MicrostockGroup

Agency Based Discussion => Adobe Stock => Topic started by: stocker2011 on November 04, 2025, 23:08

Title: Adobe sales
Post by: stocker2011 on November 04, 2025, 23:08
How are your sales going since the beginning of November? I know it's early days but my video sales seem to have taken a downturn for some reason.

Also, not sure if it's because of a change in the algorithm but before I was selling a nice mix of both older and newer files, now it's only older videos with lower commissions.

I can't help but wonder if AS gave us a honeymoon period after the 'exciting news' Adobe Stock Unlimited Plan, followed by a firefly bonus the month after. So could it all be downhill from here on out?
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DaLiu on November 05, 2025, 08:44
For me is the other way around, my sales went up quite a lot this week, I checked if my portfolio is on the top sellers or something but is not, normally i do around 40 sells a day, today morning I had already 40 sells.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: SuperPhoto on November 05, 2025, 14:20
Well. I'm not sure what it is - but since about april - down by about 40-50%.

And last couple days - only $2-$3, which is extremely concerning.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: angelacat on November 06, 2025, 13:03
Slow start to November - October was one of my best months. 
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: MPfoto71 on November 06, 2025, 13:34
My sales dropped in early September 2025 from about 170/week to 100/week.
Nothing changed in my upload behaviour, just the sales dropped by >40% with no visible reason.

Maybe Adobe changed "the algo" again, which was very bad for me...
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: cobalt on November 06, 2025, 14:53
60% of what I earned last year, but because of rejectiongate I uploaded 80% less, so whatever is coming in now, is fair I think.

I will restart doing stock probably by April, I have sone other issues to deal with first.

And then...full production ahead fro video.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: danielvisuals on November 07, 2025, 00:49
Quote from: cobalt on November 06, 2025, 14:53

I will restart doing stock probably by April, I have sone other issues to deal with first.

And then...full production ahead fro video.

That's the spirit, Jasmine!

Due to external factors, I've had a few months of low production. I used the downtime to upload photos from old videos (frame grabs) to SS, AS, and IS. I'm surprised how well these photos have performed, probably because most of them have model releases. I will start shooting again next week.

I'm also investing in a nice EVF. I want to nail critical focus every time, and after 3 years of shooting with an external monitor (ninja V), I can say that it will be a significant upgrade, mainly since I mostly shoot outdoors.

Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: pancaketom on November 08, 2025, 20:40
volume about the same, maybe more sales in the 30 cent range, including a few custom for only .31. Maybe that is normal, but I thought .32 was my previous low.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Uncle Pete on November 09, 2025, 16:57
Quote from: pancaketom on November 08, 2025, 20:40
volume about the same, maybe more sales in the 30 cent range, including a few custom for only .31. Maybe that is normal, but I thought .32 was my previous low.

I think that new Enterprise unlimited plan is finally showing. I just got a stack of DLs marked Custom and the commission was $0.31 each.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: cobalt on November 10, 2025, 14:55
Quote from: danielvisuals on November 07, 2025, 00:49
Quote from: cobalt on November 06, 2025, 14:53

I will restart doing stock probably by April, I have sone other issues to deal with first.

And then...full production ahead fro video.

That's the spirit, Jasmine!

Due to external factors, I've had a few months of low production. I used the downtime to upload photos from old videos (frame grabs) to SS, AS, and IS. I'm surprised how well these photos have performed, probably because most of them have model releases. I will start shooting again next week.

I'm also investing in a nice EVF. I want to nail critical focus every time, and after 3 years of shooting with an external monitor (ninja V), I can say that it will be a significant upgrade, mainly since I mostly shoot outdoors.

frame grabs from videos, that is interesting, never tried that.

I believe that video has a good future ahead. will still upload photos and also some ai to adobe.

I have never had the chance to do only stock full time. so really curious how it will go.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: cobalt on January 06, 2026, 10:34
You will get there! Don't let the negativity bring you down, stock is not dead, just the easy days are over.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 18:03
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.

25,500 images in 3 years... Wow. I suppose your images are pieces of art... or maybe you only shoot in burst mode and send tons of these pictures.
Hem, well, maybe you only use a smartphone. Strange world today... Really...
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: BT1976 on January 06, 2026, 21:21
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 18:03
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.

25,500 images in 3 years... Wow. I suppose your images are pieces of art... or maybe you only shoot in burst mode and send tons of these pictures.
Hem, well, maybe you only use a smartphone. Strange world today... Really...

"He didn't take 25,500 photos."

"He uploaded 25,500 photos."

If he's been involved in photography for a long time, it's perfectly normal for him to have even more photos in his archive.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 23:17
Quote from: BT1976 on January 06, 2026, 21:21
"He didn't take 25,500 photos."
"He uploaded 25,500 photos."
If he's been involved in photography for a long time, it's perfectly normal for him to have even more photos in his archive.

What if his grandparents were photographers and he inherited their stock, what if he had bought a stock of millions of photos, what if he had a body with 18 arms, 9 heads, 18 eyes and 50 cameras, and if he came from the planet Mars... Yes, anything is possible!
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: BT1976 on January 07, 2026, 01:47
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 23:17
Quote from: BT1976 on January 06, 2026, 21:21
"He didn't take 25,500 photos."
"He uploaded 25,500 photos."
If he's been involved in photography for a long time, it's perfectly normal for him to have even more photos in his archive.

What if his grandparents were photographers and he inherited their stock, what if he had bought a stock of millions of photos, what if he had a body with 18 arms, 9 heads, 18 eyes and 50 cameras, and if he came from the planet Mars... Yes, anything is possible!

I'm sorry. We have different perspectives on photography.

Yuri Arcurs added 1,236,635 photos to Dreamstime in 4 years. Maybe he also took a series of photos, or maybe the photos were inherited.

It's important not to judge anyone without knowing their efforts to earn money. Here, we all have the same goal: to make a living from the visuals and videos we shoot or produce.

I hope everyone here always earns a lot.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: sinandogan on January 07, 2026, 06:45
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 18:03
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.

25,500 images in 3 years... Wow. I suppose your images are pieces of art... or maybe you only shoot in burst mode and send tons of these pictures.
Hem, well, maybe you only use a smartphone. Strange world today... Really...

Hey buddy, calm down. I'm not going to learn photography from you. I've traveled the world for 20 years, photographing cities and towns. I have over 100,000 photos in my archive, and each one is valuable. I'm sure you have a valuable archive too, but that doesn't give you the right to look down on others.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: videostock.system on January 07, 2026, 18:12
A lot of people are noticing the same thing. For some sales are down, for others theyre up, but overall it feels very uneven. Older videos seem to sell more, while newer ones dont get much traction.The Unlimited plan definitely changed things - more low commissions and less consistency. I dont think its the end, more like another adjustment phase. We ve seen this before. For now, the best move is to keep uploading, especially video, and not overreact to shortterm dips.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DiscreetDuck on January 07, 2026, 18:44
Quote from: BT1976 on January 07, 2026, 01:47
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 23:17
Quote from: BT1976 on January 06, 2026, 21:21
"He didn't take 25,500 photos."
"He uploaded 25,500 photos."
If he's been involved in photography for a long time, it's perfectly normal for him to have even more photos in his archive.

What if his grandparents were photographers and he inherited their stock, what if he had bought a stock of millions of photos, what if he had a body with 18 arms, 9 heads, 18 eyes and 50 cameras, and if he came from the planet Mars... Yes, anything is possible!

I'm sorry. We have different perspectives on photography.

Yuri Arcurs added 1,236,635 photos to Dreamstime in 4 years. Maybe he also took a series of photos, or maybe the photos were inherited.

It's important not to judge anyone without knowing their efforts to earn money. Here, we all have the same goal: to make a living from the visuals and videos we shoot or produce.

I hope everyone here always earns a lot.

Sorry, but second degree seems to be unreachable for some people here.
And Arcurs would work for $0.023 RPI? :D ;D Oooh ok ok
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DiscreetDuck on January 07, 2026, 18:55
Quote from: sinandogan on January 07, 2026, 06:45
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 18:03
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.

25,500 images in 3 years... Wow. I suppose your images are pieces of art... or maybe you only shoot in burst mode and send tons of these pictures.
Hem, well, maybe you only use a smartphone. Strange world today... Really...

Hey buddy, calm down. I'm not going to learn photography from you. I've traveled the world for 20 years, photographing cities and towns. I have over 100,000 photos in my archive, and each one is valuable. I'm sure you have a valuable archive too, but that doesn't give you the right to look down on others.
Soo, earning $599 (i.e. $50/month) in 2025 with 25.500 photos is hope for the future.. Oooooh ok ok ok ok. I am so sorry being so ignorant and stupid.
And 5 people like your post. Congrats, you are the future Yuri Arcus!...
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: SimonSays on January 07, 2026, 21:53
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 07, 2026, 18:55
Quote from: sinandogan on January 07, 2026, 06:45
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 18:03
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.

25,500 images in 3 years... Wow. I suppose your images are pieces of art... or maybe you only shoot in burst mode and send tons of these pictures.
Hem, well, maybe you only use a smartphone. Strange world today... Really...

Hey buddy, calm down. I'm not going to learn photography from you. I've traveled the world for 20 years, photographing cities and towns. I have over 100,000 photos in my archive, and each one is valuable. I'm sure you have a valuable archive too, but that doesn't give you the right to look down on others.
Soo, earning $599 (i.e. $50/month) in 2025 with 25.500 photos is hope for the future.. Oooooh ok ok ok ok. I am so sorry being so ignorant and stupid.
And 5 people like your post. Congrats, you are the future Yuri Arcus!...
I have to agree with duck here. If 25,000 photos brings you so little then probably it's crap or AI or both.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: danielvisuals on January 07, 2026, 22:12
Quote from: videostock.system on January 07, 2026, 18:12
A lot of people are noticing the same thing. For some sales are down, for others theyre up, but overall it feels very uneven. Older videos seem to sell more, while newer ones dont get much traction.The Unlimited plan definitely changed things - more low commissions and less consistency. I dont think its the end, more like another adjustment phase. We ve seen this before. For now, the best move is to keep uploading, especially video, and not overreact to shortterm dips.

Good advice  8)
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: mike123 on January 08, 2026, 09:03
deleted
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: alan b traehern on January 08, 2026, 17:38
Quote from: sinandogan on January 07, 2026, 06:45
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 18:03
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 13:25
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on January 06, 2026, 12:20
Quote from: sinandogan on January 06, 2026, 07:35
Despite all the negativity, Adobe is promising for me. Since I started uploading products at the end of 2022, I've seen my sales increase every year.

2023 -> 102 downloads and $134
2024 -> 217 downloads and $226
2025 -> 491 downloads and $599

From the beginning to the present, there are a total of 860 downloads and $1006.


I know these numbers might seem quite low and ridiculous to some, but they offer hope for the future.

My portfolio currently consists of 25,500 photographs and 1,060 videos. It mainly features travel and landscape photography and videos.

My goal now is to make more than $1,000 in sales by 2026.

Your RPI (royalties per image/video) is around $0.023. And you tell that it's worth the time and (eventual) skill?
To earn a very low income of $8/hour, you have to spend maximum 6 seconds/image or video.
I think you are ready (or already) for AI prompting and flooding.

My RPI on Adobe is around 45x more! And I can tell you that I consider it low...

No, there's no income right now that would justify the effort. But I mentioned that it's increasing steadily. I live in Turkey, and the economy here is very bad. Even an extra $300-400 a month is a very good amount. I earn my living from other jobs, and stock websites are a source of extra income for me.

25,500 images in 3 years... Wow. I suppose your images are pieces of art... or maybe you only shoot in burst mode and send tons of these pictures.
Hem, well, maybe you only use a smartphone. Strange world today... Really...

Hey buddy, calm down. I'm not going to learn photography from you. I've traveled the world for 20 years, photographing cities and towns. I have over 100,000 photos in my archive, and each one is valuable. I'm sure you have a valuable archive too, but that doesn't give you the right to look down on others.

I'm pretty sure that Ms Duck not buddy. She's putting down your RPI which doesn't matter for what you get paid. Earnings are important not irrelevant statistics.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Bauman on January 08, 2026, 22:15
I agree with Duck.

The problem isn't that I don't want Sinandogan to sell his images; he can.

The problem is that I don't think he should sell them alongside professional photographers and illustrators and amateurs of medium-to-high quality.

The two markets should be separated, otherwise the noise of the huge volumes uploaded risks making quality work invisible. A good photographer risks being irrelevant to the algorithm.

Call it what you will: enshittification or slopification.

https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year (https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year)

https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists (https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists)

But this is what's happening on all platforms, especially now with AI, not just stock image platforms, but also music, art, and news platforms. The creative industry is at risk if mid/high-quality work and crap work is mixed.

This is done to lower production costs and pay image creators less and less.

But this way, the web is dying under a tsunami of low-quality content. People are getting tired of scrolling through junk feeds.

I have 6,000 to 7,000 high-quality images created over 15 years, and they generate between $600 and $800 a month on Adobe Stock, while Shutterstock still barely surpasses Adobe. Sinandogan has four times as many images as I do, but he earns in a year what I earn in a month.

There's clearly a quality issue. I suggest Sinandogan submit fewer images and study to improve the quality of his shots.

I don't think it's fair to play in the same game. What do we offer clients? Low-quality images? That keeps clients away! Some say: professionals should go to premium agencies. Unfortunately, premium agencies don't sell anything anymore; even the most prestigious newspapers and magazines and the most famous commercial brands buy stock images from Shutterstock, Adobe, or Istock.

I would be in favor of bringing back an entrance exam for selling through agencies. If you deserve it, you can sell. Otherwise you start studying to improve your images until you reach an acceptable level.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Year of the Dog on January 09, 2026, 17:32
Quote from: Bauman on January 08, 2026, 22:15
I agree with Duck.

The problem isn't that I don't want Sinandogan to sell his images; he can.

The problem is that I don't think he should sell them alongside professional photographers and illustrators and amateurs of medium-to-high quality.

The two markets should be separated, otherwise the noise of the huge volumes uploaded risks making quality work invisible. A good photographer risks being irrelevant to the algorithm.

Call it what you will: enshittification or slopification.

https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year (https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year)

https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists (https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists)

But this is what's happening on all platforms, especially now with AI, not just stock image platforms, but also music, art, and news platforms. The creative industry is at risk if mid/high-quality work and crap work is mixed.

This is done to lower production costs and pay image creators less and less.

But this way, the web is dying under a tsunami of low-quality content. People are getting tired of scrolling through junk feeds.

I have 6,000 to 7,000 high-quality images created over 15 years, and they generate between $600 and $800 a month on Adobe Stock, while Shutterstock still barely surpasses Adobe. Sinandogan has four times as many images as I do, but he earns in a year what I earn in a month.

There's clearly a quality issue. I suggest Sinandogan submit fewer images and study to improve the quality of his shots.

I don't think it's fair to play in the same game. What do we offer clients? Low-quality images? That keeps clients away! Some say: professionals should go to premium agencies. Unfortunately, premium agencies don't sell anything anymore; even the most prestigious newspapers and magazines and the most famous commercial brands buy stock images from Shutterstock, Adobe, or Istock.

I would be in favor of bringing back an entrance exam for selling through agencies. If you deserve it, you can sell. Otherwise you start studying to improve your images until you reach an acceptable level.

Well said. The two shouldn't be mixed and sold as the same.

(https://scontent-ord5-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/605381605_122147651210943950_8549345113889267312_n.jpg?_nc_cat=104&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=833d8c&_nc_ohc=3luMYmd6E2UQ7kNvwHoFCfb&_nc_oc=Adk8ik3_MSiYUEDJGj4K0mNQPaYEzaomwge277ipleH_cVsCEtxKVXFec0X75YHLNCdVaQZodaT_n0H_tl32taBJ&_nc_zt=23&_nc_ht=scontent-ord5-2.xx&_nc_gid=A4aQ0pf6inAeeDtZm7CWVw&oh=00_AfrZSDLMYp61Fg1A4YXMS8A7x2SmBU9PNyJARssWTvLW0A&oe=6966F9E7)

How do we know what's real and what's AI? At least this is marked AI.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: saylonlu on February 19, 2026, 11:11
Hi folks, Adobe contributor sales are on a downward trend. Earnings have halved in the last 2-3 months.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: danielvisuals on February 19, 2026, 22:22
That's not everyone's experience. Many contributors here have had increased earnings on AS. I can't complain.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Wilm on February 19, 2026, 23:45
Quote from: Bauman on January 08, 2026, 22:15
I agree with Duck.

The problem isn't that I don't want Sinandogan to sell his images; he can.

The problem is that I don't think he should sell them alongside professional photographers and illustrators and amateurs of medium-to-high quality.

The two markets should be separated, otherwise the noise of the huge volumes uploaded risks making quality work invisible. A good photographer risks being irrelevant to the algorithm.

Call it what you will: enshittification or slopification.

https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year (https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year)

https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists (https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists)

But this is what's happening on all platforms, especially now with AI, not just stock image platforms, but also music, art, and news platforms. The creative industry is at risk if mid/high-quality work and crap work is mixed.

This is done to lower production costs and pay image creators less and less.

But this way, the web is dying under a tsunami of low-quality content. People are getting tired of scrolling through junk feeds.

I have 6,000 to 7,000 high-quality images created over 15 years, and they generate between $600 and $800 a month on Adobe Stock, while Shutterstock still barely surpasses Adobe. Sinandogan has four times as many images as I do, but he earns in a year what I earn in a month.

There's clearly a quality issue. I suggest Sinandogan submit fewer images and study to improve the quality of his shots.

I don't think it's fair to play in the same game. What do we offer clients? Low-quality images? That keeps clients away! Some say: professionals should go to premium agencies. Unfortunately, premium agencies don't sell anything anymore; even the most prestigious newspapers and magazines and the most famous commercial brands buy stock images from Shutterstock, Adobe, or Istock.

I would be in favor of bringing back an entrance exam for selling through agencies. If you deserve it, you can sell. Otherwise you start studying to improve your images until you reach an acceptable level.

The problem isn't that agencies are flooded with images. The problem - as you yourself write - lies in the algorithm.

If this algorithm favors masses of images over high-quality images, it's logical and right to do without expensive camera equipment because you can no longer recoup the cost.
What I'm trying to say - this is also directed at DiscreetDuck - is: Why should contributors refrain from flooding the database with potentially second-rate images if it brings them enough money from their point of view? And what's wrong with using a smartphone in that case?

The problem is not the flood of images and the providers who create this flood, but the agencies with their market assessments, which then define the algorithm.

And while we're at it: Who has the right to complain? The one with an RPI of 45 x 0.0023 (which corresponds to an RPI of 0.1)? The one with an RPI of 1? The one with an RPI of 5? It's a question of subjective standards. Because someone with an RPI of 5 could also complain that the one with an RPI of 1 is flooding and clogging up the database.

Generally speaking, I agree – purely subjectively. $600 a year for 26,560 images and videos would be completely out of the question for me. But in Turkey, it might be an incentive. In countries such as Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or Zimbabwe, the financial situation is completely different, and even $50 a month can make a big difference. And the motivation for these income opportunities may be many times higher than in the US or Europe. In my opinion, this is probably a very important reason for the flood of images at the agencies.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: DiscreetDuck on February 20, 2026, 05:04
Quote from: Wilm on February 19, 2026, 23:45
Quote from: Bauman on January 08, 2026, 22:15
I agree with Duck.

The problem isn't that I don't want Sinandogan to sell his images; he can.

The problem is that I don't think he should sell them alongside professional photographers and illustrators and amateurs of medium-to-high quality.

The two markets should be separated, otherwise the noise of the huge volumes uploaded risks making quality work invisible. A good photographer risks being irrelevant to the algorithm.

Call it what you will: enshittification or slopification.

https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year (https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year)

https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists (https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists)

But this is what's happening on all platforms, especially now with AI, not just stock image platforms, but also music, art, and news platforms. The creative industry is at risk if mid/high-quality work and crap work is mixed.

This is done to lower production costs and pay image creators less and less.

But this way, the web is dying under a tsunami of low-quality content. People are getting tired of scrolling through junk feeds.

I have 6,000 to 7,000 high-quality images created over 15 years, and they generate between $600 and $800 a month on Adobe Stock, while Shutterstock still barely surpasses Adobe. Sinandogan has four times as many images as I do, but he earns in a year what I earn in a month.

There's clearly a quality issue. I suggest Sinandogan submit fewer images and study to improve the quality of his shots.

I don't think it's fair to play in the same game. What do we offer clients? Low-quality images? That keeps clients away! Some say: professionals should go to premium agencies. Unfortunately, premium agencies don't sell anything anymore; even the most prestigious newspapers and magazines and the most famous commercial brands buy stock images from Shutterstock, Adobe, or Istock.

I would be in favor of bringing back an entrance exam for selling through agencies. If you deserve it, you can sell. Otherwise you start studying to improve your images until you reach an acceptable level.

The problem isn't that agencies are flooded with images. The problem - as you yourself write - lies in the algorithm.

If this algorithm favors masses of images over high-quality images, it's logical and right to do without expensive camera equipment because you can no longer recoup the cost.
What I'm trying to say - this is also directed at DiscreetDuck - is: Why should contributors refrain from flooding the database with potentially second-rate images if it brings them enough money from their point of view? And what's wrong with using a smartphone in that case?

The problem is not the flood of images and the providers who create this flood, but the agencies with their market assessments, which then define the algorithm.

And while we're at it: Who has the right to complain? The one with an RPI of 45 x 0.0023 (which corresponds to an RPI of 0.1)? The one with an RPI of 1? The one with an RPI of 5? It's a question of subjective standards. Because someone with an RPI of 5 could also complain that the one with an RPI of 1 is flooding and clogging up the database.

Generally speaking, I agree – purely subjectively. $600 a year for 26,560 images and videos would be completely out of the question for me. But in Turkey, it might be an incentive. In countries such as Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or Zimbabwe, the financial situation is completely different, and even $50 a month can make a big difference. And the motivation for these income opportunities may be many times higher than in the US or Europe. In my opinion, this is probably a very important reason for the flood of images at the agencies.

Finally, the main problem may stem from the fact that there are different markets but only one price for a snapshot or more artistic photo and everything is lumped together, at the same level. Algorithms ignore quality, soul, and authenticity (even some contributors, eheh). Only sales bring the invisible to the surface, but it often takes an incredibly long time. Are you sure that only people who work hard to produce quality or exception can understand what they are exposed to? All have to be equal today? incompetence equals competence? laziness equals effort? beginner equals experimented? I think there is a generational question here.
So, people living in Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or Zimbabwe are inevitably people who flood collections with second-rate images? Does competence depend on nationality for you? Personally, I don't think so. There are people on this forum who prove that incompetence (or even mediocrity) is not incompatible with being American or European.  ;)

Propose a vision that is exception and authentic emotion is the opposite of AI Machinery.
Nothing could be more fitting than the lyrics of a song to evoke an enlightened consciousness.
Yes, there was so much soul and human creativity in Propaganda's P:Machinery (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=660ZCEhvbnw)  8)

It's your turn, Bauman. Sorry for answering before you did, I look forward to hearing from you.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Wilm on February 20, 2026, 08:42
Quote from: DiscreetDuck on February 20, 2026, 05:04
Quote from: Wilm on February 19, 2026, 23:45
Quote from: Bauman on January 08, 2026, 22:15
I agree with Duck.

The problem isn't that I don't want Sinandogan to sell his images; he can.

The problem is that I don't think he should sell them alongside professional photographers and illustrators and amateurs of medium-to-high quality.

The two markets should be separated, otherwise the noise of the huge volumes uploaded risks making quality work invisible. A good photographer risks being irrelevant to the algorithm.

Call it what you will: enshittification or slopification.

https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year (https://www.theringer.com/2025/12/17/pop-culture/ai-slop-meaning-meme-examples-images-word-of-the-year)

https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists (https://sarah-stumboeck.com/blog/the-great-slopification-why-the-future-belongs-to-human-artists)

But this is what's happening on all platforms, especially now with AI, not just stock image platforms, but also music, art, and news platforms. The creative industry is at risk if mid/high-quality work and crap work is mixed.

This is done to lower production costs and pay image creators less and less.

But this way, the web is dying under a tsunami of low-quality content. People are getting tired of scrolling through junk feeds.

I have 6,000 to 7,000 high-quality images created over 15 years, and they generate between $600 and $800 a month on Adobe Stock, while Shutterstock still barely surpasses Adobe. Sinandogan has four times as many images as I do, but he earns in a year what I earn in a month.

There's clearly a quality issue. I suggest Sinandogan submit fewer images and study to improve the quality of his shots.

I don't think it's fair to play in the same game. What do we offer clients? Low-quality images? That keeps clients away! Some say: professionals should go to premium agencies. Unfortunately, premium agencies don't sell anything anymore; even the most prestigious newspapers and magazines and the most famous commercial brands buy stock images from Shutterstock, Adobe, or Istock.

I would be in favor of bringing back an entrance exam for selling through agencies. If you deserve it, you can sell. Otherwise you start studying to improve your images until you reach an acceptable level.

The problem isn't that agencies are flooded with images. The problem - as you yourself write - lies in the algorithm.

If this algorithm favors masses of images over high-quality images, it's logical and right to do without expensive camera equipment because you can no longer recoup the cost.
What I'm trying to say - this is also directed at DiscreetDuck - is: Why should contributors refrain from flooding the database with potentially second-rate images if it brings them enough money from their point of view? And what's wrong with using a smartphone in that case?

The problem is not the flood of images and the providers who create this flood, but the agencies with their market assessments, which then define the algorithm.

And while we're at it: Who has the right to complain? The one with an RPI of 45 x 0.0023 (which corresponds to an RPI of 0.1)? The one with an RPI of 1? The one with an RPI of 5? It's a question of subjective standards. Because someone with an RPI of 5 could also complain that the one with an RPI of 1 is flooding and clogging up the database.

Generally speaking, I agree – purely subjectively. $600 a year for 26,560 images and videos would be completely out of the question for me. But in Turkey, it might be an incentive. In countries such as Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or Zimbabwe, the financial situation is completely different, and even $50 a month can make a big difference. And the motivation for these income opportunities may be many times higher than in the US or Europe. In my opinion, this is probably a very important reason for the flood of images at the agencies.

Finally, the main problem may stem from the fact that there are different markets but only one price for a snapshot or more artistic photo and everything is lumped together, at the same level. Algorithms ignore quality, soul, and authenticity (even some contributors, eheh). Only sales bring the invisible to the surface, but it often takes an incredibly long time. Are you sure that only people who work hard to produce quality or exception can understand what they are exposed to? All have to be equal today? incompetence equals competence? laziness equals effort? beginner equals experimented? I think there is a generational question here.
So, people living in Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or Zimbabwe are inevitably people who flood collections with second-rate images? Does competence depend on nationality for you? Personally, I don't think so. There are people on this forum who prove that incompetence (or even mediocrity) is not incompatible with being American or European.  ;)

Propose a vision that is exception and authentic emotion is the opposite of AI Machinery.
Nothing could be more fitting than the lyrics of a song to evoke an enlightened consciousness.
Yes, there was so much soul and human creativity in Propaganda's P:Machinery (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=660ZCEhvbnw)  8)

It's your turn, Bauman. Sorry for answering before you did, I look forward to hearing from you.

This interpretation of my words is unfair, incorrect, and polemical. I never said that people from poorer countries deliver poor-quality images.

What I wrote was that a contributor with significantly lower living costs is likely to be more motivated in the microstock business, simply because the sale of images accounts for a higher proportion of their total income.
Example: A contributor earns $100 per month.
In Bangladesh, that is almost half the average monthly income ($235).
In Switzerland, the average monthly income is $10,000. You would have to be an outstanding contributor to be able to make a living from microstock in Switzerland. In Bangladesh, on the other hand, this is easily possible. If I can make a living from something, I can invest more time in it—it's not just a hobby on the side.

That's what I meant.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Wilm on February 20, 2026, 10:14
Addendum: Microstock is an international market. The automotive industry, for example, is also an international market. Here in Germany, this industry is currently facing massive problems. Donald Trump's customs policy is only a small part of the problem. A major problem is the Chinese automotive industry. It can produce much more cheaply, the cars are cheaper, and the quality is now beyond doubt. In my view, it is therefore to be expected that the Chinese automotive industry will become the new global leader.

Here in Europe, there is virtually no textile industry left. Production used to take place in Central Europe. When that became too expensive, production shifted to Eastern and Southeastern Europe. Now production takes place in Southeast Asia. This is because local buyers don't want to spend $100 on a T-shirt either. Just as microstock buyers now want to spend less money on average than they used to.

It is also possible that in the future, contributors from poorer countries and emerging markets could become the top dogs in the microstock market, as long as this market is not completely replaced by AI. These are normal market laws. And if customers are now satisfied with lower quality, we have to accept that.

My annual Microstock-RPI used to be $17 (with a simple compact camera and standard software). I remember people whose annual RPI was $220 or much higher at that time. The quality of those contributors' images was probably significantly higher than my own. At that time, however, you were still welcome in the microstock community because every contributor added to the agencies' broader range of offerings and overall sales increased because the agencies still had customer growth. Today, due to the glut of images, it's exactly the opposite.
In any case, I wouldn't invest in expensive equipment today because it's no longer economically viable here in Germany compared to other jobs.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: videostock.system on February 20, 2026, 10:50
In short and without drama: the core issue isn't contributors or their countries, it's the rules of the game. Agencies like Adobe Stock and Shutterstock designed algorithms that often reward volume over quality. In that environment, it's rational for people to upload a lot, even smartphone content , if it brings income. Metrics like RPI or "professionalism" stop being universal benchmarks when $50-100 a month is meaningless for some and life‑changing for others. Microstock is a global market with a single price level. What's happening isn't bad contributors pushing out good ones, it's a system that can't price quality properly and only reacts to sales signals.
Title: Re: Adobe sales
Post by: Big Money on February 20, 2026, 13:32
My sales are like 10% of what they were in 2015! I've since left the MS business and work part time at a local grocery store making $30K a year. I've never looked back...