For today it’s not lo-fi equipment I’ll be talking about.
Today I’m going to tell you about Lo-fi talent. And luck. And the masses. And cheap accessible technology.
Yesterday’s experiment was based on this lo-fi kick I’m on.
(Illustration of how I held my camera to shoot through my car window)
I asked myself what would happen if I stuck a 90mm lens on my 5D and shot randomly through my car window while driving to my girlfriend’s house in West Seattle.
It’s like that mental experiment: if an infinite number of monkeys with typewriters had infinite time to type, they would eventually produce Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
Today in photography we face exactly the same problem.
With millions of new photographers in the last several years publishing photos to sites such as Flickr, we are seeing the infinite monkey theorem at work in the photography space.
With a cheap digital camera, a few Photoshop actions, and the ability to publish quickly and cheaply to the web, we are seeing an over-saturation of the photography market with work that is ‘good enough for print’ along with occasional accidentally amazing images, that over time will create an infinite library of excellent imagery covering every imaginable topic.
We are only 5-7 years into the digital photography age and the amateur has already produced enough free content to completely fill sites such as iStockPhoto, Shutterstock, and Jupiter Images.

In case you missed what is directly above:
- 4,374,279 royalty free photos.
- 43,312 new stock photos added this week (OMFG!!!)
- 115,818 photographers (!)
So what does this all mean? Where is Kirk going with this post?
Well, as a stock photographer at Aurora Photos I can tell you that there may be a sliver of a chance that a pro *can* stay in business over the long term.
What these gigantic image aggregators lack for the time being are two things:
1. An efficient image filtering system to find the images an editor needs at a quality level that is acceptable.
2. Model released images. Most amateurs have no clue how model releases work. That isn’t to say they won’t figure it out soon enough. Without model releases images are not quite as valuable in the market place.
So here is my message to those who wish to be pro photographers. The only thing separating us from a pack of wild dogs, er, monkeys with cameras are three things:
1. The ability to choose interesting/unique subjects and shoot them with a carefully developed consistent style. Consistency people. Consistency is key here.
2. Whatever you did before the surge in photography 5 years ago is no longer good enough. Stop bitching, please! If you fail now it is your own fault. The stakes are much higher now: you have to jump higher, be better than the rest and never rest on your laurels.
3. Be a professional with your business. Learn how to make money so you can stay in the game longer and outperform your competition. This means model releases, this means learning how to negotiate, this means learning how to figure out your cost of doing business, this means having a solid knowledge of how to write a contract, this mean dressing, talking and acting like a professional, not like a prima donna, scarf wearing, cigarette smoking, globe trotting, wine sipping, reportage photographer; who, without a trust fund, is ultimately doomed in this day and age…
…you can be all fancy like HCB once you have your business in order. Because things are changing fast.
Remember, the pack of monkeys at your heels. Good luck and god speed.
-Kirk







Yo – what’s inspiring the rant today
Love from Glasgow.
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This is an absolutely brilliant post! Thank you for this and your latest shots are incredible. I’m going to pass this one along to some photographers/cinematographers/photojournalists I know. Keep up the good advice!
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Thanks guys!
I just think it’s important to re-evaluate our place as content creators and storytellers. I hope I didn’t come off as hysterically angry or anything, but I truly do believe what I write should at least be considered for those who wish to solely create content as a means to their livelihood.
I for one, constantly re-evaluate my own relevance in this market.
We all will need to be more like Chase Jarvis (chasejarvis.com) in the future; Chase is constantly evolving and maintaining his relevance….and succeeding greatly by doing so.
Ha.
Will there be room for many like him? Probably not.
Kirk
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Well he was nice enough to reply to a mail I sent his team saying how much I loved his Stevens shots!! Good to see someone so successful remain so grounded and gracious with it too.
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