Feb 11 2011

Make Your Blog More Popular: Write For Friends

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 6:26 am

AfterCapture Blog_110211_Make Your Blog Popular_1

“There are lots of reasons why people flock to certain blogs, but I think one of the most important is that popular blogs are written by popular people — the sort of people who attract others.”

This is from Dean Rieck’s “The 7 Secrets of Running a Wildly Popular Blog”, and it shows — go figure! — that I was totally on track when I mused that Chase Jarvis’ blog is so damn popular because Chase Jarvis is so damn popular.

It’s the Quality of Visitors, Not Quantity

Reick’s popularity-building advice for bloggers includes “Have a conversation,” “Lighten up,” “Help people” and “Stop trying so hard.” This is all good stuff. However. . .

Notice that while these strategies can make your blog more enjoyable, they will not actually make you more popular  — not in the real-life, flesh-and-blood world.

Regarding Jarvis I noted:

In person, Jarvis is more charismatic than most photographers will ever be (or would want to be).

This is true, and my point is simple: In blogging, just as in real life, it’s not the quantity of interaction that matters, it’s the quality.

If your blog is an enjoyable destination that honestly presents your work, skills and personality, it will prove invaluable as a portfolio and marketing tool — as a “landing pad” for potential customers. And that is worth a lot more than any number of “hits.”

Unless you’re Madonna or Lady Gaga, you don’t need people worshiping you. You need people interacting with you. You need people interested in using your services. You need to make connections with real people who can expand your creative and professional horizons.

If your blog readership goes from zero to 10, that’s great! If you end up with 50 regular followers, that’s awesome! If you have 200 hundred people who stop by once in a while, that is un-freakin’-believable!

Blog for Your Friends & Family & Most-Likable Clients

The key to taking advantage of Rieck’s advice on blogging (or my advice on improving your blog writing style) is to blog as if you are addressing, in person, the people you actually know and like, or who you would like to know — personally.

There’s an important difference between Rieck’s intended audience and the intended audience of this blog. I’m assuming that you don’t need to create a “widely popular blog.” You are not in the business of writing a professional blog; you are in the business of professional photography. Don’t forget this.

The best way to reach out to these potential customers through blogging is to write content for a specific, real audience of friends, family members and the clients you most enjoy working with.

Yes, “family and friends” sounds cliché, and if you hate your family, um, keep them them out of the equation. But if you only write for potential clients (abstractions of your imagination) your blogging will fall flat.

So read Reick’s advice and work to make your blog more popular (for friends, family and real-world clients), but don’t try to make a blog that is widely popular (just for the sake of being popular).

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Jan 12 2011

In 2011, Is There Such Thing as a Still (Only) Photographer?

Category: ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 7:11 pm

In this interview, Gail Mooney explains that at the Professional Photography Teleseminar she will be speaking to “photographers who think they might be interested in moving into motion.” Interviewer Adam of RETV jumps in and says:

Which is just about every photographer out there right now because it is such a huge movement. I mean, it’s very similar to when we switched over from film to digital. You know, you’ve got everyone out there right now trying to pick up a camera and shoot motion because the clients are asking for it.

I had never thought of the move into motion as being analogous to the switch from film to electronic capture and, in many ways, the shift seems to be a more massive one. After all, we’ve come to accept that a “still film photographer” and “still digital photographer” are, fundamentally, one and the same. On the other hand, a “still photographer only” and “still photographer and videographer” — which is how Mooney defines herself — are totally different creatures.

Sure, it’s possible that not every photographer is currently moving into motion as Adam suggests (and this blog assumes). But those photographers not at least interested in the potential of motion seem as rarefied as, say, a 1995-era photographer who insisted on only photographing with black-and-white film using an 11 x 14 view camera.

“Drop the Digital from Photography” Chase Jarvis blogged in November, asking, “Isn’t it time we implore the rest of the world to assimilate the term ‘digital photography’ back into ‘photography’ as a whole?”

As 2011 gets rolling, almost everyone who buys a new point-and-shoot camera or cell phone gains the ability to capture motion, and will so so comfortably. Given this, isn’t it becoming ridiculous, and perhaps self-limiting, to talk about “still photographers”?

I think that each photographer needs to define what his speciality is and what types of image making most interests him. But aren’t we getting to a point when saying “I’m a still photographer” is like saying, if even unintentionally, “I’m against the possibilities of motion”?

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Dec 17 2010

New Media Blogging Inspiration from Chase Jarvis

Category: Business & Marketing, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 8:14 am

AfterCapture Blog_101217_Chase Jarvis Blog_1Chase Jarvis is an über popular commercial photographer, and his New Media-savvy blogging is a key ingredient to his marketing and self-promotion efforts — although “effort” is not the right word. Javis blogs for the pure love of it, and his love of blogging is critical to his success with blogging. Blogging is not a chore for Jarvis, nor something he does in a calculated manner to increase his hits. Jarvis’ number of hits keep increasing because he’s eager to speak to a popular audience, and because he has something that audience wants to hear.

If you are not familiar with Jarvis’ blog, definitely take a thoughtful tour — even if Jarvis’ photography (or personality) don’t float your boat.

New Media Blogging?

I know. “New Media blogging” seems repetitive. After all, blogging is about as New Media as you can get, right? Actually, blogging is just a tool — a simple way to post content to the Web — and most of us Dead Tree Bloggers do not fully embrace the New Media spirit. Two critical ways Jarvis does is to:

• Constantly link out to peer content. Jarvis does much more than add SEO-friendly links to his posts; he features content from other creative professionals. This is good for him. In the blogosphere, the more you link out, the more people link back in.

• Makes the blogging experience interactive. This is no easy task: to make people feel involved in your blogging. One way Jarvis does so is by enticing people to comment on his posts, and then rewarding them with follow-up responses.

Popular in Flesh, Popular in the Blogosphere

Don’t try to imitate the way Jarvis blogs. Jarvis is Jarvis. You are You. The key to Jarvis’ blogging is that it is honest.

In person, Jarvis is more charismatic than most photographers will ever be (or would want to be). Jarvis once told me Continue reading “New Media Blogging Inspiration from Chase Jarvis”

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Dec 15 2010

Which Jarvis is Better: With or Without Photo Surveys?

Category: Business & Marketing, Creative ProcessEthan G. Salwen @ 8:11 am

AfterCapture Blog_101215_Chase Jarvis Comments“Which Photo is Better: A or B?” The name of Chase Jarvis‘ latest blog post gives a good sense of its content. The 830 comments readers have posted in less than 24 hours speak to why photographers might want to get clients and fans involved in a Web 2.0 editing process.

Yes. 830 comments!

Jarvis tends to average between 15 to 75 comments per post, which is major, but not as super-massive as 80o+. Clearly, people like to share their two cents — especially when it comes to picking photo A or B.

But it’s not just that.

From experience, Jarvis’ readers know that their input will acctually influence the photographer. They also know that Jarvis will blog about his reader-influenced process — making them feel as involved as they truly are.

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Feb 12 2010

Fear: A Critical Topic Impossible to Discuss?

Category: Creative ProcessEthan G. Salwen @ 3:38 pm

AfterCapture_Blog_100210_Fear_1_RF1108_Fear_Salwen.pdf (page 1 of 4)How we address our fears is critical to our creative and business success. I clearly see this trait of dealing in all successful photographers, and I have questioned many of them on the topic. I have wanted to say something insightful on this fear theme, but I am not sure I have gotten beyond clichés.

In “Triumph Over Fear,” an article I wrote for Rangefinder, I did my best to explore some of the implications of fear as part of success in photography. My strategy was to share the stories of four photographers. This seemed the only honest, valuable way to explore the topic.

However, I admit, it was hard not to try to write the article in such a way that it suggested: “Embrace your fears, even appreciate them. What you are afraid of makes you stronger.”

See how lame that sounds? It’s not like I’m Franklin D. Roosevelt inspiring a nation. What the hell do I know? It scares the shit out of me just to learn new keyboard shortcuts — and I’m not kidding. Continue reading “Fear: A Critical Topic Impossible to Discuss?”

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Feb 05 2010

Why Do Lawyers Make the Best Photographers?

Category: Business & Marketing, Photographers, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 3:05 pm

AfterCapture_Blog_100205_1_FrielNo, my post title is not a joke, even if it sounds like one. And no, I am not going to suggest that lawyers actually make the best photographs. However, having had a wonderful phone interview this morning with Bernard Friel, a very accomplished nature photographer and an extremely successful lawyer, I do want to share something that Friel brought to light.

“Lawyers tend to be a pretty sociable group,” Friel told me at the end of our hour-plus conversation, in which he shared more than a dozen names of photographers and influential people he has met in his journey as a photographer. Friel, who is 80, laughed often during our talk, and spoke of his many friends with fondness and respect.

“I had never been to a photography association meeting,” Friel told me of his unlikely participation in the first annual meeting of the North American Nature Photographers Association (NANPA). “I didn’t want to talk about pictures; I wanted to make them.”

However, being a social creature, the fist night of the conference Friel introduced himself to the “elderly man” sitting at the same dinner table. “Hello,” the man responded with outstretched hand. “I’m Roger Tory Peterson.” Friel had made another friend. And yes, this friend is the Peterson of “Peterson Field Guides” fame. Continue reading “Why Do Lawyers Make the Best Photographers?”

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Dec 18 2009

Chase Jarvis Redifines “Holiday Party”

Category: Multimedia & Video, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 7:55 am

OF COURSE something DID happen, Chase! You’re Chase Jarvis, Man. Who the hell else “unwinds with the mission of having a darn good time” with more than 600 “clients, business friends and co-collaborators” during his holiday party that features “a photo booth using state-of-the-art camera and lighting equipment and captured 21,112 photographs in under 5 hours”???

Em, that would be. . .no one else but Chase Jarvis.

If that weren’t enough, Chase gives shares all of his 21K photos with us in his latest  “Frames” series installment– “Chase Jarvis FRAMES: 21,112 Party Pictures” — so we can be amused, impressed, inspired or maybe just irritated by the gall of this guy having too many buddies and collaborators to fit in the Airbus A380 he rented to give joy rides during the party.

Talk about blurring the lines between still and motion! Definitely get inspired. . . even if you hate parties.

Next Up: “Ethan Frames: Holiday Party of One in Five Depressing Pictures.”

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Nov 25 2009

Who ISN’T An Ordinary Photographer?

Category: Business & Marketing, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 7:26 pm

“If you have a point of view. . .why the heck wouldn’t you be involved in the doing?

This from the video that Chase Jarvis featured on his blog yesterday, and which I’m featuring here. It’s a short clip from a series from PSFK — a “trends research, innovation, and activation company” that publishes a daily news site, which is worth checking out — and if you take Jarvis’s advice, as you watch the video you’ll replace the title of “planner” with “photographer” and you’ll get some interesting food for thought.

Interesting, but actually not that innovative, at least to the photographers who are as successful as Jarvis, in terms of incomes, recognition and satisfaction). I say this because like Jarvis, these successful photographers often tell me — in one way or another — over and over again: “It’s not the photography, stupid!”

Photography has always been easy — compared to Continue reading “Who ISN’T An Ordinary Photographer?”

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Jun 29 2009

The Art of Provoking Thought on Photojournalism

Category: Creative Process, Photographers, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 8:23 am

ACMF_NG_088“Two French students were awarded the annual Grand Prix du Photoreportage Etudiant last week to honor a photographic story that presented images documenting the precarious lives of students today and the things they must do in order to survive and succeed.

“The only catch is that the entire story was a fake.”

This is from commercial photographer Chase Jarvis’s blog post this morning, and if this topic sounds interesting – how could it not? – you can get a full overview of the story at this post of Horses Think.

Jarvis’s coverage and insight on the topic is interesting, and rings true with me. In part, he says: Continue reading “The Art of Provoking Thought on Photojournalism”

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Apr 14 2009

A True Bird’s Eye View

Category: Creative Process, Multimedia & VideoEthan G. Salwen @ 6:45 am

Head to commercial photographer Chase Jarvis’s 4/9/09 blog entry to get a REAL birds eye view – that is, a film recorded by a micro camera strapped to a high-flying, fast-diving raptor. Jarvis’s post highlights the work of José Luis Ortiz.

One thing I really appreciate about Chase is that he is always upbeat, curious and pumped up by other artists, even as he takes on his own projects at a frantic rate. As he says, he himself has been working with POV photography for years in many interesting ways. But he admits that José Luis Ortiz has taken the art to a whole new level: WAY up in the air.

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