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General Stock Discussion / Re: How much time do you spend in this forum?
« on: June 09, 2020, 00:34 »
Time spent in reconnaissance is seldom wasted.
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General Stock Discussion / Re: How much time do you spend in this forum?« on: June 09, 2020, 00:34 »
Time spent in reconnaissance is seldom wasted.
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Shutterstock.com / Re: Accurate Calculations of OLD RPD vs JUNE RPD (Constant Updates)« on: June 08, 2020, 11:10 »Possibly the most ridiculous post I've read for a while. Go set up your own forum.Your civil and "CONSTRUCTIVE" words on this forum on past posts 178
Shutterstock.com / Re: "I'm a single mother. My son and I will literally have nothing to eat."« on: June 07, 2020, 02:45 »Actually the true indicator of performance is total income earnt. You can't buy many burgers with a high RPD if you have only sold 1 image.If he lives in the Ukraine or any other eastern european country the living costs and wages specially on lifestyle model shoots can make a few thousands a month (if he makes that) go a long way. In Western Europe and USA you can surely not get a proper return on yours costs at this ridicolous commissions. Thats a reason why big names in this industry are also taking a stance and might well move to greener pastures........Shutter is alienating the big and small players. A shitstorm that will damage them deeply . But hey if the numbers work for him let him dance along to the playing melody........ 179
Shutterstock.com / Re: "I'm a single mother. My son and I will literally have nothing to eat."« on: June 06, 2020, 04:09 »One persons earnings are not quite a 25% sample of shutterstock's total payments are they? As a matter of fact election predictions have not proved particularly accurate of late...mainly due to sample bias it seems. Your sample size is so small as to be virtually meaningless and an estimate based around the published rates is just as valid.You are taking a 5 day sample of one person's earnings and then telling people they need to understand maths maybe you could brush up on your statistics. 180
Shutterstock.com / Re: "I'm a single mother. My son and I will literally have nothing to eat."« on: June 06, 2020, 02:34 »The amount of criers in here is too high ... so does this single mother calculate the 2/3 by the reduction on the minimum earnings on a single sub image? Or was it another miscalculated mistake?You are taking a 5 day sample of one person's earnings and then telling people they need to understand maths maybe you could brush up on your statistics. 181
Shutterstock.com / Re: Is there something more to the SS royalty cut« on: June 04, 2020, 07:22 »Last time I looked which is a while back SS did have a lot of money sitting in the bank...they could maybe finance Getty's debt. In the world of investment/banking all sorts of bizarre things seem possible.Shutterstock/Istock merger to "compete" with Adobe? We are doomed I tell you. Or it may be that they are seeing a massive slump ahead with Covid. I pretty sure we don't know the full story. 182
Shutterstock.com / Re: Is there something more to the SS royalty cut« on: June 04, 2020, 03:48 »
Shutterstock/Istock merger to "compete" with Adobe? We are doomed I tell you. Or it may be that they are seeing a massive slump ahead with Covid. I pretty sure we don't know the full story.
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Shutterstock.com / Re: How to properly adjust your strategy like a serious businessman« on: June 02, 2020, 05:17 »
The difference is farmers can only sell the same Bacon once. What succesful farmers in the Uk have done is diversify with farm shops, premium food products, leisure facilities such as fishing and camp sites....producing food as a commodity only works for a few mega farms. For those wanting to make a serious living for photography they need to think of themselves as professional photographers not producers of stock photography as its been obvious for a while the returns on that are only going to go down.
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Shutterstock.com / Re: What if Instead SS had Raised Their Prices?« on: June 02, 2020, 02:13 »
The only way raising prices could possibly work would be actually to reduce the size of the port and have a ruthless approach to quality control so buyers could be assured they are getting top quality images which some are still prepared to pay for. Thats totally against their current philosophy so with at least a proportion of high quality producers pulling out we will see a dilution in quality and a spiral to the bottom.
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Shutterstock.com / Re: June so far« on: June 01, 2020, 07:41 »Of course the hard reset on royalty percentages doesn't occur until Jan 1st 2021 so most likely you will be on your exisiting level from June 1stThats not what has been said we are on our new %age levels. I'm expecting SS to update the amounts when they get round to it or in my wildest dreams a last minute rethink of the scheme with the CEO's head in a basket. 186
Shutterstock.com / Re: June so far« on: June 01, 2020, 04:46 »From a technical point of view there's no way you'd implement a major change to billing, selling and everything else when not everyone is there to oversee it.Yes but this is Microstock so I wouldn't necessarily count on them to do the obvious 187
Shutterstock.com / Re: With new earning structure made by Shutterstock will you disable your portfolio?« on: May 31, 2020, 05:00 »You'd be crazy to accept exclusivity with SS when you've seen they are happy to slash commissions with a few days notice.The next step is to introduce exclusivity, there is no way they can compete with Istock without that move. If that's on the horizon Adobe should react faster and introduce exclusivity right now, because this is the right moment for that.People keep saying (hoping) that customers will go to Adobe. They will go to Istock and Getty, unfortunately. There is bigger possibility for that, it's a bigger stock company. 188
Shutterstock.com / Re: With new earning structure made by Shutterstock will you disable your portfolio?« on: May 31, 2020, 04:57 »I largely agree and normally I accept these changes as an inevitable result of market forces. I have never come so close though to pulling my port though as what SS have done and particularly the way they have done it is shocking. I fully get why many people have had enough and are bailing out.I will not disable anything. 189
Dreamstime.com / Re: Dreamstime increasing royalties« on: May 30, 2020, 02:41 »They are linked closely though...thats why TV manufacturers launch sales campaigns before world cups....any decent agency is going to look how to react to Shutterstock's move. I fear some might see it as a signal to further drop commissions others to boost their image bank.This is really a great move, but am I the only one who finds the timing incredibly....convenient? Shutterstock announced a cut of our royalities and two days later Dreamstime announces a rise in royalities? Does seem a bit like an attempt to gain some publicity and customers and attrackt as many contributors who are possibly leaving Shuttersock at the same time?Why wouldn't they try and gain publicity and customers? Name a business that doesn't do that. 190
Dreamstime.com / Re: Dreamstime increasing royalties« on: May 30, 2020, 00:50 »This is really a great move, but am I the only one who finds the timing incredibly....convenient? Shutterstock announced a cut of our royalities and two days later Dreamstime announces a rise in royalities? Does seem a bit like an attempt to gain some publicity and customers and attrackt as many contributors who are possibly leaving Shuttersock at the same time?Why wouldn't they try and gain publicity and customers? Name a business that doesn't do that. 191
Dreamstime.com / Re: Dreamstime increasing royalties« on: May 29, 2020, 15:40 »
Always had a soft spot for them. They seem to sell more of the images I like myself rather than my tawdry "me too" pot boilers ;-)
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Shutterstock.com / Re: Shutterstock just became iStock 2.0« on: May 27, 2020, 06:25 »Before you blow up the whole shutterstock, please consider that they have changed the whole pricing structures for customers, so now you can not say anything about how your income will look like after the changes they want to introduce.We know quite a bit the "most popular" image pack is .28 per image and we will be getting a perecentage of that. 193
Shutterstock.com / Re: Shutterstock correction email arrived« on: May 27, 2020, 05:19 »I hope they might just rethink the January 1st reset as that is manifestly unfair even for this industry the obvious thing to do is have a rolling 12 months. I think they are desperately worried about paying to keep their palatial accomodation and fat salaries though.So the protest from video content creators worked here is an update SS just shared about levels: 194
Shutterstock.com / Re: Shutterstock just became iStock 2.0« on: May 27, 2020, 04:48 »
Just to add to the depression this now means if SS drop prices on their packages it feeds straight to us rather than having the "safety net" of the subs income at a certain level.
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Shutterstock.com / Re: Shutterstock just became iStock 2.0« on: May 27, 2020, 02:33 »not the case as they state the amount is based on the full package. "If a customer buys a pack or sub, but doesnt use it all, how are my earnings calculated?Regarding to subscription sales, that always was main sale; we never was paid based on the subscription package that buyer buy. There are 4 subscrption packetes:Thanks for the calculations. But it seems more complicated than that. When a customer buys a pack or subscription, your commission is calculated based on the price per asset assuming full usage of the pack or subscription. For example, if a customer buys a 10 images per month subscription at $49 per month, the price per image is $4.90. Your earnings percentage is based on $4.90 regardless of how many images the customer downloads from their allotment. " Not even I stock do that 196
123RF / Re: Is it the end of 123rf« on: May 22, 2020, 04:00 »123 is performing avg here. I will not say end for 123rf is anywhere near.Theres much worse sites out there for earnings for me it took a nose dive 2 years or so and is now bumping along at a low level. 197
iStockPhoto.com / Re: Latest sales - down quite a bit« on: May 19, 2020, 14:10 »
Poor but not a disaster after a couple of rising months.
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iStockPhoto.com / Re: Getty/ Istock views vs sales?« on: May 19, 2020, 01:33 »
My advice would be take no notice of their so called "stats" no one least of all I-stock knows whats going on.
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Shutterstock.com / Re: Seriously, what's wrong with Shutterstock?« on: May 14, 2020, 02:35 »they seem to be rejecting 95-100% of videos/images.I suspect that for whatever reason some contributors get a free pass and are waved through the system. I get reviewed to a high standard lately and any marginal images seem to get rejected...fair enough until I see the quality of some of the new content. 200
Shutterstock.com / Re: May sales drop dramatically?« on: May 09, 2020, 03:10 »
Looking ahead a lot will depend if and by how much companies cut costs and drop their contracts or simply go bust. We may even see a short boost if they buy as much as possible before dropping them. It would be optimistic to put it mildly to think that a world wide recession will not serverely impact this industry in the short/medium term. This situation is pretty unprecedented so anyone's guess how much and how long.
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