There are many alternative careers for photographers. The first thing you should do is find out what you like to do and what you’re good at. Once you have an idea of what your strengths are, find a job that will let you use them!
The first thing that comes to mind when thinking about careers for photographers is photography itself. But if you’re not interested in being a professional photographer, this probably isn’t the best option for you.
You could also get into graphic design, which would be a great way to use your photography skills. You could become an art director, who helps other people create their artworks, or even an interior designer who decorates buildings or homes with the help of photos they take themselves!
This career path may not be right for everyone though—it can be hard work so make sure it’s something you really want before deciding on it as a career path!
Another option is becoming a photojournalist or documentary photographer—these types of jobs involve traveling around the world and taking pictures as part of an assignment from an editor or news agency such as Reuters (Reuters). This type of job requires lots of patience and persistence because sometimes it can take days or weeks
Alternative Careers For Photographers
Freelance Photographer
Here’s something to think about: The highest paying photography job doesn’t exist. In the year 2000, we took 86 billion photos. In 2019, that number grew to more than 1.4 trillion. The exponential rise of digital technology has put all but the most dedicated and established film processing labs out of business and brought the power of technically advanced SLRs into the hands of the average consumer. Alas, photography was not just for professionals anymore.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were just under 110,500 photography job openings in 2020. Collectively, this offered a median income of $41,280 annually. Compare that to something like accounting and auditing, a role that boasted about 1.4 million jobs with a median annual salary of over $73,560 for the same year. After investing three to four years of time and money into professional camera gear, education, and practice, the reward suddenly doesn’t seem so great.
What does all of this tell us? One way to work your way up the “best paid photography jobs” list is to start your own photography business. Some of the most creative (and lucrative) photographs of the modern age were shot by freelancers, so as long as you have a camera and some supplementary gear, you’re sure to find how to make money with photography.
Success in this area is less about camera skills and more about a mix of strong business acumen and great sales experience. Ironically, avoidance of the latter is commonly what drives people to want a career in photography in the first place.
Below are some of the most common photography jobs for freelance shooters:
- Fashion Photographer
- Sports Photographer
- Product Photographer
- Events Photographer
- Assistant Photographer
- Stock Photographer
How to Become a Freelance Photographer
There are many ways to earn money as an independent photographer. Sometimes, it’s just a matter of finding your forte—basically what you’ve been practicing the longest for or are really good at—and then looking for potential clients. You’ll probably need to build your photography portfolio first, and then offer your services to people you know so you can build your confidence and increase your asking rate.
- Pros: Freelancing allows you to be your own boss (sort of), so you can take any kind of photography assignment you like and get paid directly by the client.
- Cons: Working for multiple clients can sometimes be a handful and not working for a specific company can give you a pretty unstable income, unless you become established and popular enough to get consistent bookings.
Fashion Photographer
Being a fashion photographer — like America’s Next Top Model judge and fashion photographer Nigel Barker — is one of the most desirable jobs in the industry. Unknown to many, it involves more than just capturing high-fashion poses on the catwalk. One must also be prepared to take photos in virtually any location.
For many photographers, it’s a dream job to be shooting for big magazines, fashion catalogs, and even billboards. Former Allure magazine photo editor Clio McNicholl told Fashion.net that she gets around 50 unsolicited portfolio submissions per month. After all, Allure has an exceptionally large monthly circulation of almost 900,000, making it one of the most sought-after publications for both aspiring and professional fashion photographers.
But like sports photography, professional fashion photography requires connections to other photographers, designers, and other high profile people in the industry, aside from requiring a signature style and a strong portfolio.
“If I don’t know who the person is, I ask them to send me some promotional material. Generally I only see people who are coming with a direct recommendation from somebody I know,” McNicholl revealed.
How to become a fashion photographer
Focus on improving your qualifications and building your network. Consider moving to cities where there is a demand for fashion photographers and tapping friends or family who may have connections to the industry.
- Pros: Meeting creative people, travel opportunities, and creative freedom.
- Cons: Highly competitive, and often not as glamorous as it looks.
Fine Art Photographer
Among the jobs on this list, doing fine art photography allows you to exercise your creativity the most. However, it also takes a lot of luck to become a successful fine art photographer.
In his interview with Fstoppers.com, prolific fine art photographer Ted Forbes revealed that his fellow photographer, Peter Lik, has sold more than $500,000,000 worth of prints from his more than 15 galleries despite not being regarded as one of the best in the field. Stephan Brigidi, on the other hand, admitted to Pacific Standard that he had to take photography teaching jobs, commercial photography projects, book publishing, and even wait on tables for a short period of time to support his passion for fine art photography.
How to become a fine art photographer
While aspiring fine art photographers will most likely have to hope and wait before getting their big break, having a degree in fine arts adds value to your credibility, provides you with the necessary technical skills to improve your work, and helps expand your network of fellow artists.
- Pros: There’s always the fulfillment that comes with selling your first photo. And with the growing demand for fine art photography, there’s more chances of people actually appreciating your work as well as greater influence for growth as an artist.
- Cons: Fine art involves featuring work that is not exactly commercial in nature, so you’ll have to be persistent in trying to make a name for yourself as you pursue this career.
Medical Photographer
Much like any other job in the medical field, being a medical (or biomedical) photographer pays very well, but not before undergoing some serious training, acquiring high levels of technical skill, and gaining detailed knowledge in scientific processes.
You may be tasked to document or photograph anything that is health-related, which normally includes surgical procedures and even autopsies. Other assignments include digitizing images, creating prints of statistical data on charts and graphs, and doing some photomicrography, sometimes for use in educational materials like pamphlets, textbooks, teaching models, instructional films, and exhibits. Your work may also be used as evidence in legal procedures.
How to become a medical photographer
Depending on the targeted position, formal photography studies (a full-blown degree) and medical training may be needed, on top of being detail-oriented and creative.
- Pros: It’s highly lucrative, plus it allows you to take part in the improvement of the medical field.
- Cons: Aside from the often graphic content, there’s not much room for creative freedom.
Product Photographer
Although it may seem to be a trivial job, product photography can rake in a decent amount of cash depending on the project and the photographer’s experience. Clients also vary—from artisans and businesses to big-time advertising agencies—but they generally need professional-quality images of their products for promotional purposes.
The resulting images taken can directly affect sales, which is why it’s crucial for companies to get an experienced product photographer. Whether you’re shooting food and beverage items, gadgets, cosmetics, furniture, and even industrial materials, it’s usually up to you to make them look as attractive and appealing as possible.
Many photographers in this field work freelance, which works well for companies that prefer to hire multiple photographers with varying creative styles for different types of projects. Work hours can be as long as 40 hours per week on average, depending on the number of clients, the product, and the contract.
How to become a product photographer
Photographers entering this field don’t necessarily require formal photography training, but they do need to be very skilled and experienced in product photography. Knowledge in photo post-processing is also a major plus.
- Pros: There’s a steady increase of clients and products that will need your services.
- Cons: You won’t always get to exercise your creativity as much as the other photography jobs here do.
Film Set Photographer
Known for his celebrity portraits and promo posters of prolific TV shows like Homeland and Californication, Los Angeles-based freelance photographer Patrick Ecclesine is one such person. A self-professed “gun for hire in Hollywood,” Ecclesine takes photos of actors on set to produce posters and promotional material for film and television. However, being a film set photographer is not all glitz, glamour, and six-figure salaries, Patrick admitted in an interview with Shutterbug.
“When I first considered shooting stills for film and television shows, I was warned that still photographers are routinely humiliated and fired by hypersensitive, prickly actors, often on a whim,” says Ecclesine.
You’d be forgiven for thinking all the $$$ you’re raking in from this work would ease the burden of a high-stress work environment. While it’s not the lowest paying photography job out there, it isn’t the highest paying either.
“The pay isn’t staggering. It’s just under $50 an hour. However, it’s very good if you’re working long hours on a feature film. After eight hours you get paid time and a half; over 12 hours and you get double time. Considering that most feature films are pulling 12 to 14 hour days for a two to six month period, you can do the math and see that it adds up. Television is less lucrative because they put you on an eight-hour day. The upside to this is that, while the crew continues to slave away, you get to go home early,” Ecclesine added in the interview.
But before you turn up to your favorite director’s office with a portfolio, there is a significant number of hoops you’ll have to jump through first—more so compared to the majority of other photographic jobs out there.
“In order to work as a photographer on a film or television show, you have to get into the union. The I.A.T.S.E. (International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees). The bad news is that not only does it cost $6000 to join, but it’s very difficult to get in.”
How to become a film set photographer
According to Ecclesine, there are three ways to qualify as a photographer on a film or television show.
- Work and get paid for 100 days on a non-union show where you earn at least $50 a day;
- Work on a non-union show that happens to go union;
- Be “grandfathered in” by a producer or director who insists upon working with you, and you only.
For Patrick, it was a combination of perseverance and being in the right place at the right time.
- Pros: Compensation can be very generous if you work long hours
- Cons: Can be particularly hard to get into, especially for beginners
White House Photographer
Photographing the most powerful people in the world would be a dream for most aspiring photographers. But for former Chief Official White House photographer Pete Souza, it’s just another day.
From capturing portraits of the first dogs of the United States, Bo and Sunny, to covering tense moments in the situation room, Pete Souza’s job as President Obama’s personal photographer and “fly on the wall of the White House” was so coveted, he became an online celebrity.
So how did he get it? Turns out it wasn’t his two degrees (a B.S. in Public Communications and an M.A. in Journalism and Mass Communication), or his three-decade long photojournalism career at renowned publications like the Chicago Tribune, Life, and National Geographic—it was whom he knew.
In 2005, Pete was asked to take on a project documenting the inaugural year of a new US Senator named Barack Obama. Documenting Obama’s rise to the presidency in 2008, the two established a strong relationship and Pete was asked to be the Chief Official White House photographer because of it.
“The job of presidential photographer is all about access and trust, and if you have both of those, you’re going to make interesting, historic pictures,” Souza says.
To take the best possible images, the photographer has to develop a kind of invisibility. “For a presidential photographer, there’s no higher praise than being utterly ignored, so the subjects pay you no attention and you get the most natural shots,” says Souza.
John F. Kennedy was the first president to hire his own photographer, so such a role has only existed for a little over 40 years. During the Obama Administration, Pete Souza oversaw a whole team of White House photographers who took up to 20,000 photos of the president’s administration in a week.
How to become a White House photographer:
You have to know someone from the White House and, more importantly, to earn the president’s trust.
- Pros: It pays significantly big to be working in the White House, plus you get to meet the president and his family.
- Cons: Can be a difficult field to enter, and requires long hours.
Wedding Photographer
Not many understand why wedding photographers do what they do, especially when it’s at the expense of a more stable career. After all, it doesn’t really start paying all that well until word gets out about your experience, talent, and most of all, stunning images. That’s what happened to Alan Kirwin, who made a career shift to wedding photography despite already being successful in the computer industry and was once disappointed by his own wedding photographer in 2002.
“At the time, people couldn’t understand why I was giving up such a successful and lucrative career to take wedding pictures,” Kirwin told The Guardian. “Without looking at the whole context, they thought I was crazy.”
Like many wedding photographers, Kirwin worked with his current set of skills to his advantage, particularly branding, marketing, and computing, and aims to meet clients’ demand for more candid photos that captured the essence of their weddings.
How to become a wedding photographer
After earning a photography degree, the wisest route is to first apply as a second shooter to several weddings before even dreaming of being a main or only shooter. Being under the wing of a more experienced photographer while solving technical problems on the job will really sharpen your skills and boost your confidence.
- Pros: With the increasing demand for priceless wedding photos, there are more opportunities to increase income.
- Cons: High equipment and occasional space cost when you start venturing out on your own or shoot in studios.
Social Media Photographer and Influencer
There’s a reason more and more photographers want to go the social media photographer or influencer route: It pays well, if you do it right. In fact, one report says brands pay influencers with over 1 million followers up to $250,000 per post. Yes, you read that right, per post.
To be clear: Being a social media photographer and influencer requires a ton of work. You have to organically build a following while creating your signature style and engaging with fans, brands, and potential clients. Plus, you do this while figuring out revenue streams along the way. But, for those who are willing to put in time and effort, this job can pay well.
Since more and more brands are looking at engagement numbers versus sheer following, you can even make social media photography a solid career as a “micro-influencer” as long as your followers are engaged and eager for more.