February 4, 2012

Why Getting Started in Microstock Photography

I just recorded a short but important video on why you should get started in Microstock photography and it’s a real eye opener.

Microstock photography is much easier to begin with compared to traditional stock photography and is very rewarding for several reasons.

Here’s the 3 main reasons you should get started in microstock photography:

  1. Easy to get started
  2. Fun and rewarding
  3. Almost instant feedback

Just watch the video and let me know what you think. Good or bad comments to the video, please make a comment below.

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Start A Big Profit Microstock Photography Business

Maybe I’m confused (I hope I’m OK :-) but I decided to release my new special report “Start A Big Profit Microstock Photography Business – 12 Steps To Sell & Resell Your Images” for free.

16 pages of pure content.

No email address required, no jumping through hoops…

… just download the report from this link.

I need to know what you think about the report. Drop me a mail or make a comment below.

Over and out.

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STEP #10: How To Keyword Your Images

The greatest lesson I ever learned about microstock photography is that key-wording is extremely important. It’s not sexy or fun but this is where you eventually will crush your competition if you do it right. Most of your competition will luckily do it completely wrong so you can get an enormous advantage here.

Listen carefully.

Some microstock agencies have millions of images in their databases and the method the photo buyers use to find the right image is to search for certain keywords they think is relevant for the image they need.

It works much in the same way as when you search for something on Google. You type in a few keywords and Google presents the result the search engine think is relevant.

But Google and all other search engines have a big problem with images.

You can easily see what the image is all about just by taking a quick glance at it but for a search engine it’s not as easy. They are simply clueless if you don’t help them to understand what the image is all about.

No one will find your images if you ignore to include relevant keywords.

Tagging your images with relevant keywords is an absolute must if you want the photo buyers to find your images.

Not just one keyword but many keywords (as long as they are relevant).

In most microstock sites you also can write a short description and a headline to your images. Also use this opportunity to try to get some important keywords.

Here’s a few important types of keywords you should try to include:

  • Where the image was taken (city, national park, country)
  • What is in the image (Empire state building, Niagara falls)
  • Emotions expressed in the image (happiness, loneliness)
  • Concepts involved (cooperation, complexity, security)
  • Orientation (vertical, horizontal, panoramic)
  • Race (Asian, Black, Caucasian)
  • Age (11-12 years, senior)

Note: Include as many keywords you can as long as they are relevant but do not include irrelevant keywords just to come up on the search engine result page.

You have two options to upload the keyword to the agencies website.

  1. Type in the keywords after you uploaded the image and got it approved
  2. Embed the keywords inside the image so they automatically are uploaded when
    you upload the image.

Embedding the keywords in the image is obviously preferred because you only have to do it once and get the keywords automatically uploaded to the site. You can save lot’s time if you submit images to many stock agencies.

The problem with embedding keywords in images is that you need special software to do it and not all stock agencies support it. You also need to decide which keywords to use before you upload your images (but you can always add keywords later).

If you decide to manually type in the keywords you can simply create a simple text file with keywords for each image and simply copy and paste the keywords to the website. This is also fast and easy so don’t panic if you can’t afford software to embed keywords or don’t know how to do it. This is how I started out and often still do.

Previous posts in this series:

  1. Microstock Photography Tutorial
  2. Types of stock photography
  3. STEP #1: Research hot selling markets
  4. STEP #2: Leverage on your strength
  5. STEP #3: Research for lame and lazy competition
  6. STEP #4: Determine A Niche For Your Microstock Photography
  7. STEP #5: Shortlist Microstock Photography agencies
  8. STEP #6: Select one (1) microstock photography agency
  9. STEP #7: Select stock images with good technical quality
  10. STEP #8: Select images that are commercially useful
  11. STEP #9: Remove images with potentially legal issues
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STEP #8: Select images that are commercially useful

Even if you’re images are technically perfect they might be rejected if they are useless for commercial reasons.

Here’s a simple checklist with common commercial issues that could get your image submission rejected:

  • Inappropriate images (pornography, glamour etc.)
  • Images with no demand
  • Images they already have too many of
  • Bad composition
  • Tight cropping and framing
  • Images outside the agencies target market

Always read the submission guidelines carefully and weed out images with questionable commercial value.

Note: here you should put the highest priority on images that falls within the market you identified in step #1-4.

Previous posts in this series:

  1. Microstock Photography Tutorial
  2. Types of stock photography
  3. STEP #1: Research hot selling markets
  4. STEP #2: Leverage on your strength
  5. STEP #3: Research for lame and lazy competition
  6. STEP #4: Determine A Niche For Your Microstock Photography
  7. STEP #5: Shortlist Microstock Photography agencies
  8. STEP #6: Select one (1) microstock photography agency
  9. STEP #7: Select stock images with good technical quality
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STEP #7: Select stock images with good technical quality

OK, so now it’s time to select images with good technical quality.

Here’s a simple checklist with common technical issues that could get your image submission rejected:

  • Image noise
  • Blurry or unsharp images
  • Chromatic aberration
  • Interpolation artifacts
  • Color cast
  • Dust
  • Leaning horizon or leaning buildings
  • Contrast issues
  • Badly exposed
  • Wrong file formats
  • Wrong resolution
  • Excessive sharpening

Always select ONLY your VERY BEST images for the first image submission because the QC controllers will be extra thorough in your first submission.

Even worse, if you fail to get only one image accepted they might reject your whole batch, especially if it’s you’re first submission.

Read the submission guidelines and make sure you don’t violate any technical requirement.

Next in line is to make sure you don’t end up as a jailbird but more about that in the next post.

Previous posts in this series:

  1. Microstock Photography Tutorial
  2. Types of stock photography
  3. STEP #1: Research hot selling markets
  4. STEP #2: Leverage on your strength
  5. STEP #3: Research for lame and lazy competition
  6. STEP #4: Determine A Niche For Your Microstock Photography
  7. STEP #5: Shortlist Microstock Photography agencies
  8. STEP #6: Select one (1) microstock photography agency
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