Microstock sucks in my opinion.
Much better way to put it Scott, than to have someone posting lies and mis characterizations labeling it as something, it isn't.
I don't see how anyone can work for 99c a photo, when it takes time to shoot them, plus more time to edit them. But some people are working on the volume principle and making good money. I don't think there are as many as some of the agencies would like us to believe.
However, I fully support an individuals right to work for them self, which it really is, and earn what they feel is a fair pay. Because none of us are slave labor or being forced to sell our photos on Micro Stock. Are we?
As for a $200 photo becoming a 99c photo, as someone else suggested. There are numerous ways to look at it. The first is, that $200 photo was way overpriced and the 99c photo is way under priced.
Another is, that what it takes to produce a $200 photo, that's worth that, will never be reproduced by some 99c photo with entry level equipment, lighting, experience and techniques, so they are not identical photos.
A Yugo and a Porsche Carrera six are both automobiles. In many ways they are alike. Both will take you to get groceries and back. One for much less. :mrgreen: However just like the $200 photo and the 99c photo, they are very different in the end.
Affordable good quality digital equipment has reached the masses. That means all of us can take much better photos. It also means that the cost and specialized equipment is no longer controlled by a select, small group.
Competition in the marketplace isn't driven by a monopoly or price fixing. Sellers and buyers are free to choose. Some photographers don't like that, because their stranglehold is being challenged.
Would the same people who hate micro, feel the same way if, for instance, oil companies, all agreed to charge $600 a gallon for gasoline? (that's the same variance as the $200 photo price vs the 99c photo price by the way) Ah ha, the story changes when you are the buyer, and no longer the seller. :lmao: That's not a fair or realistic analogy, but it was funny.
Lets say the Florida orange growers association agreed to limit growers sales, manipulating the supply, to keep the price up, but the independents undercut them for a lower profit margin? Would you support that?
Guess what, it's a reality.
OK you don't drink orange juice, so you don't care. How about, something you actually need and use? Would you support price fixing and restraint of free trade?
Then why do some people advocate and defend price control for photographs?