Getting Hired Through Social Media

Social media is such a hot topic these days that I thought I should talk a little about it. It's a new important type of marketing channel available to everyone whether you're selling a product or service.

I've been actively using social media to promote the work that I do since the early days of it all. I occasionally try a bunch of programs out there and over a certain period of time, figure out what works for me and what doesn't. I don't consider myself a pro at it as I believe social media is always evolving and that you just have to be adaptable to change.

Every business is different therefore the types of social media tools will vary. Take this for example: I had a few people question why I don't use Flickr. As a photographer, it probably makes sense to have my pretty photos up on that website to be viewed by many. Sure, it's a great channel to promote your photos, but it just doesn't appeal to me.

Five main reasons for this is:

  1. The Flickr audience is mostly made up of aspiring photographers, enthusiasts, camera tech talkers, and the likes. It's great place if you like Internet chatting.
  2. I don't want my work to be praised, critized and taken advantage of by a large pool of enthusiasts. 
  3.  I wanted to gain feedback from the real professional industry folks that would tell me the actual truth about how bad or good my pictures are.
  4. The buyers aren't on Flickr. 
  5. I've got a actual business to run and clients who take my work seriously to serve. 

This now leads me to how I got picked up by a division of Japan's largest advertising agency, Dentsu Razorfish, a digital agency based in Tokyo. I remember going into the first meeting about a year back and totally blowing it. This was a project involving a social media project for a major camera manufacturer. I was super unprepared and the atmosphere was just grim already. I knew it wasn't going well. My presentation materials were just crap. Live and learn. I left their office thinking they would toss my business card in the trash and would never contact me again.

Well, I was wrong. 

A year went by and I get the call from them asking if I'm interested in getting involved on this social media project for this same major camera manufacturer we discussed back then.

Thinking myself a year ago after how I blew that meeting, I wondered why it took them one year to contact me. Usually that never happens especially with a massive company like Dentsu.

I think with all this being said, consistency on promoting your product or service over time even when business is bad, just may convince those companies to think twice on why they should buy from you in the first place.

I'm speaking from experience not with just one company, but several. 

 

Work Smart, Not Hard

I've been in the corporate world for quite some time prior to getting into this independent creative industry that I'm in now. As a photographer, I have worked with so many different types of companies that this is what classifies both worlds:

Corporate companies usually aim for the masses. Quantity over quality. Even if their independently owned, they can still operate like a corporate company. If you're a company employee, you usually get the corporate thinking type of support that will help you do your job better or worse.

Independently owned companies are focused and small. Quality over quantity. Less is more. If you're a company employee, you get the type of positive support and flexibility that you would usually find with friends and family.

If you're a photographer or anyone in this case working on your own, it's better to put your efforts to those clients that truly understand the value great work in addition to giving you the necessary feedback to continue to do what you love in the long run.

So when it's raining, you know how to make it pour.

 

In The Field: Japan Upper House Election 2013

So it begins tomorrow, July 21, 2013 and I'm back out on assignment once again for the EPA while the majority out there is probably going to enjoy their day off. This is my second time covering the elections in Japan so the pressure is on for every photographer to make great pictures and transmitting to the wire within minutes after the results are announced.

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As you can see from above, one of my images from the last year's election coverage was used in yesterday's story about the upcoming election in the Japan edition of The Huffington Post. Lots of ballots were counted that evening...

 

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Here's my equipment for tomorrow. Pretty standard stuff for news coverage except for that 400 2.8 there. While at the EPA Tokyo bureau yesterday, it was recommended by my Chief to bring along the beast and so I have no complaints other than the fact that it weighs a ton or two ;-) Miscellaneous stuff not pictured is my laptop, external hard drive, monopod (for the 400), ladder, lens blower, card reader, Internet transmission device and so on.

Happy funday Sunday everyone! 

Atiba Jefferson

Skateboarding has always played a big part in my photography career. Coming from Southern California where skateboarding lives, eats and breathes, it's the type of sport that most really don't understand unless you're in it, which is why I don't talk much about it with lots of people. Although there's very few skateboarding type of stuff in my body of work, still being active in the industry itself is what inspires me to go out and shoot the things you see in my portfolios.

Back when I was starting out, skateboard and commercial photographer Atiba Jefferson, has been one of the photographers whose work I really admired until this day...

 

When The Trains Are Coming

This is, for the most part, what it feels like to be in my shoes. I pretty much feel no different than when I was 20. Now I'm 30...grateful that I can eat all kinds of delicious junk food and still can't put on any weight.

Tattoo's Are Like Photographs

They can be daily reminders to oneself or reflections of the past. Just like photographs, there's always a unique story to be told with each piece of art that you see whether you like it visually or not, like this one...
 
For me, I'm most interested in the process behind the art first, which then makes me understand what makes this piece beautiful, visually.
 
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Top line down: 

Believe in yourself.

Love yourself.

Never change.