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Author Topic: IS traffic - 51% less in 9 months  (Read 13637 times)

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« Reply #25 on: January 20, 2011, 03:29 »
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...See, whats happening here is a classic, lots of people do actually believe or wish that buyers are going to side-up with contributors and go elsewhere or whatever?  this will ofcourse never happen. "Blood is thicker then water" and for loads of buyers, IS, is in fact their life-blood, been going there for ages and they are not gonna give that up in favor of a few contributors screaming and halloring, right or wrong?...
It looks to me like some buyers are leaving istock for the other sites.  I agree that they probably wont do it just because some contributors leave istock but that's only one factor.  Istock have continually increased prices and now they have made it very complicated, with all the different collections.  The site is down much more than the others, there have been multiple bugs and some buyers are going to have to use the other sites to get what they want.  None of us really know how this will work out but I really don't see any reason why istock should always remain the No.1 site.  How many industries do you see where the first business in to it remains the biggest forever, when they make lots of mistakes and alienate some of their suppliers and buyers?  They might get away with it if there was little competition but that's not the case in the microstock industry.  I think it's quite possible that istock will be overtaken at some point and it looks to me that they are accelerating their own downfall.
« Last Edit: January 20, 2011, 03:31 by sharpshot »


« Reply #26 on: January 20, 2011, 03:49 »
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Interesting link thanks and seems in line with my decline in Downloads there, and possibly a clue to me seeing a huge increase in On Demand sales over at Shutterstock of late.

As for the reasons why.... think sharpshot pretty much nailed it above

« Reply #27 on: January 20, 2011, 05:59 »
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See, whats happening here is a classic, lots of people do actually believe or wish that buyers are going to side-up with contributors and go elsewhere or whatever?  this will ofcourse never happen. "Blood is thicker then water"...

Further more, the entire Micro market is slightly down, not just IS but all of them and its normal, micro has had its 10 year span and thats about as long as the novelty lats.
I think the buyers who do leave Micro,

Seems to me that you yourself are believing or wishing that micro is on the way out and your ten-year theory will hold true. What evidence is there that the entire micro market is slightly down? Where are these buyers rushing off too? We know that the macro market is heavily down and sale prices on Alamy, for example, continue to fall.
Micro photographers have a constant struggle against the ever-expanding competition, we all know that, but overall, old-timers seem to be topping up or flat-lining while newcomers are reporting strong growth. Someone on SS sold over 20,000 files in his first year there. That says to me that the micro market itself is very far from being down. What it means for me, I don't know. Maybe that some of the newcomers are so good that my gravy train has sprung a leak.

lagereek

« Reply #28 on: January 20, 2011, 06:14 »
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You must be joking!!  I certainly do not wish Micro to be on the way out, I have got far too many shots and far too much invested in Micro for that kind of wish. As you say, where are the buyers going to? beats me!
In another fresh thread here, FT, is following suit lowering comissions,  so, you tell me:  where is it going?  might be that newcomers, newbies, are a safer bet for agencies? they dont shout, no primadonna attitudes and they keep producing until they themselves are old-timers.
Dont know??????????

« Reply #29 on: January 20, 2011, 06:24 »
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If I had just found microstock now, I wouldn't bother with it.  Just getting accepted with some sites is hard.  They now reject far more than when I started and some sites sell hardly any new images.  It must be very discouraging for newbies, especially when already low commissions are being slashed and competition is extreme.

« Reply #30 on: January 20, 2011, 10:32 »
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No 50% drop here, in fact more than that the other way. And I submitted less in 2010 than in 2009. iStock sales are great for high volume exclusives these days... imho
And since iStock's sales are up year over year, those traffic stats apparently have zero correlation to sales


How do you know iStock's sales are up year over year, and by sales do you mean revenues or unit sales? Even when traffic was rising, sales per file were at least in part because the number of files online was growing fast, so there has always been a disconnect between traffic and individual contributors' sales/earnings. It may be that the great majority of traffic is accounted for by contributors rather than buyers, so p-ssing off contributors is the main thing that shows up in such figures.
Perhaps what this shows is that the relative importance of iSTock in the market is falling and awareness of competitors is increasing. Istock got where it is through very effective marketing that created high industry awareness (Sean is a brand in his own right and has his own personal industry awareness that will probably help to insulate him from negative trends). But in general, however much exclusives like to believe that their files make istock far better than anywhere else, the truth is there are two or three other sites that are equally capable of satisfactorily filling the gaps in any designer's draft.

Every time Kelly Thompson talks about sales figures, they've always gone up. And recently he said they expect  sales to be up 30% next year. One thing iStock has going for it that others don't is branding, it's now synonymous with stock for many people. It's like saying do you want a 'coke', when you really mean any soda. Of course, this won't help if the site isn't up  ;)

rubyroo

« Reply #31 on: January 20, 2011, 10:38 »
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Do people actually do that somewhere on this planet?

I'd be really pee'd off if I asked for a 'Coke' and actually got a 'Coke'.

« Reply #32 on: January 20, 2011, 10:58 »
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Every time Kelly Thompson talks about sales figures, they've always gone up. And recently he said they expect  sales to be up 30% next year.

Nothing goes up forever. That piece was written in early September and what he actually said was that he expected payouts to contributors to increase by 30% next year __ despite the reductions in commissions. Sales would have to rise by even more than that if he were correct. I very much doubt that will happen. The reduction in RC targets is a strong indicator that sales in the latter part of the year were significantly below projections. If Kelly can't actually project the next 3 months with any accuracy then I wouldn't give his predictions for the next 15 months much credence.

RacePhoto

« Reply #33 on: January 22, 2011, 03:38 »
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Do people actually do that somewhere on this planet?

I'd be really pee'd off if I asked for a 'Coke' and actually got a 'Coke'.

Yes, Coke Brand actively protects it's name and identity against becoming generic. If you ask for Coke and get some other brown Cola flavored beverage, the place selling it could be in violation.

The Coke bottling company regularly challenges restaurants and bars that sell other brands when asked for a "Coke" as they are not serving a real Coke, but something else. They can't have Coke on the menu unless they serve Coke Mix or Coke bottles and Cans.

Ask someone who owns a bar or restaurant. :D

Besides I'd hate to order Coke and get some P-Word instead? LOL

lisafx

« Reply #34 on: January 22, 2011, 11:11 »
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Reminds me of the old SNL sketch - "No Coke. Pepsi"

« Reply #35 on: January 22, 2011, 11:46 »
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Yes, Coke Brand actively protects it's name and identity against becoming generic. If you ask for Coke and get some other brown Cola flavored beverage, the place selling it could be in violation.


I'm pretty sure down south, everything is a "coke'.
http://www.tableausoftware.com/blog/do-you-say-coke-soda-or-pop-map-visualization-shows-your-likely-answer

rubyroo

« Reply #36 on: January 22, 2011, 11:53 »
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Pretty amazing... humans have finally worked out how to destroy the whole purpose of the evolution of language.

Maybe a hundred years from now humans will just be making grunting noises again, and monkeys will be waiting tables asking "Would that be an orangeade or a sparkling blackcurrant, Madam?"

« Reply #37 on: January 22, 2011, 15:06 »
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...
Ive said it before: the sites that will survive and survive without having to hide under a bigger umbrella, are the sites that get their act together regarding all these tech-problems, most important, saving buyers from tons of irrelevant rubbish, making it a quick, effective and speedy search.

Plus one!  Errr, I mean woo-yay, hearty agreement and all that.

Remember all those other search engines you used before google?  There's a reason why nearly everyone uses google now - they are quick, effective, honest and they eliminate a lot of rubbish.

If google wanted to they could probably tweak images.google.com to search any or all stock agencies, and add filters and sorting options to the search such as size, price, age, number of downloads.  No confusing crowns and "special collection" symbols.  No mysterious and inscrutable bias in the ranking.  Anyone who wanted to could actually create such a meta-agency themselves, and they could work out a deal with the stock agencies as to whether they wish to be included or not, e.g. for a percentage of sales originating from the meta-search engine.  If it was a really good search tool and became popular with buyers then agencies would have to play ball with them.

RacePhoto

« Reply #38 on: January 22, 2011, 17:10 »
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Pretty amazing... humans have finally worked out how to destroy the whole purpose of the evolution of language.

Maybe a hundred years from now humans will just be making grunting noises again, and monkeys will be waiting tables asking "Would that be an orangeade or a sparkling blackcurrant, Madam?"

More to do with Trademark protection than "evolution of language" as you put it. Coke doesn't want their name to become generic like Aspirin, Thermos, Yo-Yo, Dry ice, and many more.

Companies spend billions to ensure that their products become household names, then they spend millions more to prevent these household names from being applied to any products beside their own. Interesting conflict, but not just silly language censorship.

Meanwhile Google did run into legal problems when they were showing images in searches and some places claimed it was a copyright violation. That's why when you search you may notice the lack of images to related stories in the news. Maybe they found that keyword spam made the searches fruitless. :D

I think that if they did include images in the search, it would be helpful for all of us.

rubyroo

« Reply #39 on: January 22, 2011, 17:25 »
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Race, I think you may have misunderstood me... I meant that using 'coke' as a generic term for all sodas was destroying the purpose of language.  (i.e. to clearly differentiate between one thing and a different thing and to communicate with clarity... as I have failed to do... LOL).

More than that though... I wanted to tell my monkey joke  :D

RacePhoto

« Reply #40 on: January 22, 2011, 17:34 »
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Race, I think you may have misunderstood me... I meant that using 'coke' as a generic term for all sodas was destroying the purpose of language.  (i.e. to clearly differentiate between one thing and a different thing and to communicate with clarity... as I have failed to do... LOL).

More than that though... I wanted to tell my monkey joke  :D

Obviously I missed the point, so I need to pay better attention to the words. :)

I apologize for going into Trademarks. Now I need to go shopping I'm out of Diet Coke. ps Lite Beer is only made by Miller, the name is protected. Just in time for the playoffs tomorrow.

rubyroo

« Reply #41 on: January 22, 2011, 17:38 »
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No problem Race!  Enjoy your correctly-named drinks  and the play-offs ;D

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #42 on: January 22, 2011, 17:46 »
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Isn't it interesting how the 'generic' for a fizzy drink varies by locality.
When I was young, weans in the west of Scotland often called any variety 'lemonade', but in the east of Scotland, it was often called 'juice'.
But nowadays, it's just 'a can'.

« Reply #43 on: January 22, 2011, 18:01 »
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Isn't it interesting how the 'generic' for a fizzy drink varies by locality.
When I was young, weans in the west of Scotland often called any variety 'lemonade', but in the east of Scotland, it was often called 'juice'.
But nowadays, it's just 'a can'.

I wouldn't say Scotland is representative of any food culture ... other than Scotland itself. I remember once choosing a pizza in a Glasgow chippy as a relatively 'low fat' option compared to what else was on offer. I was utterly stunned when they said 'Aye' and then chucked my precious pizza into the deep fat fryer. Arrgghh! Apparently a significant proportion of the Scottish population think that a large portion of chips actually counts as part of the 'five-a-day' nutritional recommendation for fruit & veg.

« Reply #44 on: January 22, 2011, 18:08 »
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I wouldn't say Scotland is representative of any food culture ... other than Scotland itself. I remember once choosing a pizza in a Glasgow chippy as a relatively 'low fat' option compared to what else was on offer. I was utterly stunned when they said 'Aye' and then chucked my precious pizza into the deep fat fryer. Arrgghh! Apparently a significant proportion of the Scottish population think that a large portion of chips actually counts as part of the 'five-a-day' nutritional recommendation for fruit & veg.

Sounds like my kind of diet!

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #45 on: January 22, 2011, 18:09 »
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I wouldn't say Scotland is representative of any food culture ... other than Scotland itself. I remember once choosing a pizza in a Glasgow chippy as a relatively 'low fat' option compared to what else was on offer. I was utterly stunned when they said 'Aye' and then chucked my precious pizza into the deep fat fryer. Arrgghh!
Well, yes, you were in a chippy - what else would you expect? They even deep fry steak pies and mars bars in chippies.
Quote
Apparently a significant proportion of the Scottish population think that a large portion of chips actually counts as part of the 'five-a-day' nutritional recommendation for fruit & veg.
So does a Chocolate Orange.  :P

rubyroo

« Reply #46 on: January 22, 2011, 19:53 »
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So does a Chocolate Orange.  :P

Ooh!  Thanks!  <Adding that to health-foods list>

Deep-fried pizza?  Urghhhhhhhhh.


 

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