Sparrow
Veteran
Charge as much as the pros do, and allow the buyer to choose based on the merit of the images, not a cut rate price.
... I often wonder why this sort of thread continues on after someone comes up with the answer
Charge as much as the pros do, and allow the buyer to choose based on the merit of the images, not a cut rate price.
... I often wonder why this sort of thread continues on after someone comes up with the answer
... interesting question. So what was the answer?
Basically, I'm getting too philosophical. But there there is a paradox in today's attitude that everything should be free, including tax avoidance. But we also want wonderful free roads, parks, health care, education. If everything is free, who's paying for it?
eh? ... 42! did you not know that?
Basically, I'm getting too philosophical. But there there is a paradox in today's attitude that everything should be free, including tax avoidance. But we also want wonderful free roads, parks, health care, education. If everything is free, who's paying for it?
Anyone who thinks roads, parks, health care, and education are free right now is a fool. Everything has a cost, even if you don't incur the cost at the point of delivery. I personally don't advocate for everything to be free. My position is that instead of being forced to pay for services for others or services that I do not get to choose, I should have the freedom to use my own income to pay for the services that I deem worth having.
Which of these is unethical?
A) A voluntary free market where services are paid for by those who directly consume them.
B) A regulated market where the government coercively takes the income of one class of people to pay for services that they do not necessarily choose in addition to services provided to those who do not pay for them.
Taxation is theft, plain and simple. Legal does not always equate to ethical or moral.
This has been a very interesting thread, and I appreciate both sides. On the one hand, there is the entrepreneurial spirit of ambition, and free enterprise. At first, I was totally thinking that anyone should be able to compete against pros at any level. Survival of the fittest and all. Technology changes all businesses, from saddle makers to Model T plant workers. I was going to say to the OP, be polite, don't be rude or obstructive to the Pro, but take your pictures and sell them if you like. But -
On the other hand, X-ray makes good points about the larger issue; a change in our work ethic and community ethics. Most people in their 30s or younger that I know today, including my college son, believe that everything should be free. So now I'm shifting to the consumer mindset, but it applies to the mind of the amateur photog too. My son was telling me that being able to get free knowledge, music, software, business ideas, etc. is a great thing for society. The "open source" writers, craftsmen, programmers, photographers "do it because they love it...what's wrong?" I asked about how do people make a LIVING, and he deferred, implying that if the "free everything" world was extended enough....there would be no need for money or professions.
Hogwash. Human nature will always include some that are ambitious, some lazy. A farmer doesn't grow a crop of corn because he loves farming, or wants to hand it out to his lazy neighbors that do nothing. He grows it to sell. This thread right here on our forum proves the point: http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=129890 (Summary: I want to buy a photog book! But it's too expensive. Here you go, a fee PDF of it! Thanks, he's the greatest expert in his field, I'm glad I didn't have to pay anything!) Those that work harder, and within the law, should be rewarded. Not pushed aside by the underground business minded folks. Otherwise, our country becomes like a 3rd world - full of bribes, collapsing buildings, and everyone with a hand out. Yes, compete, but do it the right way.
Anyone who thinks roads, parks, health care, and education are free right now is a fool. Everything has a cost, even if you don't incur the cost at the point of delivery. I personally don't advocate for everything to be free. My position is that instead of being forced to pay for services for others or services that I do not get to choose, I should have the freedom to use my own income to pay for the services that I deem worth having.
Which of these is unethical?
A) A voluntary free market where services are paid for by those who directly consume them.
B) A regulated market where the government coercively takes the income of one class of people to pay for services that they do not necessarily choose in addition to services provided to those who do not pay for them.
Taxation is theft, plain and simple. Legal does not always equate to ethical or moral.
Technology disruption by disintermediation. (I just wanted the opportunity to use that word.)
Changes in technology changes the previous economic balance.
Craigslist killed ad revenue to the daily newspaper. The internet killed record companies by eliminating their monopoly of the physical product delivery channel. The Macintosh and copy-machine killed the graphic design industry and the print shop.
In the film days, you had real, moderate expenses to shoot, and real, larger expenses to publish, and you needed high technical skills to produce good B&W or Color prints. Wedding photography or advertising were businesses, in which high-quality prints were valued by the customer and the differentiation in terms of barriers to entry and skill between amateur and pro was clear.
Then came digital cameras and convenient, web-quality image delivery. Uncle Frank at the wedding with his DSLR is able to produce for free a technically acceptable DVD of images. A photography pro might be a much higher quality choice, but how do you make the business proposition to the happy couple?
Several things have to be apparent to the buyer:
- how much better quality,
- what is the cost differential,
- what are the convenience factors,
- are they actually going to deliver? (timely, meet the expected quality, show up at all),
- are there any negative consequences riding on the decision (liability),
- do the buyers have their own economic ass on the line.
(Sorry x-ray. I'm not saying you are wrong on the moral case, but from the customer's standpoint, I don't see "Does the photographer pay taxes?" in the purchase decision. Liability when the light stand falls on the bride, maybe.)
I'm cheap and kind of a controlling about my business, but I'm willing to pay real money when I want the quality of a professional, especially when my own business success is on the line. I paid a real graphic designer to create my website appearance and business card logo because I valued his artistic ability and sense of design, and that will have an impact on how my customers see me.
Anyone who thinks roads, parks, health care, and education are free right now is a fool. Everything has a cost, even if you don't incur the cost at the point of delivery. I personally don't advocate for everything to be free. My position is that instead of being forced to pay for services for others or services that I do not get to choose, I should have the freedom to use my own income to pay for the services that I deem worth having.
Which of these is unethical?
A) A voluntary free market where services are paid for by those who directly consume them.
B) A regulated market where the government coercively takes the income of one class of people to pay for services that they do not necessarily choose in addition to services provided to those who do not pay for them.
Taxation is theft, plain and simple. Legal does not always equate to ethical or moral.
I wonder why many people think "competition is good" until Walmart comes to town?
In a way, Walmart does the same thing as a weekend "pro". Walmart offers the same quality (or good enough) goods at a better price than a Mom&Pop store. Walmart buys in volume for huge discounts to help their bottom line. The weekend shooter has a full-time job to take up the slack and buy new equipment. The result is the same---a smaller, dedicated business with a tighter budget goes under.
What you have left isn't really as good as what you had, but the customer voted with their wallet.