Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Interviewed: Jonathan Ross on New Stock Agency Spaces Images

Jonathan Ross, co-founder of Spaces Images stock agency.

Jonathan Ross and his Wife Amy Anderson have risen to the top of the photography world as leaders in the stock photo industry. Prolific producers of stock stills and motion, they are also founding members of Blend Images. They freely share a wealth of information about their experience in the industry. Now they have embarked on yet another new venture, a new stock agency: Spaces Images.

Jonathan, I have long admired the proactive nature of your involvement with so many areas of stock photography…and now you have started your own new agency, “Spaces”. Can you tell us about how that came about?

 My wife Amy and I have been fortunate enough to be able to surround ourselves with some of the best minds in the business of running stock agencies. The past 7 years since we first started as a co-owner at Blend Images, as well as Cultura Images. People Like Tom Grill, Rick Becker-Leckrone and Anthony Harris have all been such valuable sources of support and information that has allowed us to realize what it takes to start such a venture. Similar to the man that ran the first 4-minute mile, he showed it could be done and removed the doubt from many to follow.

The agency itself was directly related to our own sales of imagery at Getty Images and the other agencies that represented our own stock imagery. I was shooting all lifestyle at the time and every now and then when we were on location and a model was late or something was being set for another lifestyle shot I would look around for a couple of good stills to add to the days production. After following our sales for over a decade now we started to see something we never expected. Our still images were selling as well if not better than our lifestyle. That was the moment when the light bulb went off and we started looking into what it would take to build a concept into an actual agency.

What are some of the challenges in starting an agency from scratch?

The biggest challenge was not the concept or finding great photographers that wanted to help create the agency. I think the toughest part of starting a stock agency is definitely closing contracts with your distributors. We had 35 agencies at CEPIC (a conference held once a year where all the stock agencies meet and work on their contracts together) last year agree to carry our collection and now almost a year later we are still knee deep in contracts that need closing. I have spoken with several agency owners and they all agree that going from hand shake in CEPIC to paper after the conference takes a great deal of time and is very common in the signing process. Now we are nearing this years CEPIC and the deals are really starting to close, we hope to have all our distributors representing our work in the next two months.

On your Spaces website I noticed that you have far more RM images than RF images. Is that by design or did it just happen?

 Yes, we started the agency as an RM agency only but after to speaking to one of our top distributors they convinced us that it was to our benefit to cover both sides of the Macro market. These are very smart people and when they have an idea I try to listen and then work to incorporate their ideas into the Spaces Images collection. It allowed us to give our contributors two different choices and it opened some doors for us to distribute work to agencies that would have not been able to accommodate an RM company only.

What are your goals for Spaces?

I know this might sound a bit different than what you might expect but for us it was about finding a new niche and making sure it was a fun experience for ourselves, and our contributing photographers. There is no pressure from us for our photographers to produce a certain amount of images or meet a yearly requirement. We are photographers and the thought of myself, my mind and my camera alone, was a big part of the plan. I have been producing lifestyle for the past ten years and have loved it but the cost of keeping up in a market, where your overhead has a great deal to do with your revenue, we wanted to take it back to basics. Great photographers alone with their cameras, no need for a crew or a cast of models, just great photos of locations that are hard to find and conceptual image making that is fun for our contributors to create.

What sets your agency apart from others?

I think it is our niche. Our type of photography can be found at many different agencies but no one had put it in a box and tied a bow around it. We want buyers and our distributors to feel we are the agency to deal with when you are speaking of the best in environments. Spaces Images is based on where mankind works, lives and plays without the need for people; these images are used in so many applications. We focus on many areas in our collection but one area we are focused on for our buyers is to find the perfect location to drop their product or model into without having to go on location. This is just one use for our images. Many buyers are looking for an environment that supports their concept or product without the focus being on just lifestyle. Our images can be used as great backdrops for lifestyle but they can also stand on their own to deliver the buyers message.

How many contributing photographers do you have?

We have been signing a lot of new photographers but the core group that were there to help make this agency a reality was a base group of 20 and without them this company would not exist. I owe the believers a lot and it is my goal to make them very happy they rolled the dice and took a chance on a new, upstart agency.  I am truly indebted to them. Since the original core we have been recruiting only the best in the industry and we have added about 15 more photographers to the group. They are so new their work is not yet up on our site but from seeing what they have created in their careers we are very excited to see the quality level of the collection grow and diversify. We have several fine art photographers in our group and for the first time I feel we have some really beautiful images that could be shown at galleries. We have even discussed putting a gallery together of some of our work and sending it off to curators to see if we can also promote our work as fine art. People like Paul Edmondson, Mel Curtis and soon Phil Borges allow us to present images that are not just commercially viable but also offer the buyers an approach that I think will add value for their customers. It always comes down to the best images and if we can continue to add the best photographers I feel we are on the right track.

We photographers have always had our complaints about stock photo agencies…and now you have a chance to do it, how shall I say it…your way? What are you (spaces) going to do differently?

 I have had a learning curve over the past year and the biggest part that I am trying to support is to listen to our contributors and let then know they have a voice and someone on the other end of the phone to listen and help whenever they need support. This is very much about a community of photographers that share information with each other and we try in every way to leave the doors open for photographers to discuss any issues they might have together or with myself. We have all our photographers web addresses added to our site so if one photographer wants to speak with another Spaces photographer the option is there.

We also love to work closely with photographers that like feedback. I spend a great deal of my day speaking directly to our photographers about their next shoot. We brain storm and are always working towards the same goal. The more revenue I can create for our contributors the more secure our agency will be. Photographers are the ones that make or break agencies so success for us lies in the belief that without our photographers and their hard work and talent we would be out of business.

That is also why we don't play favorites. If you just started in stock, or you are an older professional that has worked in the industry for decades, you still both get the same 50/50 commission split at Spaces. The day of name recognition is getting to be part of the past and it really comes down to who has the best images out there.

What are your royalty rates for your contributors?

As I was just saying all our photographers receive the same 50/50 commission split and all we ask for is a title above their images when they send them, we do all the rest from there. I want our photographers out pushing the button making images not stuck behind a computer having to deal with key wording or tracking their images to make sure they are being distributed properly.

Can you tell us about your distribution?

 Yes, we are closing distribution through 35 agencies across the globe. We also offer Multi-distributional RM. That allows us to have our contributors RM images represented by all 35 agencies that carry RM. When an RM image is licensed by a client who desires particular control over the use of that image for a period of time, that same image is pulled from all our other distributors for the time that that license runs. Once that license is completed we then have that same image reposted to all of our distributors. This gives the high-end image of RM quality a much broader audience without the buyer worrying about their image not remaining exclusive.

Are you promoting direct sales through your own site?

Yes, we started this year with an e commerce sight and we will be continuing to develop our own site to help promote direct sales. Having this option allows buyers, that get to know us, a place to come and see all of our content when it has just hit the market making buying from our site the best option for our new updated imagery.

Can you share you social media strategy for Spaces?

 So far we have been using Facebook and Twitter to share our vision. We post a new image every day at Facebook if you want to check out our FB page you can find it through this link http://www.facebook.com/pages/Spaces-Images/147053568681803. The main reason for this is not only to draw more traffic to our site but also for our photographers to see their work up and check in every day or so to see who was chosen and what image is up. It is always fun as a photographer to see your work up and appreciated by others; I think most photographers share that feeling.

It has also been a great opportunity to meet and review contributors from all over the world. They don't have to find us, as we are also busy trying to find them. To locate a photographer in Israel would have been difficult for a small start up agency 5 years ago, but with the growth of social media we can locate and speak with photographers from all over the globe.

I know it is still very early in the game, but do you any early “successes” you can tell us about?

I think our first was right after launching seeing the work of Will and Deni Mcintyre on a Super Bowl add. We were so young and to see our work up during the most expensive add time really was a great victory. My Football team also won so it was a good day all around. Having photographers as well known as Phil Borges joining us, in addition to so many other great photographers, is humbling. To be representing photographers whose work has been such an inspiration for me from the beginning of my career as a photographer is an amazing experience. Just as it is with you, I was so influenced by your work for so many years and to have a chance to get to know you, and see how you work, is really a dream come true for me.
This kitchen interior was a quick success for Spaces Images with a Corbis sale for $6,000.00!

For photographers, why Spaces instead of Getty, Corbis or any of the other agencies out there?

I think the opportunity to come to us and have someone to communicate with and help guide or answer any questions with a phone call is one reason. But the main reason is to have your work represented by all the top agencies in the business at the same time and having to only send your images to one agency and let us to the heavy lifting. We are also are in direct contact with our distributors and provide the feedback we get from those channels in our newsletters.

Besides you and Amy, who else is on board in the way of principles and staff?

We are very lucky to have Patrick Donehue to help guide us through this industry and help steer us in the right direction. Patrick consults for our agency and has been an integral part of our existence. It was Patrick who we first went to see if what we had was a good concept. His support, and his knowledge from so many years in the stock industry, is a big reason why we have had the chance to grow and meet the right people in the industry to make this company a success.

We also have Megan Smith working with us to help with some of the heavy lifting. Megan is a sponge when it comes to learning and developing our companies’ strategy and is willing to get her hands dirty when it is needed. Not one person in our company is micro managed; we all do our work to the best of our ability and when you have the right people that love their work and truly care about the success of the company, you need to grab them and keep them happy. There aren't many in this day and age that are willing to take a risk and support a concept with all their heart. At this time we are interviewing editors to add an even larger ear for our contributors and offer the guidance that will help them in making the most salable images for the markets needs. As the company continues to grow we see most of our future additions in the area of creative support for both our contributors and distributor relations.

How can interested photographers submit their work?

Thank you for asking. We are always open to new or experienced photographers.  Once again the support is what we are trying to always improve. If our contributors feel part of a team then the rest just falls into place. If you are interested in becoming a contributor to Spaces Images there is a page on our site that explains the steps it takes to join our team.

Are you still contributing stock photos to other agencies?

Yes, although the past two years I have had to take a break in order to put my full attention towards the starting of Spaces Images. I will be returning to shooting for all the agencies that carry my own work. They have been there for me from the start and it is important to me to reciprocate their trust by producing content to keep their agencies strong and growing.

I didn’t see a microstock offering. You and Amy put a considerable amount of effort in to producing a microstock collection, and now you have had some time to see the results and possibly draw some conclusions about the viability of the microstock model. Can you share some of your insights and conclusions with us…and if Spaces will have a microstock component?

 Yes, we tested the market to build data for our business and I am so glad we did it. It allowed us to establish ourselves in the emerging and constantly growing new market of microstock and helped us meet some great people from that portion of the stock industry. I think microstock offers an opportunity for the market that needs very generic images that meet many buyers needs and do so for a price the customer can afford.

What is interesting is there seems to be a slow transition into Macro RF and Micro RF as becoming one and the same just with different pricing tiers. Spaces Images has not looked into the opportunity that Micro might offer us but we always try to stay fluid in this industry. It is very hard to speculate where tomorrows stock industry will be showing it's strongest returns so staying involved and on top of our research for all the models of stock is a daily investment of our time.

Do you plan on handling motion stock as well as stills?

This is another emerging market that we have invested our own time in to see what kind of returns the market offers and what areas the market has a demand for. I believe we will be offering motion in the near future not just for the growth in that market share but especially to be able to offer all our customers a broad range of products to fulfill their needs at one location.

I would think that starting an agency would indicate that you are optimistic about the future of stock. Can you share some of that optimism with us?

I am very optimistic about stock. I have seen a drop in sales over the past 6 years as has everyone, but if you do the math and look at return to investment, it is still clearly a very high returning business model. I don't know if there is a higher return to investment out there in any business, especially at this time. My own sales have dropped the past six years, however over the past two years we have seen them level off to what seems to be the new base return for each model we produce images for.

One interesting fact to back that statement is that over the past two years as we have been building Spaces Images I have not been able to shoot and add images to other agencies that represent my own work. Last month without adding any new images to our collections we saw a drop from the same time last year of only $200. Without producing any new work our older stock work is still holding very strong and the opportunity for passive income, especially in this time in our history, is almost a dream come true.

I want to thank you so much John for letting us share our story. Having the opportunity to meet people like yourself that have been such a huge influence in the stock industry cannot have a value placed on it. I hope you realize how many of us out there dream of being John Lund.

Yeah, and I dream of being you guys…oh well!

Note: Previous Jonathan Ross Interview.
Space Images on Facebook.









Monday, April 25, 2011

Facebook For Photographers



Picture of a woman executive with her head surrounded by binary numbers representing an overload of information and data.
Social Media including Facebook, Twitter and Linked In have become part of the vast over supply of information that is bringing me to my knees!

How To Promote Your Photography Business With Facebook
For the past week I have been trying to figure out how to use Facebook to promote my photography business…and to no avail. I feel a huge amount of pressure to come up with an answer because of the overwhelming success and growth of social media, and of Facebook in particular.  Facebook, it appears, can be good for some photographers, but for my particular needs…well, I just don’t see the value…yet.

Facebook For Wedding Photographers
The most obvious use of Facebook for a photography business seems to me to be for wedding photographers. A wedding photographer can upload the wedding images to Facebook and tag the individuals in the photos. All of those tagged people, who have Facebook accounts (isn’t that everyone?) well then see those photos. Some might order additional prints, and some might decide to use said photographer for their own nuptials. 

Art Directors, Art Buyers and Client Relationships
Facebook might also be useful for keeping up a relationship with clients, art directors, art buyers, designers and so forth. If I were doing assignments I would seriously consider shooting, or having my assistant shoot, behind the scenes shots that I could then post on Facebook with tags to the individuals in the shoot. Even the account executives could be tagged. Those behind the scene photos could help cement a relationship.  Got to be careful though…just in case there is something of a proprietary nature going on at the shoot. Facebook could be a double-edged sword if one doesn’t proceed with caution.

Facebook Fan Pages
I have started a fan page…well, two fan pages, on Facebook. I have a fan page for my funny cat, dog and other animal photos, and a fan page for my photography business in general. My reasoning is twofold: If Facebook does prove to be important I want to at least have my feet wet; and who knows, maybe, particularly with the pet photography, there are people out there searching Facebook for the kind of images I make. It can’t hurt, right?

The Cost of Opportunity
Actually, in a way it could hurt. Where it could hurt is in the cost of opportunity. That is, the time I spend on Facebook is time that I can’t spend elsewhere.  I know that time I put into my SEO efforts, into uploading new material onto my web site…and potentially more important, time I put into creating new imagery, is earning me a return on that investment. I understand the dynamics of ranking highly on search engines and I experience people finding me, licensing my images, buying prints (sold two yesterday), and buying imprinted merchandise after finding me on those search engines.  I keep going back to the thought that when someone is searching for a stock photo, whether they know what a stock photo is or not, the overwhelming odds are that they will be using Google and not Facebook.  I do have to admit, though, I have not been putting a lot of time into my fan pages. Worse, I am still confused about how to use them, upload and link things, and execute basic functions. Is it just me, or is Facebook a little less than intuitive? Geez, in putting my Facebook fan page links up, just now, I clicked on something and I think I lost my main Facebook page altogether!!! Oh well...I'll deal with that later....

Stock Photographers And Facebook
Being a stock photographer, particularly one who rarely licenses his own work (almost all of my stock photos are with agencies), I just am not seeing much potential for me on Facebook. I will continue to dabble in it, and keep my eyes open for photographers who are making it work for them. Along those lines, if any of you reading this have any knowledge of Facebook proving valuable in advancing the career of a stock photographer, or heck, any photographer, I would love to hear about it!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Art Directors/Buyers Searching Google For Images


A conductor orchestrates a brilliant, dynamic and colorful fireworks display in a stock photo about creativity, vitality and leadership.
This image of a conductor orchestrating a vivid fireworks display was just found via Google on my site and then licensed through Blend Images. Art Directors and buyers do find images on Google!

What Buyers Want From Photographers
What particularly caught my eye in the new survey by Photoshelter “What Buyers Want From Photographers” were two statistics. First, 61% of buyers search Google for images, and secondly, 87% go to stock agencies for images (though it is a little unclear on whether the survey was indicating that 87%  go to stock agencies for images…or 87% go to agencies other than Getty and Corbis…(but either way you can’t beat the agencies in terms of getting art directors to see your stock images). 

Getting Work In Front of Stock Photo Buyers
Think about it. If your images are not on your site, and your site isn’t optimized for the search engines, you are missing out on the chance of getting your work in front of 61% of image-licensing art buyers (be they designers, art directors, art buyers, editors or whatever). That is huge! On the other hand, if you are not with stock agencies your missing out on the 87% of image buyers (or more) who turn to agencies.

Fatter Stock Photo Royalty Checks
I would propose that you are well served in having your images online on your optimized site whether those images are with agencies or whether you license them yourself. It just makes sense. If you are with agencies you can link your images directly to where people can license them through the agency. That way the process is automated…no negotiating, answering e-mails or phone calls or anything else. Just get a fatter royalty check each month (or quarter).


Additional Stock Photo Income
I don’t take the trouble to track down how many of the twenty to thirty people each day that go from my site to the agencies actually license my imagery…I imagine it is a relatively low percentage. And yet, with Blend Images in the last week I happen to know that two art buyers found the images on my site, and then were directed to Blend where the licensing transactions were completed. In both cases I had forgotten to provide the link from my site to the Blend Images site and had to manually provide that link to the buyers. In those two cases the increase in my own income amounted to just over $800.00.  Yesterday I also completed a transaction in which I licensed two more images, that are not with any agencies yet, for a total of $600.00. My stock photography income would be noticeably lower at this point without my efforts at getting my pictures online and putting the time and effort into SEO. The downside thus far has been the tremendous amount of time and effort I have put into the site...time and effort I believe will be well rewarded over the coming years.

Building Traffic For Photo Sites
Further, by doing this work now, if at some point it makes sense to be licensing more, or even all of my own work, I will already have the hardest thing to achieve in place…the traffic!  If that sort of back-up plan is important to you, then the time to start is now. Building traffic for your photo site takes time…and a lot of it. Plan on giving it three to five years to achieve decent results.  Of course, what "decent" means can vary. It has taken me two and a half years to go from one person a week to well over a thousand a day...and my goal is ten thousand a day (got a ways to go).

Online Photos and SEO Is Good Business
One more thing. As any successful business can tell you, success comes from servicing your clients well. When you put your images online and provide proper SEO, you are making the lives of art buyers easier. You are helping them find the images that solve their visual problems. Simply put, getting your photography on the Internet, and making it easy to find, is good business.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Airport Control Tower Inspired by Sleeping Traffic Controllers!


Picture of an Airport control tower created as a stock image to address issues with air traffic controllers as well as to provide a metaphor for management, control and vision uses.
An airport control tower, and a dramatic cloud photograph were combined to create a concept stock photo about management, control and vision.

Air Traffic Controllers, Hawaii and A Photograph
Two weeks ago, before all the controversy and news around air traffic controllers sleeping on the job and watch Samuel Jackson DVDs, I found myself on a jet landing at the Maui airport. On my lap was my Canon 1DS MKIII with a L-Series 100-400 zoom lens mounted. As we taxied towards the terminal I scanned the scene through my window for anything interesting to photograph. The only thing that caught my eye was the airport control tower. I squeezed off a half dozen frames with the lens fully zoomed in to 400 millimeters.

Shooting From A Moving Aircraft
I have to say I love that lens! Mine is exceedingly sharp. Even shooting from a moving aircraft, and through a well-used porthole window, I managed to get one pretty sharp shot of the tower. The trip to Hawaii, I might add, was intended not for any specific shoot, but rather to “harvest” images for future projects…and to do so in a pleasant environment. An aside here, pictures of Hawaii still sell even though one has to question how there could ever be a need for another tropical beach scene! I have had great success at making travel into profit centers through my stock photography.

A Control Tower, A Dramatic Cloud and Photoshop
So here we are two weeks later and air traffic controllers are dominating the news. Hmmm, says, I, an opportunity for a stock photo!  This is one of those insanely easy to create images. I simply used the Photoshop Pen Tool to create a clipping path around the tower, turned it into a selection with a one-pixel feather, and then hit my good old “Command-J” to create a new layer of just the control tower. I went back to my Hawaii photographs and found a dramatic cloud I had photographed at Ho'okipa Beach Park (near Mama’s Fish House).  I copied it and pasted it underneath the control tower layer. I duplicated the tower layer again, used a layer mask to “paint out” the actual room at the top, then dragged the remaining structure down to create the effect of a much taller structure. A little “dodging” around some of the antennae, and of course spotting, and Voila, a new stock photo!

A Digression To Sensor Cleaning
BTW, I bought the 1DS MKIII when they first came out…and have never cleaned the sensor! Hey, it is dirty, and I do need to clean it…but how clean it has stayed, with repeated lens changes, is pretty amazing! I was even changing the lenses between the 100-400 and a 16-35 zoom on the beach with the wind buffeting me like crazy. But I digress…back to stock photography!

A Concept Stock Photo About Management, Vision and Change
This airport control tower image is about not just the turmoil around the air traffic controller problems, but is a concept stock photo about management, vision and change. It can be used for editorials about everything from turmoil in the air traffic controller industry, to airport expansion plans, to more general advertising uses for products and services that can help companies manage operations and communications more effectively. This tower image can be about management, control, communications, change, and who knows how many other uses. It took less than an hour from start to finish for the post-production and other than my general travel expenses cost me nothing to photograph.  How cool is that?


Monday, April 18, 2011

Of Property Releases and Problems....


Picture of a mother and daughter sharing a quite, reflective, bonding moment in a bubble bath.
Failure to secure a property release, despite the promise of one, BEFORE my photoshoot in this beach house, cost me $3,500.00!

Models “Turning On” Photographers
Recently stories about models “turning on” photographers have been popping up (one such occurrence being displayed by “a photo editor.  Of course nothing can prevent a model from suing you whether you have a signed release or not, but if you do have the release odds are you will prevail. It does remind me of the importance of getting that release though!
It also reminds me of the importance of getting that release, model or property, BEFORE the shoot. I can share one instance of where I did get the release, but because I waited until after the shoot it cost me dearly.

A Stock Photo Shoot, A Beach House, and A Problem
Two of my associate photographers and I were setting up a shoot in Stinson Beach on the Marin County coast. We checked the various house rentals (houses right on the beach) and found one that would be ideal. The property manager told us getting a release would not be a problem. Famous last words….

Don’t Even Try To Bargain With Me
After the shoot, a two-day affair with about fifteen models, three photographers, a make-up artist, her assistant, a producer and her assistant, and three photographer assistants, we sent a property release over to the management company. That got back to us and informed us that the owner of the property would not sign it. I had my producer track the owner down and use all of her charm to coax a signature out of him. His reply to her: “Don’t even try and bargain with me…I am a personal injury attorney. $3,500.00 for the signature…take it or leave it.”

A Property Release and A Significant Expense
I took it. It was worth it too. So far that shoot has brought in close to $40,000.00 and is still earning. But that was $3,500.00 and a lot of time and trouble (chasing down and dealing with the owner…I shortened the whole dramatic episode considerably) that we probably wouldn’t have had to swallow had we secured a release up front. Including that $3,500.00 the whole shoot cost $12,500.00…so it turned out to be a significant expense! Something to keep in mind….

Where There Is Smoke There Is Fire
Just make it standard policy to NEVER shoot BEFORE you have signed releases for both models and property in hand. Also, in my experience, if there is any reticence on the part of a model in signing a release…you probably don’t want to shoot with that model anyway…where there is smoke there is fire!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Strange (And Entertaining) Long Tail Keyword Searches For Photos

Picture of a Woman trapped behind a bar code and straining to pull the bars apart in order to escape and stand out from the crowd.
Somebody searched for the long tail keyword "person trapped behind a bar code" and ended up on finding this image on my site. The long tail keyword is key to pulling in large amounts of traffic to websites."


Long Tail Keyword Searches
Well over a thousand people came to my website today from various search engines. It can be both entertaining and informative to peruse the search terms that were used. Almost all of the search terms that bring people to my site are “long tail keywords”, keyword phrases of three or more words. Interestingly enough, although my site is all about stock photography, I don’t ever recall seeing the search term “stock photos” bringing anyone to my pages (the closest thing to that on this day was one search for “stock pics”).

Bizarre And Specific Searches For Stock Photos
Most of the people who do find their way to my site don’t actually find what they are looking for, something reflected in my 72% bounce rate (which, from what I understand isn’t too bad).  In some cases the searches seem so specific and unique, and yet fit some of my images so well, that it is hard to understand (artist’s bias here) why the person searching doesn’t go on to license the image.  Some of those keyword phrases are so bizarre it one would never expect them to be searched for…and yet I do have stock photos that fit the phrases!

Strange and Entertaining Search Phrases For Photography
I have put together an edited list of a dozen of the more entertaining and strange search phrases (long tail keywords) for this one day, as well as a list of a dozen of the very specific and often off-beat search phrases that fit images that I actually have in my stock photo collection (though those images still might not be what the person searching for really wants). In the case of the latter list I have linked the phrases to the images on my site that I believe meet the requirements of those searches. In each case the phrases are complete with the original spelling, capitalization and so forth.

Strange (Long-Tail Keyword) Search Requests:
video camera strapped to frypan
elephants sensitive to texture
funny pic cat with shark teeth
who are the men in orange robes
sexy lips due to exercise men with pics
dangerous baby image
dog wearing fire extinguisher
john john surfer father
Pictures of george washington signing the one dollar bill
how to test tube baby real pictures
teamwork cats fishing
picture of a bird running down the road with a piece of chicken
english bulldog testiculs


Strange (Long-Tail Keyword) Search Requests with links to appropriate Images:

Expected Searches and Appropriate Images
Of course, there are many searches that one would expect people to search for, and to find, on my site. These searches are for things like lighthouse in a storm, political elephant and donkey butting heads, and pics of hospital patients in traction. But they aren’t as much fun to peruse!

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Creating A Stock Photo Illustrating Man Made Disasters


Picture of a fiery mushroom cloud exploding over the distant horizon of a long road stretching ahead, an indication of disaster ahead.
A negative stock photo such as this fiery mushroom-shaped explosion over a road ahead, can still generate excellent sales.


Picture of a Nuclear Accident
The recent tragedy of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear power plant meltdown in Japan got me to thinking about how I could make an image that could be used to bring attention to the dangers of radioactive accidents and other man made dangers.  I wanted the image to be dramatic and iconic. While it was the nuclear accident that first prompted the idea, I also wanted this stock photo to work for other man made disasters as well. For radiation concerns a mushroom cloud would make perfect sense…and a fireball and explosion can represent all kinds of man-induced destruction. Such an image could be used to draw attention to everything from Nuclear power plant dangers to Predator drone missile strikes, to terrorist bombings to gas pipeline explosions.

The Long Road To Disaster
Having the fireball exploding over a road that stretches out into the distance can show that we are headed towards such disasters. Having the event happen at sunset can indicate that the end is near. In addition, the fiery clouds of a sunset can work to make the explosion fit more naturally into the environment.

Road Trips, Fireballs and Stock Photos
Having worked out the basics of the image in my mind I went to work searching my archives for the necessary raw materials…a fireball from a public “fire” performance, a long stretch of desert road from a road trip, and a sunset image from another road trip (road trips are great for stock photo raw materials).

Creating Stock Images: The Right Stuff
Creating the image was actually relatively simple and once again affirms my belief that Photoshop is easy when you have the right stuff (photos) to work with. I was able to build the mushroom shaped fireball explosion by using bits and pieces of a fireball photographed at a night performance that included the liberal use of fire. I used layer masks and the “Lighten” mode to blend the pieces together and composite them into the sunset. Next I put the road image into the sunset picture, again with layer masks. I used both “curve” and “Color Balance” adjustment layers, with masks, to create an orange reflection on the road. The Photoshop work took me about three hours to complete.

Negative Stock Photos And Images That Sell
Conventional wisdom has it that negative images don’t sell. While it is true that for the most part negative stock photos do not sell as well as positive pictures, in some cases they can sell quite well. One advantage this image has going for it is that there isn’t a lot of competition for it. To further bolster its potential market I crafted the image so that it can work as a horizontal, vertical or square.  There is plenty of room for headlines, mastheads and body copy. The image is simple and powerful and is a quick read as a thumbnail, something very important in today’s Internet-centric world. I chose to submit this stock photo to Getty Images as a Rights Managed picture and it has been accepted for inclusion into the Stone collection.





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