Will you work for free?

October 13, 2011

I recently got a request to shoot an on-air television personality, for free. They said it was for trade but couldn’t quite offer me anything. On very rare occasion, I trade a photo shoot in exchange for a service I am in need of, where both parties could benefit. A recent call came in from someone who works for a Fortune 500 company who seemed very excited about my work. I told them I had in fact photographed paid jobs for celebrities, national magazines, and have been flown off the continent on more than one occasion to shoot. On the phone, a bubbly voice said said things like “love your work, girlfriend!” and the whole scenario became a laughable topic for many of the professional photographers around the country. We wondered what kind of sucker would actually show up for a shoot in the pouring rain, unpaid. In one conversation, I was told blatantly that there were other photographers that were a lot more “easy going” about this when I asked for a contract regarding licensing the images. I’m pretty sure this person meant that there were a lot more desperate photographers willing to be sucked in and kicked under the bus. They wanted me to do a shoot for the network, and while I was there, to do a shoot for some charity. Oh, and while I was there to do some complimentary updated headshots as they needed them all done the next day. If you have talent, experience, equipment, and insurance, you probably would not go to an unpaid shoot without some sort of contract unless you had a gun to your head. Money can buy you a reliable and skilled photographer. Honey, read below.

Dear potential photo buyer,

If you have been directed to or stumbled upon this page, it is likely that you have requested the use of an image or images for free or minimal compensation.

As professional photographers, we receive requests for free images on a regular basis. In a perfect world, each of us would love to be able to respond in a positive manner and assist, especially with projects or efforts related to areas such as education, social issues, and conservation of natural resources. It is fair to say that in many cases, we wish we had the time and resources to do more to assist than just send photographs.

Unfortunately, such are the practicalities of life that we are often unable to respond, or that when we do, our replies are brief and do not convey an adequate sense of the reasons underlying our response.

Circumstances vary for each situation, but we have found that there are a number of recurring themes, which we have set out below with the objective of communicating more clearly with you, and hopefully avoiding misunderstandings or unintentionally engendering ill will.

Please take the following points in the constructive manner in which they are intended. We certainly hope that after you have had a chance to read this, we will be able to talk again and establish a mutually beneficial working relationship.

Photographs Are Our Livelihood

Creating compelling images is the way we make our living. If we give away our images for free, or spend too much time responding to requests for free images, we cannot make a living.

We Do Support Worthy Causes With Images

Most of us do contribute photographs, sometimes more, to support certain causes. In many cases, we may have participated directly in projects that we support with images, or we may have a pre-existing personal relationship with key people involved with the efforts concerned. In other words, each of us can and does provide images without compensation on a selective basis.

We Have Time Constraints

Making a leap from such selective support to responding positively to every request we get for free photographs, however, is impractical, if for no other reason than the substantial amount of time required to respond to requests, exchange correspondence, prepare and send files, and then follow-up to find out how our images were used and what objectives, if any, were achieved. It takes a lot of time to respond to requests, and time is always in short supply.

Pleas of “We Have No Money” Are Often Difficult to Fathom

The primary rationale provided in nearly all requests for free photographs is budgetary constraint, meaning that the requestor pleads a lack of funds.

Such requests frequently originate from organisations with a lot of cash on hand, whether they be publicly listed companies, government or quasi-government agencies, or even NGOs. Often, it is a simple matter of taking a look at a public filing or other similar disclosure document to see that the entity concerned has access to significant funding, certainly more than enough to pay photographers a reasonable fee should they choose to do so.

To make matters worse, it is apparent that all too often, of all the parties involved in a project or particular effort, photographers are the only ones being asked to work for free. Everyone else gets paid.

Given considerations like this, you can perhaps understand why we frequently feel slighted when we are told that: “We have no money.” Such claims can come across as a cynical ploy intended to take advantage of gullible individuals.

We Have Real Budget Constraints

With some exceptions, photography is not a highly remunerative profession. We have chosen this path in large part due to the passion we have for visual communication, visual art, and the subject matters in which we specialise.

The substantial increase in photographs available via the internet in recent years, coupled with reduced budgets of many photo buyers, means that our already meager incomes have come under additional strain.

Moreover, being a professional photographer involves significant monetary investment.

Our profession is by nature equipment-intensive. We need to buy cameras, lenses, computers, software, storage devices, and more on a regular basis. Things break and need to be repaired. We need back-ups of all our data, as one ill-placed cup of coffee could literally erase years of work. For all of us, investment in essential hardware and software entails thousands of dollars a year, as we need to stay current with new technology and best practices.

In addition, travel is a big part of many of our businesses. We must spend a lot of money on transportation, lodging and other travel-related costs.

And of course, perhaps most importantly, there is a substantial sum associated with the time and experience we have invested to become proficient at what we do, as well as the personal risks we often take. Taking snapshots may only involve pressing the camera shutter release, but creating images requires skill, experience and judgement.

So the bottom line is that although we certainly understand and can sympathise with budget constraints, from a practical point of view, we simply cannot afford to subsidise everyone who asks.

Getting “Credit” Doesn’t Mean Much

Part and parcel with requests for free images premised on budgetary constraints is often the promise of providing “credit” and “exposure”, in the form or a watermark, link, or perhaps even a specific mention, as a form of compensation in lieu of commercial remuneration.

There are two major problems with this.

First, getting credit isn’t compensation. We did, after all, create the images concerned, so credit is automatic. It is not something that we hope a third party will be kind enough to grant us.

Second, credit doesn’t pay bills. As we hopefully made clear above, we work hard to make the money required to reinvest in our photographic equipment and to cover related business expenses. On top of that, we need to make enough to pay for basic necessities like food, housing, transportation, etc.

In short, receiving credit for an image we created is a given, not compensation, and credit is not a substitute for payment.

“You Are The Only Photographer Being Unreasonable”

When we do have time to engage in correspondence with people and entities who request free photos, the dialogue sometimes degenerates into an agitated statement directed toward us, asserting in essence that all other photographers the person or entity has contacted are more than delighted to provide photos for free, and that somehow, we are “the only photographer being unreasonable”.

We know that is not true.

We also know that no reasonable and competent photographer would agree to unreasonable conditions. We do allow for the fact that some inexperienced photographers or people who happen to own cameras may indeed agree to work for free, but as the folk wisdom goes: “You get what you pay for.”

Please Follow-Up

One other experience we have in common is that when we do provide photographs for free, we often do not receive updates, feedback or any other form of follow-up letting us know how the event or project unfolded, what goals (if any) were achieved, and what good (if any) our photos did.

All too often, we don’t even get responses to emails we send to follow-up, until, of course, the next time that someone wants free photographs.

In instances where we do agree to work for free, please have the courtesy to follow-up and let us know how things went. A little consideration will go a long way in making us feel more inclined to take time to provide additional images in the future.

 

I’m sure I will get a lot of comments in support of the photographer rather than in support of those who have no appreciation for someone’s time and talent.

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4 Responses to “Will you work for free?”

  1. Lisa says:

    I think I got the same call! I am guessing that they had to call a bunch of photographers.

  2. Tommy Von says:

    agreed on all points. I get so many of these requests. I rarely grant any unless a very special circumstance.

  3. Joseph Hayes says:

    Welcome to the boat shared by writers, editors, designers, graphic artists and musicians. It’s not even that we’re asked to “donate”, “trade” or “work for credit” … it’s demanded of us, and yes, the artistic talent is the only segment expected to work for free. The guy sweeping up at night gets paid. Let him take the pictures.

  4. Mackenzie says:

    @JosephHayes – I would also toss computer folks into that mix as well. I’m a web developer and constantly get requests from friends and family to fix their computers for free. I also receive daily asks from people who want to build the next Facebook but don’t have any money to pay their developers, so they ask us to work on 1% equity or something ridiculous like that.

    Why is it computing and creative positions are perceived as unskilled? You would never ask your mechanic or plumber to work for free.

    And if you refuse these yokels? After they finish screaming at you for being a talentless hack, they insist their nephew who knows something about computers will be able to do the job for them.

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