any NaFa student reading this .. !!!
At least the Nafa student is willing to put in money in order to learn.
It beats the "I'm here to learn some techniques and maybe some experts with passion will meet up and share with me" syndrome. :thumbsd:
The thread starter posed many interesting points for discussion. In every business, there exists many different segments, and every segment has the kind of photographer going for the kind of job.
Artist
As a photographer, the most important aspect of the craft is
ART. Business is a matter of common sense, and a mix of trial and error. Without the appreciation of the meaning of ART, and being able to relate to the subject how is one going to produce a good picture? In my limited understanding, commercial photography is more than just snapping a pretty face and editing it in Photoshop. I wish it is that simple.
You play many roles, from attempting to coordinate the colors and lightings for a fashion runway shoot, and for that you will need to understand how to appreciate colors and the significant of those colors and how to use them to maximize the effect of your shoot. At another situation, your tool might be the video camera and not the DSLR. At another situation, you could be just using the old point and shoot camera and the same expectation of the effect which you are reliant on must be created as well. I can go on and on about the other areas that photography can be applied in but I think I'll just stop here.
It is a constant journey of being aware of the surrounding.
Business
Business is about relationship and credibility. The basic of which is your cost. But in order to develop your business, you must be prepare to spend some money to gain that credibility and build that relationship. It is easy to assume that everyone wants to do for big names. However, not everyone has an eye for the art. So in the process, in order to sustain the business one should start to get in customers, starting from a base price.
Pricing
Your margin should be low in order to gain that credibility through an increase number of customers. Its not exploitation, but a matter of sustainability. Its your choice to take 6 projects of $300 for 6hrs or 1 project of $1000 per week, if you are not in a position to bargain.
After the usual word of mouth, and a series of references, you can start to increase your markup using the famous term (fees revision). Its up to you how often you revised your fees, but it should be at an acceptable level of between 6mths to 1yr before you revise your fees. At the same time, substantial relationships with customers would have been established by now. This is what you guys probably call "reputation".
Equipment
Contrary to popular believes, one does not need expensive equipment to start off with some simple wedding shoot photos. A 2nd hand point and shoot camera with a 35mm lens or 50mm lens is probably sufficient to get you started. Film is cheap and you can always convert to CD later if you want. Later, though its not neccessary, if you want you can upgrade into the Dslr if you want. Given all the consideration about cost, and all the expensive storage cards and memory space is eliminated and all your cost to incur is film which is cheap ,durable and has much richer detail that digital. A 2nd hand camera these days cost almost nothing.
Production Pipeline
Every commercial photographer has a workflow that he follows. He will also have an equipment framework that is interchangeable to support this pipeline. All equipment are modular and can be increase or decrease at will. This manages resources efficiently and you do not need to buy unnneccesary equipment or equipment that can't fit into your pipeline.