Introduction:
I get dozens of emails every week from individuals around the world asking how they can become a photojournalist. It is a difficult question and unfortunately there are no easy answers. There is probably one way to become a photojournalist for every one of us that is working today.However, I do understand the curiosity and there is quite a lot of mystery surrounding the subject. People want to know if it is better to study photojournalism in a university, graduate program or just go out into the field and build a portfolio? Is it better to work with a photo agency or wire service or have a go at it on your own? Where do I start? What do I do? Is it even possible? How long does it take? How much money will I need to get started?
Again, there are no single answers to the above questions. However, I can tell you a bit about my own personal experiences and share some thoughts and opinions I have formed over the years. Please don't take what I write as a bible, merely stories and suggestions that may help some of you as you begin your path to becoming a photojournalist.
Am I a good enough photographer?
Probably not. But don't get too depressed, like anything in life it is just something you have to learn. My "eye" is no better than anyone else's....it has just spent a long time looking through viewfinders and that is the only secret. Like most things in life, photography is something you learn and not some magical gift some people are given. This is good news because it means that you can be just as good or even better than any of us!
What do I do first?
The first step is to take some time to do some serious thinking and soul searching. Is this something you really, really want? Do you know what you are getting yourself into and how it will affect your life? Take a while to consider the things you might see and experience and think about how they will affect you. Once you have seen something you can't un-see it. Take the most disturbing film or news footage you have ever seen and multiply it a few hundred times...then you may have the beginning of an idea of what it is like to see these things in real life.
Consider what it will be like to come back home and visit with friends knowing that no matter how well you describe your experiences they will still not have any real comprehension of what it is you experienced. Think about how this will distance you. Consider how it will effect those that care about you.
Take some time to really learn about what the lives of photojournalists are like on a day to day basis. Read a couple of books written by someone who is doing or has done what you are planning on. See some movies and documentaries (i will make a post giving some suggestions on books and films in the next couple of months.
Take the picture you have in your head of the life of a photojournalist and subtract fifty percent of the romance and add 200% more discomfort.
Now, if you still think you can make a difference in the world by becoming a photojournalist and you think you can do it without shooting yourself or becoming as raging alcoholic, let's talk about what might come next.
Focus:
Yes, you will have to learn how to focus your lens at some point but first let's focus your head. You will need to start thinking about what kinds of subject matter you want to document before you go any further. During your weeks of soul searching, if you decide that you don't want to give up your whole life, your family, your country of origin etc for this job... start thinking about what kinds of subjects you can document in your own country or own neighborhood. This is the best way for anyone to start out in photojournalism...do it in your your own "backyard" and do it NOW.
If you decide to cover subjects in far away lands, start thinking about how you will afford to get there and what will happen with your apartment, bills, possessions etc while you are gone. If you have a husband or wife, boyfriend or girlfriend, pet, plans, fish...anything like this, now is the time to think about how this will effect them.
How long will it take?
I am putting this section before the How Much Will It Cost section because the two go together but how much it costs will depend on how long it takes you before you start getting paid.
When I began shooting I became friends with a very experienced photo editor who gave me lots of interesting advice and shared many stories with me. I remember one day I was on the phone with her, if I remember correctly I was in a horrible little Internet cafe in southern Sri Lanka in the wake of the Tsunami. I was frustrated with my recent photo sales and she told me "It takes a photojournalist an average of five years of shooting full time before they sell their first image and another five before they can make a living at it.". After attempting to slit my wrists I realized I was actually quite far ahead of the curve. But looking back at many of the other photographers I started out with and figuring in my own ups and downs, I believe her statement is fairly accurate.
The point is that this job is incredibly difficult and it gets more and more competitive every minute, as the world is flooded with cheap, good quality digital cameras and thousands of individuals desiring this job. Add into this formula the quickly changing publishing industry, photo agencies and publishers doing away with paid assignments and traveling shooters, and it all adds up to an increasingly difficult job to break into.
How much will it cost
Here is another extremely difficult question to answer. I spent two years in Asia living on around $200 a month when I started out. I relied on the kindness and support of many people during those days and I will be forever be grateful to all of them. I shot on a cheap, used, consumer camera for my first three years and shot only jpeg images because I could not afford an external hard drive to backup RAW images to. It was tough, and my lack of funds in some ways held me back but in other ways they taught me how to be resourceful which became a huge factor in the development of my style. Here are some thoughts on that:
I could never afford to stay in nice hotels so I always stayed in pension houses in impoverished areas with the locals. I could never afford drivers or translators so I walked wherever I needed to go and made friends instead of business contacts. During the tsunami when staff shooters from big publications flooded in and drove the cost of rooms up I stayed on the floor in a refugee camp. In iraq I slept wherever the infantry soldiers slept and never in press quarters, hotels or with the top brass...unlike most of the journalists who worked there.
Decisions that were initially a necessity do to lack of money but they ended up allowing me to get the images (and experiences) others were not able to get. They allowed me to have a deeply personal connection with my subject matter and that is translated to the images. I have chosen to continue working this way even though my days of living on $200 a month are over.
What is the secret?
In my opinion there are really only two major factors in the success formula for photojournalism. Here they are with a description for each:
1.) Take great photos:
If you want this job to work out for you, you will have to learn to take really exceptional photos. There are so may photographers who come and go, and most of them are taking snapshots. If you shoot like a fine art photographer but document photo-journalistic subject matter, you will set yourself apart from the crowd.
Shooting exceptional images that can be considered art will open many doors for you. Where a press photographer or wire shooter will take snapshots that newspapers will publish, a fine art photographer has the chance to make books, have exhibitions, lecture at universities, create their own websites to draw in viewers and fans etc. Anyone can take snapshots but it takes time to learn how to create art (and no, I am not saying that all press photographers take snap shots, many are wonderful artists.)
2.) Put in The Time:
There have been many photojournalists who have done well with the first part of this formula and learned how to create outstanding images. Unfortunately many have reached this point and decided that since people were not knocking their doors down offering them money, that it must be a lost cause.
It takes a lot of time and work in order to get your images noticed. For me it was a matter of learning web design so that I could create my own websites and even more importantly, update them as my work grew and improved. I started out with one site and then added more and more year after year. My friends pushed me to create a blog, which I finally did and ended up with the very first photojournalism and war photography blog. And even that required time to catch on. I worked on posts full time for months before I had any real traffic and it was a matter of more than a year before my blogs posts regularly ranked on the front page of google.
A formal education in photojournalism/photography or real world/ in- field experience?
While education is always important, most photojournalists believe that this is a job that is difficult to teach in a classroom and you must learn by it by actually doing it. I tend to agree with this, although I urge young photographers to consider a formal education in addition to real world experience if time and money will allow for it. The bottom line is that you will not learn everything you need to in order to be successful if you ignore either one. The good news is that there are incredible resources for studying and learning about photojournalism online, so if you don't have a lot of money but you are dedicated and persistent, you can learn most things on your own. I will begin to publish more links and stories that I believe will be helpful to those starting out in photojournalism.
I have had two workshop students who have graduated with certificate degrees in photojournalism from well known, established schools in the United States and in Paris. My personal opinion is that these students did not get a good photojournalism education from these programs, especially considering the time and money they put into them. One of the students told me that they learned more in my seven day intensive photojournalism workshop than they did in their one year certificate program abroad, which confirmed to me that workshops can be a great way for students to get started on their path in photojournalism.
Workshops:
There are countless photojournalism workshops offered around the world and many of them offer young photographers the opportunity to learn directly from well known, working photojournalists. They range in price from around $1000 to $10,000 for five to ten day programs and vary greatly in both quality and content.
To sum it all up:
Here is a good way to think about whether or not you can succeed as a photojournalist: if you are willing to work for five years, not only without pay but PAYING to work out of your own pocket, then I think you have a pretty good chance. But understand that when I say "work" I really mean WORK. You need to be willing to put in far more than a full time job would require. You will need to be able to endure extended periods of extreme discomfort, difficult and shocking traumas as well as some pretty extreme boredom at times (I know it is hard to believe, but trust me, aspects of this work can be really boring...Itype this on a plane in the middle of 42 hours of straight travel time.)
Note: I will address many of these points in more detail in future posts. I am also working on a post regarding How To Become A War Photographer in which I will offer some advice on that subject, an even more difficult job and way of life. Please take all of my thoughts and suggestions as nothing more than one photojournalists opinion and make sure you consider others advice as well before making up your own mind.