Equine Photographers Podcast

32: Field Notes – The Changing Standard: How Technology is Reshaping Equine Photography, Design and Marketing (Part 1)

7 min · 30. apr. 2026
episode 32: Field Notes – The Changing Standard: How Technology is Reshaping Equine Photography, Design and Marketing (Part 1) cover

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FIELD NOTES | EQUINE PHOTOGRAPHERS PODCAST ---------------------------------------- EPISODE SUMMARY The equine photography industry is changing—but not in the way most people think. A lot of the current conversation is focused on AI. But this shift didn’t start with AI, and it won’t end there. It’s part of a pattern the industry has already gone through before. In this Field Notes episode, we step back and look at what’s actually happening. From the transition from film to digital to the current rise of AI tools, the same cycle keeps showing up: increased access, more participation, and growing pressure on pricing and standards. The real question isn’t whether the tools are changing. It’s whether the standard is. ---------------------------------------- IN THIS EPISODE We cover: * why the current AI conversation feels new—but isn’t * what changed when photography moved from film to digital * how accessibility reshapes the industry over time * where graphic design followed a similar path * how AI is affecting editing and marketing—not just image capture * why the conversation around tools is missing the bigger issue * where the real divide is forming in the industry ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY Every shift in technology increases access. It does not increase understanding at the same rate. And that gap is where the separation happens. ---------------------------------------- WHY THIS MATTERS In equine photography and marketing, images are not just content. They are representations of real horses. Used in: * sale horse marketing * stallion promotion * client decision-making When accuracy slips—even slightly—it affects trust. And once trust starts to erode, everything built on it becomes less stable. ---------------------------------------- THE BIGGER CONVERSATION This isn’t about resisting new tools. The tools will continue to evolve. They always have. But the expectation should remain the same: * present the horse clearly * present it accurately * present it as it is ---------------------------------------- CONNECTED CONTENT This episode is part of a larger series on equine photography and marketing standards.  Read the full article: The Changing Standard: How Technology Is Reshaping Equine Photography, Design, and Marketing [http://thehorseinfocus.com/?p=671] ---------------------------------------- FINAL NOTE This conversation is just getting started. Because the question isn’t what the tools can do. It’s whether what’s being created still works. ---------------------------------------- NEXT IN THE SERIES Coming up in this series: Photoshop vs AI: Where the Line Is in Equine Photography (part 2) ---------------------------------------- If this topic is relevant to your work, share this episode or send it to someone who’s part of this conversation. Subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] The post 32: Field Notes – The Changing Standard: How Technology is Reshaping Equine Photography, Design and Marketing (Part 1) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/32-field-notes-the-changing-standard-how-technology-is-reshaping-equine-photography-design-and-marketing-part-1/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

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episode 44: Field Notes – Photography Business Mistakes artwork

44: Field Notes – Photography Business Mistakes

SUBSCRIBE [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] INTRODUCTION When photographers talk about mistakes, the conversation almost always turns to technical problems. We talk about missed focus, poor lighting, bad timing, or equipment failures because those are the mistakes we can see immediately. Looking back over more than twenty years in business, I’ve realized that the mistakes that had the greatest impact on my career weren’t usually technical. They were business decisions, assumptions, and habits that quietly influenced the direction of my business over time. In this episode of Field Notes, I share seven lessons that experience taught me—lessons I wish I had understood much earlier in my career. Photographers spend a lot of time thinking about pricing. We compare rates. We compare portfolios. We compare gear. And when someone charges more than we do, it’s easy to assume they’re simply a better photographer—or that they’ve somehow convinced clients to pay more for the exact same thing. But what if clients aren’t paying for the photographs nearly as much as we think they are? In this episode, we’re looking beyond the finished images to explore the real value clients are investing in every time they hire a professional photographer. WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS * Why the most expensive mistakes often aren’t technical. * The cost of waiting too long to make important decisions. * Why trusting a handshake isn’t always enough. * How small problems become expensive when they’re ignored. * The importance of protecting your time. * Why assuming everyone thinks like you can create unnecessary challenges. * The danger of focusing on the wrong competition. * Why success doesn’t eliminate problems—it simply changes them. KEY TAKEAWAY The mistakes that shape a business are rarely the ones photographers spend the most time worrying about. Experience has a way of changing what matters, and often the lessons that have the greatest impact aren’t found behind the camera—they’re found in the decisions we make as business owners. WHY THIS MATTERS Every photographer makes mistakes. That’s part of learning any craft. What matters is recognizing that some mistakes cost far more than a missed photograph. The decisions we make about boundaries, relationships, priorities, contracts, time, and business strategy often have a greater influence on our long-term success than any technical skill ever will. Learning to recognize those lessons earlier can save years of frustration and help build a stronger, more sustainable business. THE BIGGER CONTEXT One of the themes that continues to emerge throughout Field Notes is that photography and business are not the same thing. Technical ability may open the door, but experience teaches us that running a successful photography business requires judgment, perspective, and a willingness to continually evaluate how we make decisions. As our careers evolve, so do the questions we ask and the lessons we carry forward. FINAL THOUGHT If I could sit down with the photographer I was twenty years ago, I don’t think we’d spend much time talking about cameras. We’d spend our time talking about decisions. Because those are the lessons that took the longest to learn—and the ones that ultimately shaped my business far more than any piece of equipment ever did. SUBSCRIBE [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] ABOUT THE EQUINE PHOTOGRAPHERS PODCAST The Equine Photographers Podcast features conversations, interviews, and Field Notes exploring the business, craft, and future of equine photography. From workflow and pricing to industry trends and marketing, each episode is designed to help photographers build stronger, more sustainable businesses. 🎙️ Browse all episodes: Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/41-field-notes-the-throughput-problem/equinephotographerspodcast.com] 📖 Read related articles at The Horse In Focus:  [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/41-field-notes-the-throughput-problem/thehorseinfocus.com] The post 44: Field Notes – Photography Business Mistakes [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/44-field-notes-photography-business-mistakes/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

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