Launched : Photo portal focussed on exclusively Indian Images
November 30, 2006 (PRLEAP.COM) Technology News
IndianShutter is an image content portal where amateurs, hobbyists or professional photographers can upload and sell their photographs. Its like an online marketplace for stock images, much like GettyImages and Corbis. With the difference, that this is meant exclusively for Indian digital content. The site is aiming to become the favored destination on the web for searching/buying India specific image content. IndianShutter is based out of Mumbai, India. The rationale behind the site is hard to deny. There has always been a market for professional photographic content amongst people who work with images; eg - graphic designers, web designers, DTP professionals, Ad agencies, magazines/publications, travel sites etc. IndianShutter will enable exclusively Indian Content to be served to various markets via the web.
So here’s how it will actually work- photographers can create an account and upload their images on the site. They can upload images of various sizes or resolutions, but with a minimum 300 DPI (below which stock images don’t sell much). The buyers don’t get to see the actual images; only thumbnails and low-res watermarked previews are displayed. Once a buyer confirms the purchase after making the payment, a download link is emailed across, which remains live for 48 hours. The website scrutinizes each image for quality parameters besides content integrity, copyright etc before they accept it for sale. It takes app 48 working hours for each such approval.
The site offers its basic service free but there is a premium account as well. The difference is that for the free version, the photographer cannot specify the price for the image uploaded. And he gets 20% of the revenue from each sale while the rest goes to the site. For premium accounts, the photographer has the liberty to specify his own price. The revenue in this case is split equally. Additionally, the sale of the images can be exclusive or non exclusive. In the former, all rights of the image pass on to the buyer and the image is removed from the site after the transaction. In non exclusive sale, the same image can be sold repeatedly to different customers. Of course the exclusive sale price is much higher than the non exclusive one.
Indian Shutter hopes to eventually spawn an online community for photographers and become a hub of activity, involving yellow pages classifieds, skill enhancement tools, knowledge sharing etc for photographers. They also plan to introduce higher order features like photo blogging, citizen photo journalism et al. Also on the cards is the capability to push & pull images through mobile devices.
The site’s overall design is fairly good. And it has a clearly defined revenue model, the bugbear of most online applications. Time will tell if they are able to capitalize on their first mover advantage and become the default destination for Indian image content on the web.