Archive for the ‘Stuff we love’ Category

Are You Growing or Rotting?

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

From Andy at photographers.co.uk

In the main I get approached by people looking for ideas as to how they can start a photography business and by people whose business is struggling and could do with a lift. The people I rarely hear from are the people sat in the middle with a business that is rolling along nicely.
An article that caught my eye recently covered businesses that appear to be doing just that, but have actually hit a plateau without the owner realising it. One phrase that struck a chord was that when something is green it grows. When something is ripe it rots! In many ways it doesn’t seem fair. You put so much effort into getting started and growing your business yet as soon as it is established and you ease up to give yourself a pat on the back it starts to rot.
My own online businesses have been running for a round 10 years and this is something I can identify with. There was a time when one site I run was performing extremely well. I thought I just needed to carry on doing what I was doing and everything would be fine. I learnt the hard way that no matter how well everything appears to be going you need to keep coming up with new ideas to make your business continue to grow.
How often do you change your products or inject new ideas into your marketing?

Your Website Design is Now Even More Important

Google have been making changes to their search pages. If you change your search settings you can now see a small image of a website before you click through to it.

This means that the better your website looks the more people are likely to click through to it from the search pages. So how your website looks is even more important now.
On the subject of Google and your website I have been told that Google will soon be placing more emphasis on how long your website takes to load. This could be of great significance to photographers. Many of the websites I visit often take a while to load up the first page.
If you are considering having your website redesigned in the near future it may be worth your while to consider this when talking to web designers.
Fast load times are not only great for visitors, but soon they may also give you a leg up in the search engines.

How Far can you Go on your Own?

The majority of photographers I speak to who make a very good living from photography have a team of people behind them. Not every one wants the hassle of employing staff, but if you want to grow your business it makes sense to plan early on areas that you can delegate to either your own staff or outsource to other companies.

There are reasons why delegating early can help.  The longer you leave it the more you get used to the way things currently work. The longer you leave it the more knowledge you need to pass over when the time comes. It also makes it harder to let go.
With so many people setting up their own small companies outsourcing is certainly an option you may find worth considering over employing your own team.

Talking to people in various industries it seems that one successful method is to identify long term tasks that someone else can do. This could be accountancy, sales, SEO or retouching. It appears that people find outsourcing runs more smoothly where you can go back to the same person with little, but often tasks where you can build a working relationship over a period of time.

The London International Documentary Festival (LIDF) 2010

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

LIDF 2010 aims to explore the differences between photography and film-making as well as considering how they converge. Professionals from the film, photography and radio industries will all join panels and lead workshops and participatory events. There are two documentary photography workshops, a photographic treasure hunt around Bloomsbury and a visual exploration of Hackney and NE London. Among the exhibitions is Toby Smith’s ‘Madagascar: Bois de Rose’ and we wish him every success. Smith has been documenting illegal deforestation in Madagascar, within UNESCO-protected rainforests. Part of the LIDF, the exhibition runs from 17 to 26 April 2010 in Barbican Mezzanine, Silk Street, London. Admission is free.

For more information about the LIDF visit http://www.lidf.co.uk/

The Millau Bridge

Monday, February 16th, 2009
France shows off tallest bridge

The Millau bridge

The bridge is 23 metres taller than the Eiffel Tower

The world’s highest road bridge has been inaugurated in southern France by President Jacques Chirac.The Millau bridge over the River Tarn in the Massif Central mountains is more than 300m (984ft) high - taller even than the country’s Eiffel Tower.

The bridge, which opens to traffic on Thursday, was built to clear summer traffic jams around the town.

The BBC’s Paris correspondent, Caroline Wyatt, says the bridge is one of the most breathtaking ever built.

She says that with its concrete and steel pillars soaring high above the morning fog in the Tarn Valley, the construction makes a spectacular sight.

‘Delicacy of a butterfly’

Seven slender piers support the roadway, rising into seven graceful pylons bound to the bridge with what look like cobwebs of steel, our correspondent says.

“The bridge is just on the clouds,” Millau Mayor Jacques Godfrain told the BBC’s World Today programme.

“The architect, Norman Foster, gave us a model of art.”

 

TALL ORDER
Cost: 394m euros (£272m; $524m)
Highest point: 343m (1,125ft)
Vehicle height: 270m (885ft)

Mr Foster said the bridge was designed to have the “delicacy of a butterfly”. 

“A work of man must fuse with nature. The pillars had to look almost organic, like they had grown from the earth,” the world-renowned British architect said in an interview with regional daily newspaper Midi Libre.

Like Concorde and the Channel Tunnel, the bridge is Franco-British.

French construction group Eiffage - that built the Eiffel Tower - financed the project in return for the right to collect receipts from a bridge toll for 75 years.

 

Find out more about the Millau bridge

 

The bridge is now a source of pride for Millau, which believes many more tourists will come to admire one of the engineering wonders of the 21st Century, our correspondent says.

The construction also removes a bottleneck at the town, completing a new motorway link between Paris and the Mediterranean.

The construction of the steel bridge - now weighing about 36,000 tonnes - began in December 2001, using innovative techniques.

From the north and south sides of the valley, the metal sections of the structure were assembled, lifted slightly and then carefully slotted into place on each of the supporting pillars.

Motorists are expected to pay 4.6 euros (£3.18; $5.60) for a trip across the bridge.