Who Really Owns Your Photos On Social Sites?

Like most people, you probably don’t think twice about it.

You head over to the newest social site, sign up for an account, check the “terms of service” box without really reading it, and begin posting. Content, photo videos – it all goes up without much thought as to the true impact.

But what rights do you have to your content, photos and videos after you put them on a social site? What rights do you have to it after the fact? And more importantly, what rights do they have?

Almost every photo-sharing site has some type of license agreement to your content. While the agreements change from site to site, what you are agreeing to can change significantly. Here’s an overview of 12 major photo-sharing sites:

But even after you sign up with an account and start using it, things can change. For instance, on June 1st, Twitter announced the company was partnering with Photobucket to make sharing photos easier. Which means if you have a Twitter account and post photographs using the new API, you’ll also be subscribing to Photobucket’s terms of services by default.

Therein lies the problem.

It’s fun to use social sites, and most of us don’t think twice about signing up for an account. In fact, in many cases the benefits far outweigh the detriments.  Who wouldn’t want the possibility of reaching out to millions of people that spend hours on a site every single month?

Yet problems do exist, and will continue to grow as we spend even more time online. Whether you are trying to avoid your high school senior using a photo posted on Facebook for other uses, or you are trying to gain compensation to a photo you tweeted on a monumental event, its important to think before you post.

3 Rules Of Advice For Photographers

Think Before You Post
I often tell people to think before they write up a quick post and place it into their newsfeed. Would you want your mom reading it? Your grandmother? Just a few seconds of contemplation can save you years of embarrassment – as Senator Weiner can now tell you.

The same applies to your photos. You may love the image you just captured. But before you tweet it and share it, what are the implications? What are your goals for the photograph? In some cases, putting the image on hold for a few hours or even days can save you in the future.

Where Will Your Compensation Come From?
Instead of thinking about it on the fly, sit down and come up with your own policies on posting photographs.

If you hope to be compensated for your work now or in the future, make sure you are fully covered before you post. Include it in a package price for your clients. Take the necessary steps to copyright it. Or use a watermark to protect the integrity of the image.

If you’re using it as promotion, post it to showcase what you do. Always make sure the image leads back to you, and you keep up to date on your profile. Also realize that as much protection as you use, there is always the possibility of your photos being reused without your permission and without your credit. It’s a new fact of the social atmosphere.

What Is Your Ultimate Goal?
What is your ultimate goal for posting a photograph? Are you using it to capture a new audience to your work? Are you using it to try and gain sales? Are you using it for marketing and exposure?

Know your goals ahead of time. It’s possible to use social successfully in a variety of ways. But your first task is to know how it will benefit you. Only then can you take the necessary steps to make sure you are protected.

Social Media – Your Best Friend or Your Worst Enemy?

As a photographer, you look for inexpensive ways to market your business. You use a free blog with Blogger, and free networking with Twitter and Facebook.

You start building your network, and building relationships in a variety of ways. Its fairly easy to gain friends into the thousands, and build a nice little business for yourself.

But what if it all disappears in the blink of an eye?

Chances are you’ve heard some of the horror stories surfacing right now. Like the Tucson photographer that had his reputation destroyed in the social realm due to his $125,000 lawsuit against a newspaper for using one of his photos of the 9 year old shooting victim.

His jury wasn’t in the court systems. His jury was online. And in a matter of days, the photographer learned just how effective social networking can be.

I’ve seen the arguments on both sides.

  • You can say the photographer did everything right – it was a case of traditional media using his image without right, and they should pay the price.
  • You can also look at it through the eyes of the situation – the family was simply sharing a favorite photograph in an extremely difficult situation.

Both sides are true, and can be argued. But that doesn’t change the situation. The photographer in this case wasn’t tried in the courts – he was tried with social media, and lost.

This wasn’t the first photographer to be affected by social, nor will he be the last. And in some ways you simply can’t predict what will happen. You take a stance, and the rest is fate.

But the key that is beginning to surface now is that social is here to stay, and it has an impact on everything we do. Decisions are made quickly, and you have to live with the consequences. You can’t ignore it – it will happen with or without you.

Can a photographer recover after a moment like this? Of course, but only time will tell in this case.

Even in a situation like this, you can’t shun away from it. Embrace social. Tell your side of the story. And wait for time to cool things down. Reevaluate. And make a decision on your next move.

Life is always about risk and learning. All you can do is move forward.

Who Is The Best Photographer On Flickr?

Flickr just celebrated 7 years online. Originally created as a service within a multiplayer online game platform, Flickr developed into a more feasible project, and the rest as they say is history.

Flickr can be used in a variety of ways, and a lot of people have found success showcasing their images. Flickr can be a great tool if you use it to compliment your marketing, and use it to drive traffic from place to place. Remember, free is free, and things can happen.

If you’ve ever started searching through Flickr streams, you realize very quickly that somewhere in between all the bad is a whole lot of GREAT. I love surfing around Flickr and seeing what other photographers are creating. While I was searching, I decided to put together a list of photographers that can inspire you with their images.


image by Chodaboy

Forget Me Knott Photography
Darren White Photography
NikonD300
Stuck in Customs
Clayton Perry Photoworks
Chodaboy
AnyMotion
CubaGallery
ChrisAndCami
Heidi Hope
David Belo
Beachwalk Photography
Bahman Farzad
Yury
Renaissance Studios Photography
SamThe8th
Erik VanHannen
Jason Theaker
Zenith Phuong
Peter Bowers

I know I missed a lot of great photographers – who would you recommend?

Using FlickSquare To Share Your Photographs

Do you love checking in with FourSquare? Want an easy way to share your check in photographs with your Flickr account? Then you’ll love FlickSquare.

Head over to FlickSquare.me Login with your FourSquare account information. Connect up with FlickSquare. Access your Flickr account. And you’re ready to go.

Instead of just checking in, you can now add photographs easily as well.

What Would Happen If Your Pro Flickr Account Was Deleted?

How are you marketing your photography business online? Are you relying on social sites?

Social sites are great tools, and we’re relying on them more every day. Most social sites are free to use, have a ton of features. We use social sites to share ideas, thoughts and connect with our friends and colleagues and post our latest creations. We view the latest post or image and comment to share our opinion. Mobile devices like smart phones allow interactivity while we are away and on the move. Social sites are well, amazing.

We’re even seeing some sites begin charging for an upgraded account, offering us even more benefits and features. Even with the pay accounts, you signup, agree to a laundry list of terms and services, and assume you can now use the account in any way you choose. And in some cases, photographers are using these tools as their sole way of connecting up with prospects and clients.

Now imagine having a vast library of images stored onto an account, large numbers of interactions and friendships, all created over 3 years of time,  removed with a simple keystroke! Recently this unthinkable act happened to one of our fellow photographers, Deepa Praveen. Her paid Pro Flickr account with years of work, lots of images, connections and interactions was recently deleted.

While social accounts seem like magical places to post and hang out, they also control each part of your online persona. If you rely on one source, what would happen if that one source suddenly vanished? How would it impact your business?

The reason you have a website, a blog, a Flickr account, a Facebook account, etc, is to connect up with different people in different ways. Branding is important. And so is covering what you do.

If this has struck a nerve, there are a couple of things you can do right now.

1. Build on multiple platforms, and never rely on once source to showcase what you do. Websites, blogs and social profiles are too easy to get to rely only on one.

2. Back up your social accounts. Search for ways to backup every social site you use. For Flickr, there is Flickr Backup, Flump, or Backupify.

image by Deepa Praveen

first read about on Thomas Hawk’s Digital Connection

The Five Necessities To Photography Success

What do you need to succeed as a photographer? A better camera? More equipment? More clients?

Every photographer has a different answer because every photographer is at a different point of the business game. A photographer with a brand new studio will answer differently than a photographer with 30 years of business experience.

Yet there are certain things every photographer needs in order to make it as a successful photographer. It goes beyond the equipment or the experience.

When we were first starting your photography business, we met an incredible artist. Our friend had amazing ideas, and his images had true genius written all over them. Yet he was an artist through and through. He held a small space on Main Street, and only sold his work (at way too low of a price) to people that walked through his door. Or came to him through referral based on his reputation. He survived, but never thrived. Today he is working other jobs around his photography in order to survive.

I see and hear stories like that all the time. They don’t fail because of talent; they fail because of lack of business experience. They fail because of lack of marketing and sales skills. A mediocre photographer with great sales and marketing skills will always do better than an outstanding photographer with few skills.

As a photographer, what do you need to succeed in 2011?

Blogging

Want to know the best tool available to you today? Yep, it’s a blog. Websites are a thing of the past because of limitations they have. They are created using a hodgepodge of coding that simply isn’t attracting the attention of Google. They rely on programming knowledge, which means the average person needs help to make changes and additions.  And they allow you to stay active in the social media arena. Traditional marketing is dead – if you aren’t using social in today’s world, you are missing out on huge opportunity.

[Read more...]

3 Ways Social Media Will Make Your Photography Business Fail

The world right now revolves around Twitter, Facebook and Foursquare. You can’t go anywhere without seeing people text – even in business meetings. And have you gone a day without watching an online video – I know I haven’t.

Because of all of this, it’s pretty obvious that things are changing. Cameras are everywhere and in everything, so people become amateur photographers with just a mobile device, and some are quite good at it. Even pro cameras are seeing the change, and are pushing video on their still cameras. What does that mean for the pros? What does that mean for the industry as a whole?

It simply means its time to change.

So what does that change look like? And is it truly possible? The Internet is now been around long enough for a generation to grow up with it. Social is changing the way we use the Internet. With 500 million people using Facebook, it should be obvious that its not just a fad, it’s a life changing application.

And change is what we will continue to see. So you have two options at this point. Do what you’ve always done and expect the same results. Or try something different. [Read more...]

The One Thing You Are Missing From Your Social Networking Plan

So you have a Facebook account. Who are your friends?

Many people tell me they just don’t get social networking. They have a Facebook account, but they aren’t getting any business from it. They love it and are on it every day – but where’s the business?

Who Are You Talking To?
Spend some time walking through your friend list. Who are you talking to?

If you are talking to your family members and best friends, they already know you. They understand your business and know you are looking to grow it. They tend to ignore your business talk.

If you are talking to other photographers, they are in the same boat as you. They won’t buy your services, and they won’t increase your business. While its nice to talk to fellow photographers and share stories, you won’t get immediate action from other photographers on social sites. [Read more...]

Monitoring The Social Networks For Growing Your Photography Business

So you have 100 followers on Twitter, and you’re not quite sure what to do from there. How do you find people to follow? And more importantly, how do you find people that are interested in what you do?

One way is to use social monitoring tools.

Twitter is a program that works best when used in conjunction with other Twitter tools. If you follow any number of people on Twitter, you know your tweet stream can be in constant rotation with items from people you follow. I can easily have dozens of new messages every minute or so. And what about the people I’m not following? There may be dozens of conversations taking place on Twitter that may be of interest to me, yet I know nothing about. That’s where social monitoring comes into play.

There are many sites that allow you to use social monitoring – Twhirl, Tweetdeck, Pageflakes, and my current favorite, HootSuite. Login to HootSuite through your browser, and you can have instant access to your different social tools. I can access all of my Twitter accounts, Facebook, and LinkedIn, which makes it easy for my to post to my accounts and to monitor conversations. I can watch what my friends are tweeting, create and save posts in draft mode, find out where my posts are being retweeted, and carry on personal conversations, all from one easy location.

What I like even more is the ability to find people and conversations that are taking place about keywords and things that interest me. For example, I’m on the constant look for people talking about photography business. Since this site provides a wealth of information to help photographers build the business, I’m always looking for resources, people that may be willing to guest blog or do programs together, or for photographers looking to build the business. So using HootSuite, I simply set up a column with the keyword “photography business” and I see every tweet in which that keyword is used. So I can scroll through that column any time, and connect up with people that may be of benefit to my company.

How can you use it? What keywords are you looking for? Looking for someone planning a wedding in your location? Try following a keyword like “wedding [your location]”. If a bride to be typed in a tweet about planning her wedding, you could find her. Or maybe a keyword like “wedding photographer” would help you find tweets in which someone says, “Out looking for wedding photographers today”. And of course there are many other potential ways to use Twitter – start slowly and build along the way.

Once you find people, don’t instantly tweet them and offer your services. That’s way too pushy in the social arena. Instead follow them. Respond to their questions and offer advice. Once they notice you and like what you have to offer, then you have a greater chance of connecting with them, and ultimately booking them as a client.

5 Ways You May Be Shouting To The Wrong Crowd With Your Social Sites

Are you using social media correctly? Are you making any money by spending time on social networking sites? If you aren’t sure or if you have questions about your social media plan, take a look at these 5 ways you may be shouting to the wrong crowd.

1. Using a social site where your clients aren’t.
Are you still using MySpace? Are your clients? How about your potential clients?

If you photograph bands, musicians, actors, comedians, MySpace may be the Using Social Sites To Grow Your Photography Businessperfect place for you. But if you’re working with high school seniors, they aren’t there anymore. They are over on Facebook. No matter how much you promote yourself as a high school senior photographer, you will never capture a market share. Because they simply aren’t there.

2. Talking only to your greatest fans.
How many friends do you have on a social site? 10? 100? Who are they? I looked through one client’s Facebook account and found the following:

  • 25 family/personal friends
  • 17 clients
  • 43 business associates and other photographers

85 people following just won’t cut it. If you were to mail out a postcard, would you honestly mail 85 of them to the people on this list? You wouldn’t be in business for long. [Read more...]