News Analysis

Will iPads Become A Standard Fixture In The Classroom?

By Jim Pickerell | 414 Words | Posted 3/21/2012 | Comments
Recently, the results of a year long study of Algebra 1 students at the Amelia Earhart Middle School in Riverside, California were announced. The math scores of the students who were taught using Houghton Mifflin Harcourt’s HMH Fuse: Algebra 1 curriculum on the iPad were 20% higher in the Spring 2011 California Standards Test than other students who were taught using traditional paper textbooks.

New Recommendations For Dealing With Educational Use Requests

By Jim Pickerell | 807 Words | Posted 2/17/2012 | Comments
The Editorial Relations Committee of PACA (Picture Archive Council of America) has released updated suggestions for dealing with educational publishers. Digital technology is rapidly changing the way educational materials are being developed and used. During this transition period image licensors need to be particularly vigilant if they hope to receive reasonable compensation for the long range use of their imagery.

Is Reality In Photojournalism Extinct?

By Jim Pickerell | 292 Words | Posted 12/27/2011 | Comments
The concept of a realistic still photograph that provides an accurate representation of a news event may be an impossible dream. Many people blame Photoshop for making it so easy to “clean up” and “adjust” photographs. Photographers lose their jobs if they “overuse” Photoshop. But that is only a small part of the problem.

Image Search At picturemaxx

By Jim Pickerell | 1662 Words | Posted 8/12/2011 | Comments
The picturemaxx image search engine is unique in its approach to providing an image search experience that benefits customers – particularly editorial - as well as agencies trying to license images. The company is headquartered in Munich with offices in New York, London, Berlin and Vienna. Virtually all German speaking media customers (97%) use picturemaxx as their primary source for finding content. This story explores the advantages and disadvantages of this system for both the customer and the image creator.

What Buyers Want From Photographers

By Jim Pickerell | 494 Words | Posted 4/20/2011 | Comments
PhotoShelter and Agency Access have just released a free ebook entitled “What Buyers Want From Photographers.” The information resulted from a 35 question survey sent to Agency Access’ global database of 55,000 photography buyers. 500 responded to the survey.

Printing And Photography Revenue Compared

By Jim Pickerell | 180 Words | Posted 3/10/2011 | Comments
WhatTheyThink?, a leading research organization serving the printing and publishing industry, has just estimated that the value of printed materials shipped in the U.S. in 2010 was $86.7 billion. Based on my analysis I estimate that the worldwide sale of still stock imagery in 2010, most of which is used in some type of printed publication, was about $1.45 billion. Previously, we have estimated that in the range of 43% of the total worldwide sales of stock photography are licensed for use in the U.S. market. Thus, the comparison would be something in the range of $625 million for photography compared with $86.7 billion for printing.

Ad Spending for 2011 and Beyond

By Jim Pickerell | 475 Words | Posted 12/8/2010 | Comments
Global ad spending in 2011 is expected to be up 5.4% to $411.7 billion according to MagnaGlobal, but the trend for the print segment of the business in the Western world is not so rosy. Most growth will be in Asian markets and media that does not have a big overlap with stock photography.

Costco Markets Corbis Imagery as Prints, Posters

By Jim Pickerell | 814 Words | Posted 12/1/2010 | Comments
With the introduction of The Costco Art & Image Gallery, Corbis and Costco will sell individual prints and posters as retail products. The images offered are a select group of some 20,000 professional pieces of fine art, photography and illustration from the Corbis collection of more than 6 million images.

Search Trend Analysis

By Jim Pickerell | 329 Words | Posted 11/22/2010 | Comments
Grover Sanschagrin of PhotoShelter has published a very interesting analysis entitled “What Google Trends Says About Wedding & Stock Photography, and Photo Websites,” complete with charts that illustrate the trends.

iStock Revolution

By Jim Pickerell | 1706 Words | Posted 9/10/2010 | Comments
Beginning in 2011, iStockphoto will implement major changes to how it calculates photographer royalties. In addition, the company will soon launch a small higher-priced Agency Collection containing images from some of the major traditional royalty-free brands and invited iStock contributors. Contributor reactions are predictably negative, but how will it shake out form a macro perspective?

Going Pro: Image Oversupply

By Jim Pickerell | 1430 Words | Posted 8/2/2010 | Comments
Photographers should be aware of the number of images already in online databases and recognize that any images they produce will be competing against those that already exist.

comScore Launches Video Metrix 2.0, Predicts Continued Ascent of U.S. Online Video Market

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 360 Words | Posted 7/30/2010 | Comments
While proliferation of digital stills has not led to growth of still-licensing revenue as a whole, continued and explosive growth of online video most certainly will. Video, particularly advertising and corporate projects, continues to command higher budgets than print. Online video advertising is also more affordable than spot television, which has led to growth on both ends of the spectrum: larger companies are adding it to their mix; smaller businesses that never produced video before are adopting it.

Veer Redesigns Web Site, Completes Move from Elite to Middle Market

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 328 Words | Posted 7/14/2010 | Comments
Veer has relaunched its Web site, billing the new treatment as uncomplicated. While Veer still carries traditionally priced stills, it is certainly catering to the no-hassle customer segment with simplified licensing and prices that span the gamut—starting at $1.

Trends of the Moment

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 979 Words | Posted 7/8/2010 | Comments
The stock-licensing industry remains in the midst of a profound change affecting image production, quality, pricing, distribution and use. Some trends, such as the downward slide of average image prices, have held for years, but there are also newer, paradigm-shifting developments. These include a middle market finally taking shape, the long-predicted microstock shakeout, the fascination with touch computing and all things Apple, a change in the overall content mix and, perhaps most importantly, an evolution of the traditional stock business model from client service-driven boutique to online content-delivery platform.

Microstock Plateau: iStockphoto July 2010

By Jim Pickerell | 1545 Words | Posted 7/6/2010 | Comments
A 14-month review of data from the leading microstock supports the theory of the fastest-growing industry segment having reached a plateau, with flat unit sales and revenue growth resulting from price increases.

CEPIC 2010: State of the Industry

By Jim Pickerell | 1512 Words | Posted 6/14/2010 | Comments
If you are in the stock imagery business and want to stay current with worldwide industry trends, the annual CEPIC congress is a must-attend event. Held every year in early June—this year in Dublin, Ireland, at the brand new Aviva Stadium—the congress provides an opportunity to meet industry leaders and exchange ideas.

Image Demand – Images Licensed Annually

By Jim Pickerell | 1016 Words | Posted 6/4/2010 | Comments
How does demand for images compare to what many agree is an oversupply?

Image Oversupply: The Real Number

By Jim Pickerell | 593 Words | Posted 6/2/2010 | Comments
What does the competition look like in terms of the number of images available online? Everyone knows there are billions of amateur images floating around the Internet, but what is the quantity of unique images currently available in professional collections?

NGOs Fund Photojournalism: Slippery Slope?

By Jim Pickerell | 456 Words | Posted 4/22/2010 | Comments
Can the reader trust the reporting not to be biased when photojournalism projects are funded by non-profit and non-governmental organizations?

Promotional Dollars Continue Shift to Digital

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 316 Words | Posted 4/1/2010 | Comments
As the photo industry struggles with pricing and licensing structures to accommodate digital uses, such uses keep growing. Every month brings new evidence of advertising, marketing and communications budgets steadily moving in the direction of the Internet, with predictions that 2010 will see digital spending surpassing print.

Direct-to-Buyer Sales on Rise

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 431 Words | Posted 3/24/2010 | Comments
As buyer budgetary pressures and competition continue to drive prices downward, production companies and solo practitioners are increasingly looking to maximize their earnings by cutting out the middleman.

Has Microstock Reached Plateau?

By Jim Pickerell | 721 Words | Posted 1/7/2010 | Comments
For most of iStockphoto's best-selling photographers, the number of images downloaded per month declined in 2009.

Social Media Use and Ad Budgets on Rise

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 347 Words | Posted 12/29/2009 | Comments
Despite the general state of the economy, falling advertising budgets and continued debate over the marketing usefulness of social media, budgets allocated to social media in 2010 are bucking the downward trend. For the stock industry, the channel holds dual interest: it is becoming an important collective user of imagery and video, and an equally important marketing resource.

Archipelago Learning Uses ITN Source Footage for Online Learning Platform

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 238 Words | Posted 12/2/2009 | Comments
Those that have traditionally made their living licensing stills to print educational and textbook publishers should take heed: there is ample evidence that predictions of such uses giving way to digital, often video-based options are true. ITN Source and its Education Clip Library just announced a deal with Archipelago Learning to provide video content for Archipelago's Study Island-an online standards-based assessment, instruction, practice, and test preparation program for the U.S. K-12 educational market.

CEPIC Sheds Light on Double Counting

By Jim Pickerell | 647 Words | Posted 11/30/2009 | Comments
The figures gathered by CEPIC last year suggest that the stock industry's gross revenue estimates could be inflated by as much as a third as a result of double counting sales.