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Author Topic: benefits or negatives of including extended licenses?  (Read 5770 times)

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« on: February 24, 2010, 14:55 »
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What are the benefits of including extended licenses (obviously higher pay), but are there any reasons not to? Or not to on certain sites?
Thoughts...?
« Last Edit: February 24, 2010, 15:13 by bacmj »


« Reply #1 on: February 24, 2010, 15:16 »
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The benefit is pretty much, exclusively, more cash.  The downside?  You may not want your work in a template that someone else can resell, for example.  Or you might be annoyed to find your image on a $200 poster.

« Reply #2 on: February 24, 2010, 16:53 »
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Or you might be annoyed to find your image on a $200 poster.
It's not worse than seeing an image sold as regular license used in a bookcover or a CD cover.

« Reply #3 on: February 24, 2010, 17:03 »
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Or you might be annoyed to find your image on a $200 poster.
It's not worse than seeing an image sold as regular license used in a bookcover or a CD cover.

To me it is.  A poster is sold purely on the value of the image printed on it.  A book or cd is sold for the content within.  I'd feel worse seeing someone profiting solely from my image, than something that isn't the focus of the product, like a food label, or something.

« Reply #4 on: February 24, 2010, 17:11 »
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But then the CD and book covers are very attractive pieces of marketing, and that's why most publishers care about their design. 

I almost bought "The secret" because of its attractive old parchment cover.  I would have been very disappointed. :D

« Reply #5 on: February 24, 2010, 20:36 »
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To me it is.  A poster is sold purely on the value of the image printed on it.  A book or cd is sold for the content within.  I'd feel worse seeing someone profiting solely from my image, than something that isn't the focus of the product, like a food label, or something.
A good image helps, but I'd say marketing is the biggest factor. I could create a better cartoon character than Mickey Mouse, but it will never be as popular.

In regards to the original post, I used to not sell extended licenses because I worried about it eating into my freelance work and wanted to keep a tighter leash on my images. I was always surprised that more people don't question whether they want to offer extended licenses or not. In the end though, I decided the money was more important than policing my work.

« Reply #6 on: February 24, 2010, 21:30 »
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To me it is.  A poster is sold purely on the value of the image printed on it.  A book or cd is sold for the content within.  I'd feel worse seeing someone profiting solely from my image, than something that isn't the focus of the product, like a food label, or something.

But surely, whoever has the talent to spot an image (that will make a successful poster) and who also has the balls to pay up front to print & promote it, fully deserves the reward if it is successful __ and will also take the losses if it is not. Business is about understanding the true value of a product and backing your judgement with hard cash.

« Reply #7 on: February 24, 2010, 22:36 »
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Yes, but the risk (around $100) and the reward (thousands?) make it a bit more annoying if you spot it in action somewhere :) .

« Reply #8 on: February 25, 2010, 02:08 »
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in my opinion there is one negative of one type of EL on BigStock - an option that allows "any other use". That's too broad so I deselected it. Other ELs on BigStock, and on other micros are basically more money.

« Reply #9 on: February 25, 2010, 04:06 »
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Yes, but the risk (around $100) and the reward (thousands?) make it a bit more annoying if you spot it in action somewhere :)
Actually, I never saw anywhere a poster for 200$ or even 100$. But then, I don't hang out in malls, galleries or boutiques I can't (or I don't want to) afford.

« Reply #10 on: February 25, 2010, 06:40 »
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Yes, but the risk (around $100) and the reward (thousands?) make it a bit more annoying if you spot it in action somewhere :) .

That's at istockphoto, there are many places that sell els for 25 $ or so.

« Reply #11 on: February 25, 2010, 13:10 »
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When extended licenses were a new thing at micros (and I was independent then) I initially decided to enable ELs at only the sites that paid a decent return to the ccontributor. The (clearly idiotic) idea was that I'd be able to drive EL business to those sites that paid me the best.

It didn't take long to realize that just isn't the way buyers work - they have one or two sites they buy from and you can't entice them elsewhere (in general; exceptional images might be different).

I cringe when I recall turning down an extended license at IS in 2006 because the buyer offered $300 for unlimited print run on a greeting card and $250 was the price then for some defined limit on cards - I thought the increase wasn't big enough and my $60 royalty too small.

I think if you have a side business selling prints or merchandise you should probably not compete with yourself. Otherwise I think there's not a lot of reason to turn down the additional income. When you can pick and choose license types to permit (like BigStock) it makes it easier to avoid the really bad deals (their unlimited options were too cheap so I used to exclude those). IS is all or nothing on license types but you can pick spedific images to exclude.


 

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