Nina Ferentinos Photography
6 min
Is your businessâŚmessy? Is your marketingâŚclumsy? Is your stress levelâŚreaching atomic levels? It doesnât have to be that way. Letâs dive head first in this year, and leave our bad business habits in the past!
1. Raise your prices. STAT.
I know youâre looking at that and thinking, âI know, but my area is so oversaturated! If I charge more than $150, no one will book me. Iâm struggling to get clients as it is!â
The thing is, if you charge on average $150 for a photography session with no upselling, you would need to have one client a day, Monday through Friday every week of the year, to bring in a whopping $39,000 gross income. No dayâs off, no vacations, nothing.
Letâs say you miraculously kept your expenses low: maybe you got lucky and didnât have any equipment break or need upgrading, didnât buy props, donât have a studio space, and somehow managed to get all those clients without spending a dime on advertising.
Youâd still probably have to spend SOME of that $39,000 on expenses (insurance, gas, accounting services, outsourcing edits, website hosting, gallery delivery service like ShootProof, cellphone, etc.) but just for the sake of argument, letâs estimate your expenses for the year are $2,000.
Assuming youâre filing as a single person with no dependents, that leaves you $37,000 in taxable income, of which about $2,700 would go to the IRS, leaving you with $34,300, or $2,858/month. That sounds pretty good! If the average American is paying $1,300/month in rent, youâll have $1,558 to spend on things like your car payment, health insurance, utilities, and foodâŚsuddenly that $39,000 a year isnât looking so good.
And donât forget: photography is a SKILL, an artisanal skill that is in high demand. What is the benefit of running your own business if youâre only bringing in barely more than minimum wage, get no days off, and canât afford to take a vacation? Make it make sense!
Even if youâre running your business super part-time, you deserve a living wage. You deserve to be able to fund a retirement account, invest in your education, update your equipment, take vacations, and enjoy photography rather than treating it like a âside hustle.â
2. Be intentional about your marketing and make a marketing plan
Throwing social media posts into the void and hoping someone notices you is not a marketing plan. Leaving business cards at the local deli is not a marketing plan. Aggressively saying âYou forgot to tag meâ on the posts of clients who forgot to tag youâŚalso not a marketing plan!
Create a real marketing plan for your business that is realistic, effective, and speaks to your ideal client. A good marketing plan will have multiple strategies with measurable goals, such as email marketing, content marketing, personal brand building, paid advertising, Search Engine Optimization, etc.
Relying on word of mouth alone is great until an unexpected life event forces you to move to a new area, or business slows down right when you need it to spike up. Having a multi-pronged approach to your marketing means youâll be able to work consistently.
3. Get organized
If the way to name and store files, deliver images, or track your memory cards looks more like a horror film than a thoughtful system, you need to change that!
Be sure youâre using a simple file delivery service, like ShootProof or PicTime, so that your clients donât get frustrated when itâs time to download their images.
And consider labeling memory cards or having a couple of bowls on your desk for CLEARED and
UNCLEARED memory cards.
PRO Tip
Spend some time at the beginning of the year working out a consistent way to name files and making sure your hard drives are backed up to a cloud storage service.
4. Outsource something you hate doing
The first thing I outsourced for my business was my accounting and bookkeeping. My accountant does everything from reconciling my accounts to filing my taxes, and itâs worth the couple thousand dollars a year I spend to not have to do the tasks I hate the most.
Save yourself some headaches in the new year by making a resolution to outsource some part of your business. Get your time back! You can always make more money, but you cannot make more time.
PRO Tip
Consider outsourcing editing, SEO, Google ads, blog writing, social media management, or whatever task it is thatâs getting in the way of you doing what you do best: making amazing photos for your clients.
5. Unfollow other photographers on social media
This one might be controversial, but one of the best things I did for my mental health last year was to only follow photographers who I am friends with IN REAL LIFE.
I stopped following educators, influencers, and just people whose work I admired unless we had met (or if I had been a student of theirs and found their education useful.)
Why?
Because when I look at other peopleâs work, I tend to fall into the dreaded comparison trap â where I canât help but compare their work, their business, and their life to my own. That makes me start doubting myself and THERE IS NO ROOM FOR THAT NONSENSE IN MY BUSINESS!
So if you find yourself in the comparison trap, unfollow and focus on yourself.
6. Take more self-portraits or hire a photographer to create portraits for you
Some of you will hate this idea. But Iâd be remiss as a personal branding photographer if I didnât remind you that people want to do business with those they know, like, and trust. And if they donât know what the heck you look like, that can put people on edge.
Hiding behind your logo or a phone camera selfie isnât helping your business connect with people on a human level. I also believe many of us forget how much anxiety our clients feel when they have a camera pointed at them â so put yourself in their shoes so you can better relate to them and help put them at ease the next time theyâre in front of your camera!
7. Invest in your education and learn a new skill
Once youâve run a successful business for a few years, it can be easy to think âI know it all!â But this industry is constantly changing and we have to evolve right along with it. Make a goal this year to take a class, hire a mentor, or just scour YouTube tutorials to try something in photography youâve never done before.
8. Get a little recognition
Take a chance and enter into a photo contest, or throw your hat in the ring of a local competition to see if you might be recognized as a leader in your field.
Awards are a great way to build social capital and brand authority, and you know what? You deserve to get a little applause now and then!
9. Take a real vacation
Remember when we talked about making a resolution to raise your prices? If you price yourself profitably, you can plan to take a couple of weeks (or more) off for a vacation! And you should.
The best way to prevent burnout is to take purposeful breaks and treat yourself. Whether you use that time to relax on your own or spend quality time with family and friends, put the camera down and get away for a while.
10. Find a way to give back to your community
My hero, Fred Rogers, once said: âWe live in a world in which we need to share responsibility.â I am a big believer in actively engaging with and giving back to my community â and you can do that in so many ways!
Sponsoring an event for a non-profit cause that aligns with your brand values, finding an organization that serves families in need and donating a family portrait session, volunteering in your spare time on a board or with a charity, o a percentage of your profits for the year to a worthy cause.
Letâs make this year the year we all resolve to make our businesses, and our communities, better!
I learned that if I want to scale my business I have to plan for it. That's why I will attend a goal-setting workshop that will help me analyze this year and clarify my goals for the next year. In addition, I will be going with a friend to a Vision Board Workshop to get all my new ideas for 2024 on paper!
Stay tuned for what's about to come and bring your own visions to life!
The same rules apply to your personal life.đ