Saturday, October 4, 2008

Building a Microstock Submission & Tracking system

Microstock seems so simple -- Upload your images, then sit back and let the payments come in. But it’s soon evident that there’s a lot more to do, and the newcomer to the process can quickly become overwhelmed in keeping track of where images are; which have been submitted to which sites; how each site reviewed each image; and where the original image now resides.
I've been facing variations on problem for over 30 years. First, with slides and classical stock agencies [often called rights managed, with examples like Corbis, and Getty]. I went thru multiple physical organizing systems - by shoot, by slideshow, by topic, etc, eventually settling on metal filing boxes for over 35,000 slides organized by category. I also kept a simple spreadsheet list of slide numbers and captions.

I’ve shot digital since 2001 and problems quickly multiplied with the greatly increased number of images that were now created. Most photographers aren’t computer programmers, but some computing oriented approaches are helpful. Rather than choose a software solution and force it to fit your needs, take some time to analyze what you currently have and what you’d like to be able to do. At that point you can decide what sort of workflow system works best for you. Only then do you need to decide what actual software might be needed.

Here’s how my approach proceeded. I knew a big problem would be managing thousands of images at several stages – new images, edited images, captioning, submitting, tracking, and analyzing. [If you produce fewer images, the process will be much easier since you may be able to take each shoot completely through the process from initial creation to tracking after submitting to multiple agencies. A simple word processing program may be all you need to keep track of everything. ] The entire process could be automated, but for all but the largest shops, this is overkill. Most people will find a mixed system works well – combine old fashioned physical means with automated ones.

Now you’re ready to decide how the new system might achieve these goals. My highlighted two major needs:

1. Assign a unique number for each image The numbers produced by your camera aren’t suitable for this system. But using text names like statue of liberty1,won’t work either. What’s needed is a single identifier for each image, that contains enough information to be able to sort by date. There are various ways to do this. My files are named yymmdd-xxx.JPG


Photoshop or PS Elements does this for you – you can run a batch process on a group of images taken on the same day and rename them with the year, month, day and a serial number. The result is a group images that will always be simple to sort, with no duplicates. Numbering sequentially has a major advantage over using text -- when I’m traveling, i try to caption every night, based on my notes. i only need to identify the 1st image of any major sequence. For example, in India I could summarize over 300 images with 3 captions:

- 070101-002 Arrival in Delhi
- 070103-200 Arrival in Agra to visit the Taj Mahal
- 070104-322 Ganges river

So there’s no need to caption everything right now. When I am editing image 070101-145.jpg weeks or months later, I immediately know it was taken in Delhi. We often visit many mosques or temples in a day, and this lets me keep them all straight, while still allowing for an hour or 2 of sleep each night.


2. Store all images in one place for simple retrieval – it’s important to have one place where all images can be found.

Once these decisions were made, the solution became simpler. I could quickly see there was no need for a database. Also a database requires too much maintenance, and a simple excel spreadsheet will do a better job.

The result is a solution that allows:

- Storage of images for easy retrieval
- Fast sorting by date, topic, etc
- Instant access to any submission in progress
- Ability to track and analyze images accepted


We’ll see how to accomplish this in part 2.

Cascoly Dynamic Website Design for Photographers


4 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Henrik, this is a fascinating area for me also and it seems we manage our archive in a similar way. Please let continue your story and later I will share mine.

Antonio D'Albore
www.antoniodalbore.it

Henrik Lehnerer said...

Thank you Antonio, but the credit for this post goes all to Cascoly. He is the author of this post.

I manage my archive in a similar way too, but still using the # in the file names that the camera creates. I can see that I have to change this maybe in the future.

Thank you for commenting.

Ann Parry NY said...

Steve, I like your system of naming the files according to date plus grouping them in general categories.
(Plus, I really must bring some organization to current chaos - photos imported using different software are scattered in different locations.)

Rahul said...

Hi Henrik,

Great blog about a thorny topic for all of us. If you have a few minutes, I'd love to get your feedback on an earnings tracker we've been developing.

Cheers,

Rahul
http://www.rp0229.com/blog

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