Please listen to this and don't ruin aerial photography by making it a race to the bottom. Set your rates so that it makes fiscal sense for your situation. The upper limit should be as high as you can get. If someone wants you do do an aerial shoot for $200, let them spend the $1200-$2000 instead on one of these platforms, learn to pilot and maintain it; and plan and execute an aerial shoot. You are not doing yourself or anyone a favor by selling your services short. The video game space is impossible to get into because we've trained the population that mobile games should be free. And free is not even the bottom. In the acting world desperate aspiring actors actually PAY to audition.lutece7 said:Dont sell your self short. Too many people who are new to commercial photography and video production underestimate how much commercial clients are used to paying, and willing to pay. Someone quoted $350-500 for day with a drone. That is way too cheap. I have been a commercial photographer for over 30 years and have a degree from a university where i majored in film and video production.
When you set your rates, keep in mind, for every hour you can bill for, it takes another 4 hours running a business, testing, repairing, accounting, marketing, and so on and so on. You have to charge atleast $120 an hour if you want to clear, before taxes, $30 an hour after considering all the time you put into your business. Plus, you have expenses. Count on having to replace your drone atleast every 50 flights. Its not going to last as long as my nikon bodies and lenses. Factor in businness insurance. Higher self employment taxes, which means you have to put in twice as much into social security as salaried people. I charge $150/hr for conventional photography. I used to charge $180, but too many newbies getting into the business giving away their services for a pittance. My 3rd job with my Phantom, i was charging a golf course $250 per shot, times 6,shots. They were happy. I never shoot video with my vision+, i only shoot stills. I think it does a great if you shoot in raw and remove some noise.
I believe we should keep in mind, when setting prices that we are HELPING our clients make money. What he pays you, he will make back several times over, if you deliver good work. So be professional, and dont be so eager and willing to undercharge.
12 years ago, i wad charging $5000 for a 10 position vr tour, now so many people are practically giving it away. The corporations have gotten a huge price break, because some people hastily created a price war that doesnt make enough money to keep their VR business viable in the long run. The same thing will probably happen in aerial photography.
Ive gone on long enough.
aljames said:Lutece, I hope my drone lasts more than 50 flights. Where can we see your work? Website?
Musicman said:Personally, just me, i think you can only charge for commercial flights when you are a pro at flying AND filming/photography.
I mean, you can buy the most expensive DJI out there, put the most expensive camera under it... but that doesn't make it worth the shots.
I love the movies in the video section, but most of them are crap if you look at it professionally.
People that are not in the business shouldn't even be doing this for "some extra cash".
I read prices here of $350 and all, with those prices you blow away the people that actually know what they are doing AND deliver much better quality.
I am not a film/photographer at all, i love just flying my DJI, love making little clips, doing pretty on the editting part, but would never ever do this for money.
Simply because there are professionals out there.
I am in kind of the same situation with my own company, work fulltime in the music industry and there are tons of people out there that offer my service for cheap. TOO cheap.
We have a saying: If you pay peanuts, you'll get monkeys......
lutece7 said:aljames said:Lutece, I hope my drone lasts more than 50 flights. Where can we see your work? Website?
I dont want to put my portfolio up on this site, because i am afraid of FAA trolling this site. If you suspect that i am not all that i say i am, so be it. I have been doing good work. My only source of income has been commercial photography for 30+ years. Ad agencies, magazines, design studios, web developers, corporations, commercial real estate brokers, architects, construction companies, aviation, and industrial clients. UAV photography will be a small percentage of my income. But i love it. And it keeps others from sniping my clients.
That could be getting into a grey area if the purpose of shooting the video is to bring traffic to your free site if it has ads on it.noiseboy72 said:Good Question...
Are you profiting from your web page as a result of the video? I think, as you shot the footage for your own web page, that would be fine. You have not made money from the video as such???
Keeper of Maps said:That could be getting into a grey area if the purpose of shooting the video is to bring traffic to your free site if it has ads on it.noiseboy72 said:Good Question...
Are you profiting from your web page as a result of the video? I think, as you shot the footage for your own web page, that would be fine. You have not made money from the video as such???
well saidlutece7 said:Dont sell your self short. Too many people who are new to commercial photography and video production underestimate how much commercial clients are used to paying, and willing to pay. Someone quoted $350-500 for day with a drone. That is way too cheap. I have been a commercial photographer for over 30 years and have a degree from a university where i majored in film and video production.
When you set your rates, keep in mind, for every hour you can bill for, it takes another 4 hours running a business, testing, repairing, accounting, marketing, and so on and so on. You have to charge atleast $120 an hour if you want to clear, before taxes, $30 an hour after considering all the time you put into your business. Plus, you have expenses. Count on having to replace your drone atleast every 50 flights. Its not going to last as long as my nikon bodies and lenses. Factor in businness insurance. Higher self employment taxes, which means you have to put in twice as much into social security as salaried people. I charge $150/hr for conventional photography. I used to charge $180, but too many newbies getting into the business giving away their services for a pittance. My 3rd job with my Phantom, i was charging a golf course $250 per shot, times 6,shots. They were happy. I never shoot video with my vision+, i only shoot stills. I think it does a great if you shoot in raw and remove some noise.
I believe we should keep in mind, when setting prices that we are HELPING our clients make money. What he pays you, he will make back several times over, if you deliver good work. So be professional, and dont be so eager and willing to undercharge.
12 years ago, i wad charging $5000 for a 10 position vr tour, now so many people are practically giving it away. The corporations have gotten a huge price break, because some people hastily created a price war that doesnt make enough money to keep their VR business viable in the long run. The same thing will probably happen in aerial photography.
Ive gone on long enough.
lutece7 said:Dont sell your self short. Too many people who are new to commercial photography and video production underestimate how much commercial clients are used to paying, and willing to pay. Someone quoted $350-500 for day with a drone. That is way too cheap. I have been a commercial photographer for over 30 years and have a degree from a university where i majored in film and video production.
When you set your rates, keep in mind, for every hour you can bill for, it takes another 4 hours running a business, testing, repairing, accounting, marketing, and so on and so on. You have to charge atleast $120 an hour if you want to clear, before taxes, $30 an hour after considering all the time you put into your business. Plus, you have expenses. Count on having to replace your drone atleast every 50 flights. Its not going to last as long as my nikon bodies and lenses. Factor in businness insurance. Higher self employment taxes, which means you have to put in twice as much into social security as salaried people. I charge $150/hr for conventional photography. I used to charge $180, but too many newbies getting into the business giving away their services for a pittance. My 3rd job with my Phantom, i was charging a golf course $250 per shot, times 6,shots. They were happy. I never shoot video with my vision+, i only shoot stills. I think it does a great if you shoot in raw and remove some noise.
I believe we should keep in mind, when setting prices that we are HELPING our clients make money. What he pays you, he will make back several times over, if you deliver good work. So be professional, and dont be so eager and willing to undercharge.
12 years ago, i wad charging $5000 for a 10 position vr tour, now so many people are practically giving it away. The corporations have gotten a huge price break, because some people hastily created a price war that doesnt make enough money to keep their VR business viable in the long run. The same thing will probably happen in aerial photography.
Ive gone on long enough.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.