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Hello, I am enjoy photography as a hobby (lol...hence the screen name). But I also happen to make a few dollars here and there selling on Adobe Stock. I would really like to hear back from the more experienced professionals photographers who have been selling stock photos (or just in the world of photography) for 10(+) years.
Question: knowing what you know now about selling stock photos (or photography in general). What would you have done differently when you were first starting out?
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I began with film a l-o-n-g time ago, before digital cameras and microstock services. 100% of what I shot was for work & personal pleasure.
Stock is less about the photographer and more about what customers want & are willing to pay for.
Hope that helps.
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Part of photography in general is a journey one must take to find their creative selves. Even if you could do something different, should you?
Part of that journey is discovering what works commercially, if that is your goal.
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Former "professional" photographer now retired and working primarily with AI. I put professional in quotes because I never really made enough photographing weddings, portraits, figure, fine art, etc. to make a living from it.
I taught photography and computer graphics at a local community college. Surprisingly, even though I was an adjunct educator whose main full-time duty was videotaping educational and informative materials for business and industry, the college paid to send me to a number of photography and video workshops headed by renowned photographers the likes of Joyce Tennesen (three times), Greg Gorman and a number of others. I also used to work for internationally renowned photographer Robert Faber, designing a website for what Apple Computer said was arguably the first educational photography website on the internet.
What would I have done differently? Well, as Robert Farber once told me, "You know, you're a very good photographer. But you don't know how to market yourself."
And I didn't. Or I did, but it just wasn't in my personality to put myself out there. I lacked the confidence. In any case, the last wedding I photographed was for a friend last year and was my first in probably 20 years. I now spend my time producing and editing AI images using prompts I'm familiar with as a photographer while watching based-on-true-story Lifetime Movies on Youtube because they are so darned silly and unbelievable that I can concentrate on editing AI without needing to keep abreast of who is murdering who or why.
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Here is good info from seasoned contributors: The Microstock Life Wrap (beehiiv.com)