Jan 24 2011

Two Great Career-Focusing Exercises from “2 Good Things”

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 9:01 am
AfterCapture Blog_110124_2GoodThings

Look! No Bullshit! I actually did this "Decision Matrix" thing as part of the Values Analysis. It helped!

No! Not “career-focusing exercises”! I’m sure you’ll agree that nothing sounds so unappetizing. But bear with me. I’m not going to ask you to do anything I haven’t done. And boy-oh-boy am I glad I did.

Last week I told you all about Judy Herrmann and how her concepts can help creative professionals “reinvent” our businesses — more money, more satisfaction.

Within that post I mentioned her new blog, 2 Good Things. Within that blog are two amazing exercises that Herrman offers up for free, which makes sense because, 1) she’s a hellava gal, and 2) she has merely modified other, well-proven exercises specifically for members of our community.

If you want to start getting to know yourself a little better in ways that can help in profound, if subtle, ways over time, I strongly suggest you make the time and space to do these:

Values Analysis

Dream Job Analysis

Nearly two years ago, while beginning research for “Judy Herrmann: Reinventing Creativity,” I gave these two exercises a go — to know what the heck I was writing about — and I was amazed at what happened. No, I didn’t change over night. No, I didn’t start making loads more money. But, yes — and this is no small thing — I started to became clearer on what I truly want and not what I think I want.

This, in turn, has led me to making better decisions. No, not all the time. But, yes, more of the time.

You Really Got to Do It to Get It

To me, the Values Analysis exercise seemed complex and abstract and, frankly, like total, useless nonsense. And, being frank, I told Herrmann as much.

“I totally understand,” she said gently. “To really understand how the exercise works, you have to do it.”

She was right.

I am deeply grateful that I gave it a try. You might be, too.

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Jan 19 2011

Put Down the E-mail!

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 5:09 am

Please read this great business-life advice by Judy Herrmann if you answer “Yes” to even one of these questions:

1. Do you ever send multiple emails to communicate the same information?

2. Have you ever had critical information in an email ignored?

3. Do you ever get seriously anxious before making a phone call?

4. Have you ever distracted yourself with busy work to put off a critical phone call?

Even kids can do it!

Even kids can do it!

I’m sure you get the punch line. Herrmann’s advice from her Strictly Business post suggests that we pick up the phone more often — especially to overcome the limitations of email.

It’s still valuable to read. Herrmann is a master photographer-businessperson, and her “Pick Up the Phone!” advice is particularly helpful because:

1. She admits that making phone calls can be super nerve racking.

2. She gives us specific examples of when and how the phone trumps email in the business of photography.

Not the Phone!

I, for one, am terrified of the phone. There’s only two things that scare me more than making phone calls — nuclear war and carnies.

This is frustrating because I understood exactly why  Scott Mc Kiernan, founder of ZUMA Press, once told me that photojournalists should publish their phone numbers prominently on their homepage.

Right after reading “Pick Up the Phone!” I took a deep breath and (without — gasp! — making an phone appointment by email), I picked up the phone and called her. We had the best long-distance conversation I’ve had so far in 2011, sharing ideas and emotions and building our relationship in a ways that is simply not possible via email.

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Jan 17 2011

Judy Herrmann: Reinventing Creativity

After Capture Blog_110117_RF1110_Judy Herrmann_Reinventing Creativity_1“If you really want to earn a living as full-time, self-employed photographer, you’re signing up to work in an industry where you have to watch for every opportunity and be ready to take advantage of them,” says commercial photographer Judy Herrmann. “There is creative vision — a photographer’s artistic voice — and then there is vision for business and career. These two things have to work together, but they are not the same.”

I featured these thoughts from Herrmann in “Judy Herrmann: Reinventing Creativity,” a recent profile for Rangefinder that focuses on Herrmann increasing efforts — through workshops, consulting and her new blog, 2 Good Things — to help creative professionals gain more satisfaction through their carriers, making more money doing more of what they truly love.

“Reinventing Creativity” is probably the most important article I wrote in 2010, but — dangit! — I probably gave it the worst name.

A much better, if less flowery, title (that would have really pissed off the design team) would have been:

“Judy Herrmann: How To Reinvent the Business and Creative Aspects of Your Photography Career in a Harmonious Manner, Over Time, In an Ongoing Process, To Earn More Money and Feel Profoundly More Satisfied In Life.”

That’s what Herrmann’s insights are all about, and there are a few things that make them particularly valuable.

One is that Herrmann is full-time working photographer, and has been for two decades, and her increased interest in supporting other photographers with the challenges of business-creative success comes from an honest passion to help. She says providing consulting services to photographers “is one of the few things in my professional life that actually gives me a deep sense of meaning.”

Another reason Herrmann’s guidance rings true is that she is deep in the reinvention trenches herself, and has been since she was 27-years-old. That’s when she forced herself, for the first time, to figure out how to make more money with more satisfaction through her photography. (I reported on this in “Triumph Over Fear” for Rangefinder a few years back.)

That’s right. I have been talking to Herrmann about this topic for years now, and distilling her insights into less than 2,000 words was painful. This woman has so many valuable insights to offer professional photographers that I’m just dying for you to be aware of her. And then — damn me! — I gave her article a crappy name.

Luckily, you can get in touch with Herrmanns’ ideas directly through her posts on ASMP’s Strictly Business Blog. Good stuff, like “‘If you don’t know where you’re going…you might not get there.’ – Yogi Berra” and “Looking Forward, Looking Back.”

After Capture Blog_110117_RF1110_Judy Herrmann_Reinventing Creativity_2Another reason Herrmann’s reinvention insights rock is because she is adamantly adverse to serving in a counseling capacity. “I make it clear that I am not a therapist,” she told me. “This is not psychiatry. What I’m really teaching people is problem solving. It is defining a problem very, very clearly and then brainstorming solutions.”

“What I’m trying to do is to give people an arsenal of tools,” Herrmann explained. “My goal is to make my client not need me any more.”

One place you can learn from Herrmann how to not need Herrmann is at the ASMP’s Strictly Business 3 conferences (Philadelphia, February 25–27; Chicago, April 1–3).

Yet another reason Herrmann’s strategies are so valuable is that she is not formulaic in her approach for working with photographers. She says, “I don’t think there exists a one-size-fits-all answer to this kind of problem solving.”

Can you see why I think it’s so important to learn about Herrmann’s business reinvention processes?

So, poopy title aside, I urge you to download “Reinventing Creativity” and soak up Herrmann’s ideas.

To be clear, I am not concerned about drumming up consulting business for Herrmann (although, um, I do get a percentage of all fees she earns resulting from this post).

What makes Herrmann’s insights so invaluable is that they don’t depend on her or, for that matter, any other career consultant. Like all great ideas, Herrmann’s strategies are a distillation of other people’s great ideas. And like all great ideas, you can put them to use for yourself on your own.

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Dec 20 2010

Judy Herrmann Proves that Blog Header Photographs Can Rock

Category: Business & Marketing, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 3:01 pm

AfterCapture Blog_101219_Best Picture 2011_1_2 Good Things_1

If you’ve tried to customize a blog header with one of your images, you know it aint easy. We are not used to making (or seeing) photographs as short, wide rectangles. Also, blog headers need to pop off the screen to arrest our attention, and yet not overwhelm the blog’s content. Most challenging: how to share our blog’s message into one, single image?

For her new 2 Good Things website, Judy Herrmann has succeeded in creating the best image for a blog header that I have ever seen. This rockin’ image draws us in, but it doesn’t overpower. Most important, it speaks wonderfully to both the content and the emotional thrust of the site. This is amazing branding with a single, 940 x 200 pixel image. (To better understand the message, see the site’s “Why 2 good things?” and “What’s up with the V sign?”)

See It In Context

AfterCapture Blog_101219_Best Picture 2011_1_2 Good Things_2Definitely head to 2 Good Things to see how this image works in conjunction with the blog’s layout. It looks better in context than it does on its own. And that’s how it should be: photograph and site design complimenting each other. The in-focus fingers draw us to the left, to the posts, while the out-of-focus face rests nicely above the categories and other links. The image has a surprising amount of depth for the restraints of its dimensions, and this welcomes us to the site, as does the positive energy from the out-of-focus face.

Where Did It Come From?

Having not yet spoken with Judy about the image, I can’t be sure that this is Judy we are seeing in the photograph, nor who made the photograph. (Perhaps it was captured by her life and business partner, Mike Starke). I suppose that this might even be a stock image, used very intelligently. But I doubt it. Even out of focus, this looks like Judy — the hair, the friendly energy in the eyes.

Less important than who the model is, I’m totally convinced that Judy orchestrated this image very specifically for this site. I can see her coming up with a strong concept and then playing around with captures until she got one that works just right for the space. This process would make sense. Judy is a commercial photographer dedicated to solving visual problems for her clients very specific needs. So why shouldn’t she do the same for her own blog?

So, Judy, am I right? Is this you, and did I envision your image-making process correctly. Any thoughts you want to share on making this best-ever blog header image?

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Oct 29 2009

Richard Anderson In Person

Category: AfterCapture & Rangefinder Articles, Books, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 10:43 am
No, this is not Richard Anderson, but it is one of his images.

No, this is not Richard Anderson. But it is one of his images.

Photographer, digital standards expert and photography community activist Richard Anderson is incredibly mild mannered — definitely easy to miss in the massive crowds of PhotoPlus Expo, but definitely worth tracking down to see face-to-face. That’s what I did last Thursday, borrowing a cell phone from Judy Herrmann (Thanks, Judy. My cheap, three-year-old Argentine cell phone is no iPhone), and meeting up with Anderson to shoot the breeze in person, which we hadn’t done in two years.

I talk to Anderson fairly often, as he is always incredibly generous with his time and knowledge, and he provides me information to improve my reporting, and also acts as a sounding board on the issues most important to cover.

As the driving force behind dpBestflow.org, the co-author of Digital Photography Best Practices and Workflow Handbook and the princial author of UPDIG, Anderson knows a heck of lot about all things related to the broad, critical topic of digital best practices — from in-camera exposure to final file hand-off.

The thing is, such a statement makes Anderson sound like Continue reading “Richard Anderson In Person”

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Oct 26 2009

A Not Recap of the PhotoPlus Orgy

Category: Creative Process, The Industry, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 10:06 am

AC_Blog_PPE_CrowdThe PhotoPlus Expo officially ended on Saturday, but my experience didn’t come to an end until yesterday, with my visit to the studio of commercial photographer Andrew Matusik. My PPE experience was less frantic and more fantastic than I had anticipated.

I think this was simply because I did myself a favor and realized — before the madness began — that I should focus on quality over quantity. So my personal mantra was, “If you learn just one thing today and connect with just one person, this will be a success.” And a success it was.

I won’t try to recap my whole PPE experience — way, way too much to share — but I will give you a taste by simply listing some of the people and ideas that came my way:

The best part of PPE was spending real quality time — and enjoying good eats — with photographers I already knew, including Gail Mooney, Tom Kelly, Richard Anderson Continue reading “A Not Recap of the PhotoPlus Orgy”

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Jun 30 2009

Self-Directed Projects Pay

ACMF_NG_093In the most recent issue of April 2009 “After Capture,” Kate Stanworth highlights the work of photographer Sophie Pangrazzi in her article “Defying Gravity.” It’s a great read, as Stanworth has a gift for describing images in luscious words. Stanworth also offers great insights on Pangrazzi’s creative process.

Of particular interest to me was the fact that Stanworth explains that “the key to her success has been to orchestrate her own projects, allowing her to stay one step ahead of the game and to realize her unique flights of imagination.” Continue reading “Self-Directed Projects Pay”

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Jun 22 2009

A Simple Strategy for Refining Style

Category: Business & Marketing, Creative ProcessEthan G. Salwen @ 12:00 pm

ACMF_NG_078Even successful pros need to continually refine and define their style. Scott Mc Kiernan, founder and CEO of ZUMA Press, provides a good insight on how to do so. When I was speaking with Mc Kiernan a couple months back, I asked him what advice he would give to photographers starting out in the biz. I was struck by how his simple advice rang true for photographers at all levels of professional success.

“I would start out by thinking what I really care about in photography,” Mc Kiernan told me. “If it’s travel, I would look at who’s doing the best travel photography.” This makes sense, of course, and can be applied to wedding Continue reading “A Simple Strategy for Refining Style”

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Aug 03 2008

Do You LOVE What You Photograph?

ACMF_080803_DoYouLove_1_hr_reelsefxI often hear successful—and satisfied— photographers say that it is critical that photographers are as interested in their subject matter as they are in making images. These same pros say that the smartest business strategy is the path of least resistance: Focus on passion.

I was reminded of this while reading about photographer Jeff Farrell. In a June/July 2007 AfterCapture article profiling Farrell, writer and photographer Peter Kotsinadelis explains that one reason Farrell is having incredible success is because he provides art direction and graphic design services in addition to his photography.

However, Kostinadelis makes it clear that the foundation of Farrell’s success is his love of everything related to the casino industry, which is the market he serves through his Outpost Productions. Farrell told Kostinadelis: “It always felt like a magical world when I was inside those places—an endless visual buffet.”

Continue reading “Do You LOVE What You Photograph?”

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