Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/10/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Oct 30, 2006, at 3:17 PM, Harrison wrote: > Ted Grant wrote: >> >> >> After the gear one wishes to use and purchase, film, processing and >> travel costs amount to the biggest expenses, but with digital you can >> eliminate about $15,000 a year using digital. So the logic is you can >> easily buy 3 M8's and you laugh all the way to the bank. > > One thing that many many people do that is a mistake in billing for > photo shoots in this digital age is to NOT bill for digital capture. > Some think, hey I have no film expense so I do not bill for > that...well....your camera cost substantially more than they used to. > You have a large investment in computers, software, hi-speed internet > and the like. So be sure to bill a digital processing fee. This > covers > your expenses and time in front of your computer processing the files > and your expenses in purchasing the digital cameras, computer > hardware, > high speed internet connection, web space to transfer your files > and all > that other stuff. Remember you now are not just the shooter, but the > lab and fed-ex also. > > Who in the old days would not charge for film, processing, fed-ex > fees, > slide pages, and all the other fees? No one who wanted to stay in > business for very long. The same is true in today's digital world. Harrison, Your logic is impeccable, and, I suspect, applicable to many photographers. I have not been a professional photographer for some time but the practice of charging film costs for each individual shot is foreign to the way I and many of my associates did business. For a number of years I maintained a small office/studio on S. Park Avenue in the heart of New York's photo district. Most of my sales were to specialty publications (travel and marine) and for corporate reports. Many of my friends did fashion photography on contract to magazines. Virtually all of my sales were for specific projects, not individual pictures. I may be just demonstrating my lack of familiarity with the current professional climate but the only photographers I know that charge by the individual picture are wedding photographers and school photographers. I retired before the digital era but since I converted my personal photography to digital, I have spent about $3000 on a 20" iMac, a quality digital camera, and image manipulation software. Fortunately many of my film lenses could be adapted to fit the digital body. I have a lot of other computer equipment but the equipment I cited is used almost entirely for photography. So far I have taken about 6000 digital images. Dividing the number of pictures into the equipment cost, each picture cost me about 50 cents. Allowing for my usual success rate of one in ten, were I still in business, I could justifiably bill a client $5 for each exposure. But I suspect that if I did that, I would not stay in business for very long. My client's accountant would immediately tell him that my marginal cost for additional exposures is zero, or very close to it. Further, my client, who probably has a P&S digital camera himself, knows that one of the primary advantages of digital is elimination of film and processing costs. Better to bill the client on a per diem basis factoring all the costs into your daily rate if the pictures are "works for hire" or on a fixed fee project cost. For free lance editorial work, charge for each accepted picture. It should make no difference to the client if the camera is digital or film. And the joke about the pizza is unfortunately true. Larry Z