Makes perfect sense. That was a good tip for a new photographer. At least they START CHARGING. That’s always the hardest part when you have never charged a person for “Services performed.” Nice vid Adrian! 😎
I just spent 45 minutes on LinkedIn learning looking for videos on pricing. I could not find any that explained pricing in simple terms like you did in your videos. I have the camera and editing skills and now I have a good Idea what I should start charging for my services. I also Subscribed to your channel.
I am just getting started. I got myself a Fuji X-T4 and I have the kit 18-55 lense and just purchased a viltrox 56 1.4 for portraits. I really want to get into shooting portraits for a profit for a side hustle/part time job. I think the hardest part for me is going to be how to pose people.
This video was super helpful. I’m a pretty experienced photographer in all other areas however I have never got into portrait photography because I always made exuses like not having the right gear for it or the possibility people wouldent be happy with my product. I ended up deciding it was time for me to get outside of my comfort zone and do what I have wanted to do for a while. So I bought the Nikon d850 with a Nikon AF-S 85mm f/1.4G lense. This video helped me to decide that I think I should charge 50 dollars for now to see where I am at and make sure the customer is happy and work my way up from there!
I’ve been a photographer for my high school newspaper and college newspaper for 8 years and I feel like Im at the confidence level with my equipment that I charge $100-250 for a photo session depending on whether its a 1 or 2 hour session. I’d be curious to hear what you think of that price point and how I can market it as a good deal considering some photographers charge upwards of $500 for a portrait session. I also tend to do environmental portraits because I don’t own a studio space.
Thank you so much. I got hit up for my first shoot and was thinking of just doing it free and saying "spread the word". But if the word spreads, I have no confidence in charging! Very scary! Thank you again :)
Definitely got value from this video. I found your channel about a week ago, subscribed and have watched over 40 of your videos lol. I'm looking to start my photography business early next year and your videos have definitely helped.
@@AdrianLardPhoto watching your videos I’ve learned it’s important to find a niche lol. I still don’t know exactly what I want to specialize in, but over the last year taking pictures of my family and pets and watching tons of TH-cam videos. I do have see myself having a passion for portrait photography. I’m also interested in landscape photography to potentially dabble in NFT’s. I’ve learned a lot and after speaking with other photographers and getting good feedback I feel comfortable taking this to the next level and look to start a photography side business. I’m also a musician so with the traveling I can get some good content out to help promote the brand I’m looking to start.
I basically waited until my client offered to pay... That was about a year and then my photography started getting good. My prices went from nothing to $60 when I had my first paying client to $75 for 20 min mini sessions and $225 for an hour session
Youre welcome Michael. Just trying to help out. I've had many points in my photography journey where my confidence was super low, so I know how it feels and it can be hard to build it up.
Thank you. I actually started taking photos to be a smart-ass, dumb story, but I got booked. I have been an officiant for years and realized I have been undercharging for my services by hundreds of dollars. So I made my contract and listed my price as $100 an hour, but I plan to change it immediately after my first shoot lol.
Haha. Hey, at least you realized it and changed them...some people never change their prices. I get it though, it can be scary. Thanks for watching, Marie.
I have collections with multiple images (ex: 8 images for $600, 12 images for $900). For digital files, I have clients download them and purchase extras from ShootProof.
Ismail frm kenya ,man am so proud of you work ,myself am still saving for the A7iii, was asking what is the most basic budget laptop/pc for editing the a7iii photos and videos obviously . Thnks
Do you make your own prints, do you use a service or do you provide your customers a file the6 can use to get prints? What are your deliverable options for your customers?
Clients can purchase print through their online gallery. I use ShootProof for this. Right now the deliverable is mainly digitals, but I'm gonna be doing more IPS next year.
It depends on the type of shot. Time and images are different for most shoots. For a 1 hr portrait session, I might take around 200 photos. The number of images the client gets depends on the package they choose. They choose their images before I edit them.
i can not find a video on this ... how do you get you're client to pay the deposit and is it better to ask before the session and what should be the deposit fee ?
Yes. Our clients pay in full before the session. The deposit is paid to secure their date and the rest has to be paid before the shoot. As far as the fee, it depends on what the shoot is and how much we're charging. It's usually around 40% or 50%. Oh, and you can send invoices to clients using something like ShootProof (this is what we use).
@@AdrianLardPhoto I was looking for advice for a portraits like how much shots would I give the client if I do a portrait photo shoot is 10 edits to low I really need help with this one because I don't want to be shorting anyone
@@AdrianLardPhoto I was thinking of taking street photography to a different level walking up to people and asking if they’d like photos and selling them on it for about 10$ for a few good photos.
It should be free. Build a portfolio that sells your services, and then start charging. The value to the customer is the results, not your labor or time.If you can consistently deliver images that sell themselves, charge what the images are worth. The client does not want to know you are a beginner, they want photos like in your porfolio so focus on building the skill set that allows you to deliver what you promise. Compare your own work to the best in your city, if it is not as good, fix your weaknesses. Attend workshops, use models who know how to pose, learn from them. Two people you need to develop relationships with is a good MUA(makeup artist) and skilled models and pay close attention to how they enhance the two dimentional image to appear more 3D, learn how to reduce the impact of flaws in the subjects. If a client is heavy, a camera can exagerate size but creative posing is a tool used to assure that your images reduce the impact of problem areas. With sight position changes of the camera, you can make someone appear more size and weight proportional.Closer body parts appear larger, shooting a bit above the midde line or from below the center line an change the perception of proportions, for example longer slimmer legs or angle of incidence can slim someone or appear to appear more voluptuous, han d or finger angle can make them look more feminine, etc. Practice with patient friends, or if just starting with studio lighting, get a wig styling head at a beauty supply shop, preferably one with more realistic feature sizes and practive compare the results to what you imagined. Make every shot deliberation, not run and gun. If the result does not what you expected, figure out why, use poor images as lessons. Think about the difference what you imagined and what resulted.
Wanna learn how to make your first $1,000 with photography as a beginner? Watch this video next: th-cam.com/video/hSDAne-Dm5A/w-d-xo.html
Makes perfect sense. That was a good tip for a new photographer. At least they START CHARGING. That’s always the hardest part when you have never charged a person for “Services performed.” Nice vid Adrian! 😎
I agree...starting is definitely the hardest part. Appreciate you for watching!
I just spent 45 minutes on LinkedIn learning looking for videos on pricing. I could not find any that explained pricing in simple terms like you did in your videos. I have the camera and editing skills and now I have a good Idea what I should start charging for my services. I also Subscribed to your channel.
I am just getting started. I got myself a Fuji X-T4 and I have the kit 18-55 lense and just purchased a viltrox 56 1.4 for portraits. I really want to get into shooting portraits for a profit for a side hustle/part time job. I think the hardest part for me is going to be how to pose people.
don't overlook this side hustle my friend. it might as well be your full time gig one day 😘
I love the way to explain. You make sure excuses are set aside and people do the work.Thanks for the simple and great advice😊
This video was super helpful. I’m a pretty experienced photographer in all other areas however I have never got into portrait photography because I always made exuses like not having the right gear for it or the possibility people wouldent be happy with my product. I ended up deciding it was time for me to get outside of my comfort zone and do what I have wanted to do for a while. So I bought the Nikon d850 with a Nikon AF-S 85mm f/1.4G lense. This video helped me to decide that I think I should charge 50 dollars for now to see where I am at and make sure the customer is happy and work my way up from there!
Beginner here just bought my 2000d r7 canon this was very helpful man
it's crazy because i was scrolling all over youtube looking for a video like this...who knew it would' ve been so underrated - stay blessed king
Competence, confidence and comfort are essential. Thanks for the simple reminder.
I’ve been a photographer for my high school newspaper and college newspaper for 8 years and I feel like Im at the confidence level with my equipment that I charge $100-250 for a photo session depending on whether its a 1 or 2 hour session. I’d be curious to hear what you think of that price point and how I can market it as a good deal considering some photographers charge upwards of $500 for a portrait session. I also tend to do environmental portraits because I don’t own a studio space.
Thank you so much. I got hit up for my first shoot and was thinking of just doing it free and saying "spread the word". But if the word spreads, I have no confidence in charging! Very scary! Thank you again :)
Yes, it can be pretty scary. Sometimes you just have to jump in and do it. Good luck!
@@AdrianLardPhoto Thanks!!! 😵💫😊
Definitely got value from this video. I found your channel about a week ago, subscribed and have watched over 40 of your videos lol. I'm looking to start my photography business early next year and your videos have definitely helped.
Thanks man...that's great to hear. Welcome to the community🤝
Will you be specializing in a specific type of photography for your business?
@@AdrianLardPhoto watching your videos I’ve learned it’s important to find a niche lol. I still don’t know exactly what I want to specialize in, but over the last year taking pictures of my family and pets and watching tons of TH-cam videos. I do have see myself having a passion for portrait photography. I’m also interested in landscape photography to potentially dabble in NFT’s. I’ve learned a lot and after speaking with other photographers and getting good feedback I feel comfortable taking this to the next level and look to start a photography side business. I’m also a musician so with the traveling I can get some good content out to help promote the brand I’m looking to start.
Mindset is a necessary conversation for newbies, and would even be a great refresher to those of us who are experienced.
For sure💯💯
You handled a tuff question really well
New subbie…that was super helpful & made sense. I was afraid to charge due to lack of confidence so I did the shoots free. Tyvm Adrian
I basically waited until my client offered to pay... That was about a year and then my photography started getting good. My prices went from nothing to $60 when I had my first paying client to $75 for 20 min mini sessions and $225 for an hour session
Thanks for this. This was something I needed to hear.
so true your words
Thanks! I really needed guidance! This was very helpful!
I struggle a lot with pricing and how many pictures should I give to my clients
I'm glad someone said this!
💯✊
Make sense thank you
Thank you very much for these
What can you say about pricing for people who are starting their photography with a mobile phone (phoneography)
Great video thank you!
Thank you for the advice and information on developing confidence In our craft...
Youre welcome Michael. Just trying to help out. I've had many points in my photography journey where my confidence was super low, so I know how it feels and it can be hard to build it up.
Thank you. I actually started taking photos to be a smart-ass, dumb story, but I got booked. I have been an officiant for years and realized I have been undercharging for my services by hundreds of dollars. So I made my contract and listed my price as $100 an hour, but I plan to change it immediately after my first shoot lol.
Haha. Hey, at least you realized it and changed them...some people never change their prices. I get it though, it can be scary. Thanks for watching, Marie.
Kinda new to photography, but are all of the photos chosen to give clients edited and if so how long does it take before you deliver?
I let them choose first, and then I edit them. We do up to 1 week for delivery.
When you sell portraits, do you charge, say $150, is it for just one print or multiple, how about when the want the electronic file? 🙏
I have collections with multiple images (ex: 8 images for $600, 12 images for $900). For digital files, I have clients download them and purchase extras from ShootProof.
Love ur info thx
You're welcome...glad you're enjoying the content.
I like your video 🤙🏼
every video of yours is so helpful, thanks for your work
You're welcome. Thanks for watching!
Confidence, Yess 🙌🏾
💯✊️
Thanks Dude, the video I need. Can you compute the 40dollars in Philippine piso?
amazing channel thank you
I started like a few weeks ago, and I'm thinking of charging for shoots. But I got a question, Should i charge more if i edit the photos too, or no?
It's a package deal I say so make sure you're getting paid for your time or add in the help you pay for.
Ismail frm kenya ,man am so proud of you work ,myself am still saving for the A7iii, was asking what is the most basic budget laptop/pc for editing the a7iii photos and videos obviously . Thnks
Hi. Thank you. You will love the A7iii. I'm not sure about budget laptops, I use a custom PC.
Do you make your own prints, do you use a service or do you provide your customers a file the6 can use to get prints? What are your deliverable options for your customers?
Clients can purchase print through their online gallery. I use ShootProof for this. Right now the deliverable is mainly digitals, but I'm gonna be doing more IPS next year.
Can you show where you started and how are you grew from there?
How much do you charge for travel?
It depends on how far I'm driving.
What i don’t know is lets say i charge 50, but would i charge for like an hour or for bundle of one hour and 20 edited pictures?
How long should a shoot take & about how many photos would you take in a shoot compared to the photos the client receives?
It depends on the type of shot. Time and images are different for most shoots. For a 1 hr portrait session, I might take around 200 photos. The number of images the client gets depends on the package they choose. They choose their images before I edit them.
If I send you some pics can you tell me what you would pay for them so I could have an idea on how to charge?
Okay $100 for labor but how much with photos included?
i can not find a video on this ... how do you get you're client to pay the deposit and is it better to ask before the session and what should be the deposit fee ?
Yes. Our clients pay in full before the session. The deposit is paid to secure their date and the rest has to be paid before the shoot. As far as the fee, it depends on what the shoot is and how much we're charging. It's usually around 40% or 50%. Oh, and you can send invoices to clients using something like ShootProof (this is what we use).
So how much photos does the client get ?
It varies...it really depends on what type of shoot I'm doing.
@@AdrianLardPhoto I was looking for advice for a portraits like how much shots would I give the client if I do a portrait photo shoot is 10 edits to low I really need help with this one because I don't want to be shorting anyone
Are you proud of some of your work. That’s fine but you can’t be confident in charging for your work until consistent quality is a given.
Great tips, question I’m think about pricing say about $150 but I was wondering if I should include edited photos for that price and if so, how many?
Thanks. I would include photos, but not a lot at that price. I've charged that in the past for mini sessions and gave like 3 images.
@@AdrianLardPhoto I was thinking of taking street photography to a different level walking up to people and asking if they’d like photos and selling them on it for about 10$ for a few good photos.
What would you included if not edited photos for that?. I’m thinking of editing them and everything for 10bucks for 2
Would you be willing to rate our photos and give us a price point you would rate us at? Hope that makes sense
Do you feel like you would get value from that?
@@AdrianLardPhotoI do. People always tell me I should be charging triple for my work. But it’s not the ones paying saying that so….
@@AdrianLardPhoto Yes! At least it gives a starting point or a median number.
Bro $40 omg
Lol...hey, you gotta start somewhere right
It should be free. Build a portfolio that sells your services, and then start charging. The value to the customer is the results, not your labor or time.If you can consistently deliver images that sell themselves, charge what the images are worth. The client does not want to know you are a beginner, they want photos like in your porfolio so focus on building the skill set that allows you to deliver what you promise. Compare your own work to the best in your city, if it is not as good, fix your weaknesses. Attend workshops, use models who know how to pose, learn from them. Two people you need to develop relationships with is a good MUA(makeup artist) and skilled models and pay close attention to how they enhance the two dimentional image to appear more 3D, learn how to reduce the impact of flaws in the subjects. If a client is heavy, a camera can exagerate size but creative posing is a tool used to assure that your images reduce the impact of problem areas. With sight position changes of the camera, you can make someone appear more size and weight proportional.Closer body parts appear larger, shooting a bit above the midde line or from below the center line an change the perception of proportions, for example longer slimmer legs or angle of incidence can slim someone or appear to appear more voluptuous, han d or finger angle can make them look more feminine, etc.
Practice with patient friends, or if just starting with studio lighting, get a wig styling head at a beauty supply shop, preferably one with more realistic feature sizes and practive compare the results to what you imagined. Make every shot deliberation, not run and gun. If the result does not what you expected, figure out why, use poor images as lessons. Think about the difference what you imagined and what resulted.
$40 is not embarrassing. Some of these talentless people Need to be charging $40 instead of $2k while using ambient light and. f3.5 kit lense