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    Cell Phones for an Aging Population: Potential Solutions
    Cell phones have become the primary method of voice communication. These devices are credited with saving lives based on their easy, immediate access at all times. As cell phones have evolved however, they have taken on a multitude of other functions; acting as cameras, MP3 players, computers, television, and so forth. Increased complexity has been the result of these expanding functions while the physical size of the devices has been shrinking steadily. For a significant portion of the population, this has created problems in using cell phones.At some point in middle age, people
    store.

    It works. And we can expect that many similar companies will follow suit.

    Now that RF has been around for a few years, the $1-a-picture industry has come to the realization that their exquisite clich?s have a limited life span. Limited shelf life in the Royalty-Free industry is a fact of life. Styles, trends, and buzz-pix become popular, then become stale, and then die. (Remember those earlier suit-with-a-briefcase-in-hand, rushing down the street? Do suits still carry brief cases, or has the style moved on to shoulder slung satchels?) The pictures Dreamstime plans to choose for giving away

    Saving Time and Effort: The Lazy Way to Leadership
    As a leader, if you've looked around you and wondered why some leaders seem to have all the time in the world, while you're feeling stressed and under the hammer, perhaps you need to lead the lazy way instead.The Oxford University Press defines Lazy as:1. Unwilling to work or use energy. 2. Showing or characterized by a lack of effort or care.Both of these are very good definitions of what the lazy leader should be; unwilling to expend useless energy and characterised by a lack of effort. Unfortunately, the definition is somewhat limited in vision for true leader
    This kind of marketing tactic is one that editorial stock photographers don’t need to employ, because their photos grow in value as time moves on –unlike commercial stock photos that are more closely tied to trends or conform to current design dictates, and consequently fall out of fashion.

    No doubt. It’s the way of the future. Giving away photos. Free.

    Dreamstime, a Royalty-Free company, recently announced that it will give away photos each month.

    What’s the catch? It’s the first on-line image portal to announce that it’s got extra baggage it’d like to get rid of. And, in so doing, it’s wisely launching a marketing technique that is sure to be followed in the $1-a-picture on-line business. (Except that Dreamstime also features some pricey pictures.)

    Dreamstime is following a new Internet trend that has been used for years by the brick-‘n’-mortar people: overstock. When a product’s shelf life has expired (it’s not selling) they usher the items off to a second tier of businesses that are willing to take on the product (cheap!) and sell it to “dollar stores” or similar enterprises. Everyone benefits, including the customer. Extra baggage in the stock industry means extra administrative time, extra disk space, and extra keywords, not to mention disappointment on the part of buyers. Depending on the category –teens, office workers, industry, etc. – the RF pictures have a shelf life of between two to five years. After that, they are usually relegated to the trash bin.

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    “It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers

    an introductory coupon…”

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    But how does a photobuyer benefit? Well, everyone likes something for free, whether it turns out to be useful or not. Dreamstime says that this technique opens the door to many new and potential customers. Some may never have heard of Dreamstime (you just heard about them…), some, former customers who forgot about them, and some of them window shoppers. They just might go on to become long-term customers, once they have visited the website.

    It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers an introductory coupon. ($2 off this product). It’s called a loss-leader. In this case there’s little loss to Dreamstime. Customers will come in and look around and perhaps move beyond this back door bargain section into the front of the store.

    It works. And we can expect that many similar companies will follow suit.

    Now that RF has been around for a few years, the $1-a-picture industry has come to the realization that their exquisite clich?s have a limited life span. Limited shelf life in the Royalty-Free industry is a fact of life. Styles, trends, and buzz-pix become popular, then become stale, and then die. (Remember those earlier suit-with-a-briefcase-in-hand, rushing down the street? Do suits still carry brief cases, or has the style moved on to shoulder slung satchels?) The pictures Dreamstime plans to choose for giving away,

    ACTION is More Important than Knowledge!
    It was Albert Einstein who stated that 'imagination is more important than knowledge'. Now if he had been addressing a room full of entrepreneurs, I hazard a guess that he might also have extended this quotation by saying that 'action is more important than knowledge too!'Make no mistake, if you want to make your mark on this world as an entrepreneur you have to consistently take ACTION! Not only that, you will also need to have the ability to inspire other people into ACTION as well.Learn by taking ACTION!In our modern society we gravely underestimate the value and
    launching a marketing technique that is sure to be followed in the $1-a-picture on-line business. (Except that Dreamstime also features some pricey pictures.)

    Dreamstime is following a new Internet trend that has been used for years by the brick-‘n’-mortar people: overstock. When a product’s shelf life has expired (it’s not selling) they usher the items off to a second tier of businesses that are willing to take on the product (cheap!) and sell it to “dollar stores” or similar enterprises. Everyone benefits, including the customer. Extra baggage in the stock industry means extra administrative time, extra disk space, and extra keywords, not to mention disappointment on the part of buyers. Depending on the category –teens, office workers, industry, etc. – the RF pictures have a shelf life of between two to five years. After that, they are usually relegated to the trash bin.

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    “It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers

    an introductory coupon…”

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    But how does a photobuyer benefit? Well, everyone likes something for free, whether it turns out to be useful or not. Dreamstime says that this technique opens the door to many new and potential customers. Some may never have heard of Dreamstime (you just heard about them…), some, former customers who forgot about them, and some of them window shoppers. They just might go on to become long-term customers, once they have visited the website.

    It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers an introductory coupon. ($2 off this product). It’s called a loss-leader. In this case there’s little loss to Dreamstime. Customers will come in and look around and perhaps move beyond this back door bargain section into the front of the store.

    It works. And we can expect that many similar companies will follow suit.

    Now that RF has been around for a few years, the $1-a-picture industry has come to the realization that their exquisite clich?s have a limited life span. Limited shelf life in the Royalty-Free industry is a fact of life. Styles, trends, and buzz-pix become popular, then become stale, and then die. (Remember those earlier suit-with-a-briefcase-in-hand, rushing down the street? Do suits still carry brief cases, or has the style moved on to shoulder slung satchels?) The pictures Dreamstime plans to choose for giving away

    Farm Kitchen Sink
    I grew up on a farm in the 40's, and one of the most pleasant things in our lives was sitting around the kitchen, which was the center of the household. Mom was an excellent cook, and I remember well the old farm kitchen sink, which was always a focal point.Currently there are three primary types of kitchen sinks: self-rimming, under mount, and farm. Self-rimming, or drop-in sinks, sit on top of the counter top. This is the least attractive sink option, and the least practical, as the countertops cannot be wiped off directly into the sink. The rim prevents this from happening smoot
    isk space, and extra keywords, not to mention disappointment on the part of buyers. Depending on the category –teens, office workers, industry, etc. – the RF pictures have a shelf life of between two to five years. After that, they are usually relegated to the trash bin.

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    “It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers

    an introductory coupon…”

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    But how does a photobuyer benefit? Well, everyone likes something for free, whether it turns out to be useful or not. Dreamstime says that this technique opens the door to many new and potential customers. Some may never have heard of Dreamstime (you just heard about them…), some, former customers who forgot about them, and some of them window shoppers. They just might go on to become long-term customers, once they have visited the website.

    It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers an introductory coupon. ($2 off this product). It’s called a loss-leader. In this case there’s little loss to Dreamstime. Customers will come in and look around and perhaps move beyond this back door bargain section into the front of the store.

    It works. And we can expect that many similar companies will follow suit.

    Now that RF has been around for a few years, the $1-a-picture industry has come to the realization that their exquisite clich?s have a limited life span. Limited shelf life in the Royalty-Free industry is a fact of life. Styles, trends, and buzz-pix become popular, then become stale, and then die. (Remember those earlier suit-with-a-briefcase-in-hand, rushing down the street? Do suits still carry brief cases, or has the style moved on to shoulder slung satchels?) The pictures Dreamstime plans to choose for giving away

    The Primary Social Dilemma of Our Time
    So what is it? It's the power 'role reversal' of men and women.Is the nation headed down a path of female breadwinners and standby husbands?Don't these men know that something is amiss? Don't they feel ashamed in a way that their woman is leading the family or have they become accustomed to it so much that they don't care?What happened to men of courage and character?Popular society now seems to favor the alpha male archetypes that are dangerous and bravado in their approval of female exploitation such as hip-hop's superstars.Or is that maybe just becau
    r not. Dreamstime says that this technique opens the door to many new and potential customers. Some may never have heard of Dreamstime (you just heard about them…), some, former customers who forgot about them, and some of them window shoppers. They just might go on to become long-term customers, once they have visited the website.

    It’s not unlike the supermarket that offers an introductory coupon. ($2 off this product). It’s called a loss-leader. In this case there’s little loss to Dreamstime. Customers will come in and look around and perhaps move beyond this back door bargain section into the front of the store.

    It works. And we can expect that many similar companies will follow suit.

    Now that RF has been around for a few years, the $1-a-picture industry has come to the realization that their exquisite clich?s have a limited life span. Limited shelf life in the Royalty-Free industry is a fact of life. Styles, trends, and buzz-pix become popular, then become stale, and then die. (Remember those earlier suit-with-a-briefcase-in-hand, rushing down the street? Do suits still carry brief cases, or has the style moved on to shoulder slung satchels?) The pictures Dreamstime plans to choose for giving away

    Long Term Care - The Who, The What and The How
    While life is populated by choices, one certainty that faces the majority of adults is that they can control their future options only by planning ahead. Financial planners recommend diversifying interests to insure profit. Real estate planners bank on the idea that real estate matures over time and is a solid investment.Life insurance promises a financial cushion for bereaved family members so they won’t have to worry about things such as house payments or accrued debt. Long term care planning focuses on the growing need for assisted care as the nation’s baby boomers near retiremen
    store.

    It works. And we can expect that many similar companies will follow suit.

    Now that RF has been around for a few years, the $1-a-picture industry has come to the realization that their exquisite clich?s have a limited life span. Limited shelf life in the Royalty-Free industry is a fact of life. Styles, trends, and buzz-pix become popular, then become stale, and then die. (Remember those earlier suit-with-a-briefcase-in-hand, rushing down the street? Do suits still carry brief cases, or has the style moved on to shoulder slung satchels?) The pictures Dreamstime plans to choose for giving away, will be only images that have been online for at least one year, that have had no sales.

    THE EDITORIAL DIFFERENCE

    In our field of editorial stock photography, we see an opposite effect. Unlike commercial stock photos that have a short ‘shelf life’, editorial stock photos gain in their marketability. The editorial stock photographs you are capturing today can easily experience an increase in their marketability as the years move on.

    A commercial stock photograph taken in the 1990’s may have already lost its marketability, but an editorial stock photograph of an aborigine listening to a transistor radio in the 90’s will increase in its salability and become even more useable in this century.

    Whether your interest area is the environment, politics, education, etc. your present pictures will be marketable not only today but also in the future. You’ll even be able to pass your collection on to your heirs as an annuity.

    Is this a new phenomenon? It has existed to a degree all along, but now it’s getting big. Now that the publishing industry, which includes physical markets (paper, newspapers, etc), but also “air-space” on TV, the Internet, and future means of publishing, has realized that nostalgia, history, and memorabilia sells. (Who would’ve thought just a few short years ago that there would be a history channel on TV?) If you are following a stock photo career of taking pictures in a category you love to work in, you will become a contributor to history.

    Unlike the Dreamstime people who consider their throw-aways as dead-weight and un-saleable, your pictures are becoming more valuable as time moves on.

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