Micky Bill Offline Upload & Sell: Off
|
p.1 #15 · Profitable Photography Business Market Segments | |
jjsterling wrote:
Thanks for the info
If you know of other "pro" photo forums that might be more appropriate; I am all ears (in this case, eyes).
I don't feel it as "push-back" as much as individuals having different reasons for doing what they do, and different ways of doing it.
I'm not sure what 'outliers within their fields' represent to you.
I believe my question is quite specific as an initial start in my interest to understand what market segments are profitable. I am hoping that by finding what the most profitable segments are, I will also find those that aren't. And not have to do the same thing that others have already done and failed.
I believe without doing the proper planning, and asking the proper questions, one won't generate the financial profit necessary to pursue one's desires fully. No matter why one got into it in the first place.
If one stands in the intersection pursuing their passion it won't be long before one gets run over.
That is why I hope to learn what has been successful and what has not.
What can be done differently to make successful and what cannot.
Excellent firms don't believe in excellence.
Only in constant improvement and constant change. - Tom Peters
justruss wrote:
OP: It is wise to learn about the business environment, but asking on a rather empty "pro" photo forum what type of photography business is most profitable doesn't really address your desire to "know the business environment."
It's almost so vague a question as to be useless.
Far more important is understanding the market for different types of photography where YOU are geographically located (or plan to be), whether the market is contracting (probably) or expanding, who is already serving that market, how well the suppliers to the market are matched and meeting the demand of the market, what approaching changes may impact your market, what is happening to unit pricing/marginal costs in that market, etc.
What is profitable in Topeka might not be in NYC-- and vice versa. Same goes with your various costs, quality of life, etc.
I think that's part of the reason you're getting so much push-back from the forum. Compound that with the fact that the bulk of photography going on is NOT very profitable, and you'll realize that the majority of "most profitable" photographers tend to be outliers within their fields (unlike many other industries/careers, where there's more of a normal curve distribution of incomes).
My personal feeling is that from an economic standpoint, going into photography is not a rational move these days. You don't do it full time for the money so much as you do it in spite of the money... if you can get enough to stay above water.
If you think you were specific in your question a career in politics or writing mission statements might be a better choice than photography, it's a very vague question.
I know a ex-paparazzi who took a picture of a star doing something stupid and he made $35,000 after the split with his agency, after starting his own agency he now owns mid level apartments in Burbank .
I know a guy who shoots catalogs for clothing companies that we all know he bills about $300,000 per 6 week job, he does 3 or 4 a year has a house in NYC, Paris and 2 in the SF Bay area.
Once I made more in a two day shoot than in my entire first two years in business.
Another guy I know turned his parents sleepy little wedding studio in to a hip and popular operation and was billing close to $400,000 five years ago I don't know if he still doing that.
There are sports guys on FM doing kid sports events and it sounds like they are doing quite well.
There is no answer for your question until you narrow it down somewhat. What's you background are you able to step into a business like these or not. Most photographers find their passion and hope it makes them some money, not the other way around.
The APA has a forum
Luminous Landscapes has a lot of different pros on it
Edited on Nov 02, 2009 at 06:00 AM · View previous versions
|