Sir, you have just done something that not many ppl in the forum can do. For that, I salute you.
I salute you too BlitzWerkz. Just be careful of his cronies backing him up
Sir, you have just done something that not many ppl in the forum can do. For that, I salute you.
I salute you too BlitzWerkz. Just be careful of his cronies backing him up
Hmm, why get so personal?
Agreed with Ellery, when did commercial photography wants RAW file? 16bit Tiff yes, but even then most prefer ready to use jpeg.
Not every client has an art department waiting to process your raw. Maybe a client in the creative field but almost always they want the finalized work becoz that's why they hire me for. And which salaried employee likes to do the post production work for an external vendor? If they ask for RAW it could mean I messed up and they don't like the final product, or, they dont understand what's a raw file.
I'm facing one such case now. Did an hour-long outdoor wedding photoshoot recently. Shot about 350 photos in total but picked the 50 best and edited for them on a CD. Next day the bride called and said not enough nice photos etc.. they want the rest to choose..
I thought 50 shots from a 1hr photoshoot is already quite good liao??
How do you guys deal with this?
1. Nice is subjective - but then, I guess the rule of thumb in this industry is that any photo that your client likes is a good photo? Even though it may suck in the eyes of a photographer.
2. Is "standard industry practice" not to return all raw images a good excuse if the client tries to 'accuse' photographer of shortchanging them? We're talking about 50 edited photos given vs 350 total shots...
What did your contract stipulate? ALWAYS protect yourself with a contract.
I'm facing one such case now. Did an hour-long outdoor wedding photoshoot recently. Shot about 350 photos in total but picked the 50 best and edited for them on a CD. Next day the bride called and said not enough nice photos etc.. they want the rest to choose..
I thought 50 shots from a 1hr photoshoot is already quite good liao??
How do you guys deal with this?
1. Nice is subjective - but then, I guess the rule of thumb in this industry is that any photo that your client likes is a good photo? Even though it may suck in the eyes of a photographer.
2. Is "standard industry practice" not to return all raw images a good excuse if the client tries to 'accuse' photographer of shortchanging them? We're talking about 50 edited photos given vs 350 total shots...
yes, you should let your customers know an estimate amount of photos will be given before you shoot, and how many you shot in the session is not their concern.
it is not an excuse, customers are paying only for good and finished images, want to have more images even the bad one, they can just pay for that.
anyway, if the customers do not trust the photographers will deliver only their best, you are serving the wrong type of customers.
Rashkae said:What did your contract stipulate? ALWAYS protect yourself with a contract.
Could you share how to word contract such that the customer could not come back relentlessly asking for more? Thank you so much
if what you show in your portfolio is what you usually deliver, customers should able to receive similar standard for their photos, and it usually won't be any issue on unsatisfactory results.This thing about "good and finished" images - problem is, it's really subjective. What we feel may be all killer shots may only be so-so in the client's eyes and vice versa..
As the photographer, having gained our experience in selecting shots through experience, we really try our best to pick out the best of the lot to process into the finished images for them. But s**t happens and there are customers who may come along and comment after receiving their photos that - "bro, the photos not nice leh" or "some photos are nice only. not enough nice photos. do you have any more man?"
What's the generally accepted and agreed way (among photogs) of handling the above situation or communicating with the unhappy client so that we do not end up performing a form of service recovery that is actually a taboo in the industry?
Rashkae said:There mare many examples out there, but I'm not going to upload the one my lawyer wrote for me as I paid good money for that - as should you.
But common sense will already give you quite a few things to include, such as:
- Agreed upon number of processed prints and is what size/format (coffeetable book, etc)
- Agreed upon number of web-sized copies
etc.
Also, clearly stipulate what is NOT included, such as full-resolution images, RAW images, etc.
By the way, clicking on this:
http://www.google.com.sg/search?q=sample+photography+service+contract
Will give some good examples, such as:
http://www.21creations.com/PDF/photography/CONTRACT%20FOR%20PHOTOGRAPHY%20SERVICES.pdf
..which can then be modified as needed.
if what you show in your portfolio is what you usually deliver, customers should able to receive similar standard for their photos, and it usually won't be any issue on unsatisfactory results.
and you should able to pick up any signs of their concerns of the outcome during the shoot, you should communicate with them about the shots, rectify any problems there and than, if every seem fine with them during the shoot but making some fuss after seeing the proof, it almost certainly can tell they are trying to find excuse for asking discounts.
you can tell them you are very happy with the results and want to post it in your blog or facebook, to see how their response.
worst come to worst, if they are not satisfy with the outcome, you can tell them you are not charging them for your effort and time, but you will to take back all the images and they are not allowed to use any them in any form since they are not happy about it.
About what Catchlights said regarding taking back images, I respectfully disagree. With commercial clients it works in a business to business setting, but with private persons/consumers like couples, once they get the pics - THEY GOT THE PICS. They purchase photography for personal reasons and thus being personal, if they dont share openly and that they hide it from you, no way for you to catch.