How to earn money on flickr

what is Flickr

Flickr - truly the world's largest online photo and sharing service - has two main objectives: 

1. We want to help people make their photos available to people who are important to them.

 Maybe they want to keep a blog of the times taken on their cameraphone, or maybe they want to show off their best photos or video around the world for the purpose of web celebrities. Or maybe they just want to share the pictures with their children and their families around the world. 

Flickr makes all these things happen and there are so many!

 To do this, we want to integrate photos and videos into and out of the system in as many ways as possible: from the web, to mobile devices, from users' home computers and to any software they use to manage their content.

 And we want to be able to get them out in as many ways as possible: on the Flickr website, in RSS feeds, via email, by posting on external blogs or in ways we never thought of yet.
 What else will we use for those smart refrigerators? 

2. We want to enable new ways to edit photos and videos. Once you have switched to digital, it is very easy to become overwhelmed by the sheer number of photos or videos you take with that smelly finger. Albums, the main way people do things today, are great - up to 20 or 30 or 50 of them. 

They work in the days of getting advanced film rolls, but the metaphor of the "album" desperately needs the Florida condo and full retirement. Part of the solution is to make the process of editing photos or videos work together. 

On Flickr, you can give your friends, family, and other contacts permission to edit your stuff - not just to add comments, but also notes and tags. People love ooh and ahh, laughing and crying, making wisecracks when sharing photos and videos. 

Why not empower them to do this while watching them online? And since all this information is available as metadata, you can find things much easier over time, because all this information is searchable. 

Flickr is an in-depth program, which means it has something for everyone, and maybe some things you don't know yet. This is an effective guide to help you get the most out of Flickr. Click on one of these topics to navigate to that topic: 

Do you have a Cameraphone? 

Interested in the community and getting good photos? Do you have a Blog? Edit your photos and videos! Having a wedding, a reunion or an event? Share privately and securely How to use RSS and Atom Feeds Want to upload directly from your camera? Interested in the community and getting good photos? Look around and see who you like. 

Check out Flickr Blog, which provides you with great content every day, or pay attention to a page that shows everyone's uploads. Or better yet, invite your family and friends to see your photostream, so they can leave you notes and comments and tags. Having friends, family and favorites on Flickr is probably something that will make a big difference to you! You can also create public or private groups. 

Private parties are ideal for small groups of friends, or events such as weddings. You can post items in the group pool for everyone to see in one place! You can join a group that already exists on all topics from cooking to philosophy. Another way to find good things is to search for tags like me or selfportrait. You can also hit the most popular tags on Flickr, or search there with any tag you like. Do you have a Blog? 
Flickr and blogs go hand in hand like Captain and Tennille. First, set up your blog. It could be LiveJournal, Blogger, Mobile Type, Typepad or whatever. Make sure you like the composition of the post. If you know HTML you can modify it to make it look the way you want it to. Then look for a small "Blog This" button above the image or video on its main page. Click and go!  If you haven’t already, set up your blog, then go to the email setup page. Enter a second email address on your phone again. You can also add one of these cool photo pieces to the side of your blog. Just create a badge, then cut and paste the code into your blog template! And another great thing to add to your blog is Flickr Zeitgeist.

 Cut and paste into your blog. 

You can set it up again so it just displays your photos and contacts on Flickr. Very good, isn't it? 
Edit your photos and videos! When loading items, there is a small box where you can tag. There is space to tag right on each page of the image and you can add tags when using Organizr. 

Why use tags? 

Tags make it easier for you to find your items later when you have uploaded more items. Just type some words that are related to the image, with spaces in the middle, such as "sky park dog dog blue grass green". Another great thing about tags is that it helps other people find your stuff too! Check out these great tags:


You can see the representation of the foremost popular tags within the system by visiting flickr.com/photos/tags/ - the dimensions of the link represents the amount of tags for that name. Similar views may be generated for your photostream and tags. Just hit your photostream page and click on the 'Tags' link. you'll be able to also find RSS feeds for individual tags. See below for more details. Having a marriage, a reunion or an event? Want to mix photos or video of various people together from a celebration or event? the newest wedding collected quite 400 photos from their guests in but time period. it is a good way to share. Here's how: Build your own event team From the group page, invite attendees to the event. this can make sure that they're made contacts, and are automatically integrated with the group. Post the subsequent instructions on the group page: 

How to upload a photograph or video to the current group: 

Add photos or video to your Flickr photo. Flickr offers you a lot ways to try to to this: www.flickr.com/tools. Go to the Editor, click on the "Your Teams" tab at the highest, which can hospitable show a listing of all of your groups. Just drag and drop items you wish to share to the group! Explore is Flickr's automatic try to show you "the best photos in Flickr." Check to point out up to 500 images per day, which is alleged to be about 0.005% of the daily download volume. Years ago within the dog age and within the internet age, Flickr was an area for photographers, which daily exploration containing 500 photos was how to form more visibility of your photos. Google Search has identified your URLs for Flickr images, and Flickr's strong public response to comments, likes and more seems to reinforce Google Search activity. Flickr stats showed almost 30% of my photo views came from Google Search, so spending time on Flickr was definitely a productive thanks to get more visibility for my emerging photography business. Many photographers have tried to undo an engineer and play a program to do to upload their photos. Photos may appear after they start off of Explore, so it might not always be easy to inform whether your photo was temporarily uploaded, or at the underside of that daily selection of take a look at, unless someone posted a "Congrats on Explore" comment below your photo. As photographers took to Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, the Explore algorithm emerged, and it could seem to travel through the assorted esoteric highlighting categories: telephone guns, foreign celebrities, and apparently (as they describe) yellow school buses. As someone who wants to be popular for impersonating someone they're not, Flickr Explore as an impersonation of Instagram (or whatever) was as indirect work as Google Plus. I had identified about 200 of my photos that had more established the Explore exhibition over time, but eventually found them less interesting, so i finished looking. appears like I didn't usually get photos, but more importantly, those that were included were things like iPhone test shots, status documents, they weren't really pictures i might show anyone anyway. Some were high-level decisions, which I didn't care about exposing myself to theft. Since Explore now not worked on behalf of me, i finished caring. But worse than that, my time spent on Flickr was decrease. Flickr was still used as a full-fledged place for my photos, tags, albums, photo embedded embedding for my blog, and exposure to its remaining community, but Explore wasn't as effective, and as users moved to other apps, Google search traffic seemed dry. how to sell Flickr may be a photo sharing website that enables people to post visual images publicly or privately. If you're a paid photographer or simply want to start out selling your amateur photo, there are some guidelines and options for monetizing Flickr. you'll find out how to sell images on Flickr by using the Getty Images licensing program and promoting your images in accordance with Flickr's terms and conditions. Think of photos you send to Flickr before uploading. If you'll be able to sell them at a photograph booth or gallery in your community, you'll save a photograph and money on them without the trouble of trying to safeguard yourself online. You can opt to save photos offline and send more, reckoning on what's popular locally and on the net. Add a watermark, if you are doing not want to market any photo sharing without sales. Use a watermark that doesn't spoil the sweetness of the image. A black or hidden watermark most of the image is unlikely to sell. 

Create Flickr account:

you'll have to take it slow to urge to understand the features and find viewers. You will need a Yahoo ID to register. If you've got one, you'll associate your Flickr profile together with your existing Yahoo account. you'll also create a brand new Yahoo ID. Make sure your profile is about to "Public" instead of "Private." you cannot really sell photos if the general public can't afford them. Tag your photos. Research popular keywords which will be wont to search your images. You can use keyword tools like WordStream or Bing keyword tools to seek out the foremost commonly used words to seek out images. Mark images by region or region. this can be especially important if you wish to sell travel or regional photos. Share your Flickr profile with as many folks as possible. Find your fans over time and that they will distribute your photos even more

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