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Mary Beth Koeth
  • OVERVIEW
  • PERSONAL
    • No Partner Required
    • Missed Milestones
    • Off-Season Santas
    • The Collector
    • Porn Moms
    • Richard Harr
    • Miami Boyfriends
    • People of the 8th Street Bus Stop
    • Indonesian Senior Club
    • Nephew in New York
    • Senior Ping Pong Olympics
    • Sonia Warshawski
  • PRINT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • Recent
  • about mb
  • contact

Younger Photographers Older Ones Too | Need to Hear This

Younger photographers — and honestly older ones too — need to hear this:

Being wanted is not the same thing as being respected.

I’ve photographed billionaires, finance executives, major companies, politicians, celebrities, and brands people would recognize instantly. Again and again I’ve watched wealthy clients praise the work, praise the vision, praise the talent… and then suddenly become “confused” when the invoice arrives.

One production company told me a commercial shoot would roughly cost $5k. By the time they required a Digi Tech, lighting, assistants, rentals, mileage, travel, hotels during spring break, and gear delivery, my expenses alone were over $6,000. They refused the invoice and said they’d only pay $5k total.

Another company flew me to NYC to photograph top executives over a ten-day period, then refused to pay hold days, food, transportation, or my assistant’s hotel — the assistant carrying gear up and down 47 floors.

Another finance client wanted full rights to the images so they could distribute them to magazines and media outlets. I flew from Dallas to Miami, rented gear, bought custom gels for the shoot, rented a car, and delivered exactly what they wanted. I invoiced $4,150 INCLUDING usage rights. They immediately pushed me down to $3k.

Here’s what I’ve learned:

Artists are taught to be grateful for access.
Powerful people are taught to negotiate everything.

Your talent is not the invoice.
Your boundaries are.

Stop subsidizing wealthy clients with your own exhaustion, flights, hotel rooms, assistants, gear, food, licensing, and peace.

If someone has the budget for luxury offices, branding campaigns, private equity deals, magazine PR, and million-dollar image management strategies, they have the budget to pay the artist properly.

I’m no longer interested in being “easy to work with” at my own expense.

Know your worth.
Protect your gift.
And stop apologizing for charging what your work is actually worth.

tags: Know your worth, Editorial Photography, Commercial Photographer, creative industry
categories: Artist, Dallas Photographer
Wednesday 05.27.26
Posted by Mary Beth Koeth
 

Ziggy

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Ziggy

📷 Mary Beth Koeth 🧥styling Mila Kastari
studio Ace Props Miami

tags: ziggy, ace props, Editorial Photography
categories: Female Photographer Miami
Monday 05.15.23
Posted by Guest User
 

Jon Platt for Billboard Magazine

Jon Platt photographed for Billboard Magazine’s Power 100 Issue at the Faena Hotel in Miami Beach.

📷: Mary Beth Koeth
digi tech 💪🏽: Javier Sanchez, retouching: Babydoll Studios

BillboardTop100_JonPlatt_MBKoeth.jpg
tags: Editorial Photography, Magazine Photography, Billboard, Miami Editorial Photographer
categories: Photography
Monday 09.10.18
Posted by Guest User