Visual Wilderness
  • Get Started
  • Shop
    • SPECIAL OFFERS
    • STREAMING SERVICE
    • Browse by Topic
    • Learn To Shoot
    • Post Processing
    • Online Classes
    • eBooks
    • Landscape Photography Guide
  • Blog
    • Blog
    • Guest Photographers
  • About
  • My Account
    • My Account
  • Search
  • Menu Menu
  • 0Shopping Cart
Cover for nature photography business blog post by Jay Patel

Lessons from a Successful Nature Photography Business

December 21, 2020/in Photography Business/by Jay Patel

It was little more than five year ago that I sent my final email as a corporate employee and jumped with both feet into the nature photography business. At the time, I didn’t realize what the coming years had in store for me. I expected to find some success and make some mistakes along the way, but I never expected so many twists and turns as a nature photography business owner.

To be honest, a lot of time in our first year as business owners was spent wandering around in the dark and taking a few wrong turns along the way. Our nature photography community did not work out the way we had hoped and marketing on social media produced very little return on investment. As time passed we learned how to protect our nature photography business from major strategic mistakes. And as the business grew, there were operational challenges related to scaling up content delivery on Visual Wilderness. Over the subsequent years, we spent more time fine-tuning our business model to take advantage of those successful sources.

Varina Patel conducting Nature Photography Business on a Sandbar, Fiji by Jay Patel

Varina Patel conducting Nature Photography Business on a Sandbar, Fiji

Here are some of the most important lessons we have learned over the past five years:

Nature Photography Business Successes

Success for our nature photography business often came from unexpected sources. When you start out on a new path, you don’t know if you’ll be successful so it is a nice surprise when things do work better than expected. One of the most unexpected sources of success was our blog content. We worked on it for the past three years and we always knew it drove traffic to our website. But this year it provided us with a platform that made photographers want to return to our site.

Nature Photography Blog

This requires determination and long-term planning. Varina was responsible for starting our content creation strategy a few years ago by creating a simple blog on her site (I dismissed the idea of a blog). Today we have over 600 articles on Visual Wilderness and more articles are added to the website every month. Besides content from Varina and me, we also have a team of some of the world’s best landscape photographers contributing content to Visual Wilderness. Today our nature photography blog is responsible for driving traffic to our website.

Nature photography blog on Visual Wilderness

Nature photography blog drives traffic to our business website.

Creating Our InFocus Newsletter

Varina and I have been teaching nature photography since 2005. However, it was not until five years ago that we started creating our newsletter. We used blog content to tell stories and to deliver consistent high-quality nature photography tips to our newsletter subscribers. This content keeps our 50K newsletter subscribers engaged and creates a reason for nature photographers to subscribe.

Forming Partnerships with other Nature Photographers

In 2015 we started forming a partnership with other nature photographers to create more value-added content for our video tutorials. This gives the partners the opportunity to jointly market their video tutorials on Visual Wilderness and it gives our customers new content. Partnership with other nature photographers allowed us to offer a bundled nature photography educational package with steep discounts.

  • Nature photography business Cover for InFocus Deals

    Nature photography business partnership to sell cost effective bundles.

  • Products on multi vendor nature photography business website by Jay Patel

    Visual Wilderness is a multi vendor nature photography business website

These partnerships proved invaluable for our nature photography business in 2020 during the pandemic. We were able to host several online workshops with the help of our partners. This created a win-win situation for everyone.

Organized Customer Database

We have been selling eBooks since 2009 but it was during the last five years that we started keeping a track of our photography business customers. We started categorizing customers into different buckets and making sure that we provide relevant and timely updates about the Visual Wilderness products that they have purchased. Ultimately, it’s these customers who matter the most.

Focus on Return on Investment

Our nature photography business is driven by our return on investment (ROI) rather than the latest trends, emotions, likes, ego, or your friends and family buying your work. Sometimes this means that you have to say “NO” to the photography business opportunities with low ROI. This is harder than it sounds and it continues to be an ongoing problem as more opportunities come our way.

This focus on ROI also extends to our social media strategy. It requires letting go of your ego-boosting posts on social media and instead concentrating on the nature photography posts that create value. While a value-added post may not get you noticed as much as an ego-boosting post about a great photo you shot, it builds a solid business brand in long term.

  • Varina Patel on nature photography workshop in Australia in 2013

    Varina Patel on nature photography workshop in Australia in 2013

  • Travel photography workshop for Charity in Nicaragua in 2014 by Jay Patel

    Travel Photography from Barrios, Granada, Nicaragua

One of the causalities of this approach was our photography workshop business. To be fair, it generated good income. However, it did not fit into our long terms plans. We still occasionally speak at events and teach at workshops organized by others for charity or for profit, but for now we are not organizing our own workshops.

Scalable Business Systems

In our first year, we had all the logistical tools in place to deliver eBooks and video tutorials for our customers. However, we soon discovered that this was not enough. As our nature photography business expanded, we had to expand our content delivery systems to handle several terabytes of video downloads from customers all over the world. We did go through a few operational glitches before getting this right. Today we rely on automation and custom programming to keep our nature photography business running smoothly.

Mistakes to Avoid

I wish there was a way to avoid mistakes in our nature photography business but this is a learning experience. Only after you spend the time and money do you realize that something was a mistake. Any good photography business owner knows that it is never a good idea to make the same mistake more than once. Here are some of mistakes we made in last few years:

Creating a Cheesy Advertise for our Products

Following the advice of a marketing guru to create a cheesy ad to view our video tutorial and our eBooks. We experimented with this and found that the audience retention rates on the videos were so low that it didn’t drive sales as expected. It also put our Visual Wilderness brand in a negative light. Thankfully we put an end to this effort after a short time.

Starting a Photo Community

We started a nature photography community in 2014 but it took a staggering toll on the rest of our business. Not only did we spend too much time nurturing the community, but this also locked out users from our blog content which drove traffic to our site. The fallout rates for the community were fairly high and the participation rates low. The income derived from this photography community was very small compared with the income from other sources. In the end, we had to disappoint some customers by putting an end to the photography community venture.

Assuming Social Media Marketing is Easy

We assumed that the social media marketing was a no-brainer if you have millions of followers. However, this was the wrong assumption to make. Most consumers are on social media to be social and not to shop. I discovered that the social media post with the least interaction was the sales post. Selling on social media requires a soft-sell approach – you provide a value to your customers and let them decide whether or not to purchase your products.

Experimenting with social media strategy for nature photography business

Experimenting with social media strategy for nature photography business

In other words, consumers on social media want to buy but they also don’t want to be sold to. Our social media strategy is constantly being refined and the income from this social media is still pretty small compared to other marketing channels.

As we continue to grow our nature photography business we are looking forward to making grand mistakes and embracing failure… and finding those unexpected sources of success that allow us to enjoy visiting exotic places while making money.

About Author Jay Patel

I could startoff like this – “Seeds of Jay Patel’s appreciation for beautiful places were planted early in his childhood….” but it would get boring really fast. I will just sum it up and say that I am a Landscape and Wilderness Photographer who loves to capture dramatic light. My photographs have been published in various magazines, calendars and advertising materials throughout the world.
Patience is a virtue...unless you are chasing your dreams

Website | Google+ | Facebook | Twitter | Linkedin | Pinterest

Tags: Photography Business
You might also like
Landscape photography blog cover about selling fine art prints by Jay Patel.Landscape Photography – 5 Takeaways from Photos that Sell
Cover for landscape photography business blog post by Jay PatelAm I Ready to Start a Landscape Photography Business?
Landscape photography from West Thumb, Yellowstone National Park by Varina PatelHow to build a Better Mobile Photography Business Website
Cover for nature photography blog about classifying your images by Varina PatelHow do Pro Nature Photographers use their images?
Cover or Nature Photography Business blog post by Patricia Davidson10 Steps to starting a Nature Photography Business
Landscape Photograhy by Lace AndersenA Beginners Guide for Adding Watermark to your Photos

NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY NEWSLETTER

Join 45,000+ Nature Photographers and get the free eBooks, free creativity course & discount codes right in your inbox.

loader

Note: We never share your email address with anyone. More Info.

Blog | Shop | About

 Email Policy  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms

INFOCUS NEWSLETTER

Join 45,000+ other photographers and get the Free eBooks, Free Creativity Course & Discount Codes right in your inbox.


loader

Note: We never share your email address with anyone. More Info.

All Rights Reserved, © Copyright Visual Wilderness

How to choose a Perfect Camera Lens for Landscape PhotographyLandscape photography from Zabriskie Point Sunrise, Death Valley National Park, California by Peter CoskunLandscape Photography by Jay Patel from IcelandHappy Holidays from Visual Wilderness
Scroll to top

This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.

OK

Cookie and Privacy Settings



How we use cookies

We may request cookies to be set on your device. We use cookies to let us know when you visit our websites, how you interact with us, to enrich your user experience, and to customize your relationship with our website.

Click on the different category headings to find out more. You can also change some of your preferences. Note that blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience on our websites and the services we are able to offer.

Essential Website Cookies

These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our website and to use some of its features.

Because these cookies are strictly necessary to deliver the website, refusing them will have impact how our site functions. You always can block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and force blocking all cookies on this website. But this will always prompt you to accept/refuse cookies when revisiting our site.

We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies but to avoid asking you again and again kindly allow us to store a cookie for that. You are free to opt out any time or opt in for other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies we will remove all set cookies in our domain.

We provide you with a list of stored cookies on your computer in our domain so you can check what we stored. Due to security reasons we are not able to show or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser security settings.

Other external services

We also use different external services like Google Webfonts, Google Maps, and external Video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data like your IP address we allow you to block them here. Please be aware that this might heavily reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will take effect once you reload the page.

Google Webfont Settings:

Google Map Settings:

Google reCaptcha Settings:

Vimeo and Youtube video embeds:

Privacy Policy

You can read about our cookies and privacy settings in detail on our Privacy Policy Page.

Privacy Policy
Learn More
NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY NEWSLETTERJoin 45,000+ Nature Photographers

Unlock Your Photography Potential! Get Free Webinars, Tips, eBooks, and More Delivered Straight to Your Inbox! 📸✨

We never share your email address with anyone. More Info.

Enter your email address