pancakes

MicrostockGroup Sponsors


Author Topic: iStock connect/fixed usage sales?  (Read 7734 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

« on: April 21, 2020, 05:08 »
0
Checking March income statement for espgetty I see that I have made about 20 dollars from various items reported in connect summary statement.

Most of it comes from items under fixed usage fees. 

Connect.txt reports these sales one by one and I have about 4000 sales there (all or most of my portofolio in iStock).  The data in each of these 4000 sales is the same: Getty, California, 0.02683, 0.15000, 0.00403. 

So Getty has sold all my images as fixed usage for 2.7 cents and I am paid 0.4 cents per image totaling about 17 dollars. 

There is no information about the buyer nor have I found any explanation for the term "fixed usage fee" or the nature of these sales. 

I was under the impression that connect sales were view based royalties from embedded images.

I have not been active in espgetty for a year and might have missed some info about these fixed usage sales. 

I wonder what this is all about.  Anyone else having similar fixed usage sales?



« Reply #1 on: April 21, 2020, 05:21 »
+1
Mmm ... I think the time has come to say goodbye to Getty ...

Last year I had an average RPD of 0,53 $ ... this year an RPD of 0,36 $ (more than 500 sales/month)

And now these Connect sales for a fistful of cents ...

 >:(


ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #2 on: April 21, 2020, 05:38 »
0
Checking March income statement for espgetty I see that I have made about 20 dollars from various items reported in connect summary statement.

Most of it comes from items under fixed usage fees. 

Connect.txt reports these sales one by one and I have about 4000 sales there (all or most of my portofolio in iStock).  The data in each of these 4000 sales is the same: Getty, California, 0.02683, 0.15000, 0.00403. 

So Getty has sold all my images as fixed usage for 2.7 cents and I am paid 0.4 cents per image totaling about 17 dollars. 

There is no information about the buyer nor have I found any explanation for the term "fixed usage fee" or the nature of these sales. 

I was under the impression that connect sales were view based royalties from embedded images.

I have not been active in espgetty for a year and might have missed some info about these fixed usage sales. 

I wonder what this is all about.  Anyone else having similar fixed usage sales?
Fixed usage is like a very micro RM. Somone who used to post here regularly said these could be for as little as four hours, but I don't know where s/he got that information.
We aren't allowed to post direct links to their forum, but if you go to their forum > iStock discussions > iStock Royalties - published April and read the OP, you'll find a link to some info about Fixed Usage/Connect.

« Reply #3 on: April 21, 2020, 06:23 »
0
Thanks ShadySue

I found that piece of information but all it says is that fixed usage fee means that a customer pays a fixed price for a high volume of files and makes the content available to their users for a defined use. 

So there is a customer who wants to use my images and buys them all and I am paid 17 dollars or 0.4 cents per image.  But the rights of use is not limited to the customer who bought my images.  The customers of the customers ("the users") also have the right to use my images - for a defined use.

For me this reads like my whole portfolio is now in public domain. 

Maybe this is just Google paying to Getty for "reasonable use" and photographers receiving a one-time payment for the use of their portfolio.  So 17 dollars...

 



 

     



 

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #4 on: April 21, 2020, 11:46 »
0
Thanks ShadySue

I found that piece of information but all it says is that fixed usage fee means that a customer pays a fixed price for a high volume of files and makes the content available to their users for a defined use. 

So there is a customer who wants to use my images and buys them all and I am paid 17 dollars or 0.4 cents per image.  But the rights of use is not limited to the customer who bought my images.  The customers of the customers ("the users") also have the right to use my images - for a defined use.

For me this reads like my whole portfolio is now in public domain. 

Maybe this is just Google paying to Getty for "reasonable use" and photographers receiving a one-time payment for the use of their portfolio.  So 17 dollars...
I think it's pay-per-view, e.g. Pinterest, but it's really difficult to find any concrete info about the scheme (unless you sign up as a buyer). And their legalese always seems to allow them a lot of wiggle room/variety of interpretation.

« Reply #5 on: April 22, 2020, 11:36 »
0
This is apart from stuff like Pinterest and apart from pay-per-view stuff.   I have lots of those also reported in connect.txt. 

This is 0.4 cent sales of every image in my portfolio (4000+ images).  My connetc.txt file for March has about 5000 lines, one for each sale.   

I wish Getty would explain stuff like this. 



 
 

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #6 on: April 22, 2020, 11:54 »
+1
This is apart from stuff like Pinterest and apart from pay-per-view stuff.   I have lots of those also reported in connect.txt. 

This is 0.4 cent sales of every image in my portfolio (4000+ images).  My connetc.txt file for March has about 5000 lines, one for each sale.   
Every file? For sure I'd take out a support ticket (good luck with that: some tickets just 'disappear' without being answered.)
I have a very few small value sales listed as 'RF Image' sold to buyers in South Korea or China

Quote
I wish Getty would explain stuff like this. 
Wouldn't that be nice?
There is such a lack of transparency over there, I can't make my figures in iS, TodayIs20 or Deep Meta balance, and all the explanations for why that is so raise more questions than they ask.
They've always loved obfuscation, or at least all the 13 years I've been on there. But since ESP, it's been much worse.
« Last Edit: April 22, 2020, 12:03 by ShadySue »

« Reply #7 on: April 22, 2020, 12:32 »
+1
It is stuff like this that makes me reluctant to upload new images to EspGetty.   I haven't uploaded new stuff to Getty/iStock for a year and have a backlog of 3000 images already uploaded to other agencies.  These 0.4 cent sales could be perfectly legitimate and reasonable but as there is no explanation I feel a bit paranoid.  After all it is a lot of hard work and a portfolio I feel is worth more that 17 dollars.

I think there are two possibilities here.  Both are a bit concerning.  Either Getty sold my portofolio to Google or it was sold to Visual China Group which is Getty's exclusive distributor in China.  Which ever is the case I hate it. 

But there is nothing I can do about it.  It is RF and sold...

 




« Reply #8 on: April 24, 2020, 11:51 »
0
Here is a part of what Getty explains about Connect statement and "Fixed Usage Fee":

"Connect is a solution we offer to customers that allow them to embed Getty Images content, metadata and search functionality directly inside their tools, products and services. For example, through Connect we can collect royalties on views of Getty Images content.
Because of typical high volumes and unique usages of Connect, your royalties on your Connect (.txt) statement may be reported as fractions of a cent, to 5 decimal points."

"Fixed Usage Fee :
You will see this in your statement when a customer makes the content available to their users for a defined use.
The customer pays a fixed price for a high volume of files. We determine the price per file by dividing the customers fee by the number of files they used.
Typical customers of this Connect usage are technology companies that provide internet-related services and products."

Uncle Pete

  • Great Place by a Great Lake - My Home Port
« Reply #9 on: April 25, 2020, 09:48 »
0
Odd? I thought someone posted this link and I didn't want to make a duplicate?

https://contributors.gettyimages.com/HelpArticle.aspx?article_id=5176

What is a Connect statement?

It is stuff like this that makes me reluctant to upload new images to EspGetty.   I haven't uploaded new stuff to Getty/iStock for a year and have a backlog of 3000 images already uploaded to other agencies.  These 0.4 cent sales could be perfectly legitimate and reasonable but as there is no explanation I feel a bit paranoid.  After all it is a lot of hard work and a portfolio I feel is worth more that 17 dollars.

I think there are two possibilities here.  Both are a bit concerning.  Either Getty sold my portofolio to Google or it was sold to Visual China Group which is Getty's exclusive distributor in China.  Which ever is the case I hate it. 

But there is nothing I can do about it.  It is RF and sold...


The actual way Getty reports this is $0.04266 which is 4.266 Unless they use two different systems?  :o

"All royalties over $0.01 will be summarized and reflected in the Connect Summary Statement chart on the last page of your PDF statement. "

CONNECT SUMMARY STATEMENT
Summary of Connect-based revenue by customer and product. See Connect TXT file on the export tab for a list of transactions.

Order ID Invoice Date Product Type Sale Territory License Fee Royalty Rate Gross Royalty (in USD)

That last column is what we got. In my case, and I hope this isn't true for many others, I make more a month on connect than I do on downloads.

« Reply #10 on: May 06, 2020, 10:45 »
0
Uncle Pete,

0.00403 per file.



 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
Are the polls fixed?

Started by Microbius Panthermedia.net

21 Replies
9019 Views
Last post April 19, 2012, 14:55
by CD123
9 Replies
5434 Views
Last post October 12, 2012, 13:54
by lisafx
19 Replies
9334 Views
Last post February 05, 2013, 07:03
by hjalmeida
2 Replies
2954 Views
Last post May 01, 2019, 08:57
by swisschocolate
5 Replies
4719 Views
Last post February 27, 2021, 08:18
by drd

Sponsors

Mega Bundle of 5,900+ Professional Lightroom Presets

Microstock Poll Results

Sponsors