Posts Tagged ‘Actor Headshots’

Submitting Actor Headshots through email

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Over the past six years, online submissions have grown enormously in the performance industry.  Because of this, entire casting companies exist in the virtual world allowing performers to submit their headshots and resumes.  A voiceover artist in Chicago can submit for a casting notice in New York or LA.  Even more beneficial is the money saved on postage and mailing costs, as well as the time saved sending and opening headshot envelopes.

While there is still a significant amount of industry professionals that outright refuse to accept such electronic submissions, you need only consider the substantial benefits to realize that this practice will not only continue to grow, but eventually become the new standard.  Obviously, new systems will continue to develop so that a casting director’s computer doesn’t drown in gigabytes of actor reels and headshots.

Many online companies that post casting notices already provide a system that makes the submission process more uniform and that way the casting director can easily view many of the submission photos at one time online and use that as a first step to screen the performers.

However, many casting opportunities also provide an email address and request that you send them a link to your website so they can view your headshot and resume, or demo reel.  For those of you who need an actor website, please visit www.actorartistdesign.com.

Occasionally, casting notices will also just request that you attached your headshot and resume in an email to the casting director.  Sometimes, they don’t specify how or what to do with the attachments.  Actors that aren’t yet tech-savvy enough to know how email attachments work sometimes submit their photos as attachments that are huge.  Photo images that are not modified (also called optimized) can be so large they are rejected by the email account of the intended recipient.  Your email to the casting director bounces – or worse, it goes to the junk mail folder of the recipient.

Even more dreadful is if the recipient gets your email, but the file size of your attached image(s) are so large that they fill up the available file space in the casting director’s email account – now you have just exceeded their email account space of the casting director and all of the other performers that want to submit are having their emails bounced because the casting director’s inbox has reached it’s file size limit!  Not good!  Especially since the casting director will eventually realize what is happening, and figure out that it was because of your email that they have to repost the casting notice for more submissions!

So what do you do?  The ideal file format for submitting your headshot and resume is a PDF.

Why?  Because 99% of computers have Adobe Acrobat Reader and can open these files.  Moreover, PDF files can be optimized to reduce the file size and still look great.

Many actors believe they should submit their resume as a word document.  Unfortunately, Microsoft came out with a new version of Microsoft Office in the past few years and if you send a word document saved using the new Microsoft Office program, you have to save it with using an extra step, or the older Microsoft Office programs won’t open your resume.  That means the casting director may not be able to open your resume!  Ah!  Frustrating for everyone.

To avoid this, submit your headshot AND resume in PDF format.  Also – be SURE you save the attachments using your name!  If you instead save them as “Headshot” and “Resume” – the casting director may save them somewhere else on their computer by accident and your photo may become separated from your resume on their hard drive.  Use something like “JasonAlanCaine_Headshot.pdf” and “JasonAlanCaine_Resume.pdf” to make sure that your information stays together.

Finally, find a friend who knows Photoshop or another program where they can ‘optimize’ your photos and reduce the file size.  Usually, this just means they need to reduce the “resolution” from 300 dpi (dots per inch) to 72 dpi.  The 300 dpi resolution contains much more detail so that the photos print out well.  The 72 dpi is the ideal resolution for viewing on the web.  Computer screens can’t display any more detail than a 72 dpi image, so anything higher is a waste of space for no reason.  The only difference is that the 300 dpi image file is much larger in file size so it takes up more file space, it doesn’t look any better.

While there are also other factors (such as the actual physical size of the image – 4” x 6” vs 12” x 18”, etc) the resolution (dpi) is usually the easiest and most effective thing to change to make your photos easier to mail.

If you don’t have any computer-savvy friends, please send us an email by visiting our contact page and we would be happy to help you.  We optimize (1) headshot for free!

Have a great day!

Thanks for stopping by!

Jason C Small
Business Development Manager
http://www.ActorArtistDesign.com
Actor Artist Design, a division of Great Young Minds, LLC

*Jason has worked as an actor in New York City for seven years appearing on All My Children, As The World Turns (3 years as “Lou”), Guiding Light, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Good Morning America, at Radio City Music Hall, in the New York Fringe Festival, and in many more productions. He has more than 15 independent films to his credit, and has managed an acting studio for a celebrity in NYC, and served as Marketing Director for one of the top casting websites in the New York market. Jason owns and operates Great Young Minds, LLC, a graphic and web design company servicing the entertainment industry, with offices in New York City.

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Cost-effective Headshot Reproduction (Lithographs)

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Every actor has a budget – some are tighter than others, and when it comes to headshot reproduction – it can be a very trying time figuring out the best option for reproducing your headshots.

One great option, and huge money-saver, is to use abcpictures.com and get lithographs reproduced.  Basically, a lithograph is a copy of the original made through a cheaper process.  That’s the bottom line.  Speaking of bottom lines – look at the pricing comparisons:

LITHOGRAPHS through ABCPICTURES.COM:

Black & White
250 MIN - $75.00
500 - $90.00
1000 - $120.00

COLOR
250 MIN - $199.00
500 – $299.00
1000 - $399.00

Now compare that to Reproductions.com (NON-LITHOGRAPHS) – one of the most popular places in NYC for actor headshot reproductions:

BLACK AND WHITE

Quantity
New Order
Reorder
50
$96.50
$77.20
100
$119.50
$95.60
150
$159.50
$127.60
200
$197.50
$158.00
300
$262.00
$209.60
500
$359.50
$287.60

COLOR AND BLACK AND WHITE (ON HIGHER QUALITY PHOTO PAPER)

8×10 PrintsColor and Black & White
Quantity
New Order
Reorder
50
$107.50
$86.00
100
$141.00
$113.20
150
$195.00
$156.00
200
$242.00
$193.60
300
$330.00
$264.00
500
$470.00
$376.00

 
Now, while there is definitely a difference between the two final products, the truth is that if someone handed you a lithographic headshot, and you had no other headshots next to it, you wouldn’t even know it was a lithograph.  Even if you have another headshot next to it, the difference isn’t really big.  Yes, the non-lithographic headshot does look slightly better and it may be glossy – but the lithograph looks just fine as well – and at the end of the day, it is still your picture on the shot.

So you may want to give it a shot – 500 lithographic headshots for the same price as 50 headshots.  That means that 450 MORE people will see you for the same amount of money, and the quality difference between the headshots is pretty negligible.  Give it a try!  The company producing lithographs is www.ABCpictures.com.  Full disclosure: Actor Artist Design does not get a kickback or have a relationship with ABCpictures.com, and if we develop such a relationship in the future we will always disclose the information to our readers.

Thanks for stopping by!

Jason C Small
Business Development Manager
Actor Artist Design, a division of Great Young Minds, LLC

*Jason has worked as an actor in New York City for seven years appearing on All My Children, As The World Turns (3 years as “Lou”), Guiding Light, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Good Morning America, at Radio City Music Hall, in the New York Fringe Festival, and in many more productions. He has more than 15 independent films to his credit, and has managed an acting studio for a celebrity in NYC, and served as Marketing Director for one of the top casting websites in the New York market. Jason owns and operates Great Young Minds, LLC, a graphic and web design company servicing the entertainment industry, with offices in New York City.

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Headshots & Websites

Friday, December 12th, 2008

It has been the core marketing tool for performers since the creation of photography: headshots.  That’s no secret to any actor who has spent 20 minutes in the industry.

Over the past seven years, technology has slowly integrated into the casting industry – where many professionals remain conservative and prefer the conventional methods of doing business.  It has taken years for much of the casting industry to accept ‘online submissions’ from actors, and there are still many out there that do not accept this as a method of receiving submissions from actors.  ActorsAccess.com has moved that benchmark along faster, because of the strong credibility associated with their company.

Several other casting websites, like BackStage.com, have also made the transition into ‘online submissions’ for actors over the past few years.  Other casting websites have also been born out of this new strategy.

Having worked for one of the leading online casting websites in the New York market, I can tell you first-hand how they operate in a future blog.  They are basically ‘collectors’ who spend all day making phone calls to industry contacts, and searching among the other competing casting services.  They make sure that they at least try to get the same casting notices everyone else has (by keeping a membership on their competitors websites) and then they contact personal industry relationships to find out about a few other castings that are happening, in hopes of posting them before any other casting websites beat them to it.

Getting back to my point, with the integration of online casting over the past seven years – the main calling card of any performer is STILL the headshot.  But now, more than ever, an actors website is almost a complete equivalent in terms of importance.  The online presence of an actors website serves up an instant access point for reference by agents, managers, and casting professionals.  They don’t need to open an envelope, file a headshot, or put a DVD into a DVD-player to view your reel.  With a well-executed acting website, like Actor Artist Design websites, professionals can visit a link and it is literally a full marketing package giving them everything they need know about you…24/7.

Keeping this in mind, why would you spend anywhere from $99-$1500 (NY-rates) for a great headshot, and then put up a website without an investment in yourself?  I have seen many websites for actors that have incredible photos and reels, but the websites are obviously short-changed.  It just makes no sense to have such great shots, from a complete pro-photographer, and then post a website that obviously brings down your professional impact on a casting director, agent, or manager.  It is comparable to purchasing a BMW, and then putting an old motor in it to drive around.

Many turn to a friend for a website, and are often left disappointed by the result.  This is because having the skills to produce an actors website, doesn’t mean that the designer understands the industry and how/what/where to best execute an actors website.  There are also website templates available for actors, and unfortunately this leaves hundreds, if not thousands, of actors with the exact same website as one another.  You may never even see that another actor, possibly with the same or similar appearance as you, has the exact same website, because they used the same template.  This is obviously bad news, because a casting professional sees so many faces, that they may instantly assume that they have seen you before – just because you look similar, and your websites are so close in appearance because of the website template you used.

The only way to be sure you are as original as your acting work, is to invest in a fully customized website.  Not all web designers even know how to design a fully custom website.  They secretly run-off and purchase a template, then try to work in your materials.  Leaving you thinking you are ready-to-go, not knowing there are plenty of other websites out there – just like yours.

My point is this; it is just silly to not have a website – and even more silly to have a website you paid $10 for when you expect casting professionals, agents, and managers to view you as original, professional, and prepared.  Whether you have a friend do it (be very cautious), purchase a template (there are very few out there that haven’t already been widely used and ‘customized’), or try to find a custom-website designer who specializes in actors, models, and all other performers (hint hint…Actor Artist Design) – be sure you are not sacrificing opportunities to save some money.  At the end of the day, your marketing materials are an investment to make you money, and that investment is working for you everyday that you are getting yourself out there and generating interest.

Thanks for stopping by!

Jason C Small
Business Development Manager
Actor Artist Design, a division of Great Young Minds, LLC

*Jason has worked as an actor in New York City for seven years appearing on All My Children, As The World Turns (3 years as “Lou”), Guiding Light, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Good Morning America, at Radio City Music Hall, in the New York Fringe Festival, and in many more productions. He has more than 15 independent films to his credit, and has managed an acting studio for a celebrity in NYC, and served as Marketing Director for one of the top casting websites in the New York market. Jason owns and operates Great Young Minds, LLC, a graphic and web design company servicing the entertainment industry, with offices in New York City.

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