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How To Communicate Value To Prospective Photography Clients

One of the hardest skills a photographer has to learn is how to effectively communicate the value of their photography to prospective clients so that they not only make sales, but more importantly get paid what they’re worth.

Getting paid what your worth isn’t easy and has been made even more difficult with the advancement in digital technology which has led to almost everyone owning a digital camera in the form of a smartphone, not to mention access to thousands of digital camera and photo editing apps.

This fact alone means photographers have to work even harder at convincing prospects that their photography is worth more than the instant in which it appears to be created.

Overcoming societies false perception of digital photography and ease in which photographs appear to be created isn’t easy, but can be achieve by first differentiating your business from your competition and secondly, increasing the overall perceived value of the product or service you’re offering prospective clients.

For example, digital files are perceived by society as worthless and therefore focusing your marketing efforts on selling digital files or loose prints which from the perspective of your client can be easily obtained via their smartphone and local mini lab is just bad business…

Do you want your photographs to promote your business or do you want them to sit on a hard-drive or in a shoe box never to see the light of day again?

So instead of focusing on what can easily be obtained, you need to focus your business and marketing on points of differentiation which aren’t as easily accessible to your target audience directly or indirectly through your competition.

Here Are Three Tips For Differentiating Your Photography Business From Your Competition:

Here Are Three Tips For Increasing The Perceived Value Of Your Products And Services:

But What If I Lose Potential Clients Because I Don’t Have On Offer The Same Products As My Competition?

If your photography business isn’t unique, then you just become another commodity that can only survive by competing on price which is just lazy marketing. One skill you need to learn not as a photographer, but as a marketer is how to prequalify your prospects so that you attract the right type of client that are happy to pay you what you are worth and you are happy to work with as a client.

In this article, I’ve covered why photographers have difficulty expressing the value of their photography to prospective clients, what photographers can do to overcome this problem and how to effectively differentiate your photography business from your competition by not focusing on what can easily be obtained, but instead focusing on what can’t… by simply increasing the level of skill and quality required to creating your products and services.

So now that you’ve read this article, go ahead and analyse your photography business and your competitors to come up with a list of points that you can then use to identify specific ideas that will increase your value proposition and differentiate your business from your competitors.