Reply #22 - March 07, 2008, 03:17:42 PM
Maybe that didn't come out right

I don't mean that it is cheap to start, especially if you're starting your business right. It's that not everybody will spend as much money to start selling their services as a photographer as other businesses might.
Compare it to starting a restaurant. Either way you're going to need to save up living expenses while you build up your business, assuming you're doing it right. But with a restaurant you'd need to deal with stoves, employees, a lease, permits, food, etc. Presumably many people that start calling themselves a professional photographer have a camera and a handful of business cards. I'm not saying that's the right way to do it. But there are a lot of people selling their services as a photographer who start that way.
And then you have businesses like accounting that take years of formal schooling. And although photography should have some sort of instructional period, many people don't start out that way.
What y'all are talking about is starting up a photography business that has a better chance of being successful because you're starting it like a business instead of as a way to make a few extra bucks with your hobby.
There's the camera, lens, flash, flash bracket, computer, software (Photoshop, accounting program, etc), storage (memory cards, external hard drives, internet service, website, business license, advertising, tripod, more lenses, reflectors, samples (albums, prints, porfolio), business cards, insurance, fees for the business checking account, batteries, phone service, etc.
And this quote is a perfect example. How many photographers out there do you think hung out their shingle with nothing more than a digital camera and a pirated copy of Photoshop? Your list includes things meant to start a business instead of getting your friends to pay you 20 bucks for pictures of their kids.
« Last Edit: March 07, 2008, 03:23:28 PM by Ryan Nutt »

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