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Messages - JohnItalia
1
« on: April 06, 2021, 09:36 »
It's really not about the rejection or sales, nor is it about being a bit narcissistic. It is about who decides what is good and not good. Are they capable of making that decision? Well obviously, since they have the job they are doing, but we may not agree, so keep trying.....and forget what they think. My photos, sound, video clips won't make or break Stock companies or myself. A few examples I have learned over the years and not photography related, but life in general. Did George Lucas sell Star Wars immediately or did he get booted several times, but did not quit! If he quit, we would not have Star Wars and maybe he would have settled building sets. Doesn't matter if you like or dislike Star Wars, it's the point! I wrote a script about 10 years ago and got thrashed on every screen writing table site, every international screen writers site you can imagine. I found an agent who decided to take on my script and promote it, after about two years he said to me "nothing more I can do, however, don't give up". 4 years ago, I sold my script for a ridiculous amount of a lot of money, not the $2 million, Abrams sold Forever Young for, his first script for but not far off. Will it ever become a movie? They say chances are not great, but possible. If you think you have something good, keep at it! Don't listen to the buffoons who do nothing or talk a big show or think they know what they are doing because that is their job they were hired for. And by the way.......Not whining or complaining, not being narcissistic, just making a point I hope someone can learn from and thrive!
2
« on: March 25, 2021, 08:24 »
Wouldn't it be easier if good, not great uploads just got accepted the first time around!
With that said, I uploaded a sound effect 3 times before it was accepted. It was good, not great, it was a common sound, nothing special.
The same reviewer rejected it twice, then got lucky on the 3rd different reviewer who accepted it. Long story short, this clip has sold 4 times in 3 days, so I made $20 and so did the stock company!
Why did that reviewer reject $$$? If they don't want their cut, I am happy to take it!
3
« on: March 03, 2021, 13:05 »
Well they do Suck!
4
« on: December 10, 2020, 13:17 »
DJI Phantom 4, still getting great results and a good amount of sales. I process them in AirMagic. Future might be a Mavic 2 Pro for me.
5
« on: November 17, 2020, 13:30 »
And back to Level 1 on 12/31/2020 11:59 and 59 seconds
6
« on: May 31, 2020, 13:58 »
I have about $25 left in my Shutterstock account. If I disable my portfolio and leave Shutterstock will they pay out? Or will I have to wait until I hit $50? Thanks
7
« on: October 16, 2019, 18:04 »
8
« on: October 16, 2019, 17:58 »
Who cares about healthcare in US!
No such thing as healthcare in the US only sick care and even that is 3rd world at best.
9
« on: August 17, 2014, 12:59 »
Your photos are not bad, however, they are not good either (for stock purposes) They are images and and having an image is better than not having an image at all. Something my photography instructor told me years ago. Even photos that get accepted doesn't mean they will sell. I would highly recommend Tony Northrup's book Stunning Digital Photography, this book is a great help for beginners to advanced amateurs. There also some books to be found on Amazon really cheap that you can see what photographers are taking for stock which will help you develop your own style. Don't give up, we all started somewhere and in no time you will see your acceptance rates move up and start seeing sales. Good Luck.
10
« on: June 13, 2014, 22:02 »
I highly doubt microstock will be gone in three years, however, that is just my opinion.
I have been a real estate agent for almost 18 years and every year I hear the same things from real estate trainers, brokers and just about any pessimist in the business that the real estate market is changing and in a few years real estate agents will not exist as they do now. It will be only a hand full of agents working on salary and no commissions will be paid anymore. Well, that hasn't happened and I make more every year on commissions. So I have heard it, been there done that kinda thing, only time will tell.
11
« on: June 13, 2014, 21:25 »
The problem is that there is no consistency with Shutterstock lately. I submitted 12 photos and they were all rejected due to focus issues, WTH! The focus could not be more dead on, the photos were taken in a studio with my 7D and used live view 10X to focus and shot with 100 iso, 250 shutter at f/8. Istock, Canstock, Alamy and a few other companies accepted them within 2 days. So here is the secret for Shutterstock, wait 3-4 hours after the rejection then resubmit, just don't forget to delete the rejected photos. I just resubmitted all 12 and all 12 got accepted, and I sold 9 photos within 8 hours of their acceptance, go figure.
12
« on: April 22, 2014, 12:30 »
Right. She's shooting something, we can't see what. Basically, it's a shot of the back of someone's head.
That does not make it a non salable photo! Maybe it won't make hundreds of dollars over the next year or so or maybe it will, however, even if it makes $10.00 that's cash in your pocket. Not just SS but many stock companies employees put their head where the sun don't shine which in turns losses money for both sides. I have a mediocre photo of Stonehenge that was rejected by SS, but picked up by 4 other stock companies including IS, that photo has made over $800 in 2013, go figure! My opinion is that the photo has potential to be a salable photo!
13
« on: July 11, 2013, 12:41 »
1. Batch editing. If most people add photos like me, I will sometimes have 10 similar photos I need to use the same keywords, title and description. One of the worse is istock, no ftp that I know of, so no I don't love uploading to them. Shutterstock and Dreamstime have a pretty good system. 2. Advertising. Need to get the word out, Pond5 has so much potential to get to the top tier. 3. Who is in charge? Pond5 or Pixmac?
14
« on: July 04, 2013, 08:19 »
Sometimes it takes hours until she appear in "Unfinished".
Thanks so much estike! They just started to show up after about 2 hours.
15
« on: July 04, 2013, 07:30 »
I just sent sent over 100 photos to Canstock using FileZilla and can't find my photos anywhere. I know they went through, I have used FileZilla on other sites without any problems. Does it usually take sometime for the photos to arrive on the ftp upload? Thanks for any help.
16
« on: July 04, 2013, 07:25 »
Another one from the clowns at Fotolia No model release attached it was attached, so I resubmitted the photo with the model release again Rejected because they could not find a signature Yup, I am done with them for sure!
17
« on: July 03, 2013, 06:22 »
I will give FT lots of credit for really fast turnaround!
LOL, they were rejecting photos as I was uploading them. That is a fast turnaround.
18
« on: July 03, 2013, 05:54 »
Just got the last few rejections back from Fotolia, I'm done with them! Photos rejected for blur and out of focus reasons. They seriously need to get a clue. I checked my photos at 100% (Actual Pixels) and beyond. You can see pores on my models skin and peach fuzz hair on her face in focus, their reviewers have some serious mental issues from playing stink finger, maybe it that throttled their brains and affected their eye site! Maybe it's time to boycott them for a while!
19
« on: July 02, 2013, 13:09 »
That sort of image is better off at Alamy.
Alamy is my favorite, of course they accepted all 150 photos. I will also bet that the rejected photos that were accepted by Alamy will sell within a few weeks.
20
« on: July 02, 2013, 10:21 »
I usually have mixed feelings about Fotolia, but after my last submissions I am completely convinced the reviewers are playing stink finger while reviewing the photos. I always submit to Fotolia last, I want to see what the other 18 companies I submit too do with my photos. I submitted 150 photos to 18 other companies and had a 92% approval, except for istock and shutterstock which were at 87% for istock and 85% at shutterstock. Now for Fotolia, 3 out of 150 got accepted what is that something like less than 2%, WTH is wrong with them? I think I am done with them now! Just had to vent.
21
« on: June 15, 2013, 13:44 »
Not surprised they flatlined! Sorry to be so blunt, but GL just needs to shut down for good and make room for companies that get back to their photographers within 6 months (going on 7 months with no response to a few emails) no matter how bad the market gets. If they can't it's time to shut down!
22
« on: June 07, 2013, 15:13 »
Alamy! Sold a photo that was rejected on the Big Four but accepted and sold on Alamy for $196.00. However, I have sold photos on Alamy for a few hundred one time and sold them on Dreamstime for example multiple times which exceeded that few hundred. My advice would be to sell on Alamy and the micro sites.
23
« on: June 01, 2013, 06:06 »
I'll say it again... 123RF is top tier. They'll officially be one of the "Big 4" in four to six months.
I completely agree! They will bump Dreamstime down and move into their position within months. My sales have gone up on 123RF, simply because they accept more good photos unlike Dreamstime. My last upload on 123RF was 97% accepted and Dreamstime was 49% The ones on 123RF have already started to sell as they might have also on Dreamstime had they accepted them and not given me lame excuses of why my photos lacked this or that, my favorite was "Poor lighting due to lighting conditions (wrong time of day, dull skies, harsh shadows etc.)" this on a studio shot with proper lighting etc Hope 123RF continues to do what they are doing because it's working!
24
« on: May 19, 2013, 13:10 »
I really have to agree with Sharpshot completely! I am a real estate agent, about 15 years ago my office recruited the top agent in the area. She was making about 400K-500K a year with 5 assistants, the top agent in our office was making about 200K-250K a year with 3 assistants and I was making about 125K sometimes a little more sometimes a little less with no assistants. When word got out that this top agent from another company was coming to our office, a few agents threatened to leave, because this was the end of our income. The broker of the office said to them nothing was going to change, but they insisted it would. He said, fine leave the office, business will go on just fine without them. Long story short, Nothing changed! If Yuri is making a million a year, I hope he makes 2 million next year! That would mean microstock is growing and so will our incomes. Yuri is not the microstock god, he is not my hero, he is a hard working person who found his nitch!
25
« on: May 17, 2013, 12:55 »
What's next an Italian guy eating a pizza? Offensive to Italians for stereo typing I don't find it offensive, hope you get it worked out with the SS and MP, your work is very good!
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