Late last
year, I was approached by the editor of a magazine and asked if I would
consider submitting some photos. This
editor and I have a number of mutual acquaintances, one of whom is a good
friend of mine so, on the strength of that, I happily agreed.
Thus began
an ongoing communication, during which I shot not one but two sets for the
magazine, both of which I agreed to keep exclusive until after they had been published,
and made sure I kept the editor apprised of the progress of both shoots as
progress was made. No specifics beyond
general themes were ever discussed, but since this editor came to me based on
the work in my portfolio that he had already seen, he knew my style. The photos were submitted well before the
deadline for the issue, and when emails were sent out to let contributors know
which high-resolution images needed to be sent, I found out that one image from
one set would be published, and the submission of the second set was not even
acknowledged.
Flash
forward a few months, and a dear friend of mine finds herself in an almost
identical situation, with a different magazine; approached by the editor, asked
to submit a photo set based on the strength of her portfolio with only a very
general description of what they’d like to see, time and money spent on the
shoot, photos kept exclusive and submitted well within the required timeframe
and, after several attempts to find out the status of publication, finally
given only a lukewarm “maybe” as to whether they’ll ever be used.
I’m not
going to say, now or ever, that any editor is obligated under any circumstances
to guarantee publication of unseen work, regardless of who initiated the
contact. The editor’s job is to make
sure all work published is in keeping with the quality and overall image of the
magazine and, until you’ve seen the pictures, you can’t know they meet the
criteria. So my issue with the above mentioned
situations is not that the photos asked for weren’t used. My issue is with the communication, or rather
lack thereof, from the editors’ sides.
In both of
the above situations, the burden was on those editors to let me and my
friend know as soon as possible that the work submitted was not what the
magazine was hoping for. A simple “you
know, I appreciate you taking the time to do this, but it isn’t quite what
we’re looking for” would have been fine.
A simple “you know, we’d love to see a set from you in a bar-type
setting with mood lighting and a sheer black robe” prior to the shoot actually
taking place would have been even better.
What is not at all even a little bit okay is “just send something
Christmas-y” or “we’d like photos of you wearing red lipstick” and then leaving
the model hanging for an answer, or ignoring the submission altogether.
I do not
consider myself the be-all and end-all of magazine editors, far from it. But I know what I want and I know the only
way I’m ever going to get it is to ask for it, clearly and concisely, from the
people I think are most likely to be able to provide it. Case in point: I received a cover art
submission for an upcoming issue that was almost
what we want. I emailed both the model
and photographer and said “can you redo this same concept, making these changes
and adding this?” They said “hell yes we
can!” and I have no doubt that we’re going to have an amazing cover that is
exactly what we want.
Communication. Is.
Key.
And it’s
not actually all that painful. Editors
don’t like sending out rejection emails any more than contributors like
receiving them, but you know something weird?
I’ve lost count of how many emails I’ve received over the past year from
people who have sent work that is not in keeping with what we publish, thanking me for taking the time to let
them know we wouldn’t be using their submissions. They’re not thanking me for turning them
down, because that would be silly and masochistic, but they are thanking me for not just letting
their hard work vanish into a black hole of sent-and-never-answered emails.
To anyone
who takes the bullshit line of not having time to reply to all submissions,
no. Just... no. If you have time to ask for submissions, and
time to profit from other people’s work, you have time to create a form letter
that you can cut and paste as a reply to work that you don’t want to use.
Rejections
are like band-aids. A quick and clean
rip that stings for a second is far better for everyone than ignoring it until
the adhesive rots and it falls off on its own and lands you don’t even know
where until it gets caught in the vacuum cleaner belt and starts to smoke and
stinks up the entire room.
I whole-heartedly agree. I'm starting my own magazine soon and I have rejected photo submissions and it sucked. But I let the photographer know that even though I was saying no to the particular photos she submitted, I wasn't saying no to her. Being a newb to this business, I certainly don't want to get off on the wrong foot! I'm bookmarking this blog so I can refer to it lest I become too big for my britches! Thank you, Harlean!
ReplyDeleteI'm very flattered that you find the blog a viable source of too-big-for-britches antidotes ;) but so much of it comes down to simply treating people the way you want to be treated. Common courtesy, timely responses, just stopping to ask yourself "if I were on the other side of this, what would I want?" It's not an easy job, but it's so incredibly rewarding, and I'm sure you'll do great! :)
ReplyDeleteNext time just mind your own business.
ReplyDeleteWell, it actually is my business, and I am minding it. Or am I somehow misinterpreting your comment?
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