Equine Photographers Podcast

36: Field Notes – The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living (Part 5)

1 h 0 min · 28 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 36: Field Notes – The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living (Part 5)

Descripción

INTRO Pricing is one of the most consistent conversations in equine photography—and one of the most misunderstood. It’s often reduced to undercutting or people charging too little. But the reality is more complex than that. This episode looks at why pricing continues to be a problem in the industry, and why it’s tied to larger structural shifts rather than individual decisions. ---------------------------------------- WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS * why pricing issues keep showing up in the industry * how accessibility and technology changed the market * how photographers typically set pricing—and where that breaks down * what actually drives pricing pressure over time * why equine photography is especially affected * where technology fits into the conversation * how the market separates between price and value ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY Pricing problems are rarely just about numbers. They come from the gap between what the work actually requires and how that work is understood. ---------------------------------------- WHY THIS MATTERS In equine photography, pricing doesn’t just affect photographers. It affects: * how work is valued * what clients expect * how consistent the industry becomes When pricing is disconnected from reality, it creates pressure that spreads across the entire market. ---------------------------------------- THE BIGGER CONTEXT This episode connects directly to the broader shift happening in the industry. More access → more people entering → more volume → more pressure. That pattern isn’t new—but the effects are becoming more visible. ---------------------------------------- FINAL THOUGHT At the end of the day, the question isn’t: “How cheap can I be to get booked?” It’s: “Can this actually support me over time?” Because if it can’t, it doesn’t matter how busy you are. ---------------------------------------- RELATED CONTENT  Read the full article: The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living [http://thehorseinfocus.com/?p=697] Subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] The post 36: Field Notes – The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living (Part 5) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/36-field-notes-the-pricing-problem-why-so-many-equine-photographers-struggle-to-make-a-living-part-5/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

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episode 37: Field Notes – Photographers vs Designers: Where the Line is Actually Drawn (Part 6) artwork

37: Field Notes – Photographers vs Designers: Where the Line is Actually Drawn (Part 6)

INTRO The line between photographers and designers has been shifting for years. Photographers are creating ads. Designers are picking up cameras. And in many cases, people are doing both. On the surface, that looks like a natural evolution. But underneath it, there’s a growing gap in how those roles are being understood. ---------------------------------------- WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS * how and why the line between photography and design has blurred * how the design industry shifted before photography did * why designers moved into photography * why photographers started taking on design work * where the overlap works—and where it starts to break down * how AI behaves differently in design vs photography * why accuracy matters more in equine work ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY The divide isn’t photographer vs designer. It’s the difference between understanding the work and relying on tools to make something look finished. ---------------------------------------- WHY THIS MATTERS In equine marketing, both photography and design carry responsibility. A strong image with weak design fails to communicate. A clean design built on a weak image fails differently. Both sides have to hold. ---------------------------------------- THE BIGGER CONTEXT This episode connects everything from the series: * accessibility * technology * pricing * AI The tools are overlapping. The roles are shifting. But understanding hasn’t increased at the same rate. ---------------------------------------- FINAL THOUGHT The question isn’t: “Who does photography?” or “Who does design?” It’s: “Who understands what they’re creating?” Because these aren’t just images. They’re representations. ---------------------------------------- RELATED CONTENT Read the full article: Photographers vs Designers: The Overlap No One Talks About [http://thehorseinfocus.com/?p=706] Subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] The post 37: Field Notes – Photographers vs Designers: Where the Line is Actually Drawn (Part 6) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/37-field-notes-photographers-vs-designers-where-the-line-is-actually-drawn-part-6/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

4 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
episode 36: Field Notes – The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living (Part 5) artwork

36: Field Notes – The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living (Part 5)

INTRO Pricing is one of the most consistent conversations in equine photography—and one of the most misunderstood. It’s often reduced to undercutting or people charging too little. But the reality is more complex than that. This episode looks at why pricing continues to be a problem in the industry, and why it’s tied to larger structural shifts rather than individual decisions. ---------------------------------------- WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS * why pricing issues keep showing up in the industry * how accessibility and technology changed the market * how photographers typically set pricing—and where that breaks down * what actually drives pricing pressure over time * why equine photography is especially affected * where technology fits into the conversation * how the market separates between price and value ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY Pricing problems are rarely just about numbers. They come from the gap between what the work actually requires and how that work is understood. ---------------------------------------- WHY THIS MATTERS In equine photography, pricing doesn’t just affect photographers. It affects: * how work is valued * what clients expect * how consistent the industry becomes When pricing is disconnected from reality, it creates pressure that spreads across the entire market. ---------------------------------------- THE BIGGER CONTEXT This episode connects directly to the broader shift happening in the industry. More access → more people entering → more volume → more pressure. That pattern isn’t new—but the effects are becoming more visible. ---------------------------------------- FINAL THOUGHT At the end of the day, the question isn’t: “How cheap can I be to get booked?” It’s: “Can this actually support me over time?” Because if it can’t, it doesn’t matter how busy you are. ---------------------------------------- RELATED CONTENT  Read the full article: The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living [http://thehorseinfocus.com/?p=697] Subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] The post 36: Field Notes – The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Equine Photographers Struggle to Make a Living (Part 5) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/36-field-notes-the-pricing-problem-why-so-many-equine-photographers-struggle-to-make-a-living-part-5/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

28 de may de 20261 h 0 min
episode 35: Field Notes – From Film to Digital to AI: We’ve Seen This Before (Part 4) artwork

35: Field Notes – From Film to Digital to AI: We’ve Seen This Before (Part 4)

EPISODE SUMMARY The current conversation around AI feels new—but the pattern isn’t. In this Field Notes episode, we look at how the shift from film to digital mirrors what’s happening now with AI, and how increased access has changed both the industry and the people working in it. ---------------------------------------- SHOW NOTES The conversation around AI in photography is being treated like something completely new. But it isn’t. The industry has already gone through a major shift—from film to digital—and the pattern we’re seeing now isn’t all that different. In this Field Notes episode, we step back and look at what actually changed during that transition, and how it reshaped who could enter the industry, how images were produced, and how pricing and expectations started to shift. Because what happened then is happening again now. More access. More output. More pressure. And just like before, the separation isn’t coming from the tools. It’s coming from how well those tools are actually understood and used. ---------------------------------------- IN THIS EPISODE We cover: * what changed when photography moved from film to digital * how accessibility reshaped the industry * why more people producing images doesn’t equal more understanding * how AI fits into that same pattern * where the real separation is happening now * why this shift is affecting pricing, workflow, and business structure ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY Every shift in photography increases access. It does not increase understanding at the same rate. That gap is where the separation happens. ---------------------------------------- WHY THIS MATTERS In equine photography, this isn’t just about images. It affects: * how photographers enter the industry * how work is priced * how businesses are structured * how consistent (or inconsistent) the final product becomes And when those things shift, it doesn’t just affect photographers. It affects: * trainers * owners * buyers * and how horses are represented overall ---------------------------------------- THE BIGGER CONVERSATION This isn’t about resisting new tools. Digital didn’t ruin photography. AI won’t either. But every shift changes who can participate—and how easy it is to produce something that looks finished. The question isn’t whether the tools are changing. It’s whether the understanding behind them is keeping up. ---------------------------------------- CONNECTED CONTENT This episode is part of a larger series on equine photography and marketing standards. Read the full article: From Film to Digital to AI: How Accessibility Changed the Industry ---------------------------------------- FINAL NOTE The pattern hasn’t changed. The tools have just made it faster. ---------------------------------------- COMING NEXT The Pricing Problem: Why So Many Photographers Struggle to Make a Living ---------------------------------------- If this is something you’ve seen play out over time, share this episode or pass it along to someone in the industry. Subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] The post 35: Field Notes – From Film to Digital to AI: We’ve Seen This Before (Part 4) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/film-digital-ai-equine-photography/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

21 de may de 20267 min
episode 34: Field Notes – Stallion & Sale Ads: Why “Pretty” Isn’t the Same as Effective (Part 3) artwork

34: Field Notes – Stallion & Sale Ads: Why “Pretty” Isn’t the Same as Effective (Part 3)

FIELD NOTES | EQUINE PHOTOGRAPHERS PODCAST ----------------------------------------  EPISODE SUMMARY A good-looking ad and an effective ad are not the same thing. In the equine industry, especially in stallion and sale horse marketing, there’s a lot of emphasis placed on how something looks. Clean design, polished images, visually appealing layouts. But none of that matters if the ad doesn’t actually communicate the horse. In this Field Notes episode, we break down what makes an ad effective, where things start to fall apart, and why clarity matters more than design when someone is making a buying decision. ---------------------------------------- IN THIS EPISODE We cover: * the difference between a visually appealing ad and an effective one * why clarity matters more than design in horse marketing * how buyers actually use images when evaluating a horse * where ads commonly go wrong * how photography and design work together—and where they don’t * why “pretty” can sometimes get in the way of communication ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY A strong ad is not built to impress. It is built to communicate. ---------------------------------------- WHY THIS MATTERS In stallion and sale horse marketing, images are not just decorative. They are part of the decision-making process. Buyers are using these ads to: * evaluate structure * assess presence * form an initial impression If the image or design gets in the way of that, the ad stops doing its job. And when the ad doesn’t work, everything built on it becomes less effective. ---------------------------------------- THE BIGGER CONVERSATION This isn’t about removing design. It’s about understanding what role it plays. Design should support the image—not compete with it. And the image itself needs to clearly represent the horse. Because if that foundation isn’t right, nothing layered on top of it will fix it. ---------------------------------------- CONNECTED CONTENT This episode is part of a larger series on equine photography and marketing standards. Read the full article: Stallion & Sale Ads: Why “Pretty” Isn’t the Same as Effective [http://thehorseinfocus.com/?p=680] ---------------------------------------- FINAL NOTE A polished ad might get attention. But attention alone doesn’t sell horses. Clarity does. ---------------------------------------- COMING NEXT Film → Digital → AI: How Accessibility Changed the Industry ---------------------------------------- If this is something you’ve seen in your own work—or in ads you’ve come across—share this episode or pass it along to someone in the industry. Subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/equine-photographers-podcast/id1040981682] The post 34: Field Notes – Stallion & Sale Ads: Why “Pretty” Isn’t the Same as Effective (Part 3) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/34-field-notes-stallion-sale-ads-why-pretty-isnt-the-same-as-effective-part-3/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

14 de may de 20266 min
episode 33: Field Notes – Photoshop vs AI: Where the Line is in Equine Photography (Part 2) artwork

33: Field Notes – Photoshop vs AI: Where the Line is in Equine Photography (Part 2)

FIELD NOTES | EQUINE PHOTOGRAPHERS PODCAST ---------------------------------------- EPISODE SUMMARY Editing has always been part of professional photography, especially in equine work where environments are often unpredictable. But as AI tools become more common, the line between refining an image and altering the horse itself is becoming less clear. In this Field Notes episode, I break down the difference between traditional editing tools like Photoshop and AI-driven processes. While both can improve an image, they do not work the same way—and that difference matters. We get into where normal editing belongs, what AI is actually doing when it regenerates parts of an image, and why that becomes a much bigger issue when the subject is a horse. Because in equine photography, especially in sale horse and stallion marketing, even subtle inaccuracies can change perception. This is not really a Photoshop vs AI conversation. It is a conversation about whether the horse is being preserved—or changed. ---------------------------------------- IN THIS EPISODE: * what editing is supposed to do * the difference between cleaning up an image and changing the horse * how Photoshop works differently from AI * why AI regeneration is not the same as traditional editing * where the ethical line sits in equine photography * why this matters more in sale horse and stallion marketing ---------------------------------------- KEY TAKEAWAY The tool is not the issue. The outcome is. ---------------------------------------- CONNECTED CONTENT This episode is part of a larger series on equine photography and marketing standards. Related article: Photoshop vs AI: Where the Line Is in Equine Photography [http://thehorseinfocus.com/?p=675] ---------------------------------------- FINAL NOTE This conversation is just getting started. ---------------------------------------- COMING NEXT NEXT Coming up in this series: Stallion & Sale Ads: Why “Pretty” Isn’t the Same as Effective ---------------------------------------- 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 33: Field Notes – Photoshop vs AI: Where the Line is in Equine Photography (Part 2) [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com/photoshop-vs-ai-equine-photography/] appeared first on Equine Photographers Podcast [https://equinephotographerspodcast.com].

7 de may de 20267 min