14 Tips to be a Successful Freelance Photographer
For some, working for yourself is one of those great dreams. The satisfaction, freedom, nobody looking over your shoulder (except your significant other), ah the life right? Well not in every case. The freelance photography life can be hard. Long hours for little pay, alone with no co-workers to speak to or have lunch with, the lack of stability of a weekly check. You have to be dedicated and follow some specific rules to make it work.

My office as I’m writing this
So I thought I would write a list of things that I have learned over the years as I have progressed from a small desk in my bedroom to a slightly larger work area in my living room (gotta learn to work in small spaces here in NY). I have made every mistake in the book over the years and here’s to helping you avoid these mistakes and to becoming more productive.
Now as a side note, I’m not going to pretend that I do all of this stuff all of the time. I have good streaks and bad ones, but I try my best at it. Save this list and come back to it frequently to remind yourself of what you can improve at.
1. Create a good website with a daily blog
Your website is going to be your most important ally. It is what most people will look at when considering you for a job and so your effort and/or money should be invested here. Make sure it is easy to navigate and in HTML (NO FLASH!). Keep in mind that you are only as good as your worst photo, so don’t just throw up every photo that you think looks decent. Sometimes less is more.
If you don’t have enough content, create some! Set up shoots with friends or seek out aspiring models who are willing to work in exchange for photos. As long as the finished product looks great, your clients don’t have to know that these weren’t paying jobs. After all, it’s your ability as a photographer that counts, right?
Set up a daily blog. Update it every day with a photo, religiously. You can take Sundays or the full weekends off. The effect of a daily blog are wide ranging. Unfortunately, when you start a freelance photography business, the one thing that often goes out the door is actually taking pictures. You focus so much on getting jobs and doing them well that you forget to actually shoot for yourself. A daily blog will keep you doing this, shooting things that you love, and it will help you improve on a daily basis. It will also add a personality to your website and help to steadily build a community of people who are interested in your work.
2. The jobs that scare you s***less are the most important ones
If you are starting out as a freelancer, you will probably get offered jobs that you are scared silly doing. Photographer Joe McNally does a great impression of a young, shivering photographer being asked how much he would charge to shoot his first wedding: “Ccccan I pay you to do it?” he sheepishly asks.
Just remember that the jobs that scare you the most are the most important ones to get under your belt. You won’t be nearly as scared the second time around.
Even the best photographers in the world were once scared by certain jobs, and most still are.
3. The most valuable question in the world: “What is your budget?”
This question is the most valuable tool in a photographer’s belt. Pricing can be the most annoying thing to figure out, especially if you are not so confident in your abilities. I still struggle with pricing. We don’t know how much a client has to spend. We don’t want to underbid and either look like an inexperienced photographer or sell ourselves short for our services. And we don’t want to overbid by too much to lose the job. The simple question, “what budget are you trying to work with here?” puts the power in your court.
Now I rarely quote prices in the first contact, it’s just not my thing. I say, “let me take down all of the details and get back to you soon with the price. Is there a particular budget that you a trying to stay within (or is there a particular amount you are trying to spend on this)?” This gives me some time to figure out the right price.
*As a side note to this, make sure to flesh out all of the details of a project before you agree to a price. This is probably the most annoying and time consuming mistake that I constantly made when starting out. I have nightmares of the never ending job where I was too afraid to ask for more money. If someone asks you to go above and beyond the initial agreement, don’t feel bad about explaining this and asking for additional payment.
4. Respond to emails and phone calls as fast as you can
If you are contacted by someone looking for your services, chances are that they just spent the time to look at your work, liked it and now you are fresh in their mind. Every second that you wait dissipates this freshness. Get the dialogue going quickly and the person will often not look elsewhere.
5. Keep lists!

Lists are so important. Big goals are reached not at once, but through series of small tasks, in list form. With freelancing there is always so much random stuff to keep up with, often stuff you don’t feel like doing. Having these things in a list makes them tangible and keeps them fresh in your mind. And the rewarding feeling of crossing these things off is necessary to keep from procrastinating on the less urgent tasks.
Up until 4 months ago I was a paper list man. I would have paper scraps of lists everywhere. I could never find an online list service that I really felt comfortable with, until I found teuxdeux.com. It’s so simple but oh so perfect, a weekly list that you can access from any computer. It has vastly improved my life. Try it out. Set your homepage to it.
6. Set up specfic web surfing times for the day

This is a tough rule for me to follow because I have pretty bad ADD, and I like to read the internet. While reading informative websites and such during the day can seem like it is productive, it fragments your attention. I try to set aside specific times to surf the web. I get it out of my system in the morning while I eat breakfast and then again at lunch.
If you have particular trouble with certain websites, there are ways to block these websites on your computer (you can find out how by googling.) Block them every morning and then unblock them at night.
7. Separate your personal life from your work life
Yeah right.
8. Keep a consistent schedule
Probably the most annoying question that I get from my friends is how awesome it must be to work in my boxers.
I consider myself a professional. I wake up every morning at the same time, shower, get dressed, put on shoes–well slippers, eat breakfast and start work at 9 (and work the same hours every day). Start work at the same time as everyone else. Work and sleep the same hours hours every day. This was something that I did not do when I first started out and I lost a lot of productivity and it made work a lot less fun. I often think about that almost ‘romantic’ ideal of the semi-deranged writer spending coffee fueled nights churning out those magical pages. That is a tough lifestyle to succeed on. You will have much more energy and get much more done if you keep the same early schedule every day.
9. Low energy days and the 15 minute nap
The dreaded low energy day, the bane of my existence. Sometimes having a boss looking over your shoulder can be a good thing. Retouching skin for hours on end can make your eyes droopy and have you feeling like shoving a screwdriver into your brain. All those dreaded tasks piling up, just mocking you from your list.
Besides consistent exercise and coffee (which I try to save for those rough days), the 15-20 minute power nap can be a crucial thing. An up and coming tool often used by CEOs, but yet still frowned upon in the work place, the quick mid-day nap can clear your head and reset your energy for the day. It is also a great way to break up a long retouching session when you get to the point where you can’t tell red from green. I don’t do this daily, but it is a wonderful tool for those rough days.
10. Figure out where the jobs are supposed to come from (and go out and get them!)
There is nothing wrong with contacting potential clients and letting them know about your work. Take time to think about where you would like your jobs to come from and then figure out ways to reach these people. The friendly email can go a long way.
Contact owners of blogs and see if they will be willing to feature your work. Tell them you think their readers might be interested in it and if your work is good enough they will often be willing to do this without anything else. You are offering them value for their site. If they need more, offer to write a small post, some tips or valuable info for their readers.
11. Don’t over promise.
If you think you can get a job finished by Friday, don’t say Friday. You never know when something crazy will come up. Give yourself an extra few days to work with and when you are actually able to get that job finished on Friday, the client will be very pleased with your efficiency.
12. Speed (and why I use Lightroom.)
Being fast is so important. It is a skill that is really built up over time, as you gain more experience. But I can’t say enough how Lightroom has changed my life.
If you don’t use it already, it will be the best money you’ve ever spent.
The program is so intuitive and it has transformed the speed at which I am able to edit my work.
Really learn how to use the entire program and learn the keyboard shortcuts as well. Keyboard shortcuts are amazing!
13. Keep learning
The investment of getting a Lynda and/or Kelby training account will be a million-fold. For those of you that don’t know, both of these are educational, video-based resources taught by highly qualified and amazing teachers. Compared to traditional education, the value is unreal.
Each lesson is split into 5 or 10 minute videos so you can watch them at your own pace or pick out the specific information that you want to focus on. Lynda.com is based more on the computer side of things, with an enormous amount of Photoshop, Lightroom and web design lessons. Kelby training is focused more on actual photography (and Photoshop). Both are incredible investments.
14. Have confidence!
You can do it. It’s not easy, but believing in yourself is the most important tool to keep yourself going. Put yourself out there. You will screw up sometimes, but screwing up is a good thing. It means that you are learning. Just try not to make the same mistakes twice.
And keep in mind that the work you do during the tough times is what makes the good times happen.





40 Responses to “14 Tips to be a Successful Freelance Photographer” - Add Yours
November 24th, 2010 at 6:41 am
Hm. So right at the top you admit to padding your web presence because “As long as the finished product looks great, your clients don’t have to know that these weren’t paying jobs.” That doesn’t inspire a lot of confidence in someone we’re supposed to be taking advice from to get paying jobs.
But, I like a lot of this advice, especially #2. I think haste is a little overstressed in #4 and #12, I would think everyone has their own pace with which they produce quality work — cutting corners to bang out subpar results can’t be good. Of course, cutting corners while still keeping quality high would be nice, but so would a flying pet unicorn who poops gold bars.
But overall, good explanation of one person’s process.
November 24th, 2010 at 7:03 am
some day i’ll give up my day job for this. good stuff, thanks!
November 24th, 2010 at 8:00 am
These tips are awesome, especially that I’m starting to bring my hobby to the next level. I think that being a good photographer doesn’t mean you have to buy every equipment and accessories out there. I think I’ll try your suggestion here on street photography and the challenge is when to take that perfect, candid shot. Thanks!
November 24th, 2010 at 8:25 am
Very good article. Also having problem to set the prices right and when it will be done, or getting enough motivation, when i’m at home. this idea with blocking website is good
November 24th, 2010 at 8:32 am
Making a living as a freelance photographer, I agree with most of your points. I’ve been doing this for 12 years. Very part time at first, now full time but on my own time. Keeping work hours is important. Set a lunch time, exercise time like you would if you were in a cubicle downtown. Try not to do a load of laundry during work hours for example.
I also agree about taking scary jobs. Those are the ones that will make you grow as a photographer. Even if you lose sleep over it. You can do it! Ask fellow photographers for tips, it’s a great community and I have made a lot of great friends and connections over the years.
Well, it’s pretty much what James wrote in different words, great post by the way.
Valerie
November 24th, 2010 at 9:22 am
Thank you for this. I’ve been so full of thoughts and ideas and plans, and this was exactly what I needed to remind me to breathe and take one step at a time.
My favourite thing for tonight is your oh-so-simple “what is your budget?” tip. Sometimes it’s the little things that set the lightbulb off. I’m struggling to price my first wedding, and for some reason hadn’t thought of asking what she’s hoping to spend, this helped, I’m calmer, thanks! (#2 is also appropriate to the whole first wedding thing as well come to think of it… so very much so)
Oh, and I’m instantly addicted to TeuxDeux! Instantly. Love it!
@B, I don’t see the problem you have with building a portfolio from unpaid work. Even if they knew, what do the clients care whether you were paid or not to take those photos? Surely the only thing that matters is that your photos say everything they need to about your talent. This is advice for people beginning as freelancers, and who may not have a large portfolio of paid jobs, everyone’s got to start somewhere!
November 24th, 2010 at 9:50 am
I always find something useful in these articles, thank you!
Having recently gotten my first few paid assignments i was obviously ecstatic and the feeling is great, i looked around online spoke to other freelancers and looked at my budget for hiring the lens that i wanted , i came up with a budget and this research definitely helped me in securing the jobs.
November 24th, 2010 at 10:24 am
@Vrinda you are correct about the unpaid work thing. That’s actually one of the most important things you can do, and not only when starting out, but anytime during your career. It allows you to practice, develop or refine a style, try new techniques, and create a portfolio of work that you can show off to get jobs that reflect your style. Your portfolio is to show off what you have the ability to create, not what you have been paid to create.
@B you are right about the haste thing, and I should have improved the article to explain more about what I meant by speed. Certainly not going too fast and cutting corners. I guess I meant to say efficiency and digital organization, creating a streamlined workflow that allows you to organize, edit, and retouch your photos. Lightroom is amazing with that. I stand by #4 though.
@Gusto I would be screwed without blocking a couple of sites.
@Valerie I totally do my laundry during work hours and it def wastes time! Can you call up my significant other and tell her I shouldn’t be in charge of this, please!
And Vrinda I’m glad I helped you to take a deep breath. I know about those sleepless nights well, it’s terrible, and while it’s gotten somewhat better for me, I’m not sure that ever fully goes away.
November 24th, 2010 at 10:29 am
Great article. Lots of helpful pointers and tips that I had never really thought of. Especially maintaining organization, which can one of the hardest things for me.
November 24th, 2010 at 11:15 am
What a fantastic post. I particularly needed someone to tell me not to work all hours. That 100 hour week has been both a necessity and a bane, and I know a lot of that has to do with getting distracted and justifying it as “material I’ll use in the future”. Probably needed someone to tell me to take a shower, too. And eat. Eating is good. Must schedule that in.
November 24th, 2010 at 11:30 am
Some great tips, thank, sorry to ask, but why No Flash websites?
November 24th, 2010 at 12:16 pm
This is probably the best post I have read here on DPS in quite some time, although that’s not to say that I don’t find the other articles informative. It’s just that I have found myself in a little slump of sorts and I desperately need to claw my way out of the depths that I have sunk to. These tips are spot on with what I SHOULD be doing and I appreciate this gentle nudge in the right direction.
I will surely print out this list and attempt to implement the tips you have shared! Thank you for sharing
~WW
Recent post:
http://www.wayfaringwanderer.com/2010/11/pigging-out-oak-st-po-boy-festival-new.html
November 24th, 2010 at 2:15 pm
Great article!
I really appreciate this information because being a photographer will be my first job.
I’m currently looking for photography schools in Monterrey, Mexico, but I couldn’t find anything beyond short introductory courses.
Meanwhile I’m looking for a photographer to be his/her assistant and learn more directly from the field.
Thanks again!
Elvira
November 24th, 2010 at 6:25 pm
I would add to this – very useful – list:
Don´t forget to knock-off work!
It happens to me regularly that i work from morning to evening – and than later at night also – that´s ok when have to get a specific job done – but if you haven´t any urge, try to call it a day and enjoy some free time.
November 24th, 2010 at 9:02 pm
Just getting set up myself as a freelance and wow, what great information! Thanks for posting.
November 24th, 2010 at 9:04 pm
And as for light room – the ‘v’ button and ‘cntrl+shft+V’ have saved me hours and hours and hours of work!
November 25th, 2010 at 1:14 am
@JohnTudor Flash is starting a slow decent out the door, starting with Apple deciding not to support it on iphones and ipads. The reality is that its really not necessary anymore and it slows down the user experience. You can do everything you need in HTML, it will be snappier, and all of your pages will be separate and easier to be accessed through search engines. These are only a few reasons but there are more.
@aggie yeah i’ve found that the more hours you work the less you actually get done per hour. I have a few days a week where I’ll work very long hours, but as a general practice you don’t want to do that every single day. You’ll wear yourself out.
November 25th, 2010 at 7:18 am
Great article and tips. I’ve been posting daily to my photoblog for a couple of years now. However, I have a separate site that is my ‘professional’ site and am now wondering if they should all be under the same domain? PR on the photoblog is 4 and on the other site is 3. Guess I need to do some research and a lot of thinking.
November 25th, 2010 at 11:47 pm
Hi James,
Great post! John from FreshBooks here. #2 is for sure my favorite and I think anyone can learn from. If you’re not scaring yourself everyday, you’re not learning and progressing. This goes for all professions (yes, salaried ones too) and I wish more people would write about it.
November 26th, 2010 at 12:21 am
By and large good advice, I have worked for myself for over 12 years now and I think th emost important thing is having a structure. surprised you didn’t mention networking as I think that that is one of the best ways to get new business. Just having a decent website and a daily blog wont get th ephone ringing.
November 26th, 2010 at 12:22 am
By and large good advice, I have worked for myself for over 12 years now and I think the most important thing is having a structure. surprised you didn’t mention networking as I think that that is one of the best ways to get new business. Just having a decent website and a daily blog wont get the phone ringing.
November 26th, 2010 at 12:46 am
Great post.
I have been a full time photographer since may, the trick on budget is amazing. I hate to ask for money or deal with money, and I obsvered that when someone ask me for a price, I return the question, what is your budget ?, last week a guy ask me for a price and in my head I was thinking I will charge this for 2500 dollars, but I ask him for budget instead and he said 4000 dollars. When you let the person originate and you have a decent person in front of you 80% of the time you have some good surprise. When I originate first the price, I see that the customer will try to cut it down.
I made most money this year by selling my photos into luxury hotels as part of the decoration as signed prints (in Paris), I sold over for 100 000 dolars this year only. Hotels have money and need good decoration, try it into your area.
http://Www.sergeramelli.com
November 26th, 2010 at 3:46 am
Great article….great advice….I think the part about getting training and where is what I really needed to hear. Thanks a lot. I am not god enough to leave my day job, yet, but working on it.
November 26th, 2010 at 7:00 am
love, love, love teuxdeux, thanks for that tip! I am an avid list maker, and this brings my obsession into the future and off the written page. Lists are the only thing that keep me tethered as a freelancer, there are so many distractions and opportunities and ideas and things to do! I review my lists numerous times in a day, and feel really good when I can check things off. And I take a nap when I need to. Great post.
November 26th, 2010 at 10:20 am
this post is going to change a lot of my bad habits, thank you so much.
November 26th, 2010 at 11:24 am
Could you elaborate more on #7. “Separate your personal life from your work life”? I was rather confused.
Gobble Gobble.
November 26th, 2010 at 1:49 pm
Kathie, whether to integrate your personal blog with your professional site is a tough thing to figure out and every situation is different. I think it depends on what you shoot both professionally and on your blog.
Matt the networking issue should have its own post written about it. I tried to cover it a little bit with contacting people that you would like to work with/for, but yeah there are a million different ways to do this.
Ramelli the luxury hotel idea is great. In this economy its tough to find people/companies with money willing to spend it right now, but luxury hotels need to put good artwork on their walls!
Audiomind #7 was kind of a joke. It’s really tough for me to separate my personal life from my job because I love it and it’s one of those things where you can always be doing something.
November 26th, 2010 at 4:38 pm
I’m a pro freelancer…and think this is a fantastic article! I’ve experienced so many of the things mentioned above! Thanks for the great post!
Michael
November 27th, 2010 at 1:41 am
Great practical information. I’m self employed, but not in photography. Still your pointers apply to anyone that needs to be focused on getting the job done and moving FORWARD.
I especially like that someone else has brain failure after heavy concentration on image processing. I definitely need to let my brain cool down at some point.
Thanks for the great insights.
December 28th, 2010 at 2:46 am
dear all,
I am a pro freelance photographer based in Italy.
I read your article and.. well.. this opened my eyes, guys! Especially regarding the website and portfolio you must show to the others!
thank you very much for sharing!
Marco
Fotografo a Torino
January 4th, 2011 at 11:08 pm
Great post, thanks for the advice! I’ve been freelance for over a year, did part time for a few years. I found the hardest thing was using your time correctly going to bed at some point (often worked 2 days in a row straight) and spending money on the right things. All the advice is valid, i have made mistakes like over promising clients on time lines and under/over charging. Its a bit of a steep learning curve..top line for me for 2011…”So whats your budget?”
Thanks Rob
March 4th, 2011 at 9:09 am
Thanks for the great info. I wonder what your take is on how one would go about getting in contact with clients for potential jobs. Do you get in contact directly and if so how? Or have you simply been doing it long enough to have them seek you out.
March 29th, 2011 at 9:58 pm
great set of things to consider and they all make sense. Pricing and routes to market are clear to get the jobs as is a good portfolio to showcase your work!
April 20th, 2011 at 11:00 am
This is one of the best articles that I’ve seen here at DPS.
Huge thanks !!
May 2nd, 2011 at 10:13 am
i AM LOOKING FOR FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPHY WORK THAT ISNT ABOUT GETTING THE BABY TO SMILE. i AM NOT CONVENTIONAL , THAT ISNT THE WAY ART IS SUPPOSED TO BE. MY WEBSITE SHOULD BE UP IN A FEW DAYS/ BUT UNTILL THEN IF YOU ARE LOOKINF FOR SOMEONE WITH 12 YEARS OF ADOBE AND 20 YEARS PHOTOGRAPHY EXPERIENCE… THAT IS ALSO A PUBLISHED POET. THAN DROP M,E A LINE.. PEACE
May 4th, 2011 at 11:36 pm
Number 14 blew my mind away. So encouraging!!
July 2nd, 2011 at 2:55 pm
The day when I am gonna say good bye to my job and say hello to photography will be my happiest day in my life.
November 30th, 2011 at 1:16 pm
Your suggestions are very good and easy to understand your point. Thanks a lot for taking your time for this rookie to find the answers to some of my questions.. Thanks a bunch!!!
January 24th, 2012 at 3:07 am
I am very curious as to why you think that Lightroom is better than Apple’s Aperture for Post-Processing? Given its natural mainstream Post-production to website building and publishing.
I would love to get a reply comment on that…
February 10th, 2012 at 3:50 pm
I haven’t used Aperture myself so I can’t compare. But Lightroom is amazing. While every program will have its own benefits, I personally can’t imagine that there’s a better program out there than Lightroom. But I could be wrong.
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