Business Trends
Marketing Portraits With Personal Style
All Photos © 2004, Marilyn Sholin, All Rights Reserved
I first met portrait photographer Marilyn Sholin when both of us were teaching classes at the Golden Gate School. Impressed by her wonderful images, we talked about business every chance we could that week. I was quite surprised to learn that Sholin was working with a rep, usually a business relationship reserved for the commercial photographer. Her style is so distinctive that it was easy to see how attractive her work would be for the right type of rep (more on that later).
Sholin (www.marilynsholin.com)
is truly an artist, combining photography of children and family portraits with
Corel's Painter software to create a mixture of vivid color and textures
that are bold and soft at the same time. Her work is by private commission and
she teaches classes at professional photography schools worldwide and is the
author of two books published by Amherst Media. Sholin's accolades include
award-winning photographs published in the PPA magazine, National Association
of Women Business Owners (NAWBO) awards, and she is the only artist approved
by the Miami Children's Museum to link to their website. Contributions
from her photography brought in over $100,000 last year to the museum.
In this piece, Sholin will do more than just show her work, she will talk to
us about her business and marketing success.
Shutterbug:
How important is your style to giving you a marketing "edge"
in such a competitive market as children's portraits?
Marilyn Sholin: I have always sought to be on the cutting edge
of whatever market I entered. When I began professional children's portraits,
I researched the market and saw that around the country high-key white backgrounds
with props was very hot. In my market area, no one was doing that style. So
I went after learning that style and made my "name" doing high-key
children's portraits. I was the only game in town at that time. So for
25 years I have always worked the same way, incorporating my personal style
of portraiture into what is missing in my targeted markets. That is what has
always given me the edge on the competition. Being not only the most original
and innovative, but being first with a style and creating styles of my own.
If they can't get it anywhere else but from me, then the clients must
book me for their portraits.
SB: How did this style combining your portraits and the Painter
software evolve and do you still market "traditional" portraits?
MS: The evolution of my paintings is a great journey. I went
from admiring the "look" and having someone else do the painting
in the beginning to realizing that my vision wasn't theirs and I had to
learn how to do it myself. I took classes, private classes, got up two hours
early every day so I could practice tutorials and study and paint.
One
day I was trying out new ways of doing things and still searching for something
that said "Marilyn" when I came upon what made me feel good, happy,
and expressed my own artwork in the strong colors and details of a painting.
It took me a short time to learn ways to replicate it over and over and still
have every painting be an original. I studied the art world and learned that,
like great photographers, being able to create a look that says my name and
can be duplicated is the way to success.
My main sales target has always been traditional photographic portraits. It
still is, but after five years my clients know about my artwork, however they
can't visualize their own portraits in that style. So I am usually booked
to create photographs and when I sit with them and do the sales presentation,
I show them my ideas for a painting. They usually buy at least one of the paintings.
After they see themselves in my vision they are very excited. But they always
think of photographs as their first purchasing objective. I extend and expand
the sale from there.
SB: What has been your best marketing strategy?
MS: The best marketing strategy is one I would never have believed
years ago: give it away for free. Again I studied successful local and international
artists and actually even viewed their careers online to study them. I found
that artists are failures when they keep their work to themselves. The only
way to get artwork sold is for the public to see it. The best way to get to
the market that can afford the prices is to get it seen by them. The fastest
way to get the right client is to donate to a charity event where they must
bid on the artwork (not a free door prize giveaway). This guarantees that the
person bidding and paying already likes the style and wants to buy something.
It immediately qualifies them not only as a buyer, but as someone who can afford
my artwork.
Giving away to charities is the artist's best way to get their product
seen by the right client and to meet and rub elbows and socialize with the target
market. There is an art to this process and I have spent the last few years
getting the details down right for this market and how I actually enact all
the events. My best clients who now pay full price for my work are from previous
charity events and they also are ones who always purchase at least one painting
from every portrait session.
SB: It is unusual for a consumer portrait photographer to work
with a rep but a trend we hope to see more of in portrait photography. How did
you decide to work with a photo rep and--most of all--how did you
find the right one?
MS: Looking at artists again, I found that they all have staff
who do their groundwork and connect with the events, galleries, and businesses
that they could possibly work with. I started to think that this would be a
great help to me in that I am only one person and limited in time to be a photographer,
do my own sales presentations, produce the orders, find new markets, travel
and teach, and create art, all with just one full-time employee. I did not want
another full-time employee, but instead someone to work on projects and also
to find projects for me. I realized that I needed what amounted to a "rep."
Then I looked at my personal client base to see if there was anyone I already
did business with who was knowledgeable and might want to do a "trade
out" to test out a relationship. It turns out that I found one person
who had not only managed an art gallery for many years, but was a client I trusted,
enjoyed, and still had two young children who she had me photograph every year.
I invited her to lunch one day and presented the idea and showed her my portfolio
and asked her advice. She immediately knew what actions to take, how to do it,
and presented me a few days later with her thoughts and a contract for her services
for a year with renewal options. We brainstormed and she brought me in more
business than I ever thought possible from the right clients in the first two
years of our working together.
My rep is invaluable. She opened doors for me that I couldn't get in.
When someone else is representing an artist, it's not the "poor
little artist knocking on the door" but instead a prestigious and knowledgeable
representative who knows the artist's work, knows not only how to talk
about the benefits of the artist's work, but, knows how to create a beneficial
environment for the purchasers.
It's a win-win situation where my rep tries to make the clients happy
while making money for me. She takes the stress out of my days by contacting
new markets and doing the groundwork to find the right events and charities
for us to work with and be sure we are not wasting our time. She also constantly
sends my work out to larger companies and gets the feedback I need for national
sales and licensing of images so I keep myself on the right track with my art.
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