The Economics of Everyday Things - 65. Stock Photos
Episode Date: September 30, 2024Making money in the stock image business requires a sharp eye for trends, a very specific type of model, and a race against A.I. Zachary Crockett takes his shot. SOURCE:Yuri Arcurs, C.E.O. and founde...r of PeopleImages. RESOURCES:"The Last Stock Photographers Await Their Fate Under Generative A.I.," by Katie Deighton (The Wall Street Journal, 2024)."The Impressive 100-Year History of Stock Photography: From Analog to A.I.," by Ivanna Attié (Stock Photo Secrets, 2024)."How Much Can You Make Selling Stock Photos? — It’s Not as Profitable as it Used to Be," by Matic Broz (Photutorial, 2024)."Confessions of a Stock Photography Model," by Andrew Kimler (Vox, 2016).
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In daily life, you're surrounded by perfectly generic images.
If you're messaging with a customer service chatbot on the internet, you might be greeted
by a photo of a smiling woman who's wearing a headset.
If you're flipping through a brochure of investment options at a bank, you'll see
a shot of a diverse group of people in suits in a brightly lit
conference room.
And if you pass a bus stop advertisement for a local gym, you might catch a glimpse of
a runner racing off into the sunset.
Our stuff is the secret background of the whole world.
That's Yuri Arkurs.
He's the CEO and founder of a company called People Images.
And he's one of the most prolific
stock photographers in the world.
Essentially any big city, if you walk for 10 minutes,
you'll probably see five or six of my shots.
Pretty much all the big brands at some point or another
have used our files.
When a company needs an image that embodies a particular vibe in a bland but professional
way, it often buys a stock image, an existing photograph that can be licensed for commercial
use. There are millions of stock photos for sale on websites like Shutterstock and Adobe
Stock, depicting nearly every subject you can dream up. If you need a photo of an elderly
Japanese woman on a tractor or a heavyset man in a blue shirt eating a donut, a stock photographer
like R.Kers probably has you covered. The total database we have right now is 600,000 images.
But with commissions shrinking and new kinds of competition on the rise, it's getting
harder and harder to make money in the stock photo game.
It's got to be the right balance, it's got to be well-lit, it's got to have good composition.
And even if you have all those elements put together, you're probably going to get sales
for about a year and then it's over.
For the Freakonomics Radio Network,
this is the economics of everyday things.
I'm Zachary Crockett.
Today, stock photos.
120 years ago, if a newspaper or a magazine
needed a generic photo,
say a shot of the White House
or a family enjoying a picnic,
you would have to send a photographer.
But in the mid-20th century, a number of companies
stepped in to let them outsource that service.
They assembled archives of photos with broad applications
and provided them for a fee.
This model became the norm for journalism, advertising,
corporate communications, and other businesses in need
of basic images. Back then, the ordering process was a bit cumbersome.
They sent out these big catalogs where you had to go page by page and choose your file number.
You would call them and say, I want this file number, XY2467.
And then you would be sent a film with that file that you could then scan and put in your
print.
In the 1990s, archives of physical photos were transferred onto computer servers, and
stock agencies sold CDs with preloaded images.
There was a limited amount of space available on those CDs. And
the photographers who made the cut were handsomely rewarded.
The photographers that were in this little elite clan, they were making massive amount
of money. They were selling at very high prices. And then on top of that, it would be rights
managed, which means that if you wanted to print it just a tiny bit more than what you said you wanted it in, you pay extra or you put it
on a brochure, then you pay extra.
So it's very tightly managed and incredibly tedious for the consumer.
But in the 2000s, stock photography experienced a revolution.
Websites started popping up that allowed anyone to upload and sell their photographs.
Customers started choosing cheaper files with less restrictions.
They might be paying a dollar per download versus $1,200 of $600.
This new model was called Microstock, and it opened the door for amateur photographers like Juri R. Kurs. While he was a student in Denmark in 2006,
he started posting his photos to one of the bigger microstock websites, Shutterstock.
I was studying psychology, so I needed the money.
I was a dirt poor.
I decided, okay, I'm going to put three months of my time
just into shooting as much as I possibly can. Good timing, an eye for the right images,
and a lot of work led to quick success.
I would see my shots in the street or on newspapers and things like that.
I was ecstatic and then it went so fast.
I went from making $500 one month,
$4,000 the next month,
$12,000 next month.
I remember having gone from having a hobby
to making about $40,000 a month.
That was about two years in.
And at that point I had some pretty tough decisions
because this was obviously more money
than I was gonna make as a psychologist.
I'd have to beat Dr. Phil to make that kind of money.
Today, Arkurs runs a 20,000 square foot production studio in Cape Town, South Africa. His company,
People Images, does three to four shoots every day and employs more than 100 people, photographers,
stylists, editors, lighting crew members.
And he's amassed an archive of more than 600,000 stock photos
and 250,000 stock videos,
which he sells on many different online platforms.
The Dope stock, Shutterstock, Dreamstime,
123RF, FreePic, iStock, Depositphoto.
These sites host hundreds of millions of stock photos
across nearly every category imaginable.
There are doctors leafily showing charts to patients,
closeups of men in suits shaking hands,
and dogs lounging in hammocks.
Search for the word marriage on Shutterstock
and you'll get 3.4 million results.
Sunset, more than 14 million.
For Shutterstock, the business model is fairly simple.
Customers pay a monthly subscription fee for a set number of downloads,
or they can buy images individually.
A standard license grants buyers broad rights
to use the photo anywhere in the world, forever.
For the photographer, the payout comes in the form of a royalty, a percentage of the
sale price for each photo.
That payout ranges from 15% to 40%, depending on how many photos the photographer sells
in a given year.
They've been fairly successful at agencies in implementing all kinds of tier systems
and brackets and levels to try to not pay out as much as they need to.
If you don't keep feeding the beast and upload all the time, it's very hard to get up those
ladders so to speak and get the high royalties.
Then that can take you five years to get all the way up to the top of that.
Then the sales will be very small.
Most stock photographers earn around 30 cents every time someone licenses one of their images.
Arkers, who is at the top of the food chain, says his average payout works out to around
$1. And on a typical day, he'll log more than 10,000 sales. While Arkers has more than
half a million photos, only a few of them attract a lot of
buyers.
About 10% of the whole portfolio will be 90% of the sales.
It's a very congested market with a lot of competition.
A lot of files will be on a stock site and circulated for a couple of weeks and then
the algorithms will determine
that it hasn't got enough markers
in terms of clicks, views, and downloads
to keep being surfaced,
and then they'll just dump it in the background.
One financial measure of a stock photographer
is return per image, or RPI.
It's how much revenue each image generates every month,
averaged across the photographer's
entire portfolio.
It includes the thousands of photos that don't sell at all.
An RPI gives you a rough indicator of how successful your assets are.
So if your RPI sits around $1 per asset per month, then you have an incredibly high RPI.
I think the average will be cents to the dollar.
If you want to be a successful stock photographer, you can't just upload random shots of your
grandma eating a hamburger.
You have to know what's going to sell.
You can look at what's popular on sites.
The only problem with doing that is that you're essentially replicating something that's already
there.
So that's a source of inspiration you want to minimize.
The better approach, says RKRS, is to try to get ahead of your competitors by keeping
a constant eye on trends.
You've got to be good at reading between the lines a little bit in terms of what's happening
in the media.
Elon Musk is shaking hands with Trump.
Okay, noted.
Politics.
Let's shoot that.
And then now you just need to put your creative mind to work and start to imagine, okay, if
I'm going to write an article about politics, what kind of pictures do I need?
Okay, I might need a picture of people putting in their ballots in the voting station.
Okay, I'm going to take that shot. They might be voting station. Okay, I'm going to take that shot.
They might be in doubt.
Okay, I'm going to take that shot.
They might be convinced by their friends.
Okay, I'm going to try to stage a scene that looks like that.
The artistry of a good stock photo lies in knowing how to visualize an abstract concept.
Let's say we're focusing on making a factory.
Ask yourself, what kind of shots would the owner of the factory want? Or he would probably want his staff lined up outside the factory
with the factory in the background and they look confident and they're dressed nice.
All right, so we'll shoot that. You'll probably want some detailed shots, some hands, some
fingers doing some really intricate and difficult things. He would want to show off the machinery.
But stock photos need to have many applications.
Arkhurst's hottest selling asset at the moment, for instance, is a photo of a woman
taking a break from a run with her hands on her knees. She's standing in front of a bright
blue sky, smiling and gazing hopefully toward the horizon. That can be used for so many things.
It's kind of uplifting.
It's got positivity.
It's a picture that could be used in a commercial for a bank, but also an insurance policy or
want to take some time off or get in shape.
So it's got all these utilizations open.
That's really good for sales.
Photos like this look pretty simple on the surface.
But creating them requires pricey photo shoots,
models with a specific look, and some
technical wizardry.
It is not like the good old days where you could just take a bunch
of young people, put them in a suit and put them around the table
and off you go.
Those days days over.
That's coming up.
Once Yuri Arkhers settles on a concept for a stock photography series, he and his team
usually spend at least two days researching the topic.
Arkhers takes realism very seriously.
If he's producing a series of shots of a computer engineer at a desk, he'll make
sure that real code is displayed on the monitor.
If he's staging a rock concert, he'll hire a band to play on stage and put on a real
show.
And if it's an office-themed shoot, he'll ask the models to give actual PowerPoint presentations. Obviously, it is staged, but it would be very difficult to pinpoint that this is staged.
You want to catch the model in the middle of a sentence actually talking.
So when you direct a set like this, you want to give them talking points.
You want to actually have them talk about what's on whatever display media they're using
and make sure that they don't just say nonsense,
they actually try to explain stuff.
On the day of the shoot,
there's a strict plan for every shot
because wasted time is expensive.
You need a location, you need a very big crew
because you're gonna be setting up in the morning,
you need lights, you need catering,
you need four or five, six models, you need at least one producer,
probably a focus puller, camera operator.
A recent office-themed shoot R.Kurs did, for instance, cost around $5,000 and yielded 106 images.
That's an investment that won't immediately be earned back. We look at how much a shoot will bring in its whole lifetime and have a rough idea about
when it's going to break even.
Generally, the break-even point for shoots is about two to three years, which unfortunately
means that if you want to start out in this industry, you need a pretty big loan.
Another challenge is finding the perfect model. Traditional modeling agencies usually can't
give arcers what he's looking for.
The model type that they have is a very high fashion model type, runway model look. We
can't use that at all. For us, a skinny person is a problem.
It is not a good asset to have on one-hour shoots because it stands out.
There is a general misconception that prettier people sell better, but that's actually not
the case.
The case is that people that look trustworthy sell well.
Arkers looks for people who pass what he calls the weekend test.
The weekend test is essentially just that you look at a person and just judging from
their looks, you have to now decide really quickly if you would want to spend a whole
weekend on a stranded island with that person.
It's the guy next door, girl next door.
They have some appeal and they look just approachable.
Because stock photos attempt to replicate real life,
there's a demand for people of all ethnicities,
races, sizes, shapes, and ages.
Some of the bestselling models are older people
with good faces.
Senior models sell extremely well
and are very willing to shoot.
To find models, Arkurs puts out casting calls on social media. He puts a sign out in front of
his studio in Cape Town for walk-ins and will sometimes stop people on the street who he thinks
have the right look. One of the best places to get a really good diverse group of models is farmers markets.
They're amazing. Really stylish, trendy, healthy people.
Stock photography models don't get royalties for the photos they're featured in.
They're typically paid a day rate.
But sometimes they get another payoff in the form of celebrity.
You can get a lot of funny fame stories from the models that have been circulated.
The most one of our top selling guys, he's called Rodrigo.
He's everywhere in Brazil and they love him for it.
So he's become this little local celebrity.
If you look at the same pretty face or handsome guy for 10 years straight, it almost becomes
a personal relationship, I guess.
Photos purchased through microstock agencies like Shutterstock can be used for any purpose,
so long as it's not used to promote illegal, pornographic, malicious, or defamatory material.
So stock photography models never really know where they'll end up.
They might be on a billboard in Slovenia or an internet ad for a senior home in
Kentucky. Sometimes this can lead to problems. Years ago a government agency
in Germany purchased one of our Kurs' photos and used it in a campaign for HIV
awareness. He was actually one of our skinnier models, one of our guys, who just in one shot happened
to look a little bit sickly, if you will, and then they photoshopped it a little bit
and they made it look even worse.
We have had many cases where models have come back and said, hey, what is this?
I didn't agree to this.
And then we have to chase down whoever did it and get him to
take it down. And sometimes it requires lawyers' letters. It's not the most pleasant side of the
industry. In a few cases, Arkhurz's photos have gone viral online. In 2009, he took a shot of a
young woman with her head in the palm of her hand, smiling into the camera.
On Reddit, it became the template for Good Girl Gina, a meme often overlaid with text
about what a great girlfriend she is.
The model, who goes by Emma Catherine, is now an internet legend.
She got very famous from that one shot, so yeah, she's been very happy about it.
The image has been used thousands of times, and almost none of those meme makers bought a license, which means that what they're doing could be a copyright violation.
But R.Kurs says it's not worth the trouble of pursuing legal action with anonymous
memers on the Internet.
You can forget about trying to monetize that.
That's not going to happen.
You're going to have to just laugh.
But I kind of enjoy it, to be honest.
I'll forfeit the royalties for the greater good of the meme world.
Now, most stock photos don't get turned into memes,
which means ARKers has to do some work to get them noticed.
When a buyer searches for, say, an image of a flower in a field, they'll find hundreds
of thousands of options on Shutterstock or Adobe.
One of the most important steps for a stock photographer is indexing each photo, adding
keywords that give their work a better chance of showing up on the first few pages of search
results.
ARCURS employs few pages of search results.
Arcurs employs a team of indexers.
They attach extremely specific and sometimes abstract keywords to every image.
It's a very nerdy enterprise to be a keyword person.
You've got to have this enormous, vast amount of common knowledge spelled perfectly and
then know all kinds of strange words and weird
things.
What kind of weird keywords are we talking?
I mean, one picture can be of a certain flower taken in some weird place in the world.
And now we have to download an app and scan that flower, find out what the real name is,
where it is.
And then suddenly you find yourself looking into botany for two hours. And then the next picture might be a rifle, a hunting shoot.
So now you have to dive into weapons and is it loaded or not?
Magazines and distance and scopes and position they're sitting in.
If you do common and really high ranking keywords all the time,
you're not going to sell because you're competing against too many files.
So the more specific your keywords are,
you have a way better surfacing chance.
Even with the best concepts, models and keywords,
the business of stock photography is getting tougher.
There are now websites that offer stock photos for free,
and they're operating on an entirely
different business model than sites like Shutterstock.
The business model is to disrupt enough and be enough an annoyance that somebody's going
to have to buy you out.
What they're really good at is making two or three pages of content look nice, but the
rest of the portfolio behind it is actually pretty junky.
More recently, stock photographers are under threat from machine learning technology.
Tools like Dali and Mid Journey allow users to type in a prompt and generate increasingly realistic images of any subject.
NVIDIA, OpenAI, and Meta all have partnerships in place that allow them
to use stock photo libraries to hone their machine learning capabilities or generate
images. But at least for now, Arkers still thinks that he and his human peers have the
upper hand.
AI is definitely a big shakeup. Is it a threat for the industry? Yes and no. It is a lot easier still
to buy on a stock side than to start writing prompts and getting something. To really generate
the shot you're after, you're looking at probably two, three hundred generations to get one shot.
And that's about two and a half hours of work to get to that. Let's say you want to change something.
You know, I want this hand that's shown to the right side to just be a little bit more
to the left with some copy space above it.
You can write all the prompts in the world you want, but you are not going to get the
AI to understand that.
So these kind of smaller changes that a professional needs are very hard for an AI to execute. For now, it's just not refined enough to satisfy a really finicky art designer out there.
And we haven't gone down in income because of it.
And there's one more thing that an algorithm cannot do.
Partake in the joy of seeing its handiwork out in the wild.
I used to tell people I took that shot. And they would just look at me like I was some
kind of loony-toony. Like, okay, there's a screw loose here. It can be pretty hilarious
sometimes.
For the economics of everyday things, I'm Zachary Crockett.
This episode was produced by me and Sarah Lilly and mixed by Jeremy Johnston.
We had help from Daniel Moritz-Rapson.
Also huge shout out to our listeners Callie Cumnick and her boyfriend Dylan James.
Callie made her own special episode of the economics of everyday things and gave it to
Dylan for his 24th birthday.
If you've got something cool like this to share, or if you'd have a suggestion for an
episode, feel free to email us at everydaythings at freekonomics.com.
All right, until next week.
Key wording. Keywording? Yeah.
If you've done that for three years, you are the person nobody wants to play against in
trivial pursuit.