Thursday, September 6, 2007

UPDATED: GYI - The Downward Full Court Press Continues


Here's a little "flying at 33,000 feet" perspective on asset aquisition, moved a bit into laymen's terms.

When you are a company like Getty Images, which has previously stated (pre-iStockphoto aquisition) that your rights-managed royalty-free library was generating an average image license of roughly $190 an image, that's a metric you use as you look at other libraries. If then, you consider that for every 100 images you have in your library, 1 will sell per year, (and that's a rough guestimation, to be sure, but, it's functional for this example), you then determine that a library with, say, 1,000,000 images will generate 1.9 million in revenue, per year, generally speaking. You then must factor in the aging of the asset (i.e. a photo of a cell phone user has a lifespan of about 3-4 years because the models/sizes change), to the end of the "current" life of the photo. The photo then has a value as a "historical" image for the remainder of the life of the copyright. These are complicated metrics to be sure, and you definately then hire an actuary to take a multitude of factors in as you properly value a company. Don't worry though, the company you're considering buying has actuaries of their own, doing the same thing. I'd find it facinating to be in a room with competing actuaries as they debated the nuances of a companies' valuation.

I would, however, suspect that the acutaries did not take into consideration that the acquiring company would canibalize it's own assets by cutting uses to $49. I just don't comprehend that thought process. Essentially, at whatever volume you were previously licensing imagery for in that category, you are slashing the average valuation, and expecting to make it up in volume.

Businessweek has taken note, weighing in on Getty two days ago in their article Moving Pictures.

(Commentary & Analysis after the Jump)
A few cautionary notes -

The article notes that "stock has become big business in a remarkably short time. But that status seems precarious—and Getty and its photographers are straining to adapt." Getty is, in fact straining to adapt as the percentage of images sold out of 100 (as noted above) diminishes. When you have 15 images of, say, an American Flag flying during a winter storm, and , after an aquisition of another company, you now have 22, your "images licensed per 100" figure diminishes. Further, photographers are struggling to adapt because the revenue they relied upon is being slashed (more on that below), and photographers' willingness to continue to be creative is diminishing.


The article highlights this point, suggesting "It's no wonder that photographers and stock buyers gripe that Getty grabs profits where it can, leaving everyone else a skinny slice...(p)hotographers have felt Getty's influence in the way they work and in how much money they take home. "There are a lot of strong-arm tactics involved in getting lower fees from photographers...(t)he industry standard cut for photographers used to be 50 percent," citing one producer of photography, "It's now 20 to 40 percent. People sign with market leaders like Getty to make it up in volume." For rights-managed images, the average commission at Getty is now closer to 33 percent, according to the company's latest annual report.

Fortunately, I am still recieving 50% from my agency relationship. Examples abound in the article, with Jim Pickerell mentioning one photographer's experience in particular. Jim is then cited in the article - "Jim Pickerell, publisher of the trade magazine Selling Stock, adds, 'The collections will likely grow larger and larger, so the odds of any images being licensed have become less and less.'", which just reinforces my point above, and I am certain that Jim and I are not alone in this observation.

Betsy Reid, Executive Director of the Stock Artists Alliance is quoted as saying "We see seasoned photographers leaving stock because of reduced opportunity, but also because of reduced enthusiasm. They're unlikely to be replaced by a new generation of pros, nor will their level of imagery be replicated by amateurs," which is so true. In order to have creative contributions, you must incentivize the creators, which was the original basis for copyright in the US - the notion that, in order to incentivize people to produce creative works, you must - for a limited time - give them a monopoly on the uses and fees charged to others to use, those images. This revenue is needed to sustain them as they do more. As photographers see their artistic creations devalued and used by corporate America everywhere, and, in the end, they are getting 33%-50% of the $49 stock sale, that's about $20-odd dollars or so, and that level of revenue is not going to sustain them as they try to create more.

The article goes on to say "While Getty appears to be unshakable, its future may well be at the mercy of such changes in the business." Indeed. It will be at the mercy of creatively fatigued photographers - the ones that are the top creative producers of the recent past, and the allowance of the commoditization of their own imagery. Last year, JDK said "If someone's going to cannibalize your business, better it be one of your other businesses,", and that's not a functional concept when what is canibalizing your business that investors own and trade, is worth less than pennies on the dollar. It's one thing to say this when you're allowing Jeep Liberty sales to eat into Jeep Cherokee sales, as the Liberty is less expensive to produce and sell, but this just does not work when it comes to imagery! When you earn $0.80 gross (before the backend costs to bill for that and house the content), and you used to generate $95 gross (that'd be 50% of the $190 average), that's going to require you to make over 1,000 additional image sales - per image - just to break even. The article suggests, as it regards Getty and iStockphoto "It's still a potentially dire situation for both agencies." Yes, it is.

Don't believe them (or me)? The articles' closing sentiments include a quote by Washington DC's Design Army co-owner, cited at the beginning of the article: "Design Army's Pum Lefebure notes that she prefers the steep discounts offered by iStockphoto and others: "If we want an image of sky or grass, I'd rather spend $10 than $350." That's from the buyer's mouth, based upon experiences over time. That's a 97% reduction in costs for them. I just can't see, with losses like that for the creatives who produce the content, and the valuation of the company, that anywhere close to that can be achieved by making it up in volume.

Getty touted the news, suggesting it was revolutionary in their PR newswire announcement. It says, in part, "The new product enables customers producing content for the rapidly expanding online market to use award-winning imagery from the broadest and highest quality collection in the world in their online media and advertising." Now, maybe it's just be, but shouldn't "award-winning imagery" that is from the "highest quality collection" carry a premium? Shouldn't photographers who produce that caliber of imagery be rewarded at net-fees to them of more than $20-$25 a piece? The announcement goes on, "Getty Images' new web-resolution product enables customers to access the entire breadth and depth of its collections -- even the premium collections -- for their online media and advertising campaigns...Royalty-free imagery may be licensed online today with rights-ready and rights-managed online licensing in the coming weeks." So, this isn't just their old stock images, or ones that aren't selling well. This is the whole archive.

What do others think of this concept? Simon Stanmore, on his blog,
Commercial Photography Commentary - News, views & techniques for advertising & corporate communications photography
, notes in this entry, titled $49 = 1-10 year, Worldwide, Commercial, License to Use, "Ultimately all RM licenses may be devalued across-the-board by this development, especially when you consider the steady shift away from print toward digital media for advertising." Simon echoes the sentiments noted above:
"There may be another repercussion: A negative reaction from Getty’s mission critical suppliers – Photographers... A list price of $49 for a 1 year Worldwide RM commercial license may just be the straw that breaks their bleeding backs.

Either vocally or silently many of the once committed, still talented photographers who selected Getty to be their distribution partner may move on to where they feel their imagery is respected and profession better understood. And being predominantly creative individuals that entered the profession for the good of their souls over their pockets, they may well be willing to resign themselves to a short-term financial hit in doing so.
How is this going to flesh out? Well, a review of the timeline is in place. Revenue is booked by GYI either at the time of the image's license/sale, or when they recieve the payment. Assuming the latter is the case (i.e. the longer timeframe), GYI's quarterly call was at the beginning of August. Their third quarter announcement will be sometime around the end of October. You do the math - it'll take a week or two to have the lion's share of the images they want to make available at $49, and they'll see a spike the first few weeks in that income, collected within 30 days means that they will be able to report increases in volume, and attribute any diminished gross revenue to this new model, and extend out the bad news that is their true state of valuation/stability one more quarter. The statements will be something like "we look to have a modest-growth fourth quarter as new clients come online as a result of our newest pricing model. We are already seeing increased interest we expect will continue into the next quarter, and the future. We are excited about the growth opportunities and potential this new client base will bring.". If the analysts are paying attention when he says that, hopefully there will be some challenge about the overall valuation of the company based upon these new metrics, and the insights that Businessweek, Pickerell, Reid - and clients like Design Army, bring to the fore.

UPDATE: Several astute readers have corrected me, and provided an update. I referred to the $190 average price for "rights managed" libraries, and, that figure was more closely aligned with RF libraries - a big difference. In GYI's 2005 10K Statement, Section #15, it lists:
APPROXIMATE AVERAGE PRICE PER IMAGE BY PORTFOLIO - rights managed image price in 2005 was $570, royalty free was $200.
Sadly, this makes the drop for RM from $570, on average, to now $49, even more drastic.

Please post your comments by clicking the link below. If you've got questions, please pose them in our Photo Business Forum Flickr Group Discussion Threads.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

But just to play devil's advocate here, aren't the photographers, who are in control of their own images, partly responsible? After all, without photographers agreeing to provide the content through Getty, the gorilla would become a mere shell of itself. We're all gonna have to learn to deal with 'what the market will bear', which seems to be more of an economic force than photographers learning to value image licenses based on use. I wonder if this is more the result of fear and not saying no, giving in to buyers and agencies, or losing more money in the now causing us to amputate our own future?

I've chosen not to submit to Getty.

Michael Czeiszperger said...

What's missing in this analysis is mention of other royalty free stock agencies other than iStockPhoto. From a quick review of a couple of photography magazines I can find at least a half-dozen. There's a lot more going on in the industry than just Getty and iStockPhoto. Were iStockPhoto to shut down tomorrow there would still be lots of other competitors with the same or similar business models.

The interesting thing is that its almost a certainty that these other competitors aren't actually making money, they're being funded by venture money in the hopes they'll be purchased by a larger stock agency. If the traditional stock agencies can hang on until the venture money runs out, the amount of competition will decrease, and the venture folks will move out and try to cannibalize some other industry.

Anonymous said...

I'd have to say Betsy Reid's quote hits the nail on the head. I would be among those potential new generation photographers. Having read many posts here and elsewhere, I see no inventive to enter the market. It's obvious you cannot make any money at stock now, and the lack of respect shown is galling. I--and probably many others like me--plan on just continuing to shoot for myself & the heck with stock.

Anonymous said...

I've been with Getty since the beginning of their roll-up of other companies. (I was with Tony Stone Images)

At first, when everything was Rights-Managed, income went up - significantly.

Then, the world changed with the addition of royalty-free to the mix and Getty continued to purchase competitors. They started editing super-tight and rejecting shoots. Many photographers, including myself, decided to submit work to other agencies. (I am also with Workbookstock and Alamy)

Workbookstock is now a part of Jupiter Images and I am starting to see significant sales. (including two $10,000 rights-managed sales.) My sales through Alamy are slower. One friend is with Alamy and is making exceptional money with his specialized collection.

My monthly Getty sales have dropped and I continue to submit images through the Photographers Choice program. What is interesting to me, is my submissions and choices are doing better financially than selects made by Getty editors. But they are also older images and do not come up in searches as often.

There is money in stock, it is not the first focus of my career and business. If I was starting out today, I would push a young photographer toward Digital Railroad or Photo Shelter plus Alamy or a similar agency.

It is near impossible to get into Getty these days. They are the gorilla of the industry. Clients like them. They like the ease of use for the web site and the collection. That is the reality.

Smart art buyers and picture editors like the other sources - if they know how to use it. I have a PhotoShelter site set-up - it is very easy to use - and I still get questions from potential clients on how to download and image.

The key is to fiqure out how to make Google and the search engines work for you - plus - create images that truly matter and can be used to promote a feeling or concept.

bryan_luckyoliver said...

"The interesting thing is that its almost a certainty that these other competitors aren't actually making money, they're being funded by venture money in the hopes they'll be purchased by a larger stock agency."

Michael, we're still a small player in space, but our momentum is growing strong. We took no venture capital money and in a year we're just about cash-flow positive. We're going to be investing more to get to the next level, but a sound strategy doesn't need excessive capital.

I'll be speaking more about this at PACA. We're driving the midstock model- it feels a lot better moving up to $49 than going down to $49 :).

Bryan Zmijewski
Chief Instigator
LuckyOliver

Ryan McGehee said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Newer Post Older Post