< < Back Print this page Commercial

Making & Selling Photographic Cards
Jeremy Webb

A few years ago I reached a point in my professional life when I felt a little unsettled, as if there was an itch somewhere that needed scratching. It was difficult to put a finger on it - work was coming in, commissions were steady and there were opportunities round every corner. The thing was, I'd spent so long producing work for other people that I'd forgotten how to please myself anymore, having left behind the joy and passion of photography in the servicing of other peoples needs. Inside every commercial photographer is a fine art photographer just bursting to get out.

Naturally, any photographer strives to be paid for his/her work but sometimes we can lose sight of the spark which ignites our passion for this wonderful medium because our creative freedom is compromised when our creative output is determined by our paymasters. I am honoured and grateful to be using my talents for people who re-affirm my own sense of self-worth by giving me money for what I choose to do, but sometimes we have to put our working lives under the microscope when life seems a little stale and work loses its gloss. Like many photographers who succumb to this jaded state I decided to head for the wilderness - primitive man returning to nature and all that. With black & white film loaded, I found myself taking pictures spontaneously, with a lightness and excitement which was surprising. Things were starting to happen. Back in the hustle and bustle of city life, I spent a weekend printing the results of my pilgrimage to the hills. Images started to pick themselves from the contact sheets and better still, the reaction they received from other people astounded me. My images were never intended to record ultra-fine detail renditions of the scenes I visited, but to reflect my own feelings and responses, to engage fully with the landscape and nature in all its forms.

Out of curiosity I decided to stick a few pictures onto card and responses from the recipients surprised me even more. It wasn't long before the business plan started to write itself. Hand-printed, fine art, natural world cards for any occasion. This was a real tonic - a product which not only friends, family, and complete strangers wanted to buy, but an enterprise which also gave me so much enjoyment in their conception and production. After trying out a few more dummies I did some calculations based on how long it would take to produce 100 finished cards and what was the material cost per hundred cards and how much did think they would sell for. For the time being at least, my hand-made cards are made in much the same way as when I first started making them - images are hand-printed in batch-processed quantities of 20 or so at a size of 12cm x 8.5cm (this can vary according to the image used). They are then toned using a variety of cold, warm and selenium toners before being trimmed and individually mounted onto pre-cut and pre-folded recycled card mounts. Each card is signed with a stylishly discreet signature (I hope!) then my hand-made cards logo is stamped onto the reverse of each card before being packed with a fax back/order form/blurb insert and a brown envelope (in keeping with the earthy feel of the card) inside a clear cellophane packet. To my continuing delight and surprise these cards began to sell. First to nearest friends and family, then through craft fairs, and ultimately through gift shops, galleries and independent retailers who I approached. Better still, my vital extra ingredient - the fax back & order form, offered the purchaser the opportunity of ordering further copies, a gift set of 6 different designs, or a limited edition print. The cards became not only products in their own right, but promotional tools for further sales.

When launching into a venture such as this it pays to plan carefully and think strategically. Given below are some of the major considerations I had to face when deciding whether my own product was viable considering the limited amount of time I'd be able to give it. In business terms it helps to focus thinking by using what the marketing professionals call the Product Price Promotion Place People and since this is the commercial section of the Creative Lens site I'll make no apologies for providing you with a commercially-minded evaluation of some of the key issues and considerations which arise from this project. My system isn't perfect. I'm sure there are all manner of flaws and imperfections to my little venture, but it is still a very enjoyable labour of love which fits in well with my other activities.

Product
This has already been described above. Each component of my entire finished package is there for a reason. The whole package consists of: Hand-printed b&w image mounted on a pre-folded card, the signature is an essential part of the whole package, to emphasise the unique, individually-made, hand-crafted nature of the whole item. A Rubber stamped logo on reverse of card asserts my authorship as creator and provides simple information such as my contact details A recycled brown envelope which signals 'natural', 'environmentally-friendly' Fax back sheet/order form/blurb encourages customers to feel part of a 'club' and enables further, more profitable sales, and means I can communicate details of further designs or offers to my discerning customers.

Embossed 'seal' on envelope flap is a simple tag of quality. Clear cellophane packet for protection, presentation, touchability, and visibility. A small white name & address label to seal outer packet - why waste a further opportunity of reminding people of my name? There really is no such thing as being backward about coming forward when it comes to selling! As well as being a shop window to other work, I found that some people bought the cards not to send but to mount in frames for their bathrooms, and with the current high street shops bursting with cheap frames, this adds value to the cards in the eyes of some customers, as does the notion of Black & White as a 'higher' art form, and its perceived 'timeless' quality.

 

Price
After purchasing my materials in bulk, each packaged card could be made for less than 15p in raw materials (which not only included those items listed above but photographic paper, developer, stop bath, fixer, and spraymount) provided that my suppliers were chosen wisely and the cards were produced in volume, in batches of 100 - 200 at a time. How much should I sell them for? Initial market research was very encouraging. It was no good simply taking the well-meant comments and suggestions of Auntie Eileen or knowledgeable friends, I'd have to talk to the people who run the establishments which might be selling them. Advice from several galleries suggested that a price of between £2.50 and £4.95 was the market rate for hand-made cards within my area. People naturally expect to pay a higher price for hand-made cards because they are 'craft' items and as such can be sold at a higher premium.

Promotion
This is an area I've yet to tackle seriously since selling my cards has never been a full-time occupation - it's always had to fit-in around my freelance and teaching commitments. Gallery exhibitions would be ideal, with large, mounted and framed prints on sale. The bulk of my customers are affluent 40 - 55-yr olds who appreciate fine arts, good food and travel, and others were young (predominantly) females in their twenties who are less affluent but more concerned with environmental issues. Any promotional activity I undertake in the future will have to target these customers specifically and directly. When I first started selling my cards, the whole notion of the 'Natural World' was reaching a peak of interest (since passed) and consumer media which reach this particular stream of interest could prove very useful

Place
Namely, where your product is sold - be it mail order, door-to-door, website or retail outlet. Ideally, I'd try to sell direct to the public, but table rents at craft fairs and petrol costs and travelling time at weekends etc ruled this out. From the half dozen or so fairs I did participate in selling directly to the public, I made notes on which designs were most popular, and noticed also that there were quite distinguishable 'male' and 'female' cards, and a few no-hopers as well. Armed with this new information I started to sell my cards to carefully targeted galleries and gift shops along the Norfolk Coast for between £1.20 - £1.65 per card, sold in multiples of 25. The mark-up which was then applied to that price by each gallery or shop was almost always 100% in order for the outlet to make their money. I also managed to get some sale racks from a saleroom of second-hand shop equipment which I spruced-up and offered free to some of my outlets as an inducement to take on more stock.

 


People
Refers to all those individuals involved in the production and selling of the product which, in this case, amounts to just one - me. I am Market Researcher, Manufacturer, Production Manager, Distributor, Sales Manager AND Head of Research & Development all rolled into one. So there it is. This venture was never intended to make me rich, but to put something of my own interests back into my photography, to be artistic and commercially-minded without having to compromise too much, to create and manage my own project from beginning to end - only now, the end might be nearer than I'd imagined since I have a nasty feeling that I've just gone and given all my secrets away!

< < Back Print this page Commercial