Fotolia

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Fotolia is a microstock photography agency that is based in New York, New York. It was started by Oleg Tscheltzoff, Patrick Chassany, Thibaud Elziere [1] in November 2005[2]. The company also has offices in Seattle, Washington and Paris, France.

Fotolia provides means for worldwide distribution of photographs, through PayPal (in the countries that use it), and Moneybookers (another internet payment system offered in more countries than Paypal). Some photographs are offered for free; those that are sold are priced from $1 to as high as $2,000.

As of December 2007, Fotolia had more than 500,000 members who had uploaded more than 2.7 million photographs and graphic illustrations. [3][4]

Contents

[edit] Sales

[edit] Buyers

Fotolia is designed for both commercial users who need photographs for PowerPoint presentations, company web sites, and for use on profitable products, such as postcards, posters, mugs; and also for private users, who want to use high-quality photos for personal greeting cards, PC wallpapers, and other uses.

Depending on what the photographer offers, images may be purchased royalty free, for use on web sites, or they may be purchased through an exclusive buyout, in which the customer can use the photos commercially (such as selling prints and products with the photo on them).

[edit] Sellers

Fotolia allows both amateur and professional photographers to upload photos to their site, although there are strict requirements, such as size and quality, that must be met before being accepted. The photos are put into a queue where they are reviewed by moderators for aesthetic and technical qualities, and subject popularity. Those that aren't given the highest reviews are sometimes added to the 'Free' section, where artists are not paid by the users, but the advertising fees that Fotolia receives. This fee varies depending on visitors to the site and how many images each visitor downloads.

Each photo is required at least seven (but possibly more) tags to help categorize the image to make searches easier.

[edit] Competition and controversy

Other leading microstock companies include: BigStockPhoto, iStockPhoto and ShutterStock. An April 2007 New York Times article reported that Fotolia and other microstock agencies are catching up in popularity to larger stock photography providers that have been in business for many years.[5] In comparison to Fotolia's < $10 million in annual sales, stock photography giant Getty Images takes in $807 million each year[6].

The microstock photography industry as a whole has been the target of complaints that their inexpensive images are taking business away from stock agencies that must charge much more to pay the higher commissions that professional photographers demand. The smaller agencies pay only small royalties to amateur photographers and hobbyists are excited to make even a dollar on their images. Concern over emerging competition has taken a toll on the incumbents, which have seen their stock share prices plunge. [7]

[edit] References

  1. ^ *Andy Goetze, Interview With Fotolia´s CEO Thibaud Elziere, StockPhotoTalk.com, November 28, 2005, accessed April 29, 2007
  2. ^ Arrington, Michael (November 10, 2005). Fotolia's P2P Photo Sales. TechCrunch.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-29.
  3. ^ Porsche Inter Auto Signs on as Fotolia’s 500,000th Member. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
  4. ^ "Porsche Inter Auto Signs on as Fotolia’s 500,000th Member", designtaxi.com, December 2007
  5. ^ Katie Hafner, "A Photo Trove, a Mounting Challenge", New York Times, April 4, 2007
  6. ^ Robert Levine. "Photo wars: A $2 billion business gets rough", Business 2.0, April 4, 2007. 
  7. ^ Scott Martin, "PhotoShelter Snaps Up $4.2M: Photo 'microstock' site nabs funding to battle Corbis and Getty", Red Herring, April 17, 2007

[edit] External links

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