Quick NavigationThis module was written and reported by Susan Mernit, editor of Oakland Local, with Kwan Booth and Amy Gahran. It was edited by Andrew Pergam and Jan Schaffer, with additional assistance from Ashley Bright and Rachel Karas. Deeper Dive: Snapshot on Flickr
Flickr is the top online site for posting and sharing photos and images. The site offers several features that allow for simple uploading, editing, sharing and licensing of images. The site also can be used as a curation and community building tool, as well as a source for high-quality stock images that can be used under a Creative Commons license. When selecting your Flickr name make sure it matches the name of your organization or term that is easily associated with your brand. Flickr uses tags to classify images. Make sure all photos that are uploaded contain tags that are easily searchable keywords that describe the image and add context to the associated story. When uploading photos, fill in the Tags, Title and Description fields. Make sure your tag sets include the related news website, photographer and article author when applicable. These tags will also be used by search engines to rank your content. If uploading several images, one description that references the associated story can be used for all images. This can be the same one used to describe the entire set or gallery and should always include a link back to the story or main website. Whenever possible, upload images under a Creative Commons (CC) license. There are several CC levels to allow you control how content is used. This gives other users permission to post your images, with proper credit, and extends the reach of your brand. When uploading multiple images, collect them into topic themes, or “sets,” for easier viewing. Sets can be determined by individual story, content topic, show, or creator. Sets can then be uploaded to blogs and websites as extra content. Organizations can curate images from non-staff members by utilizing the “Gallery” and “Group” features. Galleries allow organizations and individuals to collect images relevant to a topic while Groups allows users to share their images and participate in discussions around those topics. Make sure a Flickr link and logos are placed in visible locations on the main website page, other social platforms, email signatures and printed promotional materials. Flickr sets can also be embedded into web page sidebars and custom fields to draw in viewers. Top Ten Tips for Getting Attention on Flickr 1. Take great pictures. Ok, first and foremost, quality does matter. If you want people to look at your stuff, make your stuff worth looking at. Practice your craft as a photographer, buy good equipment (and lenses count more than anything), actually read your owner’s manual and understand the basics of how your camera works (little things like ISO settings)—and don’t underestimate the power of Photoshop. Despite the purists who will tell you that Photoshop is whoring, don’t believe the hype. Virtually all my photos are Photoshopped and you can significantly enhance any photo by doing very simple post processing things like bumping up contrast and saturation and using the healing brush to blot out distractions in your work. 2. You get one shot a day. You have a single shot each day that matters. Choose it wisely. Don’t randomly upload your last 20 shots. Make sure that the last shot you upload is your best. The reason why this is the case is the concept of contacts on Flickr. Your contacts on Flickr have two ways that they can view their contact’s photos as they are uploaded. They can view one from each contact or five from each contact. If they choose one per contact they will only see the very last photo you uploaded. You can still upload five as some will see five but all will see one—the last one. Uploading more than five shots in a single upload all but relegates any beyond five to obscurity. If you upload more than five at a time make sure your last five are your best and your last one is the best of the best. 3. Interestingness. The single greatest tool for garnering attention on Flickr is to have your photos appear in the “Explore” section of Flickr’s interestingness stream. Interestingness is a secret sauce formula algorithm on Flickr whereby they post what their algorithm says are the 500 most interesting photos on Flickr each day to their Explore section. The higher the rank, the more people see it. Despite the top secretness formula of interestingness, it is really not that complicated to understand in broad terms. Your photos are deemed interesting when they have activity. When people tag your photos, comment on your photos, view your photos, leave notes on your photos, and especially when they favorite your photos, you increase your interestingness rank. If you want to see if any of your photos have made it to the top 500 for a given day you can check out Scout. Scout lets you put in your Flickr email and will show you any of your photos that have made interestingness. At present, I’ve got 198. You can see them here. Type in your own Flickr email and you can see your own. Making interestingness is not so formidable as you might think. Flickr recently changed their algorithm and now uses a weighted average for photographers. Thus it is much harder for me to make interestingness than it might be for you. If I average five favs per photo then only my photos that greatly exceed five per photo will be included. If your average is one fav per photo though, a five fav photo by you very well will make it in. 4. Fave lots of photos. Be very liberal with your faves. I’ve got over 13,000 now myself—and believe it or not I genuinely love them all. If you see a photo you like on Flickr, fave it. Don’t be shy. It’s as easy as clicking on the little star above someone’s photo. Faves mean more to other Flickr users than comments or tags or notes or anything. Numbers of faves is more than just recognition, it counts most towards interestingness and allows them possible access to many prestigious groups at Flickr like 10 faves and 100 views or top 25 fave minimum, or even the “100 Club” (100 faves or more, ohhhhhhhhh, ahhhhhh) Don’t be disingenuous, but if you like a photo, by all means, let the photographer know by faving it. By faving their photos you will find that many will click on your link and check your stuff out. If they like it, they may fave yours as well. 5. When you post counts. It used to really, really count, but less now that the interestingness algorithm has changed. Flickr basically begins posting top interesting shots from each day as the day gets going. I don’t know the specific time, but the earlier you post your shot each day, the more traction it can build for consideration for the interestingness stream. If you have the choice between posting a photo at 11:59 at night (with virtually no time left to make that day’s interestingness stream) or 12:01, choose 12:01. 6. Blog your photos. If you have a blog, post your best photos to it occasionally through Flickr. It doesn’t consume any bandwidth as Flickr is hosting the shot and when people click on the photo it takes them to your Flickr stream. Although non Flickr users hardly ever fav or comment on photos, the views help you and sometimes they do actually. If you don’t mind people having high res copies of your photos, let them know that they can download these from Flickr. And encourage your blogger friends to blog your photos too. If you are at an event and take a photo of a blogger on Flickr send them the link. They will appreciate it, most likely fav the shot and blog it themselves, and if it’s a good shot, email the link to tons of their friends. 7. Tell everyone you know about Flickr. Tell your friends, your family, your co- workers, heck, even complete strangers. Get them hooked (and many will get hooked). You will of course be made a friend and find them faving and commenting on your photos all the time. 8. Post your photo to lots of groups and participate in some of the game groups on Flickr. Don’t spam the groups, but if you have a photo of a bridge, put it in the bridge group. If you took a photo of San Francisco, put it in the San Francisco group. You can search the groups on Flickr and you will find that almost everything you could photograph already has a group to include your photo in. While labor intensive it will give your photography more visibility. If you can’t find a group for one of your photos then make up a new group yourself for it. There are also a number of game groups on Flickr. These are groups where you comment and vote on others photographs and they comment on yours. I participated in these groups before interestingness mattered—by including your photo in a group where it will by nature of the game get lots of views, tags and comments you will increase the potential for that photo to make interestingness. My favorite group is deleteme uncensored where photos are voted on by the group members. 10 save votes and your photo is included in a special lightbox. 10 delete votes and your photo is voted out of the pool. 9. Make everyone who makes you a contact a contact back. Don’t be shy about making everyone who makes you a contact back. It’s not just polite, but it makes sure that as they are seeing your work, you are seeing theirs. Flickr still has a mechanism where you can distinguish between contacts and family/friends and filter out only your family/friends when you want. It doesn’t hurt making them a contact and it’s the least you can do to let them know you appreciate them making you one. 10. Tag your photos religiously. Flickr allows users to search by tags (and then, to rank their search by interestingness). If people search for “San Francisco” right now on Flickr my photo will come up as the top most interesting photo. If I had not tagged this photo “San Francisco” (and remember it’s “San Francisco” or sanfrancisco not San Francisco or you may end up with the top shot for both “san” and “francisco” respectively) then people would not see it when doing searches for our beautiful City of St. Francis. Especially if you have a top ranked interestingness photo tag the heck out of it. Is it a photo of a “snake”? Is it at the “zoo”? Is it at the “San Francisco Zoo”? That’s in “San Francisco”? That also happens to be a “boa constrictor”? That also looks just like “Paris Hilton” (just kidding about that last one). If you can tag it, do. It will increase the visibility of your photo in Flickr search (which will most likely be spread to broader visibility in Yahoo! Image Search down the line).
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