Shoot to the Top

How Virtual Tours Can Be a Part of Your Photography Business with Andy Fletcher


Listen Later

Andy has worked with cameras for many years. Initially, he was in the CCTV industry. This role was about sales and account management. He worked long hours, and got well paid, but eventually got disillusioned with it and decided to be a commercial photography. He started out within a Google Maps niche. At the time google was recruiting photographers to do 360 virtual tours of the inside of businesses.

This was very popular for several years. He also sold standard images to businesses while doing the virtual tour. He also used to upload images to stock photography. He doesn’t do this much any more, but still makes money from the images he has on there. He says the most mundane images are the ones that sell the best. Marcus mentions that we were chatting to Pete Coco about Spotify and how it’s effected the music industry, and we thought it was similar to how stock providers have effectaffecteded the photography industry.

Andy now mainly does self-hosted virtual tours, so he hosts

them not Google. That means they can be much more sophisticated. Andy says this week is quite specialist and the shoot is quite rapid and quite technical. But then most of the work is done in editing. Andy has been doing this for ten years now. Long enough that he keeps being asked back to existing clients to re-shoot. He does a lot of work with independent and boarding schools.
Marcus asks how he markets himself. Before the pandemic, he did a lot of marketing, trade shows, emails, social etc. However, since then he has not needed to do much marketing. The amount of work he got shot up over the pandemic as schools needed to replace their school tours with something virtual. So during the pandemic, he had more work than he could manage. And due to that he has built up a relationship with many businesses that keep wanting him back. But he still does some marketing and outreach to ensure that he keeps getting some new business coming in.
Marcus asks how he stays creative. Andy says that doing the shoot for the virtual tour isn’t creative. But the creative work is in the post-production. He also says he prefers conventional stills photography as it is more creative.

Marcus asks Andy about AI and how he has been using it. Andy

says AI is here and we may as well embrace it, it’s here to stay. He has played with the image creation side of AI. He has also been using things in photoshop like the generative AI fill. As an example, he sometimes has to remove items from a room for the tour and 9/10 AI does this well. But at the moment he says he thinks that the AI generative images is not something he can bring into his business.
Sam asks if his corporate life helped him when he had to run his own business. He says it really helped with the sales and marketing side of things as he was doing this in his corporate role. He says many photographers find this hard so it has helped him. He says one approach is to show them what their competitors have and they do not have.
Andy plans to carry on with the virtual tours for schools. He would prefer to do more stills and drone photography. But even his current clients do not know he offers this.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Shoot to the TopBy Sam Hollis