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Adobe Stock / Fotolia V3 is now online
« on: August 18, 2011, 01:30 »
Hi, I just noticed that Fotolia V3 is now online. Hopefully everything will be working like clockwork
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Adobe Stock / Fotolia V3 is now online« on: August 18, 2011, 01:30 »
Hi, I just noticed that Fotolia V3 is now online. Hopefully everything will be working like clockwork
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Image Sleuth / Re: Public Domain Images?« on: June 02, 2011, 02:35 »You don't produce any photos on your own and none of the images on your site are either free or public domain. This is my final reply to this topic. Have you even visited the website? (Definitely not) Here is a link to my portfolio with over 2,500 images under public domain http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/browse-author.php?a=1 As I wrote above no more further comments, luckily I have better things to do. 3
Image Sleuth / Re: Public Domain Images?« on: June 02, 2011, 01:35 »
Let me clear some things. I understand that some photographers are furious when they found a website which offers pictures for free. The same thing happened when traditional photographers found out about microstock.
I was surprised that we received an email from cclapper who was furious when she found that we advertise her pictures. She is the only entrepreneur I know who hates free advertising. Anyway, we managed to add her to our block list so good for those photographers who fill her positions. It's true that we are paid by the agency but it's coming from agency's share not yours. There is only one occasion which affects your commission and it's when a customer uses a discount code. (which we don't provide) I would expect appreciating our work with converting people who search for free images to become paying microstock members but some people simply don't see it. 4
iStockPhoto.com / Re: iStock deleted my ticket with no answer« on: June 18, 2010, 14:25 »
I have a copy of that ticket in my email box, i'll send it to you in couple of minutes. Thank you
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iStockPhoto.com / iStock deleted my ticket with no answer« on: June 18, 2010, 14:12 »
Hi, I don't know if you noticed that but iStock has some problems with credits - if you click on Support page you'll see this text
"Please note: You may not receive your credits immediately and there may be a 15 - 20 minute delay. If after that time you have NOT received your credits, please contact support." Well, after 20 hours I still haven't received my credits, so I sent them a ticket. After another 8 hours the ticket was deleted with no answer and no $$ added. Do they do this often? Thank you for your reply 7
General Stock Discussion / Re: how many keywords?« on: October 22, 2009, 11:38 »8
General Stock Discussion / A page you might find very useful« on: July 07, 2009, 01:27 »
Hi, I made myself a page with all links for my microstock activities. It's very simple and efficient (for me at least
![]() There are links to main microstock agencies, keywording tools, this microstockgroup forum and few photo forums http://www.back2homepage.com/page.php?id=2119 *there are few links which have my refferal number in it, but it doesn't have any impact on page's performance. PS: If you like it and if you have any suggestions to improve it, let me know. 9
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 26, 2009, 15:38 »bobek, we are not saying it's ok to sell our images for peanuts, and that giving it away free like you are pushing here is silly. we already know how popular or unpopular subs and cheapies are. we take it , some happily, others grumbling under our breaths. we know where the top microsites esp SS is heading (ie. down , as in bread crumbs for the dogs under the table). but why encourage it ? we know it's going down to zero, but let's not push it to zero that quickly. I understand that but the website is not here to compete with microstock but to support more sales there by referring new members. 10
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 26, 2009, 11:32 »The more traffic, the worst. This is just about giving away images and rigths, risking model-realase conflicts and lawsuits, and contributin to a culture of "prhotos for commercial use should be free". I'm sure that the same fear had stock agencies with microstock at the beginning. Pictures from $1? Madness. The way I see it: - pictures for not very important projects - free - pictures for projects where a good picture is important but exclusivity isn't - microstock - pictures where quality must be excellent and exclusivity desired - traditional stock image libraries And of course, these categories will be overlapping a bit. 11
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 26, 2009, 08:57 »-I could include the words 'free porn' in the metadata of my website and get probably more unique visitors a day than you've highlighted, so therefore the statistic means absolutely nothing. - I'm not going to comment this one as it is complete rubbish -Anybody in the business of buying images in any sort of quantity will be very aware of Microstock by now. - Not true, otherwise we wouldn't be referring new people -Anybody looking to purchase images by searching via Google will be presented with vast numbers of microstock sites long before they come across yours. - try this search - http://www.google.com/search?q=red+hearts and look at fourth image (I'm searching from the UK) - red hearts, so close to valentines, quite a traffic volume -One decent stock photograph uploaded to iStock photo plus the other top sites will produce more revenue than any money you'll ever receive via referrals. - that's why the title says 'REJECTED' -Reading through any microstock site forums for the posts of anybody who's ever participated in any 'free image' scheme and the result will be that it does not produce any significant extra revenue. - their free image section leads only to your portfolio. If people look for 'Labrador' there are 11 other pictures of Labrador below your image with your Fotolia number -Unless I'm mistaken you are not a registered charity and therefore the sole reason you've created this site is to generate revenue for yourself and not to help others. Of course I'm probably making the most revenue because I have there over 800 photos but for example that girl has much better earning per member than I do. And if somebody submits 1000 pictures they will probably make more than I am. -I have more 'core data' to prove that your site won't work than you have yet provided to the contrary. - my answers above 12
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 26, 2009, 05:13 »
In my first post I asked people not to trash it until they see the results. All your arguments are based only on what you think, no core data to proof them. I don't understand why do you want this website to fail so desperately (do you see it as a competition for your pictures?) I'm sorry to disappoint you with this graph which is showing how the website is ' failing ' ![]() Facts: Unique visitors: 2,300 a day A year ago: 900 a day All I do is that I give you an opportunity to get something from your pictures if the agencies rejected them. Not interested? Fine by me. Somebody else will surely enjoy this option. 13
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 26, 2009, 02:56 »I guess I disagree. When people are used to getting images for free, they will think $1 is too much. Sure, they will go to the microstock sites then, and start ripping off the thumbnails and using those, with or without the watermark, because what the heck, those are for free. We expect that everybody knows about microstock websites, but it's not true. They simply don't know that there is a possibility to buy quality pictures cheaply. They still think that pictures cost around $300 each. The data shows us that 51% referred members also spend money there and some of them even buy subscription (very good if you referred them ![]() I'm sure that Kngkyle (who submitted around 10 pictures) will share his first experiences in 2 weeks time. You see, I only posted it here because it's working for me and some other members, so I just tought that some of you might be interested in it. 14
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 25, 2009, 13:59 »This is a nice but unsuccessful try to catch referrals. Well, we added that links on left hand side in December, before that there was only Fotolia. And as I wrote before the area where people click is on the image page under 'Sponsored pictures' title. Just wait 2 weeks and I'm sure that some of microstockgroup members will share their experience. 15
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 25, 2009, 13:48 »My god could you have made the button with our referral link any smaller? Come on. All 'Sponsored pictures' below her image have her Fotolia number. And that's the area where people click http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/view-image.php?image=504 ![]() 16
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 25, 2009, 13:42 »What do you get out of it? Just the google advertising income?Yes, but unfortunately it only covers server costs That's pretty risky. You know who's going to get bit in the butt? You (the site) and the contributor when the lawyers come a callin'. They aren't going to care about that little statement.Well, contributors have to agree that they own all copyrights before releasing the picture. Also we have to approve the pictures before they are visible to public. So if we think that there is something 'wrong', we reject the picture Giving away images to build a referral base - ie. consciously trying to get competitors to join up and submit images that compete with yours - does not sound like a smart business move to me. And these submitted images would be competing with others you have.Well, what data show us is: more pictures = more visitors = more referrals. And I believe that a bit of competition is a good thing. ![]() 17
General Stock Discussion / Re: Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 25, 2009, 12:56 »I think that people that aren't willing to pay even $2 for an image aren't going to buy from the microstock sites anyway. That's the thing. Many people don't have a clue about microstock. They just look for free images and then when we show them what kind of images they could get from just $1, they go for that. We started that service with Fotolia API in the middle of September 2008 and I asked her how many people she has referred (it was in December). Fortunately she was willing to share that information. In 3 months she has referred 26 paying members (she also told me how many credits she has earned but I think that it's too private to share it here). If you want to you could contact her by clicking on white envelope next to her name. I don't have a rejection problem but I do have some old photos that I might think about using on a site like this. It would be more appealing if we could use lower sized images. It is easy to upsize from those 1280x xxxx photos for most uses. I don't want to risk losing paying customers to try and get referral fees. Smaller images wouldn't bring that amount of visitors. The website also started at the time when the smallest image on Fotolia was 1600 x 1200 pixels 18
Newbie Discussion / Re: Payout Requests in General« on: January 25, 2009, 11:30 »
I'm not aware of any microstock website which would send money automatically.
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Adobe Stock / Re: HOW to earn fair prices on FT« on: January 25, 2009, 11:19 »I thought FT subs were limited to L. I've never had an XL sub sale. Or is that a Vector? You're right only L size is available for subscription 20
Newbie Discussion / Re: 1 Year on stock is it worth expanding« on: January 25, 2009, 11:08 »You can buy FTP software that will let you upload to multiple websites at once. Some examples are Cute FTP and classic ftp. You don't have to buy FTP software. There are plenty of free ones - FileZilla http://filezilla-project.org/ is probably the most known one. And I would go for the big 6 (on the right hand side) 21
Newbie Discussion / Re: New to stock photography........pls help« on: January 25, 2009, 11:03 »
do you have any tips to share with me?
what site should I work with?
can I upload the same photos on different sites?
how many photo should I upload?
what type of photos do these sites need?
Hope it helps 22
General Stock Discussion / Earn money from your (rejected) pictures« on: January 25, 2009, 10:40 »
You know the feeling. You take a picture, process it in Photoshop, upload it, fill all the titles, description and keywords, find suitable category and than your picture is rejected because of something silly like (this is not what our buyers are looking for, or we already have enough similar photographs). All your time and energy was just wasted.
Not necessarily. There is a website called Public Domain Pictures.net which allows you to submit your pictures and earn money from them by referring people to stock photo websites. If you submit your picture under public domain license: - the pictures are resized to 1280 x XXX pixels (so if visitors require a higher resolution, they could contact you and you can sell them high-res versions) - keywords from the image title perform a search on Fotolia and thanks to their API they show search results with your Fotolia number - you get affiliates - you can also let visitors to donate you money for your pictures thanks to PayPal donation button - you can also promote your Fotolia portfolio and your website (if you don't have one, you could fill it with a link to another stock photo website) Here is an example of a page where the girl promotes her portfolio on Fotolia with PayPal button and pictures at the bottom include her Fotolia number. http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/view-image.php?image=404 Statistics show that in average every 10 pictures refer 1 paying member to Fotolia per month. So if you're interested, feel free to give it a try on http://www.publicdomainpictures.net Please don't trash this post unless you try it. It's a great service and for example this girl doesn't submit almost any pictures to Fotolia any more as she's just happy with earning she makes by referring new members. 23
Newbie Discussion / Re: New to stock photography« on: January 25, 2009, 09:30 »
Don't even bother to send pictures of flowers, sunsets, your pets, unless they are really good and you're 100% sure that they'll sell. The reason is that they have tons of these images and you would just waste your time by uploading them.
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Canon / Re: just ordered EOS 50D from ebay!« on: January 25, 2009, 09:19 »
Don't forget to check your firmware and make sure that you have 1.0.3 (or higher) otherwise you might experience an error 99 which will freeze you camera and the only solution is to charge your battery in full. It happend to me outside, so no pictures for the rest of the day.
After upgrading to 1.0.3 problem disappeared 25
Newbie Discussion / Re: what kind of "no person photo" are the best sellers?« on: January 25, 2009, 09:11 »
Almost anything what is on white background. The reason is that it's easily integrable into buyers designs.
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