[caption id="attachment_10905" align="alignright" width="286"]© design - Fotolia.com[/caption]Although commodification of photography is inevitable, there are ways to offset the process. Take the opportunity to find where the performance of others you might be competing against is lacking, and make sure that's where your personality makes you stand out.
[caption id="attachment_10905" align="alignright" width="286"]© design - Fotolia.com[/caption]Although commodification of photography is inevitable, there are ways to offset the process. Take the opportunity to find where the performance of others you might be competing against is lacking, and make sure that's where your personality makes you stand out.
I believe much of photography is already a commodity and I plan to speak about it during the ASMP Symposium next Thursday the 27th in New York at the Times Center. The topic for the event (more details here) is “Sustainable Business Models: Issues and Trends Facing Visual Artists” which is a topic I’ve been thinking and writing about since I started this blog. the ASMP goes on to say “the rules of the game have changed and it’s no longer business as usual in today’s crowded visual arts marketplace” which to me leads to an obvious conclusion: photography is a commodity.
Commodification is a scary thought. It means you are competing on price and racing to the bottom.
Ok, so that’s the bad news. But, there’s an upside. Before we get to that, let’s destroy this cliché that I hear all the time how “photographers brought it on”, because they didn’t do something to prevent it. All the bitching and whining about weak willed photographers who won't hold the line and clients who won't pay the fees. Commodification is a natural market process. You cannot stop this.
To see the upside you need to take a more nuanced view of photography. You need to consider photography services a value chain and the act of taking a picture, what I like to call being a “camera operator”, as one part of this value chain. You also need to understand that commodification occurs when the improvements to a product overshoot the needs of the client. Better equipment and techniques matter little to the majority of clients. There will always be exceptions, but sadly, it seems we are all past the point of good enough (even if in some parts of the industry good enough is distirbingly low). Nevertheless, don’t dwell on it. Technology that blew your mind ten years ago is now completely commodified. It can’t be stopped.
The upside is that if you have commodification, somewhere else in the value chain a reciprocal process of de-commoditization is at work. In the book I’m reading now (The Innovator’s Solution) author Clayton M. Christensen goes on to say that “commoditization destroys a company’s ability to capture profits by undermining differentiability, de-commoditization affords opportunities to create and capture potentially enormous wealth.”
Click here to read the entire article What Happens When Photography Becomes a Commodity.
Biz Tip Provided by Tony Bynum, Owner: Tony Bynum Photography
Biz Tip Courtesy of APhotoEditor