Monetize Your Digital Camera With Microstocks

Monetize Your Digital Camera With Microstocks

Let me tell you the story of how a "mature" woman with no photography background makes money taking pictures…

So, I have found making a living, hmmm, shall we say, challenging, since my divorce. I have been doing all my normal stuff, and getting all my normal results, which isn’t exactly going to cut it. I also lost my little side hustle teaching English online to children in China when the Chinese government decided that I and about 40,000 other online teachers from the US and Canada were too subversive to teach their kids.

OK. I’ve been called worse.

I had been rolling around in my mind for a few years the idea that writing an ebook or two, or maybe even writing a course, might help my bottom line, and so finally I got over whatever it was that was holding me back and I got something written.

It’s kind of awkward, really. I think that sometimes it’s hard for women, especially older women, to feel like they have anything to say, not to mention the fact that putting oneself out there is nothing short of terrifying, but carrying a negative income month after month is kind of terrifying too, so I need to shake things up a bit, and my art isn’t selling so I need to come up with something.

I started writing a course, but it was getting kind of drawn out with developing all the screen shots and PowerPoints and voiceovers, etc., so I pivoted and took only the first, most important part, and turned it into an ebook which was much easier to accomplish and get out into the world. Today, I published it and it’s ready to go.

There is so much to do to get something launched. Stories and landing pages and Facebook pages and Instagram posts and blah, blah, blah… it’s endless. Writing a blog post is only one part of it all. I hope you will follow the link on the top of the page and let me know what you think.

Of course, you can also help a starving artist by buying the book. Or some art. I’d really appreciate it.

Help a Stock Photographer or Illustrator for Free

You can help a photographer or illustrator with no actual cost to you, support the arts, and really make someone grateful.

Wood fired kiln with brick filling a vent hole, soot marks

Wood fired kiln with brick filling a vent hole, soot marks

Like most artists, I have to really diversify my work sometimes just to get by. A global pandemic isn’t helping, either. One of the ways I make a little extra money is by selling stock photography and illustrations.

When it comes to stock photography, I am Master of the Mundane, because, well, a lot of stock photography is not about that perfect sunset. It’s about drainage pipes and road construction and medical stuff and food. So, if you need that perfect picture of an amputee for your ambulance chasing / accidental death and dismemberment website, I’ve got you covered.

A lot of companies buy stock photography and illustration plans for their business websites, brochures, and blogs. A plan gives you a certain number of downloads per month, and it’s likely you won’t use all your downloads.

Now, for photographers and illustrators, they get paid by the download, which is an embarrassingly small amount I would add. At the end of the month, any money you paid for your stock plan that was not taken up by the licenses you purchase, the company keeps. Is any of that revenue shared with their photographers and illustrators? Be serious; of course not.

Since you’ve already paid for those pictures, why not get some extra pictures and fill out your monthly stock plan, even if you know you’ll never use them? That insures a little more income for a starving photographer or illustrator, and you get the satisfaction of knowing you helped support an artist in need.

My stock photography and illustration portfolios

Shutterstock
IStock
BigStock
Dreamstime
123RF
Adobe Stock
Depositphotos
Alamy