The photo above is of Brown Pelicans. The Brown Pelican is the only pelican that uses the plunge-dive while fishing. The bird flies some 20 or 30 feet above the water. [NIKON Z 6, Sigma VR Zoom 120-300mm f/2.8G IF-ED, Mode = Manual, ISO 800, 1/4000, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 360)]
I love shooting with the Nikon Z6 camera during our family’s vacation at Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina.
Combining the Nikon Z6 with the Godox V860IIN flashes, I got some good group photos and portraits on the beach.
I love the ability to see what I am getting before shooting. Less chimping and checking the LCD. Also, using the Electronic View Finder, I can see what I am getting. While witnessing the histogram is always helpful, it is less necessary with the mirrorless than the DSLR.
I loved taking early morning walks each day carrying the Nikon Z6. I used the tilting LCD screen for this photo to get the camera low to the ground.
I enjoy the dynamic range that the camera is capturing as well.
I love being able to capture the family as well in candids.
I like how the face recognition and eye tracking function works.
All positives so far in using the camera during our family vacation.
My niece, the bride, asked me to take some behind-the-scenes photos of the wedding. The venue had a package that included a photographer.
They wanted me to have fun as well. Dorie, my wife, officiated the service, and Chelle, my daughter, was the wedding soloist.
I am writing this blog for those interested in the newest mirrorless camera from Nikon, the Z6, and how I set it up and used it for this wedding photo shoot.
I brought a really small kit.
Nikon Z6
FTZ converter
Sigma 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0 Art
Sigma 35mm f/1.4 Art
Godox 860II Nikon
Magmod Maggrip w/ Magsphere
I love the Sigma 35mm f/1.4 Art BOKEH when shot wide open. With the new firmware 2.0 on the Nikon Z6, the eye tracking focus helps nail the eyes when focusing.
I was in the room with the Groom and all his 16 attendants. Did I say this is the largest bridal party I have seen? 30 total. They have many friends and family, which is the best way to describe this problem.
The Sigma 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0 let me go from this broad group shot inside to much tighter shots of the Groom with individuals.
My Flash Settings on Nikon Z6
e1: Flash Sync Speed – 1/200s (Auto FP)
Auto ISO sensitivity control – Subject and Background
For the Godox flash, I set the compensation to -1.
So during the wedding, it was raining. Just a few drops, but this tells you the type of light we had. I decided just to fill in to give a little pop to the photos. So outside, I was shooting at 1/2000 shutter speed with a flash.
Then I am inside shooting at ISO 10000 at a shutter speed of 1/50.
It worked just great on the dance floor. Here I shot at ISO 6400 with a shutter speed of 1/30 to add a little action to the shots.
I love shooting with the on-camera strobe in a situation like this. It lets me be sure there is light on the people and then allows me to record the background in natural lighting.
Sometimes the light was great without a flash. I just turned it off when I didn’t need it and turned it on as needed. The settings on the camera stayed the same.
I really love just taking photos as a guest and not the official photographer.
The other thing is if you know the people in the bridal party, you get different expressions than the official photographer can sometimes get.
I love the Nikon Z6 with the Sigma 24-105mm f/4 Art lens with the Godox V860IIN with the MagMod MagSphere for weddings. I think you can shoot 95% of the wedding with this setup. I think you need a long lens, like 70-200mm, for the ceremony.
The updated Adobe Lightroom is the other thing that really makes this system work. I love using three of the controls that, if used correctly, can help out some photos that, in the past, would have been so-so photos without these controls.
I love the Texture, Clarity, and Dehaze sliders. I cannot recommend them enough.
For sharpening, I hold the Option key on the Mac while sliding the Masking control.
I loved shooting the wedding with the Nikon Z6. I think a lot of wedding shooters will fall in love with the mirrorless Nikon Z6 as much as I have this year.
The United States has been described as a “Melting Pot” and a “Toss Salad.” I prefer the “Toss Salad” better. We live in a very diverse country, and when you get to know your neighbor, this is a beautiful place to live.
Dorie Griggs, my wife, and I have been participating in Atlanta’s very diverse interfaith community for many years now. Dorie helped to produce an interfaith dialogue TV show, and I have helped by helping create websites and photograph these different organizations through the years.
Last night Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms hosted a Ramadan dinner for the Atlanta Muslim community at Atlanta City Hall. The attendees were from many of the diverse faiths of Atlanta.
The three Abrahamic faiths: 1) Muslim, 2) Judaism & Christianity, all had speakers at the event, and people from those communities of faith in attendance as well.
From my time in dialogue with people of a different faith, I have discovered that we are more alike than others when it comes to living in the community. All religions hold education as core to their values, meaning their interest in public education is high.
While everyone enjoyed seeing their friends from their faith community at the Iftar Dinner, they were just as pleased to be in such a diverse community.
What I love about the Islamic Speakers Bureau of Atlanta is that they care about the education of the faiths, not proselytizing. They realized that when we learn about the different religions, we start to see some of our common bonds.
They also realized that they needed to help create a safe dialogue space so that people could learn about their neighbors and not feel threatened by them.
Interfaith dialogue is possible only when two convictions pre-exist in the participants:
No participant is seeking to proselytize any other participant.
The participants are persuaded of the inherent validity and integrity of all the faith groups involved in the dialogue and are persuaded that no group possesses total and absolute knowledge regarding the nature and works of God and human involvement with the Divine.
I recommend you host a group like the Islamic Speakers Bureau of Atlanta’s Interfaith Speakers Network. It is a collaboration between the Faith Alliance of Metro Atlanta (FAMA) and the Islamic Speakers Bureau of Atlanta (ISB). The ISN provides opportunities to hear and interact with a panel of local practicing representatives from six faith traditions: Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, and Sikhism. The meetings are educational and facilitate dialogue and understanding between different religions. In addition to sharing information, ISN panels showcase ways other faith traditions can work together.
ISN programs promote religious pluralism by emphasizing shared values and practices and modeling respectful civil discourse when discussing our differences.
Uber asks, “Know where you are going but need a ride?” Then they offer you options.
Every time you talk to a client or a potential customer, you need to know your intent and the obstacles in your way or their way.
You need to have an objective in mind. For example, knowing where you want to go is the same as telling the Uber driver where your destination is to be for your trip.
In Barrel Racing, the rider wants to complete the course in the least amount of time, and the system is around three obstacles, which are barrels laid out in a triangle shape on the course.
When I am teaching storytelling, we use the same parts of the story that Aristotle outlined in Poetics. He wrote this around 335 BC. It is the earliest surviving work of dramatic theory. But, again, the subject wants something, and there are obstacles to overcome to get it.
The tension is great for telling the core of any story, but the one missing thing companies and organizations must have for their storytelling is a “Call to Action.” So, now that you have heard this story, we want you to do something.
Traditional Advertising Call to Action
No obligation: “TRY” is in all caps; the email offers a full refund.
Usability: Directing Readers to click “Subscribe Now.”
Immediacy: The copy includes the phrase “right away,” and the Call to Action button uses “Now.”
The key to an effective Call to Action is to provide people with compelling reasons to ACT NOW rather than defer that action.
Avoid using a passive voice. Use action verbs.
Get straight to the point and make it short and sweet.
Here is a trick that will make all your Call to Action successful. Start with the audience and the call to action. Then, find the story that will best emotionally connect with them to achieve your “Call To Action.”
How does one learn? How do you grow? I believe the answers to these questions lie in our failures.
If you try and avoid all failures, you will take no risks. Without taking these risks, you cannot learn.
When watching a PGA golf tournament, you see the caddies and golfers referencing these notepads. They have the notes they have taken about the golf course. They are often called yardage books. Here is what they may look like.
PGA golfers cannot play it safe and win a tournament. They take risks. To take those risks, they assess the ball’s lie and pick where they want to hit it. Those that win the tournaments take risks.
We often picture Tiger Woods hitting the green and sinking the put.
However, we forget how often he misses.
The reason bull-riding is a popular sport isn’t that it is easy to do. It is popular because it is hard to stay on a bull for 8 seconds.
Originally posted this on the Facebook Group “Nikon Z6 Z7 Mirrorless Cameras”. This is a repost of it.
I am a little tired of seeing posts that oversell a camera. It comes off as a used car salesman. I think we need to be as transparent as possible on a camera’s merits.
Some people are looking to buy a camera and often are disappointed because they listened to some posts about selling a camera.
Nikon Z7/Z6 cameras are fantastic. I own the Nikon Z6.
We need to go back to the film cameras just before digital became prominent in 2002 to remember what I think we forgot.
We had several cameras back then.
Viewfinder
8×10
5×7
4×5
Medium Format
2-1/4″
6×6
645
6×7
6×9
35mm
When digital came along, we tried to buy one camera to do it all. The reason was simple those first digital cameras cost as much as $25,000.
Today I think we have slowly returned to where we should be. Many cameras, like the film days, work great for certain types of photography, but there isn’t one camera that does it all.
I must admit that the Nikon D850 comes close to doing it all.
After the Digital revolution in photography, we have the mirrorless revolution.
If you do this for a hobby, you will most likely buy a good digital camera that meets your needs.
If you are a pro or an amateur with the means to buy more than one camera, you will buy at least a backup camera. Then you add those unique cameras for the things that work best.
Many pros don’t buy every camera they will use. Many rent those high-end medium format cameras for those jobs that need that resolution.
Regarding Nikon Cameras for the advanced amateur or pro, here is how I break down the Nikon Line.
Nikon D5 – The ideal camera for a photojournalist. They are asked to shoot just about everything. They need a great sports camera, suitable for portraits, low light shooting, and video. A buffer of 200 RAW images is fantastic—also XQD Card Slots for speed.
Nikon D850 – This is one of the best cameras for almost anything. I believe the Nikon D5 is better for sports due to its low light and frame rates. The enormous resolution of this camera is a must for the landscape and commercial photographer who needs to make super large prints. Great for video
Nikon D750 is a great full-frame camera, but the buffer is small at 6.5 fps. It has many low-light capabilities like the D850, just not the resolution. It is the entry-level of the full frame.
Nikon D500 – While this is a smaller DX format is is pretty much the Nikon D5 in a smaller DX format
Nikon Z7 – This is the mirrorless version of the D850. Due to the DSLR’s focus, it isn’t the same, but close. The fact it has more focus points in some ways is better. Picking this camera over the D850 is for all the reasons mirrorless has advantages over DSLR.
Nikon Z6 – While very similar to the D750, the buffer is more significant than the Z6. This might be the best video camera as far as mirrorless on the market. It has a higher frame rate than the Z7 and ISO than the Z7. I bought it for those two reasons.
Why I like mirrorless
Seeing what you are getting
White Balance
Depth-of-field
Exposure
Quieter even with mechanical shutter
Less need to Fine Tune Auto Focus
Optional electronic shutter
Lighter
More focus points
Face and Eye recognition
No need for extra gear when doing video
Significantly, you are getting sports images with your camera. It is excellent that you can make huge prints from your smaller sensor.
When you start to compare your camera by saying, who said my ______ Camera couldn’t shoot __________ is the same as saying my Nikon ______ is as good as the Nikon __________.
That is what I have a problem with.
Show off your beautiful images. Talk about the love of your camera. Just don’t try and say your camera does everything that the entire Nikon line of cameras does because it doesn’t.
The closest camera to doing that was the Nikon D850, but even it has some limits.
When I teach in college classrooms, many students are there to check a box. They need this course to meet the requirements for their degree.
So many people are going through life checking boxes. This is the time of year when many have just checked another box. They graduated from high school or college and now will look for a job.
I was raised in a different environment by my parents. My father had been checking boxes his life until one night in college, he found himself on his knees praying to God and felt God was asking him to change direction.
Vocation means a strong feeling of suitability for a particular career or occupation. Calling is a synonym for the word.
In some of the classes I have taught in college, I found students just trying to meet the minimums. I don’t mean minimum like passing, but rather what are the requirements for an “A” and then proceed to do just enough to get the “A.”
Whether your goal is to work for National Geographic as a photojournalist or to get to the finish line of a marathon, write a book, find a partner, be a good parent or a good friend, the feeling of success and satisfaction can be found in the process, not the accomplishment.
This is key to being a successful storyteller focused on the process rather than the checkbox.
Process
Checkbox
Wants to know the subject
Wants to get the content
Arrives Early
Arrives on time
Leaves Late
Leaves Early
Extremely Curious
Indifferent, Uninterested, Average
95% of people who go to Yellowstone National park use only 5% of the park. It has been reported that 90% of the visitors never leave the road, and 95% never venture more than 100 feet off the pavement.
I consider those the box checkers. They have been to Yellowstone.
Know Your “Why?”
As some might say, having a vocation or calling is being mission-minded. You are pursuing something. I believe my calling is to get to know the people God has put in my life. To develop relationships with these people and get to know them.
When I get to know someone, I learn how I can serve them.
College
Too many people go to college to get a degree, and not enough go to college to learn a subject. I want an engineer who understands physics that builds the bridge I will drive on. I don’t like the engineer who checked off they took the class.
At Georgia Tech, I was in a Civil Engineering class where the students built a bridge out of balsa wood that the professor had given them. The bridge would be tested to see if it held a certain weight.
Little did they know, but the professor gave them faulty plans. They were to check the design and build it. The lesson wasn’t the building of the invention but rather the ability to think and go back to the professor telling him that the design was flawed. This is a real-world example.
Many of the students failed that assignment that day. They were box checkers. Those who loved learning and were there for the process found the mistake and passed.
I really love covering events. Why? You have to constantly problem solve.
The first problem was ensuring the faces in a group shot were visible. I used two Alienbees B1600 strobes powered by the Paul Buff Vagabond batteries. Now to fire them, I was using the Pocketwizard Plus II Transceivers.
The problem to be solved was the group was under a large carport with a background sun lit trees.
I took photos of the individual graduate with the founders of the school and the administrators. The diploma had to be in every shot; if I were not careful, it would have been not legible. The solution is the same setup as for the group photo. By using the two Alienbees B1600 lights at a 45º angle to each other, I was getting an excellent, consistent morning for each person.
To make my post editing go quickly, I also did a custom white balance using the ExpoDisc.
By the way, can you make some headshots while you are here? Yes, I can. Again the same setup, but I just moved closer to the trees and shot some headshots of the founders.
One part of the assignment was to get the first group shot to them before the 5 pm ending time of the event. So I had to carve out a few minutes to get those group photos for posting on social media.
To get all these photos promptly, I chose to work with the Nikon Z6 and the Sigma 24-105mm ƒ/4 Art lens. While I shot the group photo at 32mm, I could go wider. I loved shooting the headshots at 105mm.
Grandparents, parents, siblings, and friends came to celebrate the GAP Year program graduates in Pine Mountain, GA.
I used Bluetooth technology to help sync my camera with my phone using Snap Bridge. I was being sure the time was correct and set the GPS Coordinates.
When I ingested the photos into PhotoMechanic, it took those GPS Coordinates and turned them into a street address.
I click on the world, and then it will look for the GPS coordinates, and as long as I have an internet connection, it will search for the street address.
Now, since I was also shooting with my Nikon D5, which doesn’t have Bluetooth technology, I just selected all the images and applied those GPS coordinates to those images.
The students dressed up in all types of fashion statements. I love this guy’s tie.
This family is from Ecuador. I love his Panama hat.
As soon as I took this photo, they asked me in Spanish if they could get copies. Yes, they can.
I provide the client with an online gallery where they can download the images using a password.
I was getting candid photos as well as occasionally finding families altogether. I would take these as well. I just had to watch the light on the faces. Way too many of the guests were posing people with the windows behind them. I put the large glass windows to their side or on my back. Again it is about Lights, Cameras, and Action!
The room was quite large, and the best place to stand to get photos of the stage was in the back of the room. This way, I wasn’t upfront blocking the guest’s view.
I brought my Sigma 120-300mm ƒ/2.8 Sports lens and a 1.4X and 2X converters. I started with the 1.4X converter; this is the view it gave me and made the lens a 420mm ƒ/4.
I quickly changed the converter to the 2X, which gave me this view with the now 600mm ƒ/5.6. Once again, I am problem-solving. This time, the camera and lens combination allows me to get photos that no cell phone will get.
As you can see, this is what the guest was getting with their phone.
I moved around the room with the long lens and looked for different perspectives. I thought the microphone was too much with some speakers in front of their faces from the back of the room.
I didn’t need to move to get a different angle with every speaker.
I was shooting with three cameras and various lenses. My wife also shot some photos with a camera.
2 Nikon D5 cameras
Nikon Z6
Sigma 24-105mm ƒ/4 Art
Sigma 35mm ƒ/1.4 Art
Sigma 70-200mm ƒ/2.8
Sigma 120-300mm ƒ/2.8 | Sport
Fuji X-E3
Fuji 18-55mm ƒ/2.8-3.5
Fuji 10-24mm
The lenses I used for different reasons. First of all, I am not shooting one specific style. I do not shoot all prime lenses wide open, which many people do. I love the shallow depth-of-field shots.
I also realized when shooting that large group shot that I needed to be at a more significant depth of field. This is why I shot those photos at ƒ/8. The front row and back row are all in focus.
I love to isolate moments using the shallow depth-of-field and know that sometimes you need more.
Technical & Aesthetic
Just yesterday, on a forum, a photographer asked if the new camera would make you a better photographer. The old argument was that it wasn’t the camera but the operator. However, I wasn’t going to take this clickbait as it was set up.
These new cameras today let me take photos that were not possible without a flash just years ago.
So I pride myself on knowing my gear and how it can help me get photos I couldn’t do before. So, I try and keep my bag updated. I also know that you can have a technically perfect picture with no aesthetic qualities.
Social Work Training – Capturing Action!
All my training in reading body language and studying for a master’s in photojournalism has helped me concentrate my efforts to capture moments. I was trained in social work to read people. I was evaluated repeatedly on how well I listened with my eyes and not just my ears.
Adequate photographers are more technicians. They get the photos in focus and well exposed.
Great photographers are doing more than being a technician. They are using the camera to capture moments that help tell a story.
I like moments like this one. The students show how much respect they have for this teacher from this year. No words are necessary to communicate their care. You need words to know why they are giving him this type of respect.
Do you want to learn how to cover meeting better? Do you need me to cover your event? Give me a call, and let’s talk. I teach one-on-one sessions and love to use my gifts to help you capture those critical moments in life that happen only once.
While doing a story on coffee growers in Salvador Urbina, Chiapas, Mexico, the farmers taught me how they produce the Arabica Bean Coffee.
I learned that arabica coffee does best with shade. The tree requires some but not too much direct sunlight; two hours a day seems ideal. The lacy leaves of the upper levels of the rainforest initially shaded the coffee tree.
When they prune the banana trees, you can see the trunks, which look like corrugated cardboard to me. Those channels help the water get to the leaves and bananas.
Salvador Urbina, Chiapas, Mexico is in a rain forrest. Salvador Urbina has significant rainfall most months, with a short dry season.
What can we learn from these coffee growers?
The production of coffee is a time and labor-intensive process. From the plantation of the first coffee seeds, it can take three to four years before a newly planted coffee tree will begin bearing fruits.
10 Steps from Seed to Cup
Planting
Harvesting the Cherries
Processing the Cherries
Drying the Beans
Milling the Beans
Exporting the Beans
Tasting the Coffee
Roasting the Coffee
Grinding the Coffee
Brewing the Coffee
Fairtrade
Fairtrade was started in response to the dire struggles of Mexican coffee farmers following the collapse of world coffee prices in the late 1980s.
Fairtrade coffee is certified as having been produced by fair trade standards. Fair trade organizations create trading partnerships based on dialogue, transparency, and respect that seek more significant equity in international trade. … Fairtrade practices prohibit child or forced labor.
Café Justo was the coffee cooperative I partnered with to help tell their story back in 2010. I had been producing videos for a short time, which was a turning point for me. We focused on telling the story focusing on the crisis the farmers were suffering and the difference the cooperative made in their families and communities.
Listen to what I captured back in 2010:
Maybe you are like those coffee farmers who had to leave their farms to find work to feed their families. By just learning to come together and tell their story, the consumer didn’t pay more for coffee. They changed where they bought their coffee. You can support these coffee growers by buying them here at Just Coffee.
While forming a cooperative and selling directly to the customer helped the coffee growers to prosper, it wasn’t the cooperative, the roaster, or their willingness to come together that made them successful.
It was when they told their stories that customers rallied behind them. People are waking up to the fundamental unfairness of world trade and demanding a better deal for the people who do our dirty work. Are you getting a bargain or exploiting people when you always shop for price alone.
Are you telling your story? Remember, what made a difference in the Fairtrade movement was the telling of the stories of people being exploited.
Once you have your customers, don’t stop telling stories. Now tell a different story. How about how bananas help produce great-tasting arabica coffee?
We all know that if you want to get someone’s attention, tell a story. We also know that not all stories are engaging.
I believe many companies are picking stories like people fish–toss a line in the water and see what bites.
Finding a good story in your organization is like looking for a great quote. That person’s story you tell will be handy because their story is a brief distillation of the larger pool of people you serve.
A good story also affirms what we already know about ourselves. The report helps you to reaffirm your beliefs and helps to define the category of the brand you are.
This past weekend I saw my daughter’s Spring Dance Concert. I photographed the event for the school to use for their recruiting and promotion.
While editing some 2,600 images, I was reminded that distilling the event down to a few photos was communicating what they hoped to become and what they were doing. They only have a dance minor at the time and are in the process of creating a dance major.
Biggest Mistake
One of the most prominent mistakes organizations make when picking a story to tell is to pick one based on politics rather than the story’s strength.
I have been consulting for many years with organizations, and over and over, the people they want to feature are often someone who has been around a long time or is very popular.
Here are the critical elements in a story that help you identify the best story for your organization to tell.
There is a before state and an after radically different state. This is before your organization made a difference in their life and after they encountered the organization.
This was a crisis of sorts. They had a real problem, and the organization helped to solve it. The key here is when comparing their crisis to other possible people for your story that their crisis was the worst.
Their story represents your target audience’s crisis that you will problem solve as an organization.
Too Close
One of the problems for most companies and organizations is they are just like the dancers–they are too close. They cannot see what they look like from the audience’s perspective.
Even the directors of broadway go into the audience seats and give feedback to those on the stage; they lack the ability often to truly separate themselves from the production and see it with fresh eyes.
I was given a story to execute when I started as a photographer. My mentor Don Rutledge encouraged me to go and find stories and do them to get better. I did this for many years and syndicated those stories through Black Star and Camera Press.
I learned very quickly the story you picked had more influence on the outcome than execution alone.
After shooting and writing many poor choice stories through the years, I slowly realized I was pitching more and more stories to editors. When I did those stories, they got much better engagement than those I was given.
The better I got to know my clients and what they were doing to help their customers I was pitching no longer just exciting stories but now strategic stories.
Another Mistake
Don’t pursue those stories that only entertain and do not move people to the “Call To Action” for your organization.
Be sure the stories you pick a point to what you do best and how you can help the audience with similar problems.
If you are a profit-oriented company, you solve problems for the audience. If you are a nonprofit, you ask the audience to join you in helping solve a problem.
Secret
The key to your company’s success is picking the right story to tell. Once you have done this, your next step will be identifying another story. Your success is directly related to communicating what you do to solve a problem for a person. Then it would help if you consistently executed doing this for those who respond and ask you to fix their problem.
Tell people what you do through a story. Do what you tell people you do. Continue to improve in the execution of your service and repeat this process.
The purpose of doing an alignment for your car is to reduce tire wear and to ensure that vehicle travel is straight and true (without “pulling” to one side). Alignment angles can also be altered beyond the maker’s specifications to obtain a specific handling characteristic. Motorsport and off-road applications may call for angles to be adjusted well beyond “normal” for various reasons.
Being out of alignment with your car shows up as uneven tire wear.
Being out of alignment in your work causes your organization and you to not get the best performance. Like tires that get worn unevenly, you will become worn out prematurely.
When the tire isn’t aligned, it creates resistance, and that is what causes the uneven tire wear.
People are more excellent when you are in alignment at work. Like all the wheels on a car, when aligned to the vehicle, it goes straight and true. The key is at work; you should be aligned to the purpose of that organization. If you don’t like the organization’s purpose, find a different job.
Everything lines up for you when you’re in alignment, and everything seems effortless because you’ve already done “the work” energetically. You feel like your team has your back because you’ve surrendered. You are not pushing your agenda. You are finding ways to serve the mission statement.
When you align, you don’t have a strong sense of ‘need’ around what you want to manifest. You are open to your desire manifesting in different ways and are not attached to ‘how’ it has to happen.
For me, my faith has helped a great deal. I feel that God has got it under control. Now I have to remind myself of this every once in a while. When I do, it releases tension.
If you report to anyone, ask questions that will help you align with the organization.
What does success look like a year from now for the organization?
What can I do to help this be achieved?
Is there anything I am doing that I need to stop doing?
Are there any books, workshops, or seminars I need to improve that you suggest?
In baseball, the batter must respond to what is pitched to them. They do not control the pitch. They only control their response to that pitch.
The best hitters are those who keep their eye on the ball and have spent a lot of time in a batting cage working on their swing.
Get in alignment to experience a life of less resistance. Learn to ‘Go With The Flow‘ – be relaxed and accept a situation, rather than trying to alter or control it.
Like most, you also measure your self-worth from what you do. When you do this, comparing what you produce to others is the next most likely thing done.
How good is your game? That seems to be what drives many photographers. They compare their work to other photographers.
Once I started to do freelance full-time, I shifted my focus to observing successful photographers. I began to watch those busy and not basing that decision on how their photos looked.
About eleven years ago, I started to hire photographers for my clients. That is when I got to see really why certain photographers were busy.
Photo Skills
First, for a person to get hired to shoot for a client, their work must meet some bare minimums for that client. Let me explain that the skill level is much lower than many photographers think it should be, but that is reality.
To be considered, the photographer must produce photos that are well exposed and in focus. Now the fascinating thing about hiring photographers was all the other stuff that made me either want to hire them again or never use them again.
Negotiating Skills
When I would call, photographers asked them to do some work on how they handled that first phone call; negotiating our contract determined the rest of the relationship.
I need to know the price, the terms and when I will get the photos. It was a two-way street on this. The photographer also needed to know this from their perspective.
If a photographer wanted to negotiate more after we agreed on everything, this was a clear indication of someone who would take too much of my time. I need the photographer to shoot and deliver with as little problem as possible.
People Skills
I was shocked that many photographers can get some great photos of people’s expressions but have poor people skills.
However, I must say that those photographers with good expressions in their photos of people tended to have better people skills than most.
Most of my clients are concerned with how the photographer did with the people when they were shooting more than just how their photos were. You see, the photographers are representing them when they show up. This is why many clients will put a staff person on set to go between the photographers and the subjects because they don’t want problems later.
I hired many photographers once that I would not hire again because the word came back that they were challenging to work with. Then other photographers make the client look better than if they were there.
Final Product – The Photos
I am surprised how many photographers take way too long to get the photos to the client. When hiring photographers, I need them to rename the images with a particular file naming nomenclature so that the photos will work with the database they are put into for the client.
In addition to the file naming, I need the metadata filled out. This is all part of the negotiating I have done with the photographer when first hiring them for the job.
You would be surprised as to how many do not follow through. So, I get the photos numbered the way they came from the camera with no metadata. This creates a problem because I have to contact the photographer and ask them to fix the images and upload them again. This delays now the client from seeing the photos.
I have had a few photographers get the photos to me after the deadline, and we couldn’t use them for the initial purpose.
Final tips to increase the fruits of your labor
Negotiating – Keep it simple. Don’t use industry jargon unless necessary. Be realistic and do not over-promise.
People Skills – Listen, communicate & relate on a personal/professional level. Good people skills include problem-solving abilities, empathy for others, and a willingness to work together toward the common good. Reply to your emails promptly. Value your client’s point of view.
Photos – Deliver to the client photos in the way you negotiated. WOW, clients by underpromising and over-delivering.
Be clear and transparent –Customer loyalty increases based on how mistakes are handled. Studies show that up to 70 percent of unhappy customers transform into loyal customers if the error has been fixed, exceeding their expectations.