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The idea of “Quality Over Quantity” is gaining steam in today’s culture of Aspiring Minimalists.
Think Capsule Wardrobe: less pieces of clothing that are higher quality (and more expensive). Every piece fits you perfectly and works together with all the others to make multiple great outfits (a system) vs. a closet full of TJ Maxx pieces purchased because they were “on sale.” You end up with “a lot” of clothes that kind of fit, don’t necessarily go together and, let’s be honest, some of them still have the tags on them.
Which shopper are you? I’ve been both.
Who I want to attract to my portrait business is clients who are looking for, as Gregg McKeown puts it in his book, Essentialism, “less but better.”
But do clients really KNOW that’s what they want? Most often they don’t.
Most clients THINK they want A LOT of pictures. They want us to shoot everything that comes into our minds (or theirs); show them everything, and then give them everything at the lowest possible price in the form of a lot of little prints or a collection of digital files.
THE RESULT?
For the Portrait Photographer: Their nights and weekends are spent with their face in a computer screen, editing their brains out for pennies while life goes on without them.
For the Client: They end up with a lot of little prints and digital files. None of which make it to the wall or an album to be enjoyed every day. Also, insert client guilt here, over never doing anything with the images. How many times have you heard, “I need to do something with those.” or “I’ve got to get those on the wall?”
But it doesn’t have to be like that. There is another way.
You can, instead, give clients what they didn’t know they wanted, while maintaining a sustainable work-life balance. It’s stepping forward as the Trusted Advisor and helping our clients create their “capsule wardrobe” of portraits of their family year after year.
But how?
On today’s episode I am joined by Allison Tyler Jones Photography’s very own Stacey Hemeyer, associate photographer and retoucher extraordinaire.
Stacey had her own successful wedding and portrait business for almost 16 years before joining the ATJ team in 2016. Her business model was built largely on the premise that “More is More” and that “Busy is Best”.
But that business model came at a steep cost.
Not only did she miss out on key moments with her young family, she found herself run ragged by clients who thought they wanted more, more, more AND wanted to pay less, less, less.
It wasn’t until she came to work at Allison Tyler Jones Photography that she understood that spending more time with less clients can be a calmer, more soul-satisfying way of doing business, for everyone involved.
Join us for an enlightening conversation with this kind, talented, former shoot and burn photographer and the lessons she has learned by doing business a different way.
In this episode, you’ll learn how to:
Here’s a glance at this episode:
Links and Resources:
Do The ReWork
Website | Instagram
Allison Tyler Jones
Website | Instagram | LinkedIn
5
5757 ratings
The idea of “Quality Over Quantity” is gaining steam in today’s culture of Aspiring Minimalists.
Think Capsule Wardrobe: less pieces of clothing that are higher quality (and more expensive). Every piece fits you perfectly and works together with all the others to make multiple great outfits (a system) vs. a closet full of TJ Maxx pieces purchased because they were “on sale.” You end up with “a lot” of clothes that kind of fit, don’t necessarily go together and, let’s be honest, some of them still have the tags on them.
Which shopper are you? I’ve been both.
Who I want to attract to my portrait business is clients who are looking for, as Gregg McKeown puts it in his book, Essentialism, “less but better.”
But do clients really KNOW that’s what they want? Most often they don’t.
Most clients THINK they want A LOT of pictures. They want us to shoot everything that comes into our minds (or theirs); show them everything, and then give them everything at the lowest possible price in the form of a lot of little prints or a collection of digital files.
THE RESULT?
For the Portrait Photographer: Their nights and weekends are spent with their face in a computer screen, editing their brains out for pennies while life goes on without them.
For the Client: They end up with a lot of little prints and digital files. None of which make it to the wall or an album to be enjoyed every day. Also, insert client guilt here, over never doing anything with the images. How many times have you heard, “I need to do something with those.” or “I’ve got to get those on the wall?”
But it doesn’t have to be like that. There is another way.
You can, instead, give clients what they didn’t know they wanted, while maintaining a sustainable work-life balance. It’s stepping forward as the Trusted Advisor and helping our clients create their “capsule wardrobe” of portraits of their family year after year.
But how?
On today’s episode I am joined by Allison Tyler Jones Photography’s very own Stacey Hemeyer, associate photographer and retoucher extraordinaire.
Stacey had her own successful wedding and portrait business for almost 16 years before joining the ATJ team in 2016. Her business model was built largely on the premise that “More is More” and that “Busy is Best”.
But that business model came at a steep cost.
Not only did she miss out on key moments with her young family, she found herself run ragged by clients who thought they wanted more, more, more AND wanted to pay less, less, less.
It wasn’t until she came to work at Allison Tyler Jones Photography that she understood that spending more time with less clients can be a calmer, more soul-satisfying way of doing business, for everyone involved.
Join us for an enlightening conversation with this kind, talented, former shoot and burn photographer and the lessons she has learned by doing business a different way.
In this episode, you’ll learn how to:
Here’s a glance at this episode:
Links and Resources:
Do The ReWork
Website | Instagram
Allison Tyler Jones
Website | Instagram | LinkedIn
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