A neighbor down street from me is a professional photographer and has lost several big clients due to the economy and large companies use local less expensive (and less talented) people.
Is it because shots from phones and tablets are "good enough" for people these days? Same with streaming music -- it's good enough.
Lastly -- the reason you get so many social media offers to "teach" you how to take photographs? Those that can, do. Those that can't, teach.
Glad I do it just for fun! Best wishes!
In my opinion, being passionate about one's profession is a must and should be the primary reason for choosing it. I'm not referencing a "job" to make money. I'm talking about a "profession". If photography is not a passion, find something else to do in life. We are only here once.
Mark
Many trends are trashing photographers' incomes. One of them is the growth of stock photography. Why hire a shooter when you can choose from millions of good enough ... or even outstanding ... photos that have already been shot?
markngolf wrote:
In my opinion, being passionate about one's profession is a must and should be the primary reason for choosing it. I'm not referencing a "job" to make money. I'm talking about a "profession". If photography is not a passion, find something else to do in life. We are only here once.
Mark
Fortunately, there has always been room in my in my life for both. My lifetime avocation for 65+ years has been birding (binoculars, not camera). My vocations, too many to list. I moved around a lot because jobs that started out being fun, a requirement, ceased to be fun. I never looked for fulfilment in my jobs, only income. Fulfilment came from birding, income kept body and soul together.
Just an observation: My dad, who's job was his passion, died at 61 years of age of stress related heart disease. I retired at age 56, I wasn't going to let that happen to me. Caught up on a lot of stuff we had wanted to do. Worked if something caught my fancy. If it quit being fun I quit. I'm almost 76 now and still functional. I bird with a camera now more than binoculars.
markngolf wrote:
In my opinion, being passionate about one's profession is a must and should be the primary reason for choosing it. I'm not referencing a "job" to make money. I'm talking about a "profession". If photography is not a passion, find something else to do in life. We are only here once.
Mark
That is true to a limit.
You must be able to survive on the income.
I am passionate about Architecture.
But would not do photography professionally because I want a fun and challenging hobby.
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