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Author Topic: Is Shutterstock dead?  (Read 6320 times)

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Uncle Pete

  • Great Place by a Great Lake - My Home Port
« Reply #50 on: February 24, 2024, 13:43 »
+3
If this is the new normal for Shutterstock (and I really hope it isn't) then this imho is a collapse of the agency in terms of its revenues from image and video sales. I'm astounded at the depth and velocity of its fall but maybe I shouldn't be so surprised. It's predictable.

  • First, you slash contributor earnings for a quick profit boost
  • You fully decentivize your main contributor base
  • Your bulk of quality contributors stop uploading - and instead upload their fresh quality content to other agencies (your competition) that treat their contributors with more respect
  • A large segment of your customer buyers and subscribers just naturally follow the better, fresh, quality content where contributors are uploading
  • Your sales, revenues and profits drop.

If this trend continues then I suspect the next quarterly report will show the depth of the damage done from this fallout with contributor and customer alike. Shutterstock actually has itself in a bind now. Won't be able to take another razor to contributor earnings again as this will just make the problem much more worse than it already is. Instead will need to find new markets and customers and might like to consider restoring some incentives to contributors given the lack of volume and quality of new uploads.

While I agree with what you wrote, there's a point that many people here are missing.

SS has diversified into other areas. They don't rely on just Microstock for earnings and income. Some day, the whole Microstock division could go away, and it wouldn't matter to the overall profits of the corporation. They won't care about our earnings or what we do as artists.

I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative.

We shouldn't assume that there will always be a Shutterstock, as we know it, or as it was founded. The whole idea of Microstock could be dead in five years, except for some bottom feeders and the last successful agencies. Adobe has the CC to support this area. Getty is a stock photo agency and that's their market. SS? They could go into other new areas, and drop stock photos as their main interest. Maybe they already have?



« Reply #51 on: February 24, 2024, 14:30 »
0
./..
SS has diversified into other areas. They don't rely on just Microstock for earnings and income. Some day, the whole Microstock division could go away, and it wouldn't matter to the overall profits of the corporation. They won't care about our earnings or what we do as artists.

I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative. ...
too many of the anti-SS crowd are quick to take recent numbers totally out of context w/o bothering to do their research
 and declaring SS dead -- look at the actual numbers, after a surge during the covid era (during which they were also declaring SS dead) its performance has reverted to the mean and their actual change over 5 years has been -2% - not a great investment stock, but also not a disastrous decline

by comparison tho, Adobe had a similar burst during covid, similar decline  but then has returned to its earlier high. Getty had  20% drop in 2022 and remained flat since.

It's hard to draw conculsions since Adobe is not just a microstock agency, but SS can declare "I'm not dead yet!"

« Reply #52 on: February 24, 2024, 19:35 »
+3
I think the question is not if ss dies, but if selling stock assets will still be a major focus in their future business.

SS might totally thrive expand and grow with their new ai business and everything else they do.

But people here are concerned about what effects them - will SS and pond5 continue  to have sales?

And the numbers show that the volume of sales is dropping strongly. And they seem to have lost 50% of their previous upload numbers. Which means many of the producers who often are graphic designers and media artist have shifted their attention elsewhere.

So perhaps this is the start of a new, fantastically successful SS, but as uncle pete pointed out this does not mean that selling microstock will grow or even be a strong focus of what they do.

You can always buy the ss shares if you believe in their plans. Maybe that is a better way to make money than uploading, who knows.

Uncle Pete

  • Great Place by a Great Lake - My Home Port
« Reply #53 on: February 25, 2024, 12:46 »
+1
./..
SS has diversified into other areas. They don't rely on just Microstock for earnings and income. Some day, the whole Microstock division could go away, and it wouldn't matter to the overall profits of the corporation. They won't care about our earnings or what we do as artists.

I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative. ...
too many of the anti-SS crowd are quick to take recent numbers totally out of context w/o bothering to do their research
 and declaring SS dead -- look at the actual numbers, after a surge during the covid era (during which they were also declaring SS dead) its performance has reverted to the mean and their actual change over 5 years has been -2% - not a great investment stock, but also not a disastrous decline

by comparison tho, Adobe had a similar burst during covid, similar decline  but then has returned to its earlier high. Getty had  20% drop in 2022 and remained flat since.

It's hard to draw conculsions since Adobe is not just a microstock agency, but SS can declare "I'm not dead yet!"

Shutterstock is not just a Microstock agency. They have greatly diversified into other areas.

I wasn't referring to their investment stock, that's a different area. I'm looking at Stock Photos and Microstock, which for contributors has lost, and for SS their income from the same has dropped. Shutterstock, the Microstock division, (the part we care about) is dying.

The corporation and investment stock is doing fine.


« Last Edit: February 25, 2024, 12:49 by Uncle Pete »

« Reply #54 on: February 25, 2024, 13:04 »
0
Im pretty scared, because it is actually pretty good for February not like it was pre 2019, but for last years averages

« Reply #55 on: February 25, 2024, 13:36 »
0
./..
SS has diversified into other areas. They don't rely on just Microstock for earnings and income. Some day, the whole Microstock division could go away, and it wouldn't matter to the overall profits of the corporation. They won't care about our earnings or what we do as artists.

I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative. ...
too many of the anti-SS crowd are quick to take recent numbers totally out of context w/o bothering to do their research
 and declaring SS dead -- look at the actual numbers, after a surge during the covid era (during which they were also declaring SS dead) its performance has reverted to the mean and their actual change over 5 years has been -2% - not a great investment stock, but also not a disastrous decline

by comparison tho, Adobe had a similar burst during covid, similar decline  but then has returned to its earlier high. Getty had  20% drop in 2022 and remained flat since.

It's hard to draw conculsions since Adobe is not just a microstock agency, but SS can declare "I'm not dead yet!"

Shutterstock is not just a Microstock agency. They have greatly diversified into other areas.

I wasn't referring to their investment stock, that's a different area. I'm looking at Stock Photos and Microstock, which for contributors has lost, and for SS their income from the same has dropped. Shutterstock, the Microstock division, (the part we care about) is dying.

The corporation and investment stock is doing fine.

but i was refencing the OP and topic name was SS is dead - not SS as a microstock agency is dead, and the numbers shows that's not true.  there's also little to show the ms side is dying - artist income is down for some (eg, for me, SS is down 10-20% over last 2 years but still doubles my income from AS), but SS continues to, make money in ms

« Reply #56 on: February 25, 2024, 18:54 »
+4
If this is the new normal for Shutterstock (and I really hope it isn't) then this imho is a collapse of the agency in terms of its revenues from image and video sales. I'm astounded at the depth and velocity of its fall but maybe I shouldn't be so surprised. It's predictable.

  • First, you slash contributor earnings for a quick profit boost
  • You fully decentivize your main contributor base
  • Your bulk of quality contributors stop uploading - and instead upload their fresh quality content to other agencies (your competition) that treat their contributors with more respect
  • A large segment of your customer buyers and subscribers just naturally follow the better, fresh, quality content where contributors are uploading
  • Your sales, revenues and profits drop.

I remember some years ago when Getty / iStock drastically reduced contributor commissions and SS acknowledged at the time that they were dealing with a huge influx of new contributors joining up (who were obviously deserting iStock in droves.) It's just crazy that SS did not learn from this. They clearly observed with the iStock situation that when an agency slashes contributor commissions, there will be a large contributor exodus. Surely, they must have been expecting that to happen. Well history repeats itself.

« Reply #57 on: February 25, 2024, 19:29 »
0
They went from 42 million to 35 million yoy for the same quarter. They lost 50% of uploads.

They give no guidance that they plan to revive their stock business. All the focus they talk about is ai and expecting great things for it.

They will still make more money than dreamstime or deposit. They will always get uploads from somewhere in the world.

Just read their own statements.

I would prefer if they had a strong increase in stock sales and proposed brilliant plans to revive. their stock business.

It would be better for producers if pond5 and SS thrive and grow. 4 strong marketplaces are better than just 2.

But their numbers show that is not the case.

We will see what they report next quarter.

« Reply #58 on: February 25, 2024, 21:08 »
+3
I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative.

What kind of business do they have that is not dependend on the stock photo business?

When they shut down the stock photo business, the AI licencing business goes away as well. They may survive stagnation or even decline in the stock photo business, but without stock images (and videos etc.), they have no AI business.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2024, 02:17 by Big Toe »

« Reply #59 on: February 26, 2024, 04:51 »
+1
after a long time, almost a year, this month shutterstock is above Adobe stock for me.

but it was mainly because of 2 high video sales. 100+ usd per sale.

« Reply #60 on: February 26, 2024, 05:09 »
+2
after a long time, almost a year, this month shutterstock is above Adobe stock for me.

but it was mainly because of 2 high video sales. 100+ usd per sale.

It was reverse for me, contributing them from last 4 years, and Shutterstock is above Adobe Stock until Dec 2023.
and from last two months Adobe Stock is above Shutterstock.

« Reply #61 on: February 26, 2024, 05:40 »
+1
after a long time, almost a year, this month shutterstock is above Adobe stock for me.

but it was mainly because of 2 high video sales. 100+ usd per sale.

It was reverse for me, contributing them from last 4 years, and Shutterstock is above Adobe Stock until Dec 2023.
and from last two months Adobe Stock is above Shutterstock.

i am on both sites for about 10+ years, from 2012-2013 until last year, SS was well above AS, then it changed in 2023, but this month when SS took first place again

if not those 2 high sales, AS would continue to be in first place

« Reply #62 on: February 26, 2024, 09:36 »
+1
./..
SS has diversified into other areas. They don't rely on just Microstock for earnings and income. Some day, the whole Microstock division could go away, and it wouldn't matter to the overall profits of the corporation. They won't care about our earnings or what we do as artists.

I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative. ...
too many of the anti-SS crowd are quick to take recent numbers totally out of context w/o bothering to do their research
 and declaring SS dead -- look at the actual numbers, after a surge during the covid era (during which they were also declaring SS dead) its performance has reverted to the mean and their actual change over 5 years has been -2% - not a great investment stock, but also not a disastrous decline

by comparison tho, Adobe had a similar burst during covid, similar decline  but then has returned to its earlier high. Getty had  20% drop in 2022 and remained flat since.

It's hard to draw conculsions since Adobe is not just a microstock agency, but SS can declare "I'm not dead yet!"

Shutterstock is not just a Microstock agency. They have greatly diversified into other areas.

I wasn't referring to their investment stock, that's a different area. I'm looking at Stock Photos and Microstock, which for contributors has lost, and for SS their income from the same has dropped. Shutterstock, the Microstock division, (the part we care about) is dying.

The corporation and investment stock is doing fine.

but i was refencing the OP and topic name was SS is dead - not SS as a microstock agency is dead, and the numbers shows that's not true.  there's also little to show the ms side is dying - artist income is down for some (eg, for me, SS is down 10-20% over last 2 years but still doubles my income from AS), but SS continues to, make money in ms

The OP asked about SS sales and income for microstock, not the corporation.
Enterprise Value/EBITDA   10.95   27.28   23.80   42.58   68.18
2022 on right current on left. That's what dying looks like. We can all see that our sales and income is down 20% or more in the last year. Mine is down 40%

Uncle Pete

  • Great Place by a Great Lake - My Home Port
« Reply #63 on: February 26, 2024, 15:01 »
+2
I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative.

What kind of business do they have that is not dependend on the stock photo business?

When they shut down the stock photo business, the AI licencing business goes away as well. They may survive stagnation or even decline in the stock photo business, but without stock images (and videos etc.), they have no AI business.

They have all kinds of divisions, and I don't really think they would shut down the stock photo business, just a far out idea that, if the rest of "Shutterstock" the corporation was making money and the Microstock division was losing money, they could close it down. I don't think that's likely. But if Microstock as an industry becomes obsolete?

You hardly see anyone making bottle openers anymore. Can openers for beverages are obsolete. Who's still in the buggy whip business, and the demand for horse shoes is really down. Hey here's a good one... KODAK film?

Yamaha doesn't just make pianos and musical instruments. Ever notice the logo is a tuning fork? Companies adapt and change as the market changes. The Gap started as a record shop. KOSS Corporation, made record players, but the headset they created to sell along with them was such a hit, that they went into the headset business. Olympus has spun off the camera division, but still makes other electronics and optical devices.

You're right. Without the new photos from real photographers, or drawings and more materials, the licensing for AI wouldn't be very profitable anymore.

« Reply #64 on: February 27, 2024, 03:10 »
+1
I know people here care and we're at the mercy of the agencies, but if the customers go to Adobe, and SS has much more profitable business gains in AI, news, or whatever else they own and do, they won't care about a division that's losing money. If it's too expensive to operate and unprofitable, they could shut down stock photos, as a cost cutting, expense reduction, initiative.

What kind of business do they have that is not dependend on the stock photo business?

When they shut down the stock photo business, the AI licencing business goes away as well. They may survive stagnation or even decline in the stock photo business, but without stock images (and videos etc.), they have no AI business.

They have all kinds of divisions, and I don't really think they would shut down the stock photo business, just a far out idea that, if the rest of "Shutterstock" the corporation was making money and the Microstock division was losing money, they could close it down. I don't think that's likely. But if Microstock as an industry becomes obsolete?

You hardly see anyone making bottle openers anymore. Can openers for beverages are obsolete. Who's still in the buggy whip business, and the demand for horse shoes is really down. Hey here's a good one... KODAK film?

Yamaha doesn't just make pianos and musical instruments. Ever notice the logo is a tuning fork? Companies adapt and change as the market changes. The Gap started as a record shop. KOSS Corporation, made record players, but the headset they created to sell along with them was such a hit, that they went into the headset business. Olympus has spun off the camera division, but still makes other electronics and optical devices.

You're right. Without the new photos from real photographers, or drawings and more materials, the licensing for AI wouldn't be very profitable anymore.

There is a lot of truth in this post. I think as soon as you see that a company has to open up new market areas, this is an indication that the primary origin market has been grazed or that the technological changes no longer make this market profitable.

So if Shutterstock licenses their content for AI models, they expect the demand for stock images to fall sharply in the long term. And this forecast is not that unrealistic as many still seem to believe.

I think they also know that they will still need stock images for specific image types in order to continue to deliver content for the AI models and receive licensing revenue.

But they will no longer need generic images, like people pictures with smiling faces or in business suits. The current models already can generate perfect images of such content.

So it would only make sense to shrink this department to a healthy size.
For example only accepting highly professional content with ultra-high resolution for large print projects.

Or limiting the image categories only to the content that is still needed for the further development of the AI models.

I still beliebe that it would make most sense to send out invitations for professional freelance photographers who would specifically shoot the required type of images they need for further AI model developments.

This would take a lot of pressure off the review process and provide a regulated process and planning for AI license income.

That would also be a win-win-win constellation.

I can't imagine that shutterstock will still need millions of contributors in the future.
The costs are too high in the long term.

« Reply #65 on: February 27, 2024, 03:49 »
+2
It would be a lot more expensive to pay professionals for custom shootings upfront.

This way they get all the content for free.

And they will keep needing daily life content shot by normal people, because for social media advertising you often need real life content "editorial style" not high end glamour shots.

They just need a stream of fresh content with enough variety for their ai training from the entire planet. Keeping a base microstock agency open will deliver that.

Half the usual uploads is probably fine, maybe even could drop another 50% without affecting their ai business.

But they could lower royalties again, especially if going forward their main focus is not growing the stock business.

It is an easy way to make more money instantly and inspite of the complaints, uploads will continue.

And if high end content is missing, I wouldn't be surprised if they can generate that out of the mass content with the help of ai. Maybe employ a few specialised designers who keep maing high end content out of the "authentic"/amateur upload streams.

I would also be good for advertising the skills of their ai engine.

« Reply #66 on: February 27, 2024, 05:01 »
+1



« Reply #68 on: February 27, 2024, 06:55 »
+1
It would be a lot more expensive to pay professionals for custom shootings upfront.

This way they get all the content for free.

And they will keep needing daily life content shot by normal people, because for social media advertising you often need real life content "editorial style" not high end glamour shots.

They just need a stream of fresh content with enough variety for their ai training from the entire planet. Keeping a base microstock agency open will deliver that.

Half the usual uploads is probably fine, maybe even could drop another 50% without affecting their ai business.

But they could lower royalties again, especially if going forward their main focus is not growing the stock business.

It is an easy way to make more money instantly and inspite of the complaints, uploads will continue.

And if high end content is missing, I wouldn't be surprised if they can generate that out of the mass content with the help of ai. Maybe employ a few specialised designers who keep maing high end content out of the "authentic"/amateur upload streams.

I would also be good for advertising the skills of their ai engine.

All legitimate thoughts.
I agree that we need fresh new content, otherwise we would still have photos with retro hairstyles, ugly striped suits that are too big with oversized shoulder pads and wide flared pants (which have made a comeback, by the way).

We need new content for new modern trends.
The question is how much is needed so that the AI models can adapt the new trends as quickly and flawlessly as possible.

I think that a few dozen thousand photos are enough to integrate new trends into a basic model. At least no one in the Stability AI community says he need millions of photos to calibrate a new model. Because it would take extremely high costs by renting thousands of Nvidia GPUs.

Yeah It would make sense to hire some professional designers, who will deliver high end AI stuff.
It would even also make sense to hire skilled IT nerds who can help calibrating specific AI models like some dudes doing it just for free and fun in the stable AI community.

You can't fight AI anymore, you have to adopt it.

If I would be shutterstock's CEO and my strategy would be to expand with AI by licensing photos, videos and 3D stuff, I would make a 5 years forward plan, which content is needed for the following model developments.

For example to hire freelancers, who can deliver stuff to calibrate models for authentic images of professions, medical and technical tools, cultural food, etc.

I would'nt want some Amateurs sending me millions of non authentical images, which can't be reviewed correctly because I would first have to teach my review team.

And imagine what will happen, if users will get multimodal AI models in the future.
They will prompt "write an article and generate a matching image" or "this is my business model like a car repair shop, I need suitable images for my website to present our services".

Then it's almost game over for the majority of contributors.

Uncle Pete

  • Great Place by a Great Lake - My Home Port
« Reply #69 on: February 27, 2024, 12:28 »
+2

I would'nt want some Amateurs sending me millions of non authentical images, which can't be reviewed correctly because I would first have to teach my review team.


Ah Ha, but that's what SS has done and their business plan has been. We don't understand why, but they just keep going the same direction. Millions and millions of everyday, ordinary, repeating subjects and snapshots, and SS accepts them.

Difficult to understand why they don't "get serious".

« Reply #70 on: February 28, 2024, 11:05 »
+2
Because they have a high end platform called offset, but customers who need something very, very specific need a huge volume of files to sift through.

Customers that want prefiltered high end collections, can choose from offset, stocksy, getty, westend61 and many other boutique places.

There is really no lack of high end agencies.

But high end doesn't have the depth of a huge planetwide database.

The market needs all of it.

« Reply #71 on: February 28, 2024, 16:30 »
0
Sales picked up the past couple of days as the end of the month arrives with better prices.

Also good to see shutterstock has dropped that ridiculous 'new' contributor dashboard.

« Reply #72 on: February 29, 2024, 08:36 »
+1

I would'nt want some Amateurs sending me millions of non authentical images, which can't be reviewed correctly because I would first have to teach my review team.


Ah Ha, but that's what SS has done and their business plan has been. We don't understand why, but they just keep going the same direction. Millions and millions of everyday, ordinary, repeating subjects and snapshots, and SS accepts them.

Difficult to understand why they don't "get serious".

Because they have crappy management board members who only want to be paid well and don't take serious actions, which can turn bad and you will get kicked out.

I mean they have the best database with statistics on buyer industries, best selling image categories, popular trends, etc.
You can use this to make an analysis or get advice from a BigFour consulting firm like Deloitte about which image categories and which buyer industries are threatened by AI models.

Then you can adapt your business plan what you want to promote more and set your focus.
But I bet they haven't developed a strategy worth mentioning. They will just cut further commissions and let it sink like a big titanic.

Brasilnut

  • Author Brutally Honest Guide to Microstock & Blog

« Reply #73 on: March 01, 2024, 12:05 »
+2
So far in 2024 for the first time ever for both January and February Shutterstock was not my best-performing agency.

Lost out to AS in January and IS in February.

Hope Alamy will crush them in March!

« Reply #74 on: March 02, 2024, 14:27 »
+1
last month for first time SS was 3rd behind AS ($1 more!) and wirestock (which has t-3 times normal over last 3 months.  canva will likely also exceed SS

last month was one of WME overall, th o 5-month  rolling avg has been steady for last 18 months


 

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