"I understand where you're coming from; after all, I am an artist, too," some buyers will say, "but what do I tell my client so he understands?"
There are a couple of points I use with clients in these situations. One is the car-rental comparison:
- If I rent a car, I pay by the day.
- If I rent a fancier car, it costs more than the economy model. Similarly, if a client wants a one-shot photograph for a project, it will cost less than a major production.
- If I rent a car for four days, it costs four times as much as one day. If I shoot for four days, it will probably cost the client four times as much as one day. If, on the other hand, I rent a car for five or more days, I tend to get a break, just as I give my clients for a job of five days or more (or whatever number of days I deem prudent and fair to both sides).
- If I opt for a GPS system, a child's car seat, and/or a rack on the top, those are extras that add to the cost of renting the car, just as extra usage merits a higher fee.
- When all is said and done, I bring the car back to the rental agency; they own the car they have produced for my use, after all, not me, just as I own the photography that I have produced for a client, not them.
- I provide a service to my clients, just as the rental car company provides a service to me.
- If a publisher pays a photographer and wants unlimited rights for a "one-time" assignment into the contract, why do they not do the same for their advertisers who pay them? We are talking usage in both cases.
- Reuse merits repay. Just as their advertisers may expect to pay additional fees for each ad insertion, with perhaps a discount for multiple insertions, so should the publisher expect to pay additional fees for additional insertions of photographs.
- If there are multiple insertions, there is often a discount for advertisers, just as I rarely charge a full stock fee for a client who paid for an assignment and wishes additional usage; instead, I tend to charge 75% of the normal stock fee for that usage.
--Margo Pinkerton, President ASMP/NC. Margo runs Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures and is the author of a weekly blog with articles and tips on photography and travel.
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1 comment:
Very good point and this should give photographers the confidence to be fair to themselves and the client. Negotiation is a two-way street, just to keep the car analogy going.
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