Glad I deactivated all of my files on IS earlier this year. What a joke.
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
Show posts MenuQuote from: meldayus on February 28, 2013, 03:18Quote from: crashoran on February 28, 2013, 03:13
Aw man. I thought I was in.
Guess I have to go through another round of inspection. (10 images)
Oh no! Did you receive the invite out of the blue, or did you submit your email to the Stocksy website and then reply to Bruce's email with a link to your portfolio?
Quote from: scottbraut on February 16, 2013, 17:43
Hello Mike,
Thanks. The team will be monitoring subscription volume and usage on an ongoing basis. Bridge to Bigstock contributors are guaranteed the highest subscription download royalty of 38 cents per download for six months. Changes can't be guaranteed, but the team is sensitive to contributor royalties. If any changes are expected based on how Bigstock customers are responding to subscriptions, they would be communicated in advance during that time period or at the end of the six months. The goal is to have both fair and competitive rates while also minimizing the possibility of having to adjust rates in the future.
Best,
Scott
VP Content
Shutterstock
Quote from: jsnover on February 07, 2013, 21:30
Here's the e-mail I just sent:
Mr. Pfeifer,
I'm not sure what you're thinking in implementing the schedule of contributor compensation outlined in your e-mail earlier today.
You must be aware of the low-earning status BigStock has for most contributors . Bottom-tier sites get supplied by contributors - in spite of their low earnings - as long as they meet several criteria. One is ease of upload; two is that they don't undercut a higher-earning site; and three is that they have decent royalty rates and a low payout threshold.
In the past, Big Stock has just about met all three of those (I have been with BigStock since 2005, with a hiatus from 2008-11 as an iStock exclusive and a new account when I returned in 2011). Your e-mail this morning has shot two of those three criteria in the head and the uploads are only OK - nothing like the easiest out there.
With the low earnings, it makes it very easy for contributors to walk away from BigStock, and with a recent rash of bad behavior by agencies, existing contributors are significantly on edge. Realistically, 50,000 downloads a year - even subscription downloads - isn't something that most of your contributors will ever reach. Many never will on Shutterstock, where the volume of business is much, much larger. And for heaven's sake don't even consider making some argument that you'll double, triple (or whatever) sales at BigStock in the next year or two. Not realistic.
Perhaps you aren't concerned about losing existing contributors and feel that there is an endless supply of willing participants with a nice point and shoot who'll supply you with content when the current crop of malcontents leaves. If that's the case, you're certainly making sure we head quickly for the exit.
If you have any concern about keeping your existing contributors, I strongly urge you to promptly reconsider this move. It is strongly reminiscent of the moves airlines made a few years ago for a two-tier pay system for pilots - one for the regional jets and one for the long-haul ones. From that, they tried to move jets classified as "regional" to the longer routes and move the pay scale with it. The real worry here isn't BigStock, but that you're looking to try this compensation scheme out and then move it to Shutterstock.
In the IPO documents, amid all the flowery words about a virtuous cycle, was a note of risks for the business. One was that contributors would no longer want to continue supplying you with content. You have the storefront but contributors own the content. Do you really want to start alienating your contributors when in general you are one of the respected agencies? Why just throw away all that goodwill you've spent so long building?
regards,
Jo Ann Snover (jsnover on both sites and contributor 249 at Shuttersock)
Quote from: gbalex on February 06, 2013, 22:32
• If you have earned $10,000 in lifetime earnings, we will increase your payment per Standard License download to 38¢ per download. This is a raise of 8¢ (27%) per download over the current applicable rate of 30¢.