it is athletes, he covers other subjects and still tells a story. I am a youth sports portrait photographer. I do some seniors at time but I specialize in youth portraits and team composites. Just a couple tips as you get started.

    • @bquinn722
      @bquinn722 3 роки тому

      @@joeclaymore I really appreciate the advice. There is a lot to unpack in your response. Sports is definitely my thing and really to this point it has been baseball. I'll branch out at some point but with it only being a hobby so far, I've mostly been shooting my kids and the leagues they are in. If you are interested in reviewing my newly created website/portfolio let me know and I'd be happy to send it to you for some feedback. Maybe we could e-mail?

  • @AfshinFeizPhotography
    @AfshinFeizPhotography 9 місяців тому

    Thanks for your insight Billie. Question: I am a portrait photographer with a fashion edge. I know that I should target fashion magazines etc but as you probably know, editorials do not pay much. they are more for exposure. What paying clients would you target in my scenario ?

  • @thejasonrobison
    @thejasonrobison 3 роки тому +4

    Thanks for the tips Billie. The work you put into this video is amazing. Thanks for taking the time to help us newbies.

    • @billieweiss7681
      @billieweiss7681  3 роки тому

      Thanks Jason, appreciate the nice feedback. Glad it's helpful!

  • @jeffgordon8346
    @jeffgordon8346 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for sharing your insights to photography careers.

  • @witheverybreath
    @witheverybreath 2 роки тому

    Thank you for the great advice, definitely will be applying this our my business!!

  • @photobizmethod
    @photobizmethod Рік тому

    True for the Fine Art Photographers too. :) Nice vid.

  • @TheRobbieRay
    @TheRobbieRay Рік тому

    Thank you Billie, this was very useful to me!

  • @kingsley.ekanem
    @kingsley.ekanem 10 місяців тому

    Hey,Billie I have just watched your video tutorial and its quite insightful

  • @alainastipcak53
    @alainastipcak53 3 роки тому +1

    Sounds like a lot of work goes into this! Great video with lots of helpful hints

  • @azwarych
    @azwarych 3 роки тому +2

    As always, great stuff @Billie! Any chance a BTS Media Day video from concept to execution on the table?

    • @billieweiss7681
      @billieweiss7681  3 роки тому

      Thanks Andrew! And yep, got it all ready to go. Hoping I can post it next week!

  • @ErwinJ7
    @ErwinJ7 Рік тому

    This is great! Thank you!

  • @JackBeasleyMedia
    @JackBeasleyMedia 3 роки тому

    Hey Billie, really good video and explanation. I like your use of examples and b-roll. Good job!

  • @joeclaymore
    @joeclaymore 3 роки тому +1

    Great advice. Glad to see your videos are getting more exposure because your advice is spot on! Looking forward to games in Boston this season. Are you ok if o swing by the pit and say hi?

    • @billieweiss7681
      @billieweiss7681  3 роки тому

      Thanks so much, Joe! And yes, let's hope the number of fans continues to trend upward. Of course, come say hey!

  • @jzcrossan
    @jzcrossan 2 роки тому

    Awesome channel man!! Just out of interest, which site did you use to set your blog up with?

  • @lucasdurante2450
    @lucasdurante2450 3 роки тому +3

    great tips

  • @freksfotos3550
    @freksfotos3550 Рік тому

    Can u help suggest typical promos?

  • @alexg0742
    @alexg0742 3 роки тому +1

    Nice video Billie. Good advice.

  • @kernzilla
    @kernzilla Рік тому

    thanks for the info here, but man you gotta match up intro audio better - it just blasted my head off m8

  • @HaroldEscalona
    @HaroldEscalona 3 роки тому

    👏👏👏👏👏

  • @cheyenneh752
    @cheyenneh752 2 роки тому

    What should a beginner photographer look for in a camera?

    • @kylerivas9756
      @kylerivas9756 2 роки тому +1

      I think the same concept that I used 20 years ago when I started still applies here. When you're starting, think of gear like you'd buy a car for a kid going into high school. Used gear is your friend and since budgets for most people are tight, it gives you the ability to try things out and see if it works for what you're doing. Obviously I don't know if your Canon, Nikon or Sony but camera bodies that are 2 to 4 years old are still great cameras. I would suggest potentially doing a mirrorless camera as we're in a large technology swing but a mirrored camera will still do the job. And cameras that have a higher frame rate are your friend. We're all a little spoiled in this category. Cameras can easily do at least 7 frames per second. The trick is also getting the settings right in camera and having a lenses that can also keep up with the action. For cameras, I shoot Sony so depending on your budget, anything from an A7 III to an A9 are solid cameras. For lenses, you can get away with lenses as old at 10 years or more and be fine. Just make sure the optics and internals are still functioning well. Lenses get dented and dinged but unless there's something within the lens that doesn't feel smooth, something grinds or feels clunky, walk away. But when I buy solid glass it rarely lasts less than 7 to 10 years for me. Lenses sports photographers should look at are a solid wide lens 24-70 or a 16-35mm at least an f/4 if not 2.8 and a 70-200mm or something equivalent. If you're primarily doing sports and events, I would steer away from primes unless it's something like an 85mm. Versatility is your friend as you develop your eye. Also, adding a 1.4 teleconverter to help with your reach on the 70-200mm really can be handy.

  • @knuttlaarsen7218
    @knuttlaarsen7218 3 роки тому +1

    Don't know how I bumped onto this. All in all Damn good clip 🥇😎. I also watched those rather similar from MStarTutorials and kinda wonder how you guys make these clips. MStar Tutorials also had cool info about similiar things on his channel.

  • @Maros_Mari
    @Maros_Mari Рік тому

    Bro, I like the content and your honest approach, but please try to adjust the audio levels - I almost stopped video when the loud intro jump scared out of screen… your voice in intro is much lower and intro music way higher, its better to adjust so they work in unison rather then against each other and viewer.