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Websites

Advice on Marketing Strategies

Q:

Can you give us some advice about what we should be doing with our social media, website and marketing strategy in general?

A:

Guest Post, Art Producer: Social Media is very important these days, especially in the way clients are trying to reach their audiences. Hash-tagging can help to expand your discoverability, but of course it’s not the end all be all to becoming noticed. 

Your website should be clean and easy to navigate, while also showcasing recent work to show you are still actively working/generating personal projects. I enjoy physical promos as well, but find they are most valuable when they come from the artist themselves (i.e. From a meet and greet).

Website Design Elements

Q:

What are the 3 most important design elements to keep in mind when creating an impactful photography website?

A:

Rob Haggart, PhotoFolio: Your typeface, your logo, and your images are all that matter. The typeface should be modern, the logo should be minimal but professionally done, and the images should be the focus of the website. Art Directors love type and bad fonts can ruin great photography.

Designing a Website

Q:

What are some things to keep in mind when designing a website, as a photographer?

A:

Your website should look professionally designed and be easy to navigate. The site should immediately entice your visitor. This of who your audience is and use a web template like https://www.photofolio.com/ to speak their language.

Portfolios + Reps

Q:

What is considered a standard “book” for somebody seeking representation… is it a website? A physical book? Something else?

A:

The standard book question does not have one absolute answer but it is good to have a website, an active Instagram presence, and a printed book. An iPad can be your portfolio although right now printed books are the hot item.