by successfulbob | bird photography, Lumix FZ 1000, Lumix Lounge, photography gear, wildlife photography
“Off to harass the birds again are you?”
My wife Holly calls it harrassing cause I used to have to get very close to the birds to fill the frame and they often would leave in a snit at being disturbed… I call it photography while I study and capture behavior images. I really enjoy photographing birds. At her parents place which looks over the marsh in Delaware I’ve plenty of subjects.
I was curious as to how the Lumix FZ1000 would perform and I gotta tell ya it ain’t bad at all. Having a 400mm f4.0 lens is quite good. I’m even more impressed with the ability of the digital zoom going to 1600mm. At that zoom range some detail it starts to soften but being able to fill the frame from a long distance is more than worth the trade-off. Here is a sequence to show the range of the camera…
Images made from the same position. To get to the digital zoom of 1600mm you must be in jpeg capture mode.
Still, with proper exposure I’ll take the reach over being able to shoot in RAW.
Osprey doing a flyby of her nest.
If I’m going to have one camera for vacation, or just to have at hand daily – that does almost everything I need – the Lumix FZ1000 is the one.
Yours in Creative Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | Lumix FZ 1000, Lumix Lounge, photography education, photography gear
Walking from my favorite restaurant and I spy an absolutely beautiful flower bloom on a cactus. So I stop to shoot a couple frames and move on in the glow of the after dinner bliss… Or, was it the wine?
No matter.
‘Squirrel Moment!’
I know you’ve had this happen.
You think you see something beautiful. On the move you grab a frame thinking you have something to work on later. Turns out you were distracted by the ‘squirrel!’ in the image and failed to look at the whole scene carefully in the frame. Here’s a recent ‘squirrel’ shot from my wanderings.
Man, I almost don’t even want to show you this… In my mind I saw the flowering blooms
and new buds coming on (cue beautiful music)…
The reality of the ‘past prime’ dead flower buds escaped my notice until
I opened the image and viewed it on the computer. “Bummer!”
I think it’s good to share the not so good stuff as well as our treasures so we all know we are in the same boat… Chugging away, trying to create beautiful images, and not always hitting a home run. The usual camera was in play and it did a good job helping me get a nice exposure on the run. It’s not the fault of the Lumix FZ1000 that I can be distracted by a ‘Squirrel Moment”… They can’t all be perfect can they???
Yours in Creative Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | photography education, photography marketing
This is a guest post for Successful-Photographer by Jenika McDavitt
Say This To The Next Fan You Meet & Watch Them Become A Client
I’ve begun to think of creative business owners as the world’s most reluctant group of superheroes.
Imagine: You’re a superhero. Cape and all. And you see a building on fire.
What do you do?
1) Stand on the sidelines, scuff your superhero boots, and say quietly: “I know how to save the day.
Do you want me to save to day? I’m really good at it. Look, here’s a list of other buildings I’ve saved.”
or:
2) Run over and say “That building’s on fire! Don’t worry! I’m here to save the day!”
Silly question, right?
Most creative entrepreneurs tell the same story:
“I’m so tired of feeling like I’m begging people for money and attention.”
In other words: I don’t want to ‘sell’ my stuff. I don’t want to spin lines about how great I am.
I don’t want to run ragged getting people to go from fan-dom to client-dom.
I just want people to buy what I offer.
It might be because you’re taking the Reluctant Superhero approach.
If you were to sum up most people’s websites and marketing, here is how business owners often pitch themselves:
“I am passionate about X. Here are a lot of people who think I am fantastic at X. Here is a portfolio of my past work. Hire me to do X for you.”
This is all good stuff. Some of it is vital, even. No one is slamming it. But there’s a snag that might leave you on the sidelines, scuffing your boots.
This business owner is making two tragic assumptions:
Assumption #1: That fans already explicitly recognize their deep need for X.
Assumption #2: That fans believe that you can provide X without Q, R, and S terrible things happening, each of which would render X a waste of time and money.
There might be a better way, superhero.
And it’s all about where you start the conversation. Instead of starting with how great at or passionate you are about X, try starting here:
“Hey there! THAT BUILDING IS ON FIRE!! But don’t worry – I will save the day. I am here to bring you X.”
Believe it or not, if you’re struggling to convert fans into clients, it could be because people don’t always know what buildings of theirs are on fire.
People rarely stop and spell out their own problems. They can sense them, sure, but they don’t always know exactly what’s wrong. They know the general neighborhood of the problem (“I need a photographer”) but they can’t always put their finger on exactly where the fire is that needs to be put out (“I need a photographer who makes my husband excited about family photos and who also will make me look great in the process.”)
If you spell out for them that your secret sauce methods ensure everyone (yes, even Dad!) has a blast while making sure Mom looks like the goddess she is, and let me tell you how…..well, you’re going to stand out to them.
It is your mission to name their exact fire and assure them you can put it out.
People feel a huge sense of relief when someone articulates their problem and they can sense that yes, that’s exactly my issue. And at that point they are open and vulnerable, and much more ready to listen to hear you say “and here is the solution, all you have to do is ____.”
That makes your fans far readier to hire you.
Remember: Your target client’s problem might not be exactly what you think it is.
Their problem is rarely a simple a matter as “I need photos” or “I need someone to photograph my wedding.”
That might be a basic issue that caused them to look for a photographer, but it’s not necessarily the precise burning building that they need you to save.
Their burning building might be:
A) “I want photos, but I always look terrible in them, so what’s the point. I should just save the money and do it myself.”
B) “I’m going to be too exhausted after giving birth to get all dressed up, get the baby ready, and drive to a studio to spend three hours having photos taken.”
C) “I don’t want to spend money on having someone take photos for my real estate listing when it’s already been on the market forever, and I’ve already spent too much money on this process.”
So instead of saying “I’m a great photographer and can give you great photos!”You might address their burning building first, instead.
If your ideal client has problem A), you can start your conversation by describing that problem: “You love the photos that you see here. But you’re worried that I couldn’t possibly get photographs like this of you. Because you’re not “photogenic enough” or feel like you need to make some drastic change in yourself first. Not necessary! Here’s how I make sure your photos will look just like these…”
And now that you’ve described their burning building, you can describe your Solution X.
Here is one reason why describing the burning building works so well at converting fans into clients:
It’s something called the Ambiguity Effect.
People will pick the thing where they know the probability of a decent outcome. They rarely invest in something when the probability of a decent outcome is unknown.
For example, more people will choose a teacher who fellow students say is “okay” over a teacher who is brand new to the university.
Even though the new teacher might be better – people would prefer to go with the one where they know what the outcome is likely to be. Where their chances aren’t ambiguous. They’d rather not take the risk that the new person would be awful, because that risk looms larger than the chance they’d miss out on someone good.
(This is also true in deciding what stocks to invest in, which business to hire, which gamble to take, etc.)
People particularly hate situations where the chances of their problems being solved feel ambiguous.
The more accurately you can describe the exact problem they face, and tell them how you’re going to solve it, the more confident they are in their chances of a good outcome.
Hiring you feels like less of an ambiguous risk, and more of a certain success. “This person gets exactly what I’m going for. They aren’t going to just deliver photos, they’re going to do it in a way that addresses the exact things I’m concerned about. They get me.”
In other words, if someone is worried about how they’ll look in images, choosing a photographer can feel like a total toss-up – maybe this person will make me look like the people in their portfolio, but maybe not. But if you speak to their concern – I know you’re worried about the way you’ll look. Lots of people have this worry, including the people you see in my portfolio here – suddenly the chances of their exact desired outcome coming true feels a lot more certain.
If you want to turn a fan into a client, find exactly the problem they’re worried about. Describe it to them in the very words they’re using in their mind to describe it to themselves.
This shows that yes, you’re the right superhero to put out this specific fire.
And hiring you brings actual relief because you’ve rigged the odds in their (and your) favor.
Try that on your next marketing piece and let me know how it goes!
***
Need some help finding out what your target client’s burning buildings, er, problems are?
And want some assistance translating that knowledge into actual words for your website, without feeling
like you swallowed a sales manual?
We cover how to do exactly that in Week 3 of Irresistible Words (but don’t worry, you get the whole thing in a single download, so you can read it right away). You’ll also master three sequences that will help you sell anything, and learn how a single essay about chickens landed me an 8 – week, all-expenses-paid trip to Tunisia – and how to steal that technique to sell your most important work. I wrote Irresistible Words to answer the question “But how do I SAY that?” and to help frustrated people spend less time writing. Because just as too many people struggle up the proverbial ladder only to find it leaning against the wrong wall, too many people spend hours writing only to find that the result doesn’t convert clients the way they want it to.
And there’s no need for that. Let me show you why.
Irresistible Words normally only sees a sale on Black Friday – but I’m making an exception for the next 48 hours.
Summertime is when you probably need to do a great deal of marketing and persuading, so you might as well save yourself some aggravation.
From June 3-4, you can get this powerhouse course for only $199.Want to learn more? Head over to the info page, and grab a free sample where it says “Peek Inside!” The free sample alone teaches my best trick for keeping people’s eyes glued to anything you write.
See you over there –>!
PS – Bob here – I bought Jenika’s Irresistible Words and learned a LOT!
by successfulbob | landscape photography, photography, photography education, photography gear
Up early as dawn was breaking I had my tripod set up in the bed of Oak Creek in Sedona, AZ. In the distance was water’s opposite – the stoic red rock formation of Cathedral Rock. I wanted to have the water slow flowing and that required a longer shutter speed than I was able to obtain with just the camera settings… Neutral density filters to the rescue.
Cathedral Rock on Oak Creek in Sedona, AZ. One of the top ten most photographed places in the country.
In the image above I used a 4 stop ND filter in the holder and added a 2 stop graduated ND filter at an angle across the top right hand corner where the sun was streaking across the trees.
Chris Kalmbach, one of the members in my Cohort in the new educational platform called the Arcanum, has been creating beautiful imagery using some long exposures using neutral density filters. Seeing and critiquing his images made me want to play with ND filters again.
Long exposure with ND filter notice water smoothed out by exposure. © Chris Kalmbach All Rights Reserved
I personally didn’t want to invest a boatload of money into filters I might only use a few times so I did some poking around and found these very inexpensive plastic filters with a full range of step rings, holders, lens shades and more from Neewer. See the ND Filter kit Here.
Yours in Creative Photography, Bob
PS – Enjoyed this water quote… “My fake plants died because I did not pretend to water them.” Mitch Hedberg
by successfulbob | Lumix GH4, Lumix Lounge, macro, photography education, photography gear
“When you take a flower in your hand and really look at it, it’s your world for the moment. I want to give that world to someone else. Most people in the city rush around so, they have no time to look at a flower. I want them to see it whether they want to or not.” Georgia O’Keeffe
In the desert southwest the smallest of flowers dot the landscape at certain times of year. I agree with Georgia that sharing the world that many pass by is a cool thing… These particular flowers can easily go by unnoticed because of tiny size. These flowers are about the size of my thumbnail.
Tiny desert flower bloom
To capture a flower this size takes a little thought and manipulation. This was captured with the Lumix GH4 and 35-100mm 2.8 Vario lens with 26 mm of extension tubes from Neewer Technologies (get two sets they are very inexpensive and you can magnify even more using the technique below). When you have that much extension Depth of Field is extremely shallow. In order to get the buds and the first flower in total focus to share the miniscule detail I added a tripod and the technique of focus stacking. I focused on the bud in the foreground and made an exposure, changed focus to the bud a little further into the image followed by multiple captures across the surface of the flower. These exposures were taken into Adobe Photoshop and blended together using Photo Merge. When this process is used Photoshop will stack the images and blend together the sharpest parts of the image giving an increased DOF.
Yours in Creative Photography, Bob