Julius13
Member
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2018
- Messages
- 19
- Reaction score
- 3
- Age
- 69
This whole industry is in a "revolution" and unfortunately it is a race to the bottom. We have people with little to no "Skin in the game" who are happy making "Beer $$" for a photo shoot. I see it almost every day and I just look the other way and beat them day in and day out with excellent Customer Service and a phenomenal end product.
John-Boy flying the drone his parents bought him for his 16th birthday can take "ok" pictures from the air but most of the time he knows nothing about composition, composure, editing, etc. For $50 a shot he can't spend much time on the project.
Also (please don't take offense) we have a large population of retirees and soon to be retirees who don't need to make much $$ and are willing to work for pennies on the dollar. I saw this first hand about 3 weeks ago when someone approached me (on a job) asking for advice and guidance about his new "Retirement Adventure". He said he wasn't doing it to make $$ he just wanted a hobby that paid for itself and kept him occupied.
It's genuinely a race to the bottom and NICHES make RICHES!!
Excellent points. I’m one of those soon to be retirees.. maybe and since I’ve been flying for couple of years I’ve turned down “offers” for some ridiculous chump change and unbelievable expectations. My niche is construction because it’s what I’ve done basically my whole career.
I have a possible client for monthly shoots for chronological verifications of work in place. He sends me a quote from some service and they are just a tad over $65 a shoot, once a month. This firm isn’t even local and seems to claim they have national presence. My guess is they hire some “hobby pilot”. And broker everything via email.
Anyway client wants to know how close I can get to this price. Okay, this site is about 140 miles round trip for me. I told them I won’t fall out of bed for $65. I also won’t quote a project until I have a full understanding of site specific conditions, but we could generally start at a baseline 10 times that amount and work from there either direction.
Regrettably most people will settle for mediocre shots taken straight from an SD card. And while you can compose some fantastic shots with just camera settings, nothing compares to some post production editing. And this in itself takes TIME.
I decided early on I wouldn’t chase that $100 bill and establish my worth, not a prospective client.