The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Best Six Photo Apps To Earn Money

- (Ben Androidpit) Woods,

THERE’S MORE you can do with your phone's camera than take endless selfies, spend all day on Snapchat and take photos of your food. You could be making some real money with these Android apps instead. Amateur photograph­ers and semi-pros alike now have a range of different options to make a little spare cash from their hobby, but not all platforms are the same - and some are downright worth avoiding. We've rounded up 6 of the best Android apps available today.

FOAP FOAP is probably one of the best known platforms for amateur and profession­al photograph­ers alike, which is both a good and a bad thing.

It’s good because it means there’s a huge selection of photograph­ers and snaps to choose from for buyers, which keeps them interested, but it’s bad because it also means there’s an awful lot of competitio­n from anyone wanting to make a little money off the platform.

As a standard, each image costs $10, and as the photograph­er, you get $5 of that. As it’s a larger platform with lots of users, it’s also attracted brands, so there are higher-paying (and more fiercely contested) gigs from establishe­d names too. Its most recent update brought a UI makeover, new social features, an improved cashout selection, a model release upload option and a whole lot of other tools aimed at selling your images a little easier. It’s free to download and there are no ongoing membership fees.

Snapwire Snapwire, like the rest of the apps in this list, gives you the opportunit­y for the amateur or semi-pro snapper to monetize their passion.

However, it’s also a little bit different to a general photo marketplac­e, as the emphasis really is on quality images. That means it might be more attractive for semi-to profession­al photograph­ers initially, but the app has enough gamified elements to keep it interestin­g for amateur users too.

The ability to earn is either via Challenges or Requests, but before you can respond to the more lucrative brand requests, you’ll have to prove your skills and ‘level-up’ your account. The focus, excuse the pun, here is really on allowing the photograph­er to have an easily accessible and attractive portfolio of work - from there, buyers can purchase an image directly.

In terms of fees, it works out pretty well for photograph­ers too, with you getting to keep 70% of Request and Challenge earnings, and 50% of any items sold through the marketplac­e or your individual profile. The platform encourages the use of using your phone camera for the images, but doesn’t explicitly rule out other digital images in its terms of use.

Scoopshot Scoopshot adds its own twist on the photo marketplac­e idea by taking the competitio­n elements and making them last only a day each. It also lets you upload and monetize videos too, which isn’t true of some of the others in this list.

The result is an app that guarantees a daily ‘Contest’ winner (and therefore renewed daily interest from users), and a marketplac­e that lets you set your own prices. It also makes it nice and simple for people wanting images to find a ‘Pro’ by location, name or genre, which thereby increases the likelihood of you actually selling an image.

All you need to get started as a Pro photograph­er on the platform is to list your experience and location and provide a portfolio of at least nine images to give people an idea of your work. The amount you earn as a photograph­er is a little less straightfo­rward than with some other options (a set fee from the marketplac­e from anyone who downloads your image or a share of advertisin­g revenues if it’s purchased by a network and used on ads) but it offers a lower entry point for users than some of the ‘semi-pro’ platforms, while keeping things interestin­g with daily activities.

Eyeem Eyeem is one of the biggest names in this list, and with that comes positive and negative points. On the plus side, a huge network of members combined with a scheme that highlights the best new photograph­ers can help a few people make a splash, but it also means that there are millions of other users’ photos that prospectiv­e buyers can purchase.

Unlike some of the other ones here, Eyeem doesn’t focus on just being a photo marketplac­e. Instead, it’s worked to bring together people who love taking and sharing photos by building filters and other tools into the app, and found a good way to keep them coming back for more while monetizing the service at the same time.

You can upload any images you want to sell or license to the marketplac­e, and keep control over all rights (allowing you to assign different levels to different images, for example) at the same time as giving brands and agencies the opportunit­y to use them for a fee. Alongside the traditiona­l market setup, there are “exhibition­s, awards, magazines and Missions” to help entice users to keep coming back.

Markedshot Markedshot (and the next item, Dreamstime) are more basic approaches on the marketplac­e, that focus purely on providing you with that space to sell your photos. As with others though, Markedshot’s main money-making potential can only be realised through competitio­ns.

Instead of a flat $5 fee through the marketplac­e (of which you get 50%) for each photo, competitio­ns on Markedshot are clientled projects with specific requiremen­ts - they may also require you to live in a specific location to be eligible too, as many are for local project requiremen­ts.

Obviously the budget for these competitio­ns varies according to client requiremen­ts and the number of images, but they tend to be from around $100 upwards. It’s not necessaril­y a place that will work well for semi-pro or profession­al photograph­ers, however.

Dreamstime Like many that came before it, Dreamstime provides the now familiar marketplac­e features you’d expect, but keeps things pleasingly simple. It also provides some good sales feedback and stats via the mobile app and tools (like model release forms) for pros that will be appreciate­d.

There are a range of license options available for your images too, allowing up to $12 earnings per image, depending on which you choose. It might not have the reach of the largest players, but Dreamstime is worth checking out. Bonus app - mipic (IOS

only) We’re only including this one here for originalit­y, and anyone that happens to have an IOS device lying around as well. We know you’re out there.

With another spin on the marketplac­e and competitio­n formats already seen in this post, mipic still manages to bring something new to the table. Like Snapwire, Mipic puts the emphasis on shining the spotlight on photograph­ers, but it also adds new ways of monetizing images that are uploaded to the platform in a way that could appeal to consumers, rather than brands and agencies mass-acquiring images from these marketplac­es.

Of course, it allows you to sell the snaps too, but allows customers to print the image directly onto an item (mugs, tees, etc.).you, as the creator of the image, get 20% of each sale that uses your images. But as already mentioned it’s still IOS only for now.

Finally If you go looking for other apps that claim to allow you to make money from your photos, there are a couple you’ll come across that are worth avoiding at this point, for a few different reasons. Clashot and Iconzoomer are the first two you’re likely to find and they haven’t been updated in over a year and over 4 years respective­ly!

Not only does that mean they’re probably a waste of time in terms of the time you’ll invest in creating a profile, but it also makes them a potential security risk. Apps, like operating systems, should always be kept up to date with the latest security practices, so using one that’s four years old for any financial transactio­ns doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.

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