My birthday is this week, making it a good time to look both backward and forward. I thought I’d share some of the mistakes that I’ve seen photographers make over the years in the hope that my readers won’t make them.
A big mistake that a photographer made that almost cost me my reputation in photography before I had hardly started.
Before I started a photo agency, I decided to become a rep for assignment work. My first photographer was recommend by several of my photographer friends. He had been in Europe for a while and had experienced a lot of success in advertising jobs according to him and to the tearsheets that he showed in his portfolio. I worked with him for a couple of days, getting ready to take the book out when I happened by the international newsstand on Las Palmas in Hollywood. As I browsed the European magazines, the guy’s work popped up everywhere. But in Europe, in those days anyway, ads carried photo credits AND my guy’s portfolio had been shot by at least five other people.
Instead of investing years of work overseas to build up an international portfolio, he had stopped by the magazine stand at Heathrow on his way back to L.A. and bought the magazines with the ads that he most would have liked to have shot. That was the end of my repping career, thankfully before I had called on any art directors/art buyers.
Here are some mistakes not to make, in no particular order:
1. Spending money as soon as you earn it but before you have it, even if you know you’ll get it soon.
2. Waiting until after the shoot to hand out model releases.
3. Not putting a value on your own time when figuring ROI (return on investment) per shoot.
4. Staying with the same vendors (insurance, bank, credit card, phone, etc) year after year without annually doing comparison shopping
5. Buying the most expensive equipment unless you absolutely need it. And buying is cheaper than regular renting.
6. Never registering copyright
7. Bad mouthing your competition
8. Spending more than an hour a day on social media
9. Writing a blog that only other photographers read (unless you are Chase Jarvis.)
10. Not keeping excellent records in regard to deductible expenses.
11. Not having an annual budget
12. Not understanding a financial statement coupled with not having one.
13. Not reading distributor contracts, purchase orders and other legal docs or not getting help when you don’t understand them.
14. Cheating, lying and stealing (just for good measure). And that includes faking model releases, exaggerating expenses on productions, directly copying other’s work and violating the items listed in item 13.
Happy Birthday to me.
Who is the first brave soul to add to the above list based on a mistake they made?





Oh, Ow, Ouch… I don’t need to add to the list to recognize I’ve already made some and have not corrected my behavior! Oh my.
I feel good that I never violate #14, and I wonder if #8 (social media) includes reading THIS blog…
My nomination? Spending too much money on photography books that I don’t read or don’t heed. But too late, I’ve already pre-ordered a certain micro-stock book from Amazon (August 2010?)… Hope it’s “heed-able” Ellen… looking forward to it.
Yeah ouch! That smarts Ellen! And it’s smart too.
I won’t admit my list of mistakes, nor will I solve
them most likely. What can I say? I’m imperfect
but loveable.
We are all imperfect…how do you think I learned about some of the mistakes on the list? Yep. Made them myself.
I vote for 6 & 13.
Happy Birthday!!!
And those of you who make mistakes 6 & 13, quick! contact someone from Chris Taylor’s profession. Yep, he is an attorney and a smart one too.
Mistake? He didn’t make a mistake… he was a thief & a liar.
I’m glad I cannot add to this list… it is extensive enough.
Yep Joseph he was a thief and a liar and that IS always a mistake!
Happy Birthday, Ellen!
Thanks for your wishes, Sharply :}
Happy b-day. Thank you for the read.
1. I tend to forget to have models sign in upon arrival and sign out at the end of the shoot. That sometimes costs me some overtime payment since I let the models have the benefit of the doubt.
2. 2 times I accidently shot “small RAW”, leaving me with tons of images with small price tags
… Bummer!
Happy birthday
This is a wonderful opinion. The things mentioned are Great and needs to be appreciated by everyone.
Stocks and Shares ISA
All great advice Ellen. My current mistake is probably No.9…I ain’t no Chase Jarvis!
Thanks!
John
Great tips! These is a must see by photographers.
Could you explain number 9 a little further?
Thanks so much!
Christopher
Christopher: Number 9: you don’t want to spend all your time talking to your colleagues/competitors. Who you need to build your name with is your prospective buyers…so gear the information on your blog/tweets etc to those who need your photos.
3,8,10,11 would be my major downfalls.. oh and Happy Birthday, I had a vague memory of sharing a birthday week with you, mine was yesterday.