Thursday, June 2, 2011

One of my Top Sellers

For more information on shooting/selling stock footage check out my other posts:
GETTING STARTED
KEYWORDING
WHAT SELLS?

My production friends are often skeptical about selling stock footage. When the topic comes up, I usually perk up, I love everything about shooting stock footage and I always love an opportunity to share some of my enthusiasm with friends. My best selling point for getting friends to give stock footage a shot is showing them a few of my top selling clips from iStockphoto.com.



After work one day in the parking lot I sat down in my Audi TT, took 30 seconds to frame up a shot of my shift knob and fired off a stock footage shot of me shifting gears.

On iStockphoto alone this shot has made me $744. (Keep in mind, that I also sell this same clip from 6 other stock footage sites, I'm just too lazy to do the math)

Not a bad supplement to my day's work with minimal effort. Every month that clip still averages 2 downloads or about $30/month, so the amount of money I got paid to shoot that clip goes up as time goes on.

Hypothetically, let's say that clip keeps pace for the next 5 years, at $30/month that would total $2544, for about 5 minutes of work.

People are amazed at how much money a simple shot can make over time. That is the key when you decide whether or not to take a few minutes to shoot some stock footage; look at the sales potential over time.

Shortly after shooting this clip, someone with a narrow view may see that after 3 months I hadn't made a penny and come to the conclusion that shooting stock footage just isn't worth the effort. Don't get discouraged, not every clip you shoot will turn into $744, or an extra $30/month, but some of them will, and over the long run, any time spent working on your stock footage library will pay off big.

Keep shooting, uploading and keywording. It pays off in the end, then it keeps paying, and pays some more.

If you haven't signed up for a stock footage account yet (whether you are a buyer or a seller) get started today and make sure to do it through one of my reference links. I highly recommend starting with Pond5.com
Royalty-Free Stock Video at Pond5


then when you expand, check out shutterstock.com and iStockphoto.com

Happy Shooting!
HDCineman

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Exclusivity vs. NON-Exclusive


For more information on shooting/selling stock footage check out my other posts:
GETTING STARTED
KEYWORDING
WHAT SELLS?

Should you be Exclusive with one stock footage website or should you be non-exclusive and post your footage to many sites?

I want to offer some different scenarios that make sense in regards to Exclusivity; the scenario that makes the most sense for you will depend on who you are, and what your reasons are for shooting stock footage.


Scene #1 - You are Exclusive with iStockphoto.com. iStockphoto is really THE premiere royalty free stock footage site currently. If you choose to be exclusive, do it with iStockphoto. To see the full benefits of being exclusive with them go to their Exclusive Program Page

If spreadsheets, data entry and business managent scares you and you want to spend the majority of your time shooting then exclusivity makes good sense, at least when you are starting out. If you choose to only sell through one website then it is not vital to keep records of all your keywords and descriptions, and theoretically you could rely on iStockphoto (or whoever) to keep all of your footage backed up on their hard drives, as long as you don't plan to use your own footage or sell it anywhere else. If I were exclusive, I would still choose to keep proper records and back-ups incase I changed my mind, or iStockphoto went out of business or something. (see my posting on Organization)

To make the most of being exclusive, you have to be shooting constantly, and really focus on shooting high-quality, unique footage. Always have something in the queue (iStockphoto takes about a month to review footage before they post it for sale). Ideally a few new clips of your footage would be accepted every day. New exclusive footage gets posted to the "New Footage" Section of iStockphoto and it gives your entire library more exposure, and potential to sell.

Also, be active on the iStockphoto website. Comment on other people's clips, write in the message boards, make friends with other contributors. Build/organize "light boxes" of your footage.

The downside of being Exclusive is that, in most cases, you do not have as much potential income. It would be the equivalent of being in a band and selling your CDs at one record store. Even if it is the best record store, they have a limited number of customers that shop at their store. Even if they put your CD in the front window of the store, and they give you a bigger percentage of the sales you just won't have as many sales as you could if you distributed your CD to 100 different record stores. Now if you were creative/driven enough to come out with 100 CDs, and they were really good, then you could create a loyal fan base, and the customers would buy ALL of your CDs, you could make good income, and no one would ever call you a sell-out.

In summary, if you are more of a purist, you don't need to make the most money possible, and you want to focus on shooting footage... Give exclusivity a shot. If you don't like it, you can change your mind down the road.


Scene #2 - You are NON-Exclusive and you post you footage library to multipul stock footage sites.

There are 4-5 good stock footage sites that sell consistently, and 40-50 that sell next to nothing. If you choose to be NON-Exclusive you want to sell footage through as many GOOD stock footage sites as possible, and maybe test the waters in a few up-and-coming stock footage sites. The stock footage world is dynamic, a new stock footage website could start up today, and in a year they could dwarf all the other sites. It's good to keep your eyes open, and try new sites out once in a while.

To make the most out of being NON-Exclusive you should really think of your stock footage as a business and you should constantly be uploading/keywording footage. Organization/record keeping is VITAL (see my post on organization) Where an Exclusive stock footage producer just needs to upload each of their clips 1 time, a non-exclusive producer will never be done uploading, the more uploading, the more potential sales. I upload footage to the best selling sites first, then work my way down the list. If I ever have 100% of my library uploaded to all sites, then I'll open an account with a new stock footage site and test the waters.

The reasons for being non-exclusive, besides having more potential income, is that you can get more mileage out of your library, the income is more consistant/predictable, and there are an infinite number of different ways to increase your monthly income besides just shooting more footage. I have a demanding career in Post Production right now so I don't get to shoot as much as I'd like. Being non-exclusive, I can leave a bunch of clips uploading at home before I leave for work in the morning. I can keyword a few clips on my lunch break, or a few here or there in the evenings. With an organized keyword/descriptions database I can even recruit other people (employees) to help me get more clips online, and increase my monthly income.

This is a "Sell Out" method of selling stock footage, but that is what stock footage is all about. I have no shame putting my cd in as many record stores as possible, there are a lot of people in the world that need to hear my music.

In summary, if you are organized, somewhat business savvy, don't mind a little data entry work, and you are driven to get the most money possible out of your stock footage then NON-Exclusive is the way to go.


Scene #3
An alternative method would be to shoot different footage for different sites. You could be exclusive with multipul sites, and divide your library in such a way that the best clips go to the site that sells the most... or to the site that pays the highest royalties.

There is a faction of stock footage contributors that believe you will maximize your sales with fewer clips in your portfolio, clips that are the highest quality, and that have a common theme. The theory is that when a potential buyer finds one of your clips, they will be able to look through your entire portfolio and find other related clips to buy.

Whatever you do, don't claim that you are exclusive and post the same footage to multipul sites, you will get caught. Play it straight and karma will reward you. Another thing to be aware of is that you can even get in trouble for posting "exclusive" footage to Vimeo, vimeo has a clause in their user agreement that says something like, "Vimeo can re-distribute anything you post." That will violate most exclusivity agreements.

Final Thoughts:
This information WILL help you to make more money selling stock footage. When you understand what you want your stock footage business to be, you can better understand where to focus your limited time and energy. Thank you for reading, and I will be sure to include more pictures in the next post.

Happy Shooting!
HDCineman

Monday, April 11, 2011

Case Study - Classic Car Shoot


For more information on shooting/selling stock footage check out my other posts:
GETTING STARTED
KEYWORDING
WHAT SELLS?

I am always keeping my eye open for an opportunity to shoot something unique. My father in law has a completely restored 1940 Ford that I have been wanting to shoot for some time. He is a little bit protective of his car so I had some reservations about asking, but when I did he was excited to get the car out and take it for a spin. It reminded me that people with a unique hobby or interest are often eager to share, all you have to do is ask.

I could have planned better for this shoot. I only had one thought-out shot in my mind, a classic 40 Ford crusin around some s-turns up in the hills. I had a general idea of where I wanted to go for that. Then I had a bunch of still shots in my brain of close ups on the chrome bumper, the wheels, hubcaps, taillights. Shooting out of the back of another car leading the Ford down a windy road. Something through the side or rear-view mirror. Out of laziness I figured that I had limited time, and I should just concentrate on getting 1 or 2 useful shots.

Here's the gear I brought with me:

Canon t2i (550D) - $650 - This camera has the same censor as the popular Canon 7D (about $1500), the t2i's construction is a little lighter, it feels a little bit like a toy, but I just want to be able to shoot the 5184 X 3456 raw still images for time-lapse, I want to shoot shallow depth of field, I want to shoot HD 1080p, and I want to be able to shoot 60fps slow-motion. This camera has what I need, so I saved on the camera body to be able to buy the more expensive glass.


Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8 with image stabilizer - $2300
For high quality images, the most important part of your set up is your lens. You can have the biggest sensor in the world, but your lens is what projects the image of the world onto that sensor and a low quality lens will limit the actual resolution of your images. This lens is the best in its class, and a standard for many professional photographers. f2.8 allows you to shoot in fairly dim conditions for a long lens, and can give you an extremely shallow depth of field. The icing on the cake with this lens for Video is the image stabilizer, many pro-sumer video cameras have image stabilization built in, but DSLR's do not and an unstable image is unusable for stock footage. I try to ALWAYS use a tripod, however, there are many times when a tripod is not practical, the stabilizer makes a world of difference. Especially since longer lenses magnify any small movements you make with your unsteady hand. And your hand is unsteady, I guarantee it.

Canon EF-S 18-55mm f3.5 - $70 - Sometimes you have to sacrifice quality for budget constraints, I purchased this lens to allow me to shoot in the wide/normal range, it is not ideal. The Canon DSLR is a new setup for me, so I will be purchasing a few more pieces as I go along. For now, this will do.

Sachtler DV2 Sticks - $500 used - for stock footage a good fluid-head tripod is vital. For the casual hobbiest, a large tripod is inconvenient, and annoying to cary around. Anyone who is serious about stock footage will find that any temporary inconvenience a good set of sticks causes pays off when you get your footage home.





The Shoot
I was glad I didn't have any more equipment. With just 1 small bench seat, and a father in law that is damn near 7ft tall, I was happy that all my camera equipment fit in a small camera bag, and my sticks could lay in the seat between us. Less equipment is a little more casual and it also draws less attention on the side of a road from authority figures that might cut your shoot short.

As we headed toward the canyon, we chatted for a while then I pulled my camera out to make sure I had my settings right. I wanted to shoot HD 1080 (the highest quality video that the t2i shoots), I put on my wide lens, made sure it was clean, I checked the exposure in sun, and as we went through shadows. I rolled 20 seconds through the front windshield. Primarily to test that everything was working correctly, but I always try to shoot something that could be useful.
The shot was very shaky, but there was a nice moment when we passed a 40mph sign on the road, I'm not sure if anyone would make the connection that this was a 1940 Ford, and it said 40 on the road, but sometimes those little coincidences get people excited about the footage and it can turn into a big seller. Symbolism sells. I may try to run an image stabilizer on this footage, you never know exactly what will sell, so when in doubt, try it out.

We finally got to a spot on the west side of a hill that still had some good light on it. I jumped out on the side of the road and told my father-in-law that we could communicate by phone and I'd have him do a few passes up and down the hill so I could grab a couple different shots. With just a small bag and a tripod "guerrilla" shooting is pretty easy. The legality is questionable... technically you are supposed to have a shooting permit in most cities. It is a little bit dangerous to be hanging out on the side of a road and anything dangerous is generally frowned upon by local law enforcement. But it's not like I'm writing graffiti or something, just taking pictures.

I had a specific shot I wanted to get, but I made sure to find a shot as the car drove off to turn around.

I am always looking for shots besides the one I have planned, sometimes the best shots are impromptu. In between passes, I would run down the road a ways to change my shot up. I always strive to get quality shots, but the BUSINESS of stock footage is about quantity as much as quality, so the more usable shots the better.

One time while I was waiting for the car to turn around I noticed that a purple thistle flower and some yellow wild flowers were nicely backlit by the setting sun, and they lined up pretty well for a rack focus.
Although flowers are way over shot, I had nothing better to do in that moment. Purple and yellow happen to be complementary colors, and an interesting rack focus between the contrasting plants made for a decent supplemental shot. It also gave me an idea to rack focus from the thistle to the car as another variation on my main subject shot, it was also a good way to utilize a key feature of the t2i/70-200mm combo, the shallow depth of field gave the shot a more cinematic look.

We shot for about 45 minutes, and I probably got 4-5 shots that I was happy with, that is a pretty good day.

There were probably 100 more shots to shoot, and if I were out on my own I could have easily spent 4-5 hours with that car. I decided to save those shots for another day. I was happy to knock out a few shots, have a little fun with the father-in-law and have some fresh footage for my stock library.

As a bonus, we stopped to fill up with gas on the way home. Never missing an opportunity, I had him hold on for just a second, I quickly jumped out and framed up a shot, gassing up the 1940 Ford. To be honest, I have a feeling that the impromptu "gassing up" shot will probably end up being my best seller. It would have been easy at the end of the day to just let that one go, it ended up looking pretty nice. But who knows? The true test is when you get the footage on line and let the buyers decide.

The next step is to process these clips. In Final Cut Pro, I have selected the clips I think are the best, they were a little short so I combined two short shots into a mini-sequence to give the buyer a little more bang for their buck. There will be a coming and going shot combined in to one clip. Then I will use my thistle rack focus shot, a stand-alone wide angle shot of the 40 Ford going by, and a shot gassing up.

I trimmed the clips to be just the best part of each shot, I made sure the clips were longer than 5 seconds but less than 30 seconds. I will do some minor color correction then I will convert the shots to 1080X1920 HD, square pixels, with a Photo Jpeg Compression (for progressive scan shots) and save them into my library. The shots will be organized into my "Transportation" sub-folder and the file names will be something like, "TRN-0063 Classic Car Fillup.mov"

Next step is to plug each clip's info into my Google Doc Database (See my post on Stock Footage Organization)

Then I'm ready to upload the clips to iStockPhoto, Pond5, Shutterstock and a few others.

That's my process, for a Saturday afternoon stock footage shoot. Next, I wait for the $$$ start rolling in after a few months, and before too long my unpaid day of fun with the father-in-law turns into a healthy payout that just keeps coming year after year, and maybe if we're lucky we'll get to see the 40 Ford in the title sequence of some street rod restoration documentary.

Thanks for reading, Happy Shooting!
HDCineman

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Stock Footage Organization


For more information on shooting/selling stock footage check out my other posts:
GETTING STARTED
KEYWORDING
WHAT SELLS?

In this post I want to offer some stock footage organization tips. I can only share what has worked best in my experience, there are probably other ways to do things and ultimately you have to do what works best for you. Even if you start off with a small library of stock footage you will want to have some way of keeping it organized, accessible, and safe.

Organization
A simple database will do wonders for your organization, I use a Google doc spreadsheet because it is free, and I can access it anywhere there is internet. Here is what my doc looks like.


Clip ID - The clip ID# contains the category code followed by 4 numbers to signify which clip number it is. AML-0036 is the 36th clip in my Animals category.

File Name - This is the actual file name I use for the clip that is stored on a hard drive. It is the Clip ID followed by a more descriptive clip name.

Description - This field contains a description of the clip. Whenever I upload a new stock footage clip I copy the description and paste it into this field for each clip. When I decide to upload that same clip to another stock footage site I don't have to re-write the description each time. It is best to keep the description fairly short because some stock footage sites limit the length of the description to 200 characters.

Keywords - I copy keywords into this field. It is best to separate your keywords/phrases by commas. Although it is best to have as many legitimate keywords as you can think of, many sites limit keywords to 50.

The above database fields are the MOST useful for organizing and reusing your stock footage library. I decided to keep a few additional columns of information that I have found useful.

Formats - I keep the video format to describe whether the highest quality clip I have is Standard or High Definition video, and whether it is HD 1080, 720 or if the clip is available in 2K or 4K resolution. I could probably include the codec/compression as well, but I have chose not to so far.

Rating - I give my clips a quick rating on a scale from 1-10. Not every clip you sell has to be AMAZING, if I only posted my 30 most amazing clips I would probably have 1/10th the monthly income from my stock footage library. To be frank, some of my footage embarrasses me as an artist; As a business man, if the clip produces some income then it ads value to the business and has a place in my stock footage library. I still find it useful to keep track of the best clips. I will spend more time keywording/describing those clips, I will use those clips for advertising purposes, or if someone needs a quick sample of my library I will be sure to put my best foot forward.

Storage Location - This will become very important as your library expands. Basically it describes what drive a clip is located on.

Accessibility - You want to have easy access to your footage. I end up using a lot of my own footage for different projects, or sometimes a friend or business acquaintance will ask if I have a specific clip they can purchase. I could just tell them to go on line to iStockphoto/hdcineman and check out my portfolio. But I would rather have 100% of the purchase price, and I certainly don't want to buy my own clip for personal use.

If you can afford a high-end redundant raid drive system... more power to you. That is probably the safest way to store your stock footage library. I try to keep very low overhead with my stock footage business to maximize my profits. I have found that using an ICY Dock and plain ol' sata harddrives is a fantastic, inexpensive system.

Harddrives are cheap and the Icy Dock allows easy access to drives. I buy 2 drives each year a primary drive and a back up. All the footage I shoot/process in a year I put on a drive organized into separate folders based on media type (VIDEO, AUDIO, ILLUSTRATION) and then by category code (AML = Animal, BUS = Business, TRN = Transportation, etc.) I can easily search for clips by opening a category folder and scanning through, or I can use spotlight on my Mac (or search function on PC) to find a specific clip.

An additional tool I have found useful is Adobe Bridge, this was developed more for photography, but it works well for video as well. I don't like the way it keeps keywords, but if you have access to it you may find it useful. I use it when I am up loading footage to a new stock footage site to help manage which clips I have uploaded to which site. If you are uploading via FTP you can drag clips directly from the Bridge window into the FTP program.

Safety - It is important copy all your footage to a second back-up drive incase the primary drive fails. Also, if you're using the yearly drive system, you should plug the primary and back-up drives in periodically and check the media. Then every few years you should move old footage to new drives. The value of your footage will outlast any harddrive.

I know organization isn't as exciting as getting out there and shooting new footage, but when you start to see the earning power of your footage increase tenfold because you are organized you will be glad you took this information to heart.

Happy Shooting!
HDCineman

Friday, March 25, 2011

What stock footage sells TODAY?

So far I have tried to post some stuff about the surface level basics of shooting stock footage. I want to write a quick blurb about the thought process behind what sells, and some of the different angles you can approach shooting stock footage from that may improve your chances of success as a Stock Footage producer.

Stock footage has evolved, there are too many “standard” stock footage shots. Everyone already has access to them. How many times have you seen a time lapse sunset shot, a close up of a water drop in slow motion making waves? An abstract of waves rippling on a lake? A colorful blurred abstract background? A close-up of beautiful flower blowing gently in a summer breeze?

Historically, stock footage has been all about shooting VERY generic, standard shots in standard categories to create an all incompassing "Stock Footage Library." A production company would purchase the library to cover all of their stock footage needs. The licensing fees for using clips from these stock footage libraries was quite expensive and usually kept small independent producers away from purchasing the footage. Things have changed, and there is a MUCH larger pool of producers that need stock footage for music videos, websites, webisodes, commercials, indy films, student films, live events etc. but they aren't willing to purchase large libraries, and they are using stock footage to save money on their productions. And they usually have much more specialized or specific needs.

With the onset of micro-sites your stock footage is available to the entire world, shoot something unique, special, impressive, difficult to shoot, or creative and you will do very well. There still is a market for the standard, tried and true subject matter, but you better have a studio, high end camera equipment and lights, hire professional actors/models and have some experience shooting professional film or video. A popular topics that comes to mind is:

Business People - Meetings, making deals, on the phone, on a computer, working together, etc. Businesses put together video presentations all the time for marketing purposes, conventions, sales meetings, etc. They use them on websites, in power point presentations etc. That is a good target market because they don’t like to go and hire camera crews to shoot a 3 minute sales meeting video.

I’m not discouraging shooting this kind of footage, but starting out, it is much more rewarding to sell your unique eye to the world.

Here is an example of a unique shot that has done well for me.


I was able to get my HVX200 into the LA County Fair and shoot this POV shot as I slid down a colorful slide. I didn't have to hire any actors, rent a studio, lights, or production assistants. As of this posting, "Carnival Slide POV" has made me $542 from istockphoto.com sales. It consistently sells (on average) about once every month. That's not a bad trip to the County Fair! I'd say I covered my entrance fee and the $2 to go on the slide.

Find something unique to shoot... it doesn't always have to be a big production. Just watch out for recognizable faces, logos, or other things that will get your clip rejected.

Happy Shooting
HDCineman

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Keywording Stock Footage

Keywording is the single most important factor in getting potential buyers to find your clip. Having great footage is good, but if no one can find it you will never get any sales. Take the time to write out very thoughtful keywords for your clips.

If you are foggy on how a keyword works, a keyword is a word or phrase that describes your clip. This word or phrase is something that a customer would type into a search box to try and find a clip that they want to buy. As a footage producer, you have no idea who will need your clip or what they will use it for, but you have to make your best guess at what a customer might type in that search box to get them to find your clip, and hopefully purchase it.

Look at your clip and type all the different keywords that describe your clip. Put yourself in the position of different customers that may want to purchase your clip, what would you type in to find your clip? Say you are putting together a short video promoting Los Angeles tourism, maybe you would type in the words, "Los Angeles Beach Scenics". Maybe you are doing an art piece and are looking for a bunch of different clips that are orange. Maybe you are a cinematography teacher and you want to illustrate the term "silhouette" or "color gradient" The more scenarios you can come up with, the more relavent keywords you will come up with, and the more sales you will make.

When you are first learning to keyword the best thing you can do is copy someone else's keywords. If you have a shot of a surfer at sunset, do a search for "sunset surfer" find the clip that is similar to yours and has the MOST downloads. There will probably be a lot of keywords on there that you didn't think of. There is a fantastic site I've recently started using http://www.findphotokeywords.com/. This site allows you to search for clips that match yours on Shutterstock, iStockphoto, Dreamstime, and Getty Images. Then you can extract keywords from those sites. Great tool!

Another good tool for some clips is wikipedia, when you type the subject of your clip into wikipedia you will get a wealth of information that could be useful for your keywords. Especially for shots of animals, objects or landmarks.



Here are the keywords I would use for the sunset surfer clip:
surfer, surf, surfboard, sunset, beach, wave, warm, California, establishing shot, silhouette, short board, Los Angeles, LA, Manhattan Beach, beach, ocean, water, recreation, sport, extreme, sports, relaxation, skill, balance, exercise, man, carve, ride, summertime, summer, outdoors, orange

Do your keywords right the first time, sometimes it is tempting to just get all your footage up as fast as possible with the intention of coming back and improving your keywords... That can grow into a daunting task as your library grows and you will be missing out on sales opportunities.

Happy Shooting!
HDCineman

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Getting Started

Getting started with stock footage is relatively simple. If you've never shot stock footage before you will need the following:

- A good quality HD camera - Buy a Panasonic HVX200, a Canon 7D or borrow one from a friend (note, you can sell standard def footage, but if you want to build a passive income that will pay you for years to come, you want to capture your footage at the highest quality possible, and standard def is already on its way out, people just won't buy it as often)

- A tripod - It is super important to have a steady shot, a good fluid head tripod is probably the best investment you can make, but if you want to get started with NO money, set your camera on a rock or on a chair if you have to.

- A computer with some editing software - I use Final Cut Pro, you really just need a way to cut your footage clips down to be the right length (usually 5 - 30 seconds) and so you can cut out any camera bobbles. You also need a way to save the file to the correct file format, the standard right now for HD stock footage is a photo jpg compression or a motion jpg A or B compression. I will to a full post on technical requirements, but you can read about them on the various stock footage websites. Pond5 Video Requirements

- Internet access - a fast internet connection is important because you will need to upload your footage to a stock footage website, you will need to write keywords and descriptions for each clip, and you will need to track and collect your earnings.

Really that's it!

Once you have those things, these are the steps to getting your first clip posted and ready to sell.

1) Take the day and go shoot a bunch of really cool stuff! anything you want, but something unique, and something that would make good stock footage. I will be writing specific posts on what makes good stock footage.

2) Sign up for a stock footage account with a reputable website. I recommend Pond5 when you're getting started, they are a little less picky on the footage they accept, and they pay the largest percentage in the biz. Pond5 Stock Footage.

3) Edit your clips - Capture your fantastic, unique, amazing footage onto your computer and cut it into clips that are the right length (based on the requirements of the stock footage site you sign up with) Select the 3 very best clips you shot and export to your stock footage site's specs. If you are using final cut: Mark an in and out point on your clip ---> File ---> Export Quicktime Movie -----> Settings:Custom Settings --->


4) Apply for a contributor's account with your stock footage site. Most of them have an evaluation/review process you have to go through. You may have to take a test, you will probably have to upload 3 samples of your work. Once you finish the application, you will have to wait for a few days up to a few weeks.

5) Upload Upload Upload! - Once you are accepted as a stock footage contributor you are ready to start putting your product out there for the world to see, and start collecting some CASH! You will need to upload your clips, add keywords and possibly descriptions or other information. The more information you provide for each clip the better your sales will be down the road. Take your time on the keywording process, this is THE way that people will find your clip. I will have a specific post on the ins and outs of keywording, but every stock footage site has some good information on how to keyword your clips.

6) Start collecting your money! - Once you have enough money in your account you can have the stock footage site send you a check, or you can simply have them transfer it to your PayPal account (if you don't have PayPal, I highly recommend opening an account, it really is the easiest way to transfer money over the internet, and it makes the money part of your stock footage business very simple) Your income will be slow at first, but it will grow exponentially as you post more clips. Your shooting skills and stock footage "Horse Sense" will improve and if you stick with it you will soon have a healthy supplemental income.