Hi
I have asked this question at photo.net from the other way round and my answers were mostly "you gotta charge for post-processing, storage etc" which is was not really my point, so I'll try here.
What I am trying to grasp is the best way of charging clients when you use film in your workflow. Lets take the following example (the prices are just figures - don't take them literally - they can obviously vary):
You are hired to photograph an event. You choose Kodak Portra NC which costs you, say £5 a roll. You shoot 5 rolls so that's £25 for the film for that shoot. You then send it off for developing, at, say, £5 a roll for dev and some 6x4 proofs. A further £25. For easy deployment to the web to show your client you pay an extra £3 or £4 to have 'standard' quality images burnt to CD from the negatives too so there's another £15 for the shoot. So thats £65 before you've even started that you have to recoup before breaking even.
I realise clients are not generally concerned as to HOW you get the image - they are concerned with the quality of the finished product and how much it costs them.
When I asked this at photo.net I got comments about the prices used in the example, and the fact that with digital your running costs are higher but I don't see a one off payment for a disk or something as a major issue.
So my question is this - how do you incorporate the price of your film and how do you pass that onto the client without them complaining or realising? Using the above example, if I were asked for a quote, and I said "Well, I'll need 5 rolls of film so for that and development that will be £65 then my fees are £XXX on top and prints are £XX each.". When you compare that to digital, they won't hear "...5 rolls of film" - just "My fees are £XXX" and if I don't mention the price of the film at all, then my prices are just comparatively higher than my digital competition.
I love shooting film, and I feel more confident that my results will be better for the client when shooting film, but I'm unsure how to pass this cost onto the client without losing customers so wondered how you guys do it?
Ted
I have asked this question at photo.net from the other way round and my answers were mostly "you gotta charge for post-processing, storage etc" which is was not really my point, so I'll try here.
What I am trying to grasp is the best way of charging clients when you use film in your workflow. Lets take the following example (the prices are just figures - don't take them literally - they can obviously vary):
You are hired to photograph an event. You choose Kodak Portra NC which costs you, say £5 a roll. You shoot 5 rolls so that's £25 for the film for that shoot. You then send it off for developing, at, say, £5 a roll for dev and some 6x4 proofs. A further £25. For easy deployment to the web to show your client you pay an extra £3 or £4 to have 'standard' quality images burnt to CD from the negatives too so there's another £15 for the shoot. So thats £65 before you've even started that you have to recoup before breaking even.
I realise clients are not generally concerned as to HOW you get the image - they are concerned with the quality of the finished product and how much it costs them.
When I asked this at photo.net I got comments about the prices used in the example, and the fact that with digital your running costs are higher but I don't see a one off payment for a disk or something as a major issue.
So my question is this - how do you incorporate the price of your film and how do you pass that onto the client without them complaining or realising? Using the above example, if I were asked for a quote, and I said "Well, I'll need 5 rolls of film so for that and development that will be £65 then my fees are £XXX on top and prints are £XX each.". When you compare that to digital, they won't hear "...5 rolls of film" - just "My fees are £XXX" and if I don't mention the price of the film at all, then my prices are just comparatively higher than my digital competition.
I love shooting film, and I feel more confident that my results will be better for the client when shooting film, but I'm unsure how to pass this cost onto the client without losing customers so wondered how you guys do it?
Ted
