Three Tips for Selling Photos to Magazines

Many of you know I was born and raised in Puerto Rico, and over the years I have visited the island a number of times for an assignment or to shoot for stock.

Like most places, Puerto Rico is known for certain things—beaches, Spanish Colonial architecture, historic forts, and rain forests to name a few—so coming up with a shooting list is not difficult. And, by making sure my pictures are well composed, properly exposed, have a strong subject, etc., it’s a good bet most of them are fit to be published in local travel publications.

The key to selling those images, then, is determining where and how you submit them to editors.

Here are three tips for improving your chances of selling your work to magazines:

** 1.  Send images of subjects that the magazine publishes.

This might seem obvious, but a common complaint from editors is being asked to review images of, say, landscapes, when their magazine specializes in cars.  Or a less obvious example might be if you sent Islands Magazine photos from non-tropical islands (not all islands are the kind featured in Islands Magazine) or you sent the editor at International Living photos from the U.S.

To editors, your untargeted submission means you are using the shotgun approach to getting work, and they do not appreciate your wasting their time. At best, they will be annoyed at you.  At worst, your reputation will spread and negatively affect your business.

** 2.  Study magazines and submission guidelines before submitting your work.

This second tip is closely related to the first one. Every publication, just like every photographer, has a style. Some travel magazines use highly-stylized imagery, often posing professional models in exotic settings, while others are more traditional and publish grittier, more journalistic pictures.

Study magazines carefully and realistically to determine which ones fit your style. Then, when sending a submission, make sure you follow their submission guidelines to the letter. The guidelines will typically include a contact person and an address, whether it’s OK to contact them via e-mail, and what type and size of digital file they prefer.

** 3.  Be persistent.

Travel publications receive thousands of submissions from writers and photographers, and it is difficult to succeed with your very first try.

Just like with friendships, establishing and building a relationship with a client takes time. As long as you have new images or information to share with a potential client, contact them three or four times a year (see submission guidelines), but note that there are mountains of studies and articles dealing with how many times is too much (or too little).

Once an editor selects your work, make sure you provide her with timely, high-quality and professional images and service. From then it is highly likely that the editor will contact you again in the future.

[Ed. Note: Remember that today is your LAST DAY to get a copy of the e-mails Efrain sends to editors when he wants them to buy his photos… the contracts he uses… all of his cut-and-paste follow-up materials… and more.  You have until midnight TONIGHT to take advantage of his tried and tested “system” and save 50%.

For more details on traveling through Ecuador with travel writer, editor and former food critic, Kyle Wagner, click here to sign up to receive details]

Efraín M. Padró is a full-time professional photographer specializing in nature and travel subjects. Born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Efraín has photographed in such diverse locations as Perú, Argentina, Chile, Morocco, Mexico’s Baja California Sur, Holland and Puerto Rico. Efraín’s work has appeared in Outdoor Photographer, Frommer’s Budget Travel, Geographic Expeditions catalogs and other publications, and he is the author of The Photographer’s Guide to New Mexico. He also teaches photography and Legal Issues for Digital Artists at various New Mexico schools. Efraín is a former member of the Board of Directors of the North American Nature Photography Association (NANPA). He currently lives with his wife Cathy in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

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