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Messages - dijkcity

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1
Indeed, but I especially wondered what kinda license they bought. $ 0,25 sounds like very cheap. It still confuses me, because I don't understand what the differences between subscription and regular downloads are. These subscription downloads are very cheap and they can download A LOT with low costs. What is the big deal there? I could imagine, the usage is very limited.

Today I sold 1 RF (large format) picture on Dreamtime for $ 2,30. Well, that's a big difference. Just 1 picture for large format.

Is there a easy explanation between those licences? Some are just 'a bit' more expensive. The subscription downloads are amazingly cheap. What is going on there?


Buyers who don't need large volumes of images will buy single images or On Demand packs for a higher price per image. We'll get more royalty per download if buyers use On Demand or single images, but subscriptions are the regular sales. It's cheap, then again, bigger volumes means you'll get more sales. That's the trade-off.
License terms are the same for all kinds of sales, unless it's an Extended License sale ($28 royalty). Anyway, look it up here: http://www.shutterstock.com/en/subscribe

Don't know why I even bother explaining, you should have read it before signing up.


Thanks for the clear answer. I'm happy to understand it. I'll probably check out licence terms soon. My rush for uploading refuses me to be patient. Also, I need Google translation for understanding difficult grammar. Even in my own language those terms can confuse me.


Are you Dutch? They have different language versions of their site, licenses and the terms and conditions. Google Translate will make it even harder to understand. http://www.shutterstock.com/nl/subscribe


Thanks! Dat klopt. I'll read them tonight. And hope I could understand it.

2
Indeed, but I especially wondered what kinda license they bought. $ 0,25 sounds like very cheap. It still confuses me, because I don't understand what the differences between subscription and regular downloads are. These subscription downloads are very cheap and they can download A LOT with low costs. What is the big deal there? I could imagine, the usage is very limited.

Today I sold 1 RF (large format) picture on Dreamtime for $ 2,30. Well, that's a big difference. Just 1 picture for large format.

Is there a easy explanation between those licences? Some are just 'a bit' more expensive. The subscription downloads are amazingly cheap. What is going on there?


Buyers who don't need large volumes of images will buy single images or On Demand packs for a higher price per image. We'll get more royalty per download if buyers use On Demand or single images, but subscriptions are the regular sales. It's cheap, then again, bigger volumes means you'll get more sales. That's the trade-off.
License terms are the same for all kinds of sales, unless it's an Extended License sale ($28 royalty). Anyway, look it up here: http://www.shutterstock.com/en/subscribe

Don't know why I even bother explaining, you should have read it before signing up.


Thanks for the clear answer. I'm happy to understand it. I'll probably check out licence terms soon. My rush for uploading refuses me to be patient. Also, I need Google translation for understanding difficult grammar. Even in my own language those terms can confuse me.

3
It never ceases to amaze me just how many people sign up without reading or understanding the terms and conditions of a legally binding agreement between themselves and the agency. You have to tick a box that says you read and agree to them before you ever submit. And then they come to the forum asking for clarification after the get their first .25 royalty, and are stunned. Unbelievable.

Not so much unbelievable about that. Since a lot of people using these stock platforms and I'm not a person with 'special terms'. So I can signup without reading these terms, because I know 'they are what they are' and they are not bad. I'm not complaining and arguing the agency, it's curiosity.

4
What is going on there?

Volume rebates on steroids.

That's what subscriptions are.

Thanks, does that mean they have the same 'rights' as people without subscription?

Yes, the license terms are the same.

Allright, thanks Dirkr.  :)

5
What is going on there?

Volume rebates on steroids.

That's what subscriptions are.

Thanks, does that mean they have the same 'rights' as people without subscription?

6
Indeed, but I especially wondered what kinda license they bought. $ 0,25 sounds like very cheap. It still confuses me, because I don't understand what the differences between subscription and regular downloads are. These subscription downloads are very cheap and they can download A LOT with low costs. What is the big deal there? I could imagine, the usage is very limited.

Today I sold 1 RF (large format) picture on Dreamtime for $ 2,30. Well, that's a big difference. Just 1 picture for large format.

Is there a easy explanation between those licences? Some are just 'a bit' more expensive. The subscription downloads are amazingly cheap. What is going on there?

7
Hi,

I just sold my first picture for $ 0,25. I know the picture they bought. But for what kinda size did they bought the picture? Or even what kinda license?

Regards,
Dijkcity

I've got the answer, quote from SS:

Quote
25-A-Day Downloads
Buyers subscribe on a monthly basis and can download up to 750 images over the course of 30 days. Your cut? Shutterstock will pay you 25 cents every time one of your images is downloaded, with a tiered set of raises to 33 cents, 36 cents and 38 cents per download as you reach the $500, $3,000 and $10,000 lifetime earning milestones, respectively. This subscription model encourages buyers to download a greater volume of images than they would at most other agencies, and commissions for our submitters can add up fast.

8
Newbie Discussion / Re: How to improve new photo ratio?
« on: October 16, 2014, 15:29 »
Time is your friend when it comes to large photo counts.  If you do 7 photos a week, you'll have 1825 photos in 5 years.  Just a photo a day :)  Yes - every photos needs titles and keywords, but if you do a series you can copy them around.  Whether you can do a series or not depends on the site, but most seem to allow it to some degree.

Allright, thanks. So people are probably photographing for years and have build such a amount of photographs. I could be outside making photo's for a couple of hours and just have 1 that is nice enough, so I have to improve that, haha.

9
Newbie Discussion / How to improve new photo ratio?
« on: October 16, 2014, 15:05 »
Hi all!

Since January 2014 I started with making pictures. I got a Nikon D5100 and Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 and I like it a lot. Also I'm enthusiast about having a new perception, to make photo's of a cup of coffee for example. It's also nice to get known with Photoshop CC.

Anyway, I read lots of people upload thousands of pictures.

  • How can they do that?
  • Do they edit every uploaded picture to get a title, keywords and all that?
  • How can someone make so much different pictures?
  • Can we upload series too?
 

I'm a bit confused. Off course I'm a starter. I just got like 5 photo's at Fotolia, 11 on 123RF, 3 on Dreamstime. My editorial ones with people are easily accepted. By iStock too, but there for I had to make a better description of the happening.

Of course I'm very new, but I spend a lot of time making pictures. I guess I will try to make isolated pictures, and more of people.
What do you think about the questions above and how do you experience this?

10
iStockPhoto.com / Keywords appear different
« on: October 16, 2014, 14:31 »
Hi,

I'm very new, so sorry for this question.

Whenever I enter a keyword, iStock will change it in suggestions that they do.

Color change to colors. Run to running, girls to little girls / teenage girls, etc.... so it is pretty annoying.
When using the application.. I thought I could clarify the meaning of 'color' and so on. Not that I like to change them.

But anyway, iStock is just changing them, also when I'm not choosing this suggestions.

How can I bypass this 'suggestion' system?

11
123RF / Re: How does the credit system work if you sell?
« on: October 16, 2014, 13:27 »
Well, thanks for explaining Jo Ann. My English may be bad, but I still don't understand.

Will I earn more if they have to spend 5 credits, in stead of 1?

EDIT: Oke, sorry, I didn't understand. So if they spend credits, a % will be payed. Can we know what % this is?

Also: What will a buyer get if they have a subscription? For example: a full size TIFF format for just $  0,21?

12
123RF / How does the credit system work if you sell?
« on: October 16, 2014, 12:50 »
Hi, I started with photography in January 2014 and have a very little experience with stockphoto's.

Here is the issue:

When I check my portfolio when not logged in, I can see the price is different for every format.
At their manual they tell you will earn like $ 0,21 for 0-249 downloads. But that is for every 1 credit or every download?

The website is not clear in that IMO.

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