Friday, August 15, 2008

Photography Website Re-Launch

I would like to announce that I have relaunched my photography website: Richard Wong Photography: Image Boutique

The previous design was a very personal one for me as it related to my family history but it didn't integrate well with other forms of media. I needed something where I could tie together all of my online and physical marketing materials in a cohesive manner. I also wanted a contemporary design not unlike that of a boutique you might find at The Grove. So after nearly four years of the old website, I have re-branded my website.

This is the start of many new things. I have launched a "Merch" section where you can purchase my magazine currently and will eventually be accompanied by other items. I also plan to add more multimedia. Eventually I also hope to have a portfolio website developed and leave this site as an e-commerce website.

One thing for certain is that for future heavy-duty stuff, I will consider outsourcing the development of my ideas so I can concentrate more on the photography and less time behind a computer.

Labels: ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Monday, July 14, 2008

New Blog: The Non-Glamorous Side of Photography

Starting today, The Field Report: The Non-Glamorous Side of Photography will compliment this blog, In The Field, by featuring weekly links from the photography world that I think are worthwhile to read along with my digital imaging workflow, photo business-related news, and email interviews with photographers / creative industry professionals that I respect. A few of the photographer-oriented posts from In the Field will also be migrating to this blog for convenient access since WordPress is a little easier than Blogger to organize blog posts. Meanwhile, In the Field will continue to be a photography-based travelogue for my adventures.

The first blog post is titled, Stock Photo Agencies.

Upcoming articles include:

* Digital Photography Workflow: Have a Good Filing System
* Interesting Links 7-16-08
* Adding Music to Your Photo Slideshows on a Budget
* Photo Keywording Strategy
* Social Networking: A Waste of Time for Photographers, or a Smart Investment?
* Rights-Managed or Royalty-Free?
* Interviews with two photographers and an advertising art director

Thanks.

Labels: , , , , ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Monday, April 21, 2008

Photography Videos

Scroll down a few blog entries and you might have noticed the photography videos I've been making. Well now I created a gallery specifically for the videos. They can be accessed within one click off my homepage now. www.rwongphoto.com

And here is the new video gallery page: Photography Videos

Labels: , ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Friday, April 18, 2008

More on Photoshelter Archive, Bandwidth Costs and Other Stuff Only Web Geek Photographers Would Enjoy

Last summer I wrote about upgrading my website with a photo search feature and weighed the pros & cons of going with PhotoShelter Archive, Digital Railroad, or Lightbox Photo. After reading Ron Niebrugge's blog post today about high server bandwidth costs, "I could make payments on a very fancy car for what this thing will cost.", I figured I would revisit the topic again.

Correct me if I'm wrong on the technical details - Ron uses Lightbox Photo software for his image search feature and hosts his images on his web server. His site has well over 5,000 images and is receiving in excess of 300,000 visitors per month to his website. Content = website crawlers = traffic = $$.

At this time last year, I was contemplating going with a similar approach for my own site using the same setup. Lightbox Photo is software you purchase and need a database server on your site to run. It would have cost about $1,000 to get the features that I wanted. Other than the price tag, one concern of mine was how much re-occurring costs in bandwidth and storage space to host all the images that I wanted to put on there. I had no idea what that amount would be, but Ron's experience has probably answered that question.

PhotoShelter on the other hand costs around $30/month for 35gb of space to store files without restrictions on bandwidth usage. With PhotoShelter while I don't own any of the infrastructure nor have my own rwongphoto.com URL for the photo archive, I know how much I will be paying in re-occurring costs and have control over that with their pricing plans. I currently have 5,300 image files uploaded to my archive, (not all visible), and have a feeling that if I were to host all those images on my own server it would cost significantly more than $30/month.

One could use PhotoShelter Archive in many different ways. For my own purposes, I place the "search archive" box on each page on my website so if someone needs to find more images then they could easily look for what they need. My site gets tens of thousands of visitors per month so I figure that even if 5% of people who visit my site use that feature then that's still enough traffic to make it worthwhile. Though I haven't sold anything from the archive yet without direct involvement in the process, it is still an amazing tool for distribution. It saves people time by giving them the opportunity to find exactly what they want and even price an image before contacting me.

Another way I have used it is if someone calls or emails me with a Photo ID# then I could instantly type it in and know what they're asking for. It also saves me from having to carry around an external hard drive. If I need to make a quick submission, (not something I do enough of), then I could generate a lightbox online and email it within minutes.

For example, a photo editor found me from a photo agency I am with and called to ask if I had certain images. I did a photo search on my site while on the phone and told her what I found then directed her to my website as well and looked it up herself. They turned out to be the same images that she had already seen but at least it only took a few seconds to come to that conclusion. I was at my freelance job that day and didn't have my external drive around, so if my images weren't already online and easily searchable, then I would have had to gather those images together later that night from my computer, create a gallery for them on my regular website and email the link to the editor or I would have had to email low-res jpegs to her. By that point, the editor probably would have already contacted someone else or forgotten who I was. She ended up licensing my image through the photo agency afterwards so despite not making a direct sale, I didn't lose a sale either.

Which brings me to my next topic; time. To update my website, it usually takes a few minutes to get all the HTML coded, placed and re-arranged. That's all fine and expected, but when you need something online ASAP it is very easy to just upload to PhotoShelter then click a few options to make them available online. Once I shot a scenic landscape image on Saturday, processed it on Sunday, uploaded it to my archive that afternoon and by Tuesday a buyer called to license it. For photojournalists, wedding photographers, event shooters, etc... having images up ASAP is essential. The quick sale of that image just happened by coincidence for me but it does show how important it is to have your photos available online and easily searchable, not just sitting on the hard drive collecting dust.

Labels: , , ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Shooting Pictures by Season

One way to attract more people to your website is to have photos of the various seasonal events during the course of the year. People are likely to want to do picture or travel research anywhere from several months ahead of time to the month of the event. So if you are known as a source for quality photos during these times of the year then your website will likely gain a boost in seasonal traffic accordingly. As an example, I will post the top 20 searched terms on my website for the current month and of September.

September

1. pumpkin patch
2. fall foliage
3. fortune teller
4. la county fair
5. monterey bay aquarium
6. pumpkin farm
7. john deere
8. zoltar
9. fall colors
10. puddingstone lake
11. l.a. county fair
12. monterey california
13. pomona california
14. pumpkin patches
15. pictures of weddings
16. romantic kiss
17. santa barbara beach california
18. christian cross
19. los angeles skyline
20. John deere tractors

October

1. pumpkin patch
2. fortune teller
3. pumpkin farm
4. monterey bay aquarium
5. fall foliage
6. john deere
7. fall colors
8. pumpkin patches
9. zoltar
10. john deere tractors
11. kentucky fall foliage
12. lucha libre
13. puddingstone lake
14. abilene kansas
15. asian railroad workers
16. aspen foliage
17. bird eating fruit
18. christian cross
19. dia de los muertos
20. downtown Louisville

In particular, observe the top ten list. The L.A. County Fair just ended this past Sunday and draws over 1.5 million visitors annually. Pumpkin patches obviously start to show up at the end of September, and fall foliage is about to kick into full swing soon to last through November. Observing your web statistics is a good way to find new ideas of what to photograph as well. Take Dia de Los Muertos for example. That is the Mexican celebration for "The Day of the Dead" which traditionally takes place on November 1st and 2nd. I haven't photographed it yet, but there is a big evening event at the end of the month at Olvera Street which I hope to photograph. I've wanted to photograph this particular event for the past several years but I haven't been in town on that week to photograph.

I'm a location photographer so my seasonal list skews toward events, places and nature-related subjects. A surfing photographer would obviously have a different list of subjects such as the Mavericks surf competition, The Wedge in Newport Beach, North Shore, etc... The point of this article is that we all have our pet subjects so utilize the peak moments of their popularity to your advantage.

Labels: ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

ColorMakesFlowers.com Website Launch

My mom's custom floral arranging and craft design website has partially launched. I created two gallery pages yesterday and added the About Page. I finally got around to photographing her work the past few days and will be adding more to the website shortly.

Feel free to take a look at the website: Color Makes Flowers: Fresh Custom Floral Arrangements & Silk Flower Design Arranging

The site is a little more "feminine" than my own website.

Graduation Day Floral Arrangement: ColorMakesFlowers.com Graduation Day Floral Arrangement: ColorMakesFlowers.com

Labels: , , , , , ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Saturday, June 09, 2007

PhotoShelter Part III: What Else is Out There?

Right now I really want to be at Huntington Beach to see the traveling action photo exhibit on the beach tonight and photograph the pier but I need to get the rest of my car repaired on Monday before going anywhere. This fuel injection system is clogged up and caused some electronics in my car to go bad when I was driving home from La Jolla so that cost about $350 the fix last week. But the root of the problem is the fuel injection which costs about $170 to clean. So I will have that done on Monday. When things go well you plan things like a lengthy camping trip up the California coast. But then the longer you wait to go, things like this happen and eventually your budget is sucked down the drain with it.

Okay now back to real purpose of this post. I have been comparing the features I have with PhotoShelter versus what Digital Railroad offers v.s. installing Lightbox Photo software on my website. At this time, PhotoShelter offers more of what I want than the others but it is not perfect either. I've emailed several suggestions to Allen Murabayashi over at PhotoShelter and they seem to genuinely take to heart what photographers tell them. A few of the things they are already trying to implement. Customer service so far is an A+ in my experience.

So here are what I have observed as the pluses and minuses to the three different services.

PhotoShelter:

Positives -

1. Customization is entirely up to you. If you know html or css then you can take their template scripts and design your archive in anyway that pleases you. If you don't want to mess too much with it then their default template is sufficient too. I think most people who sign up for the standard service however probably already have a regular website and want their archive to compliment the look of their website.

2. Easy to manage files and create galleries. Upon uploading your files, your photos and galleries can be priced and up within minutes.

3. Considerably less expensive than Digital Railroad and you get more for your money.

4. If you have a customized archive site, then you don't have to link back to PhotoShelter's main site thus not drawing customers away from your main website business.

5. Global search archive on PhotoShelter's main site. This is essentially the same as DRR's much-hyped Marketplace. I don't know which came out first but that doesn't matter. It's the same thing.

6. Big name photographers. Photogs like Sports Illustrated photographer, Bill Frakes are touted heavily by the company. The benefit to having name photographers is that it could theoretically attract their buyers to PhotoShelter. However I think the intended benefit to snatching up famous talent is to attract more photographers to the service. I mean it's fair. That is their business model and they provide what we need.

7. Automated Rights-Managed stock photo sales with FotoQuote. Assuming you have high resolution files uploaded then you can mark them as Rights-Managed and let FotoQuote come up with the pricing. I think you can assign a percentage to their default quotes and come up with your own pricing points that way but I haven't looked into it yet. You can also take payments for self-fulfilled product orders or automated print delivery. If photographers can get a big percentage of their sales by doing things automatically then it creates more time for them to do things like shooting pictures! :-)

I'll also let you in on a secret - if you automate your print sales & delivery by using PhotoShelter's lab then the profit margin is significantly higher than using your own pro labs. I don't plan on selling anything larger than 8x12 through that service though because for larger prints, quality control becomes increasingly vital.

8. Remote archival storage. This was the initial selling point for PS and DRR. You can upload your originals to be safely stored on the service's multiple remote storage locations and have access to your files from anywhere in the world.

9? My daily website traffic has more than doubled over the past few days since I have been incorporating the archive onto my site. Is that coinciding with the new month or does having 1,700 images on PhotoShelter bring in more traffic to my site? My site stats aren't showing conclusive evidence for either theory but I'm not complaining. There's only one way to find out. I should upload more images! :-)


Negatives -

1. One of the things I suggested to PhotoShelter was to have the photo captions displayed on the search results either by scrolling over the images or captioned below. Currently you have to click on the photo in order to find out what the caption is. DRR already has this down and that is where I got the idea from. I believe PS already has this in the works. Come to think of it, I'm going to suggest this to Alamy as well.

2. Another thing PS is currently working on borrows a bit from Lightbox Photo. Upon suggesting that they should allow for a bigger display page than 25 images per page, they said they were working on allowing the user to define how many images they wanted to be displayed. It will be interesting to see how 5,000 images looks on a single page.

3. The search engine on PhotoShelter.com could be more effective. The default image results are displayed according to date of upload. When you do click on search relevance it'll usually do a grouping based on photographer. I would much rather see it mixed up. When I typed in Solvang California on the global search archive, the first page was full of Tour de France type of pictures. I don't consider that to be of any relevance to anyone much less a photo buyer. Since I am the only person on PS with actual Solvang travel pictures then I should be on top and those cycling photos relegated to the bottom of the heap. At the least, our photos should have been evenly distributed amongst the search results. On a positive note, I still have my own archive on my website so you won't have to see "Tour de Solvang" pictures.







4. Re-occurring costs. I'm on the $29.99 standard plan with 35gb because I wanted my own personalized archive for my regular website. That was my whole reason for signing up in the first place. For $9.99, you don't get the customizable website and thus could be drawing customers away from your website because it brings you back to the PhotoShelter site. Plus having a PhotoShelter branded archive does nothing for your own business branding. It might seem like a minor strategical tactic but in reality it is huge. A little psychology goes a long way. How else does Nike manage to sell more shoes than anyone else despite having an inferior product?


Digital Railroad:

Positives-

1. Their new Marketplace search is getting a lot of press lately. Like PhotoShelter you can search through all of the photographers archives all at once. Essentially a fee-based version of Alamy. Maybe their expensive costs weeds out bad quality and is a better experience for photo buyers. Plus DRR is hyping up big name buyers who have signed up as buyers. The primary motive is to draw more photographers to the service obviously. I'm keeping my eye on this because I would sign up if photographers reported decent sales from the Marketplace. With one or two sales you could easily make back the annual cost of subscription. Does the hype mean that DRR is heavily marketing towards photo buyers?

2. Similar genre of photography to what I shoot and probably similar to what most people who read my blog do. It is a positive because that should theoretically attract the target audience for our photos.

3. Automated sizing of photos for distribution. You upload the high resolution file and the buyer can decide which they need to license and DRR's system will provide them with the appropriate size. That is especially attractive for the traveling photographer who might not have access to photo editing software or doesn't have time for production tasks.

4. DRR seems to have a strong association with stock photo trade groups such as Stock Artists Alliance which would appeal to a certain demographic of photogs and buyers. DRR is hyping up the fact they incorporate industry PLUS standards into their system. I tried to read up on the PLUS Packs concept but it was too confusing for me to understand. I'm too lazy to look up exactly what PLUS stands for but it is essentially a notation system for licensing photo rights from what I gather.

5. I did a DRR archive search from a photographer's website yesterday and it brought back no results from my search. However, it did take me to DRR's Marketplace and told me that if I license a photo from the Marketplace based off of that photographer's referral then they get 2% of the proceeds. It would be nice to have more than 2% but at least it fosters a collaborative business environment that benefits photographers as a whole. If I had a DRR account, then I could hypothetically sell a few images from other photographer's referrals as well. However, I think this would benefit someone like me more than someone like Robert Holmes, who has probably sold images to every publication on the planet. Whatever the case, it definetely makes it convenient for the buyer.

6. Remote archival storage. This was the initial selling point for PS and DRR. You can upload your originals to be safely stored on the service's multiple remote storage locations and have access to your files from anywhere in the world.


Negatives-

1. Digital Railroad's customizable photography archives are not much more than slapping on a photographer's logo at the top and changing the background colors. I don't know what is possible with their system but I have seen quite a few photographer's DRR archives and they all look the same more or less. Now compare it to PhotoShelter-based archives. It's often hard to tell the difference between the photographer's main website and which portion is hosted by PhotoShelter. PS is literally seamless. Also it allows for some innovative usage and design of your archives. For mine, I took the basic PhotoShelter archive javascripts and integrated them into my basic website html template. Check out PhotoShelter's main website and they'll list a few examples of other photographer's sites. The creative design potential is awesome.

2. Slow search engine. I have tried searches on DRR archives over the past few months and chose to have the maximum of 128 images displayed per page. Well once you do that, the system tends to bog down to a point of near un-usability. It runs fine when you choose to have less images displayed but what is the purpose of allowing a 128 image display if isn't going to function?

3. Expensive re-occuring costs. Their basic account starts off at $50 - $60 / month. With that you get 20 gb for your archive and inclusion into the Marketplace. First though you have to pay a $100 activation fee to have an account. Ouch. By PhotoShelter comparison. For $9.99, you get 10gb and inclusion into the Marketplace. No activation fee unless you want automated e-commmerce features. Regardless, I'm getting at least twice as much benefits on PhotoShelter for half the cost. The unanswered question though is how or if buyers will use either service.


Lightbox Photo Gallery Software:

Positives-

1. No re-occuring costs. It is like buying MS Windows. You buy the license and you can use it for as long as you wish for no extra costs.

2. Since you are hosting the images and archive, you can monitor the search results. Like anything marketing-related, you can never have too much information at your disposal.

3. Your archive is all under your domain name such as www.rwongphoto.com/asdfadsf.php... not archive.digitalrailroad.net/RichardWong or photoshelter.com/c/richardiamahack URL's for your archive. While you can mask the photoshelter.com site somewhat through your domain name, you can't do it entirely. Again, it might not seem like a big deal and maybe it isn't but it is nice to have people register through your website rather than anything branded by another company.

4. No commission sharing. It's all you.

5. For the top service plans, you get access to FotoQuote software. But then again, if you have $1,000 to spend on this software you'd probably already have FotoQuote anyway.


Negatives-

1. Since the Lightbox archive is a php-based database system, it is not likely to be crawled by the search engines. What that means is that Lightbox won't help you in terms of generating more traffic to your website when it comes to search engines. Though if you have an existing client base that already frequents your site, perhaps they'd come back for more business than before. I'm not sure how the archive data infrastructure for PhotoShelter or Digital Railroad works so I can't say for sure that search engines crawl those archives either. I will look into this though.

2. You host the images = bigger web hosting fees. While there are no re-occuring fees for Lightbox Photo itself. If you are like most photographers who use this software you probably have a lot of images online. Well that adds up in terms of hosting and bandwidth fees even if you have 2,000 low resolution images online. So in all likihood the costs for hosting a big archive would probably rival the costs of subscribing to PhotoShelter or Digital Railroad if not more. As is, I have about 87 megabytes worth of files total on my website out of a 100 mb allotment. My hosting fees aren't bad, about $35 annually currently. But I only have a few hundred images online. Very low resolution images at that. For a huge website, I don't know how much it would cost.

3. Not a viable remote archiving option. In my opinion, it wouldn't be practical to be uploading thousands of high-res images to your web server. The cost would be prohibitive to all but the wealthiest photographers.

4. Not cheap. While it is only a one-time purchasing deal, the bare bones software will cost at least $400. For a fully functional archive though ranges from $700 to $1200.


Overall: There's benefits to having any of the three services. It is a matter of deciding which fits your priorities. My current priority is to make my website a big fully functional e-commerce site in the hopes of attracting more customers. PhotoShelter just happened to be the most practical way for me to do that at the moment due to the fully customizable archive and lower price.

For another person who might already have an archive or big website and doesn't need to incorporate anything to their existing website, perhaps Digital Railroad would be the most logical avenue for them to explore. If the DRR Marketplace eventually takes off then that would serve their purposes; an additional revenue stream / side income lunch money.

For long-term financial goals and if you are prepared to handle your own database, then maybe Lightbox Photo Gallery software is your best bet.

In reality, I think the more established stock photographers will probably have a combination of two or three of these services. Someone like me who is still young and building their internet business should just take one step at a time and not bite off more than they can chew. It takes a heck of a lot of work to build a website. I began creating the current version of my website about two years ago and while it has a lot of content that brings in search traffic, I still see a lot of room for improvement. Photography is an unusual business in that you often don't see the benefits of hard work until months later. Having faith in what you are doing and being persistent is the only way to achieve success. There's no one out there that is going to pat you on the back and give you a promotion for selling some prints and stock photos for tourism brochures and magazine articles. (not that having an employer guarantees you will either, but that is another story.)

Well. Huntington Beach sounds pretty darn appealing right now but most of the shooting hours have been wasted already so there's always tomorrow. By the way, the photo exhibit will run until June 17th then move onto Portland, Oregon.

Labels: ,

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Monday, May 14, 2007

Blog Archive Links Finally Functional!!

On the right column of this blog you may have noticed that there is an archive of blog posts dated by month since I began this blog 2 and a half years ago. Well I could never figure out how to get those links to work. My friend Brandon came up with the idea for this blog and created it for me and did a great job but I had no idea how the file structure of this worked so I could never figure out how to fix those broken links. I just figured it out right now by trying to move the archive files to the blog's subdirectory and it worked. So now all of my archive links work. Before I could never figure out how to easily access my old posts but now that is no longer a problem. Now there are over 100 posts easily accessible for you to enjoy. Thanks for your patience!

Labels:

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Late XMAS Present for Everyone

For those of you who have websites or have an interest in creating one in the future, this is for you. There is an opensource freeware web design editor program on the Internet called NVU that is almost identical to Dreamweaver and MS FrontPage. Better in some ways. Like the aforementioned programs, it allows for easy creation of websites but also has features to do complex programming as well. If you know HTML, you have that option as well to tweak the code if you should be inclined.

I have been using this software for almost a month now and like it a lot. Click the link below for the website.

NVU - The Complete Web Authoring System for Linux, Macintosh, and Windows.

Labels:

Stumble Upon ToolbarStumble It! / share this: facebook