Articles by Jim Pickerell

Distributors Fear Getty Consolidation After Jupiter Deal

By Jim Pickerell | 455 Words | Posted 11/24/2008 | Comments
With the Getty Images' acquisition of Jupiterimages on the horizon, many international distributors working with both companies are feeling very vulnerable. Some believe that after the deal goes through, Getty Images will consolidate sales of all its brands with a single company for a given territory and withdraw the images from other local distributors.

Image Producers Expand Beyond Traditional Royalty Free Model

By Jim Pickerell | 625 Words | Posted 11/24/2008 | Comments (1)
Several traditional royalty-free production companies--including Image Source, Moodboard, Blend and Cultura--have begun to explore microstock to determine if it offers a growth opportunity in a difficult market. Each has a slightly different strategy.

ReadyImages: Alamy Strives for Ethical Deal

By Jim Pickerell | 476 Words | Posted 11/14/2008 | Comments
Alamy has clarified a few aspects of its arrangement with the Copyright Clearance Center to create the new ReadyImages service that was announced yesterday. The company's Rachel Wakefield said the ReadyImages offering is quite different from CCC's past photo-industry activities, which concerned many photographers.

Photolibrary Seeks Help Locating Photographers

By Jim Pickerell | 430 Words | Posted 11/14/2008 | Comments (1)
Photolibrary has provided Selling Stock with a list of 49 Index Stock photographers for whom the company has no contact information. All of them are owed money from sales made by Index Stock prior to Photolibrary acquiring the company.

Jupitermedia Q3 Sales Decline, Secondary Distribution Down Sharply

By Jim Pickerell | 477 Words | Posted 11/13/2008 | Comments
Jupitermedia has adjusted previously reported third-quarter earnings by reporting a non-cash impairment charge to goodwill in the amount of $40 million, in connection with the recently announced agreement to sell the company's images business to Getty Images. Quarterly revenues are down compared to both the previous quarter and same period of last year. There is also a sharp decline in sales through distributors.

Arcurs Offers Microstock Distribution Services

By Jim Pickerell | 738 Words | Posted 11/12/2008 | Comments (1)
Traditional stock photographers are often stymied by microstock's acceptance and upload requirements, which are very different from those of traditional agencies. The Yuri Arcurs Distribution Network may offer some of the elite and very productive traditional people-and-lifestyle shooters a way of breaking into the microstock market.

Direct Mail, Catalogs To Decline

By Jim Pickerell | 269 Words | Posted 11/11/2008 | Comments
Traditionally, direct mail brochures and catalogs have been among the biggest users of stock and assignment photography. Look for that market to continue to decline due to postage costs and general ineffectiveness of this type of marketing.

Digital Photography to Grow 54% by 2013

By Jim Pickerell | 265 Words | Posted 11/10/2008 | Comments
Digital-photography revenue, including that of traditional and micro-payment stock, is expected to grow 54% by 2013. What share of this total will be coming from still stock?

PACA Plans Multi-Agency Search Engine

By Jim Pickerell | 515 Words | Posted 10/30/2008 | Comments (2)
The Picture Archive Council of America aims to become the Google of commercial stock imagery. PACA plans to launch a stock-image search engine with a simple interface that will enable customers to quickly identify collections with images that relate to any of more than 120,000 of the most used search terms.

Alamy Appoints New Board Member

By Jim Pickerell | 75 Words | Posted 10/29/2008 | Comments

About Jim Pickerell

Jim began his career in 1963 as a freelance photojournalist in the Far East. His first major sale, a Life Magazine cover, was a stock photo of the overthrow of the Ngo Dinh Diem government in Saigon, Vietnam.

He spent the next ten to fifteen years focusing on assignment work, first as an editorial photographer, and later in the corporate area. He regularly filed his outtakes with several stock agencies around the world.

As the stock side of his income grew, Jim studied the needs of the stock photo market, and began to devote more of his shooting time producing stock images. At about this time the 1976 change in the copyright law went into effect, and the industry began to see rapidly growing demand by commercial and advertising users for stock images.

In the early 80's he helped establish the Mid-Atlantic chapter of American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP) and served as Vice President, President and Program Chairman over a period of six years. He served on the national board of ASMP for two years, was on the committee that produced the ASMP Stock Handbook in 1983, and was active in the fight to reverse the IRS rules that required capitalization of all expenses of stock photo production.

In 1989 he published the first edition of Negotiating Stock Photo Prices, a guide to pricing hundreds of stock photo uses. The fifth edition was published in 2001. In 1990, he began publishing Selling-Stock, a bi-monthly newsletter dealing with issues of interest to stock photographers and stock photo sellers, with particular focus on issues related to marketing stock images. Selling-Stock is recognized worldwide as the leading source of in-depth analysis of the stock photo industry. As a result of his many years in the industry and his work with Selling-Stock, Jim has an expert understanding of the stock photo industry, its standard practices and developing trends. He frequently provides consulting services on stock industry issues to photographers, stock agents and individuals in the investment community.

In 1993, his daughter, Cheryl, joined him in the business. Together they established Stock Connection, an agency designed to provide photographers with greater control over the promotion and marketing of their work than most other stock agencies were offering. The company currently represents selected images from more than 400 photographers.

At age 76, Jim continues to follow stock photo industry developments on a day to day basis and expects to continue to do so far into the future.