It’s not infrequent that I’m equated with a freak of nature and asked “how have you accomplished this at such a young age?”
In all honesty, I’ve been extremely blessed, and can say I attribute it to knowing just how little I really know and how little I can do on my own.
I make it a point to take at least four different seminars or classes each year on various subjects and spend time with as many mentors as possible. What I’ve learned from others has saved me from infinite heartache, headache, and provided tremendous opportunities that I never would have had on my own!
PS... Today is the LAST DAY of 2007!!! If you're thinking of attending a Photo Business Boot Camp (or a BBC on a CRUISE to Mexico!!), getting any DVDs or attending any other great seminars next year NOW IS THE TIME to sign up and take advantage of those deductions - remember education for your business is 100% tax deductible!!
Monday, December 31, 2007
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Day 5: S-Corp or LLC??
ATTENTIONAL ALL SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS: If you are thinking of filing your business as a new entity (ie switching from Sole Proprietor to an S-Corp) then JANUARY 1, 2008 is the DAY to do it!
Why? Because then you'll be the same entity the whole year and not have to fill out all kinds of different forms for both entities!
Not sure what you should be? Here's a quick run-down of the differences below.
Not sure how to register? I used The CompanyCorporation and let them do all that for me for a low price. Check em out! ***CLICK HERE***
• Sole Proprietorship - Easy to form, taxed at individual rate, no additional taxes to file (use Schedule C), losses apply against other income, no legal separation between company and personal assets.
• Partnership - We highly recommend against this if you are in business with another individual. Instead, look into filing as an LLC or S-Corp.
• Corporation - We recommend against this for small businesses because of the double taxation (you will be taxed at a corporate level and individual level). Instead, look to filing as an LLC or S-Corp.
• S Corporation - Taxed at individual tax rates, losses can be applied against personal or spouse income, legal separation between company and personal assets, allows you to avoid paying social security on all of your earnings (you can take dividends in addition to a salary), must file a corporate tax return, more paperwork than an LLC
• LLC - Limited Liability Company - Taxed at individual tax rates, losses can be applied against personal or spouse income, legal separation between company and personal assets, easier to set up than an S corp, not recognized the same in all states, single-owner LLC pays self-employment tax. Recommended for businesses with more than one partner for ease of distributing dividends.
Why? Because then you'll be the same entity the whole year and not have to fill out all kinds of different forms for both entities!
Not sure what you should be? Here's a quick run-down of the differences below.
Not sure how to register? I used The CompanyCorporation and let them do all that for me for a low price. Check em out! ***CLICK HERE***
• Sole Proprietorship - Easy to form, taxed at individual rate, no additional taxes to file (use Schedule C), losses apply against other income, no legal separation between company and personal assets.
• Partnership - We highly recommend against this if you are in business with another individual. Instead, look into filing as an LLC or S-Corp.
• Corporation - We recommend against this for small businesses because of the double taxation (you will be taxed at a corporate level and individual level). Instead, look to filing as an LLC or S-Corp.
• S Corporation - Taxed at individual tax rates, losses can be applied against personal or spouse income, legal separation between company and personal assets, allows you to avoid paying social security on all of your earnings (you can take dividends in addition to a salary), must file a corporate tax return, more paperwork than an LLC
• LLC - Limited Liability Company - Taxed at individual tax rates, losses can be applied against personal or spouse income, legal separation between company and personal assets, easier to set up than an S corp, not recognized the same in all states, single-owner LLC pays self-employment tax. Recommended for businesses with more than one partner for ease of distributing dividends.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Day 4: Be Rich and GIVE
and
We are by all standards very wealthy in that many of us are making a good living doing what we love. In the day-to-day rat race, it’s easy to forget this and instead compare ourselves to others and think of what we don’t have!
The remedy? Get out and GIVE. Give of your time, money, and other resources. Get yourself a good dose of perspective!
More on HOW TO BE RICH? Check out the playbacks dated 8/19, 8/26, and 9/2...
***CLICK HERE***
Friday, December 28, 2007
Day 3: The Art of Sales
If you’ve ever read Robert Kiyosaki, you might remember reading about a conversation he had with an author in Paris. The author was asking why Kiyosaki’s books made more money even though she thought her writing was better.
Kiyosaki points to the cover of one of his books and brings to light “notice it says ‘Best Selling Author’ not ‘Best Writing Author’!!” Perhaps we should take a course on sales instead of focusing only on our photography?
If you haven't read it yet, Rich Dad Poor Dad is a MUST READ!! Want more on sales as it pertains to the photography industry? KISS Merchandising is exactly that! It also helps you put together packages and figure out pricing!
Kiyosaki points to the cover of one of his books and brings to light “notice it says ‘Best Selling Author’ not ‘Best Writing Author’!!” Perhaps we should take a course on sales instead of focusing only on our photography?
If you haven't read it yet, Rich Dad Poor Dad is a MUST READ!! Want more on sales as it pertains to the photography industry? KISS Merchandising is exactly that! It also helps you put together packages and figure out pricing!
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Day 2: Why Photography Isn't Cheap!
"It's HOW much??!?!?" "My dad is going to FLIP when he hears how expensive the photography is!" "We can't afford it!" "Why would we pay that much for photography?? We can get prints at Walmart for $0.19!"
We've heard it all! All the excuses WHY our clients or potential clients or the public in general thinks we charge too much...
In REALITY, most professional wedding and portrait photographers are hardly making a living at it. The average income is $33,000 per year for a full time pro photographer. And that's if they're averaging 3-5k per wedding!
All the questioners think about is the paper we print on and the equipment we shoot with. The truth of the matter is, there's SOOOO much more to running a business -- so many more costs that contribute to why we need to charge what we do.
In ANY business, there is a general equation that will compute how much we need to make to pay ourselves a salary and cover all of our expenses. It's called the "Break-Even Analysis" ... I call it the BIG Equation.
If you know what your:
- Cost of Sales % is
- Overhead Expenses are
- Asset/Depreciation Expenses are
Then it's very simple to run this equation and figure out how much you need to charge.
The problem is it takes a good deal of time to determine all of the costs. What makes a Cost of Sales cost different from an Overhead Expense? Without going too much into these things (it's much more involved than time allows on a blog post) I'd like to use a simple example:
A restaurant! Simply, a restaurant mirrors a photography business model similarly.
Let's say that each year the restaurant spends $60,000 in Overhead Expenses and Assets. These are things like phone and electricity, rent, the owners salary, other salaried employees, health insurance, business insurance, new equipment (assets), new fixtures and tables (assets), cleaning services, office supplies, website fees, newspaper ads, print costs, and new menus. Of the $60,000, about half of that is for the owners and other salaries. Not much, hu!?
Then, every year, they spend $35,000 in food and food supply costs. This is the Cost of Sales.
Let's say that they bring in a grand total of $100,000 in income (aka sales on food in the restaurant).
Given those numbers, we can look at the profits:
$100,000 = Gross Sales
- 35,000 = Cost of Sales
= 65,000
- 60,000 = Overhead/Asset Expenses
= 5,000 = Total Profit for Business
WOW - a whopping $5,000 that goes back into the business as profits or that the owner can take home as return on investment. Not such a great investment for a whole TON of work, hu? The photography industry works the same way.
So the next time someone questions why we charge what we do, know that it's a bit easier to constitute your prices when you know what goes into them. If you want to go more in-dept and REALLY figure out how much you're making in a salary, how to categorize and account for expenses, how to set up your business legally, how much you're making out of every dollar, and how to put together prices and packages that actually make a profit... it's all in the Profit Center DVD. It's FOUR hours of DVD and can take a few weeks to put together if your numbers aren't already well-tracked.
SO my big question for Day 2 of the TWELVE is:
Do you know how much $$$ you need to make next year in order to pay for all of your expenses and take home a modest salary??
Clue: It's likely to be between $250,000 - 150,000 if you're a full-time pro!!!
We've heard it all! All the excuses WHY our clients or potential clients or the public in general thinks we charge too much...
In REALITY, most professional wedding and portrait photographers are hardly making a living at it. The average income is $33,000 per year for a full time pro photographer. And that's if they're averaging 3-5k per wedding!
All the questioners think about is the paper we print on and the equipment we shoot with. The truth of the matter is, there's SOOOO much more to running a business -- so many more costs that contribute to why we need to charge what we do.
In ANY business, there is a general equation that will compute how much we need to make to pay ourselves a salary and cover all of our expenses. It's called the "Break-Even Analysis" ... I call it the BIG Equation.
If you know what your:
- Cost of Sales % is
- Overhead Expenses are
- Asset/Depreciation Expenses are
Then it's very simple to run this equation and figure out how much you need to charge.
The problem is it takes a good deal of time to determine all of the costs. What makes a Cost of Sales cost different from an Overhead Expense? Without going too much into these things (it's much more involved than time allows on a blog post) I'd like to use a simple example:
A restaurant! Simply, a restaurant mirrors a photography business model similarly.
Let's say that each year the restaurant spends $60,000 in Overhead Expenses and Assets. These are things like phone and electricity, rent, the owners salary, other salaried employees, health insurance, business insurance, new equipment (assets), new fixtures and tables (assets), cleaning services, office supplies, website fees, newspaper ads, print costs, and new menus. Of the $60,000, about half of that is for the owners and other salaries. Not much, hu!?
Then, every year, they spend $35,000 in food and food supply costs. This is the Cost of Sales.
Let's say that they bring in a grand total of $100,000 in income (aka sales on food in the restaurant).
Given those numbers, we can look at the profits:
$100,000 = Gross Sales
- 35,000 = Cost of Sales
= 65,000
- 60,000 = Overhead/Asset Expenses
= 5,000 = Total Profit for Business
WOW - a whopping $5,000 that goes back into the business as profits or that the owner can take home as return on investment. Not such a great investment for a whole TON of work, hu? The photography industry works the same way.
So the next time someone questions why we charge what we do, know that it's a bit easier to constitute your prices when you know what goes into them. If you want to go more in-dept and REALLY figure out how much you're making in a salary, how to categorize and account for expenses, how to set up your business legally, how much you're making out of every dollar, and how to put together prices and packages that actually make a profit... it's all in the Profit Center DVD. It's FOUR hours of DVD and can take a few weeks to put together if your numbers aren't already well-tracked.
SO my big question for Day 2 of the TWELVE is:
Do you know how much $$$ you need to make next year in order to pay for all of your expenses and take home a modest salary??
Clue: It's likely to be between $250,000 - 150,000 if you're a full-time pro!!!
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Twelve Days AFTER Christmas: Day 1: STOP!
There's nothing more difficult in small business (in my opinion) than transitioning from work-to-play and play-to-work. The lines are VERY blurry in this business because work for us as professional photographers is very often our "play" times but what our clients don't see a lot of is all the BEHIND THE SCENES stuff we do that really does feel a lot more like work:
- taxes,
- purchasing,
- budgeting,
- pricing,
- packaging,
- database management,
- inquiry management,
- meetings,
- training,
- education,
- testing the latest equipment,
- a zillion meetings,
- another zillion and 1/2 calls and emails,
- piles and piles of legal paperwork,
- contracts,
- model releases,
- equipment repair,
- file management,
- storage solutions,
- learning new software,
- editing, editing, editing,
- design,
- branding,
- merchandising,
- marketing,
- web design,
- slideshow development,
- forecasting,
- sales,
- retouching,
- vendor relations,
- and so much more but the list is already TOO long!
I often find I'm trying, in vain, to get the the bottom of my to-do list before I leave town to go visit family or go on an actual non-work vacation. Always stressed out and missing flights. I know there is a much better transition. Just STOP. AND SAY "NO"!
S-T-O-P
(ah, doesn't that feel better now!?)
Put the computers and lists away, and enjoy life!
Personally, I'll be leaving the country for a week in January during one of the largest photography conventions of the year. I spoke at it earlier this year (Imaging USA) but when it came down to it.... I just had to say "NO" for a change. Two weeks later, I'll be flying across the country to cozy up do a WORK STOP... an annual work-retreat of sorts. More on that perhaps when the time is right.
So my question for you for DAY 1 of these TWELVE:
When will you be taking time to STOP these next few weeks/months? What will you say NO to in order to do so?
- taxes,
- purchasing,
- budgeting,
- pricing,
- packaging,
- database management,
- inquiry management,
- meetings,
- training,
- education,
- testing the latest equipment,
- a zillion meetings,
- another zillion and 1/2 calls and emails,
- piles and piles of legal paperwork,
- contracts,
- model releases,
- equipment repair,
- file management,
- storage solutions,
- learning new software,
- editing, editing, editing,
- design,
- branding,
- merchandising,
- marketing,
- web design,
- slideshow development,
- forecasting,
- sales,
- retouching,
- vendor relations,
- and so much more but the list is already TOO long!
I often find I'm trying, in vain, to get the the bottom of my to-do list before I leave town to go visit family or go on an actual non-work vacation. Always stressed out and missing flights. I know there is a much better transition. Just STOP. AND SAY "NO"!
S-T-O-P
(ah, doesn't that feel better now!?)
Put the computers and lists away, and enjoy life!
Personally, I'll be leaving the country for a week in January during one of the largest photography conventions of the year. I spoke at it earlier this year (Imaging USA) but when it came down to it.... I just had to say "NO" for a change. Two weeks later, I'll be flying across the country to cozy up do a WORK STOP... an annual work-retreat of sorts. More on that perhaps when the time is right.
So my question for you for DAY 1 of these TWELVE:
When will you be taking time to STOP these next few weeks/months? What will you say NO to in order to do so?
Who's Your Santa??
Without further ado... I give you our THREE FAB SANTAS!! These three awesome photographers fell subject to being on the OTHER side of the camera this December ... doing their very best SANTA :)
The only thing is... I'm having trouble coming up with the right captions for them! SO here's the deal: anyone who identifies all THREE Santas and comes up with quotes for them will be in the running for either a FREE DVD from our BananasEDU collection or $100 off a Business Boot Camp! I have an impartial judge standing by that will choose the most original, fun, awesome captions and we'll announce the winner sometime on Friday!
You can put your submission in the comments field or email them to us at info at photobizbootcamp.com !
The deadline is this Thursday (12/27) at 11pm EST. Quote away!!
Santa 1
Santa 2
Santa3
The only thing is... I'm having trouble coming up with the right captions for them! SO here's the deal: anyone who identifies all THREE Santas and comes up with quotes for them will be in the running for either a FREE DVD from our BananasEDU collection or $100 off a Business Boot Camp! I have an impartial judge standing by that will choose the most original, fun, awesome captions and we'll announce the winner sometime on Friday!
You can put your submission in the comments field or email them to us at info at photobizbootcamp.com !
The deadline is this Thursday (12/27) at 11pm EST. Quote away!!
Santa 1
Santa 2
Santa3
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Meet the "Survivors"
There are actually quite a few more but this slide show includes a handful of individuals who have made it through a BBC in 2007. Check for additional pics at the end too!
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
For Love or Money? ("LOVE" part IV of V)
note: The "LOVE" series is posted on www.lianasbananas.com - I felt strongly about posting this here too so here goes:
Love. Money. Our dreams. Client needs. Security. Freedom. Purpose. Budgets. Jobs. Costs. Sacrifice. Questions. Lifestyle. Opposition. Freedom. True Love.
“Often people attempt to live their lives backwards; they try to have more things, or more money, in order to do more of what they want, so they will be happier. The way it actually works is the reverse. You must first be who you really are, then do what you need to do, in order to have what you want.” - Margaret Young
Sunday afternoon, on my way home from sunny West Palm, the couple in the seats next to me started asking about Amy & Joel’s wedding pictures and commented “it looks like something from a magazine ... you can tell you really love what you do.” I smiled my thanks to them at that observation and we chatted about life and photography and the difference LOVE had made when this woman had her favorite portrait taken years ago. A few hours later, on my way out the door, I received a heartbreaking call that one of my clients passed away. I spent the rest of the evening at a church holiday event trying to keep my eyes dry in the dark auditorium, failing miserably.
My world has been a bit of a roller-coaster the past few years and the question that has been in the heart of it all is “for love or money?” I spoke on the topic at five major conventions this year... as it relates to photography and doing what we love through our work. I wasn’t prepared for how amazing it was to hear the different reasons some of my peers do what they do. I have my own reasons... some that I shared with them... that I will share with you... soon.
There’s something unbelievably cathartic about finally being hit over the head with the realization of what your purpose is. I don’t think our purpose is ever very far off from doing what we LOVE to do... for all the right reasons. Doing it NOT for money but for the LOVE of it and how it touches the lives of others.
I have a little problem though... here’s where I got the roller coaster ride.... my purpose is not simple. I did not celebrate in the epiphany that I am only to be a full time photographer and to help others experience the beauty that is around them always. God didn’t put a period there -- he put a comma. It’s taken me YEARS of heartache, headache, bad jobs, good jobs, right jobs, wrong jobs.... to finally put in words what I know I’ve been put on this earth to do. I’ll tell it to you now, because I know you’ll start seeing and hearing it everywhere in what I do: “To help others achieve the impossible AND experience the beauty that is about them always.”
To tell you the story of how I came to this conclusion and how I know without a doubt what my purpose it... would take 500+ words. I know this because I typed it up recently. Perhaps a story to share another day ;)
Regardless, it hasn’t been an easy pill to swallow... because doing what I LOVE not only involves the fun, exciting part of my job called photography.... but it deals with money. It deals with sacrifice and facing necessary evils no creative person in their right mind wants to tackle. I’ve been charged with the challenge of helping creative entrepreneurs be better stewards of their money, and being able to actually make a living off of doing something they love. And it’s one difficult industry to do it in. I'm in Boston now with 8 amazing photographers who are making that sacrifice and doing what they need to do to lay the financial foundation for their businesses. I'm so proud of what they're doing, it hurts our brains, but it's so worth it. It will allow us to move forward and focus on doing what we love.
So I guess that is my question for you. Why do you do what you do? Is it for Love or Money?
Love. Money. Our dreams. Client needs. Security. Freedom. Purpose. Budgets. Jobs. Costs. Sacrifice. Questions. Lifestyle. Opposition. Freedom. True Love.
“Often people attempt to live their lives backwards; they try to have more things, or more money, in order to do more of what they want, so they will be happier. The way it actually works is the reverse. You must first be who you really are, then do what you need to do, in order to have what you want.” - Margaret Young
Sunday afternoon, on my way home from sunny West Palm, the couple in the seats next to me started asking about Amy & Joel’s wedding pictures and commented “it looks like something from a magazine ... you can tell you really love what you do.” I smiled my thanks to them at that observation and we chatted about life and photography and the difference LOVE had made when this woman had her favorite portrait taken years ago. A few hours later, on my way out the door, I received a heartbreaking call that one of my clients passed away. I spent the rest of the evening at a church holiday event trying to keep my eyes dry in the dark auditorium, failing miserably.
My world has been a bit of a roller-coaster the past few years and the question that has been in the heart of it all is “for love or money?” I spoke on the topic at five major conventions this year... as it relates to photography and doing what we love through our work. I wasn’t prepared for how amazing it was to hear the different reasons some of my peers do what they do. I have my own reasons... some that I shared with them... that I will share with you... soon.
There’s something unbelievably cathartic about finally being hit over the head with the realization of what your purpose is. I don’t think our purpose is ever very far off from doing what we LOVE to do... for all the right reasons. Doing it NOT for money but for the LOVE of it and how it touches the lives of others.
I have a little problem though... here’s where I got the roller coaster ride.... my purpose is not simple. I did not celebrate in the epiphany that I am only to be a full time photographer and to help others experience the beauty that is around them always. God didn’t put a period there -- he put a comma. It’s taken me YEARS of heartache, headache, bad jobs, good jobs, right jobs, wrong jobs.... to finally put in words what I know I’ve been put on this earth to do. I’ll tell it to you now, because I know you’ll start seeing and hearing it everywhere in what I do: “To help others achieve the impossible AND experience the beauty that is about them always.”
To tell you the story of how I came to this conclusion and how I know without a doubt what my purpose it... would take 500+ words. I know this because I typed it up recently. Perhaps a story to share another day ;)
Regardless, it hasn’t been an easy pill to swallow... because doing what I LOVE not only involves the fun, exciting part of my job called photography.... but it deals with money. It deals with sacrifice and facing necessary evils no creative person in their right mind wants to tackle. I’ve been charged with the challenge of helping creative entrepreneurs be better stewards of their money, and being able to actually make a living off of doing something they love. And it’s one difficult industry to do it in. I'm in Boston now with 8 amazing photographers who are making that sacrifice and doing what they need to do to lay the financial foundation for their businesses. I'm so proud of what they're doing, it hurts our brains, but it's so worth it. It will allow us to move forward and focus on doing what we love.
So I guess that is my question for you. Why do you do what you do? Is it for Love or Money?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)