What i did was to plan out my shots and immediately picked those i would use while on site. I deleted the bad ones immediately from my dslr and aimed for the instucted shots needed (eg closeups on speakers). Then back in my little headquarters at the event I pulled out my laptop and took out those photos. After some photoshop I handed up my photos a few minutes before the deadline. It took me twenty minutes to resize pics and touch up on colours and stuff.
I agree.
I'm also a secondary school freelance - shooter (in-school shooter, meaning I get a tag or note from art teacher allowing me to shoot anytime, anywhere, and anyone appropriate). So there were some events that needed 'next day' handling over of pictures.
Firstly, it depends on whether I am willing or have time to spend the after-event time at home sorting pictures out. Usually I have the time, and here's my workflow, from the event itself to finish.
- Setup equipment (RAW, evaluative metering, one-shot), check batteries, if shooting in one place, calibrate WB with DIY- expodisc-like pringles cap+tracing paper)
- Shoot & Chimp; If camera shake is very noticeable, delete straight away.
- Pack-up and head back home. While on the MRT/Bus/Car, review the shots. Any bad shots (camera shake, bad subject movement, VIP blinkers) will be deleted.
- Come back, upload. Use Zoombrowser to rate pictures. 3 stars for great shot, 1 star for 'not bad' shots, and the normal 2 stars for the 'normal' shots. Delete the bad ones.
- By now, maybe 10-20% of the shots have been deleted. I do mass raw editing to the keepers, throw the good ones in photoshop and adjust even more.
- Burn into DVD, and hand up the next day.
The on-computer filtering can take as long as 1-2 hours depending on photoshop work for me.
If I'm really tight on time, I just do narco's method.
Hope this helps.