Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

If You Are A Pro Photographer, Have Consumer Quality Digital Cameras and Amateurs Caused Less Business?

There may too many amateur photographers who are low balling and taking a lot of business away from seasoned pros. Clients are doing more work themselves because of the high quality consumer digital cameras on the market. Just good enough rather than best quality work is getting more prevalent.

Has your photography studio gotten more or less work in the last few years. Because consumer and prosumer digital cameras have gotten up to 10-12 MP, more people than ever are becoming photographers and doing more of the work themselves rather than hiring pros to do weddings, head shots, product/tabletop work.

If you have seen a trend here, let us know of your experience. When just good enough is good enough and the margin between pro photographer sand amateurs is a narrowing gap.

Update:

There are many good answers here. There will always be a good market for clients that expect pro quality when amateurs can't deliver. I think someone outlined how important marketing and learning to run a business is key. Some photographers are great in their work but need some stepping up to the marketing issue. Then there are shooters that are average but find some way to be very creative in their business approach.

Digital is here to stay. Even film photographers have to scan their images which take time and do corrections in Photoshop. The quality of the new DSLR cameras is outstanding, some surpassing film scans. I know, because I have seen the images from both systems in high end pre-press houses and digital quality is right on.

9 Answers

Relevance
  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    The answer by "Mixed" above is right on the money. Yes, my business has gone down... BUT... I blame no one but myself. I am not, and never have been, a really good business man. I am very good with a camera, but when it comes to successfully running a business, that is a different story. I hate marketing, I hate selling, I just generally hate all that a successful business requires.

    It kills me to see a never ending stream of people on here with their fancy new cameras that say they take "pretty good photos" and are going to go into business. Your skill with the camera has very little to do with it.

    A person who is a GOOD business person will be successful no matter if it is photography or a restaurant or a golf course. Years ago when I began doing paid assignments, weddings, and portraits, there were much less quality cameras available to the public, so work just kind of easily came to me. So sure, the glut of better cameras in the public's hands, (not taking into account that many of them are poorly used), has hurt MY business, but there are PLENTY of other photographers who have prospered by it. Again, I blame no one but myself. I know what my strengths and weaknesses are, and being a good business person is not one of my strengths.

    In the last couple of years I have quit renting my studio space and the wedding business is very slow also. But I find I am actually happier. I now concentrate on what *I* love doing. Photos of what I want... when I want, and submissions to local and distant art galleries. The money is not as good, but fortunately I am in a position that I do not have to rely on my photography as my sole income.

    steve

  • 1 decade ago

    I don't feel like I have lost business at all. The people who are hiring an amateur or having a friend do it would not have hired me in the first place. The people who have a friend shoot their wedding probably could not afford to pay a pro. That said no corporation is going to have the data entry clerk with a good camera shoot their new products. Newspapers aren't about to send the paper boy to cover a football game.

    Some people trying to get into modelling or acting might have a friend do their head shots but if the person was ever accepted by an agency they would be sent out to get proper head shots done.

    When my father was young photographers were complaining about the same thing except the cameras were 35mm. If a technology becomes affordable to the public then you will have amateurs using it and the need for a professional will be diminished somewhat but never replaced. Your business needs to change with the economy and technology

  • 1 decade ago

    I don't think it's primarily due to the "high quality consumer digital cameras"- Digital SLRS have only recently begun to match the quality of film- and many pros still swear by Velvia over any CCD. Even then we're still talking 35mm; no current DSLR offers better image quality than a 20-year old medium-format camera.

    From the prospective client side, I think the plummeting COST of digital photography is what's resulted in more people taking a do-it-yourself approach. But I doubt those jobs would have gone to pros anyway- they would have hired a friend or colleague who's an amateur photographer and does wedding on weekends, etc.

    Certainly the proliferation of high-quality DSLRs along with improved photo-editing tools, more prevalent broadband Internet access, ready availability of CD and DVD burners and portfolio hosting sites, cost of digital media etc has allowed more amateur photographers to compete for business. But it's all of these factors, not just one.

    It's no different in photography than computer help desks- "good enough is good enough" means support lines are answered by staff in the Phillipines or India. But COST is the driving force behind this, too.

    I think historically, for every pro who operated a studio there were dozens of semi-pros who were skilled enough (let alone serious amateurs of varying skill) but simply didn't have the financial resources to pursue photography full-time. Advances in technology have eliminated many of those barriers.

    Fortunately, major clients still tend to hire established pros.

  • 1 decade ago

    The answer is if your not getting the work its because you dont want it

    Photography is not just about taking pictures its about marketing your self as better than the rest

    Lifestyle photography is going fine at the moment get away from the studio and boring white back drops

    For instance at a wedding fair last year there were three thousand photographers advertising

    with rotuine regular bride and groom pictures

    I gave my model a shopping trolley sent her into the supermarket in her wedding dressed snapped a few a shots got thrown out of supermarket

    used my picture of my bride bending over in the frozen food department with the slogan your wedding day dare to be different

    I was over run with work in fact i turned down 100 weddings

    so get out there sell your self dont go with the flow dare to be different

  • How do you think about the answers? You can sign in to vote the answer.
  • 1 decade ago

    I have good business, I know some tricks that alot of amateurs do not know, and in addition to being a photographer I am a photoshop expert, so even if I am not doing photos I can still get money by correcting pictures, and changing things around .... and some people request me to use film I do that too

  • EDWIN
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    I really think you should read this article:

    "Legal And Business Practices For Digital Photography: On Guidelines, Licensing, And More From ASMP's Judy Hermann" by Maria Piscopo in the Feb. 2008 issue of Shutterbug Magazine. Available on-line at shutterbug.com.

  • 1 decade ago

    Bitter are we? This is nothing new, friend. Technology is meant to aid the photographer, the best of which have the ability to keep up with demand as well as have the skill needed to find more work. The camera has nothing to do with keeping and maintaining a successful business. What good is the best camera if you know nothing about business, or how to even use it? A business in photography is 90% sales, marketing, and finance; 10% what you actually do behind the camera. Quit whining already. If you are a "pro" photographer feeling the pressure, and your business is suffering as a result of what you have claimed here, perhaps it's time for you to find another living, friend.

    In today's economic climate, plenty of people are finding ways to do things themselves, rather than paying someone to do it for them. That's life.

  • 4 years ago

    1

    Source(s): Become Professional Photographer http://photographymasterclass.enle.info/?8x4v
  • 1 decade ago

    my business is tanking...

Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.