Getting started with our flash templates

Hi Everyone and thanks for checking out the blog!

Our first entry will address the initial steps in converting your MorePhotos website template to the brand new flash sites. Our development crew has been hard at work on these new templates and we expect a large template turnover from our existing client base. To help ease the amount of calls to our tech department we will be rolling out videos outlining the process of setting up these templates. Here is our first video showing you how to change your template to the new full screen flash templates. You may want to view this in fullscreen mode to see details closer.

Our next video will address configuring your template site pages to load in Flash.

Need additional help? Leave a comment to this post or join the discussion on our new MorePhotos Photography and Support Forums. You can also subscribe to this blogs updates to keep yourself in the know with all aspects of the MorePhotos system.

Unveiling More Online Solutions for Photographers!

Off to an exciting start in 2010, MorePhotos unveils yet another upgrade to its photography software that allows photographers to sell their photos online. The upgrade allows clients to capture the best of both Flash and Html worlds.  Why is this vital to your operation?  Call me, I’ll explain as we update your website!

Billed as ‘the photographer’s software’, MorePhotos has the unique perspective on the needs of photographers across the globe, based on daily discussions with them. With their client base in over 30 countries, MorePhotos addresses and develops software that meets the demands of photographers to streamline their business.

One of the first companies to develop digital watermark protection on images, MorePhotos introduced lab management software in 2001, and DP2 integration in 2009.  Integrating your website with your lab’s printing service = lower costs for everyone!

As photographers around the globe voice their business needs, MorePhotos listens and develops.

Litmus test for raising prices?

We were asked by a photographer if he should raise his prices or not.  My knee jerk response straight from the textbook was, “If the demand for your services is greater than what you can supply, then yes.”  But this is quite vague.  Here’s the litmus test we came up with that is now used by many successful trend setters:

1. Get an 18 month calendar.  If you regularly book weddings out further, then a 24 or 36 month calendar might be necessary for you.

2. When a certain date is fully booked, mark an X on that day.  This could be one wedding or 4 portrait sessions, etc.

3. Continue to make slashes in the “asked about” dates.  So even when you pick up the phone and have to say, “I’m sorry, that date is already booked.”, be sure to put a slash on that date every time.

4. Review the slashes when you get the urge to make pricing changes.  Instead of thinking, “That last weekend in July is soooo busy, I should charge more that weekend.”  You can analyze it and make a more rash decision.

On a side note, I have to mention here that the classic micro-economic graph Higher Prices = Less Sales and Lower prices =  More Sales does not always ring true in the photography industry.  If you are slumping in sales, you might even want to raise your rates, creating a perceived value for your service.  When you deliver on that value, you will create a customer for life.