Hobbies that can actually make you money
1-Photography
If the photos that you are taking gravitate more toward
art, it’s entirely possible that you’ll be able to make some money with this
hobby. There are several ways to monetize photography. There are a number of
major websites, such as Flickr and Shutterstock that
provide photos to various users across the web.
You can earn some money by setting up
an account on those sites, and adding your photos to sell to potential clients.
Still another way is to market your work directly to actual clients.
Professional photographers are quite
expensive, so you may be able to sell your services as a
discount alternative for people who need photos for graduations, weddings and
other events. As you gain more experience, and clients, you can raise your
rates and increase your income.
Secrets
to being successful as a photographer
1. Purchase Your Equipment
The first thing you need to do is invest in
good equipment, so you can be confident in your ability to perform your job.
An up-to-date camera, lenses, and a flash are
the main pieces of equipment that you’ll need to start your freelance photography
business.
You may also need reflectors, diffusers and lights.
Out
of all of these pieces of equipment, good lenses are the most
important. So once you
start making some income, spend some of money to purchase new lenses.
2. Set Up Your Website
As a freelance photographer, you’ll need a professional photography website to show off your work and help you spread the
word about your photography business.
But your website can be more than just a portfolio. You can
also use your website to communicate with clients, schedule sessions, manage
your orders, and even deliver your completed work.
The best
place to start is with a WordPress site and a good photography template.
Create a good website with a
daily blog
Your
website is going to be your most important ally. It is what most people will
look at when considering you for a job and so your effort and/or money should
be invested here.
Make
sure it is easy to navigate and in HTML (NO FLASH!). Keep in mind that
you are only as good as your worst photo, so don’t just throw up every photo
that you think looks decent. Sometimes less is more.
If you
don’t have enough content, create some! Set up shoots with friends or
seek out aspiring models that are willing to work in exchange for photos.
As long as the finished product looks great, your clients don’t have to
know that these weren’t paying jobs. After all, it’s your ability as a
photographer that counts, right?
Set up a
daily blog. Update it every day with a photo, religiously. You can take
Sundays or the full weekends off.
The effect
of a daily blog is wide ranging. Unfortunately, when you start a
freelance photography business, the one thing that often goes out the door is
actually taking pictures.
You
focus so much on getting jobs and doing them well that you forget to actually
shoot for yourself. A daily blog will keep you doing this, shooting things that
you love, and it will help you improve on a daily basis.
It will
also add a personality to your website and help to steadily build a community
of people who are interested in your work.
3. Build Your Portfolio
Every freelance photographer
needs a strong portfolio in order to attract clients. When you are first starting out,
we recommend doing some work for free to build your portfolio.
You can also find local models
that need portraits for their modeling portfolio, and that way you both
benefit. Once you’ve done some free work, you’ll need to display it on your
website. Check out the Envira Gallery Albums Addon to add a stunning portfolio to your website.
4. Get Your First Clients
There are many online platforms
for photographers to get traction and clients, such as Pinterest, imgur.com,
and blogging.
Create a blog and write regularly
to attract new clients. A blog also helps your website visitors to become
clients by teaching them about your work and helping them to trust you as a
professional.
It’s also a good idea to keep in
touch with existing clients on a regular basis by keeping them updated via an
email newsletter. A strong network can help you get repeat clients, and
additional work through referrals.
MailChimp is a good free email newsletter tool for
photographers.
OptinMonster is for adding beautiful email signup forms to
your website.
5. Create a Schedule
The
‘romantic’ ideal of the semi-deranged writer spending coffee fueled nights
churning out those magical pages. That is a tough lifestyle to succeed on. You
will have much more energy and get much more done if you keep the same early
schedule every day.
Once you start getting a
steady flow of clients, you will have a lot of tasks to complete each day, and
it’s important to have a detailed schedule.
Use the BirchPress Scheduler WordPress plugin on your website to take
appointments and show your availability to clients.
With BirchPress, you can also manage your
clients, services, your calendar and more from inside your WordPress dashboard:
6. Edit Before Delivery
The best way to become successful as a
freelance photographer is to produce such amazing work for your clients that
they can’t help but rave about you.
To do that, you should always edit and enhance
your photos before delivering them to your clients. This editing may include a background adjustment, color balancing, fixing insufficient light and enhancing skin tones.
7. Manage Your Finances
When you work for someone else
your salary is guaranteed. So becoming a freelance photographer and suddenly
being in charge of your own salary can be a bit scary.
But if you do a good job managing the income
and expenses for your photography business, you can eliminate a lot of that
fear.
Keep your personal/household expenses separate
from your business expenses, and paying yourself a certain salary. That way,
you will know exactly how much money you have left over to invest in your
business, and you won’t be tempted to make those purchases out-of-pocket.
8. Attend Workshops
Attend a local photography workshop. Continuing
education is important for freelance photographers because it helps you to
raise the bar for yourself and renew your passion for your work.
9. Boost Your Confidence
You can
do it. It’s not easy, but believing in yourself is the most important tool to
keep yourself going. Put yourself out there. You will screw up sometimes, but
screwing up is a good thing. It means that you are learning. Just try not to
make the same mistakes twice.
And keep
in mind that the work you do during the tough times is what makes the good
times happen.
You should be confident in your photography skills: you are a
professional photographer. If you are going to be successful as a freelancer,
you need to show potential clients that you can confidently deliver the work
they need.
Take experience from multiple shoots. Note what
worked and what didn’t work in different situations. The more experience you
get, the more you will hone in on your skills. You will become a more confident
photographer with every step.
10. Respond to emails and phone
calls as fast as you can
If you
are contacted by someone looking for your services, chances are that they just
spent the time to look at your work, liked it and now you are fresh in their
mind. Every second that you wait dissipates this freshness. Get the dialogue
going quickly and the person will often not look elsewhere.
11. Keep lists!
Lists
are so important. Big goals are reached not at once, but through series of
small tasks, in list form. With freelancing there is always so much random
stuff to keep up with, often stuff you don’t feel like doing.
Having
these things in a list makes them tangible and keeps them fresh in your mind. And
the rewarding feeling of crossing these things off is necessary to keep from
procrastinating on the less urgent tasks.
Be a
paper list person. Have paper scraps of lists. Find teuxdeux.com. It’s so simple but oh so perfect, a
weekly list that you can access from any computer. It will vastly improve
your life. Try it out. Set your homepage to it.
12. Set up specific web surfing
times for the day
Try to
set aside specific times to surf the web. If you have particular trouble with
certain websites, there are ways to block these websites on your computer (you
can find out how by Google.) Block them every morning and then unblock
them at night.
13. Low energy days and the 15
minute nap
Sometimes
having a boss looking over your shoulder can be a good thing. Retouching
skin for hours on end can make your eyes droopy and have you feeling like
shoving a screwdriver into your brain. All those dreaded tasks piling up,
just mocking you from your list.
Being
fast is so important. It is a skill that is really built up over time, as you
gain more experience. Lightroom can change your life.
If you
don’t use it already, it will be the best money you’ve ever spent.
Really
learn how to use the entire program and learn the keyboard shortcuts as well. Keyboard
shortcuts are amazing!
14. If you try to be all things to all
people, you will fail.
Find your specialty, your niche, that one thing
that you love photographing more than anything else, and focus on becoming the
best you can be at that.
15. Invest more in lenses, less on
lighting.
You can earn some money by setting up an account on those sites, and adding your photos to sell to potential clients. Still another way is to market your work directly to actual clients.
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