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ForegroundWeb Newsletter

YOUR WEEKLY DOSE OF PHOTO WEBSITE ADVICE & INSPIRATION.

IN TODAY’S EMAIL:

⚡️ 3 Quick tips: displaying prices, busy season, educational content
🧠 Deep dive: why more traffic won't save your photography business

QUICK TIPS

1. 🏷️ Knowing vs Not Knowing

This is an excellent short piece by consultant Jonathan Stark:

POP QUIZ!

When deciding whether or not to purchase something, would you rather...

  • Know the price up-front?

Or...

  • NOT know the price up-front?

. . . . .

. . . .

. . .

. .

.

You’d obviously rather know the price up-front.

Mkay, so...

Why not give your clients the same courtesy?

Further reading on this topic: Should you display prices on your photography website?

2. 🚨 Busy season burnout is optional

Running on fumes?

If the fall photography busy season has you barely hanging on, it’s time to stop winging it and start working smarter.

Here are 5 systems that can literally save your sanity:

  • Automate bookings & galleries

  • Raise prices on peak dates

  • Say “no” to non-ideal clients

  • Batch your calendar (no more chaos!)

  • Prioritize recovery like it’s a business task

You’re not a machine. Your creativity (and sanity) depend on smart workflows.

3. 🧠 Make your educational content insanely helpful

Your goal isn't just to rank on Google — it's to build trust with potential clients who are researching and planning ahead.

So every article or guide you publish should feel personal and packed with insights, not just a block of text and a few images.

Add real value by including:

  • Behind-the-scenes tips from your actual photo sessions

  • Location-specific advice, like best times to shoot or common challenges

  • Personal stories that help readers connect with your process

  • Honest recommendations based on your experience (gear, settings, poses, workflows)

The more authentic and specific your post, the more it becomes the go-to resource in your niche — and that’s when the leads start coming in.

DEEP DIVE

Why more traffic won't save your photography business

Let’s face it, the web has changed.

Photographers are still chasing traffic as if it’s 2015, obsessing over SEO numbers and pageviews while ignoring what truly drives bookings: connection, clarity, and conversions.

Search engines and social platforms are no longer generous with clicks, and “getting more traffic” is now one of the worst goals you can have for your photography business.

It’s time to pivot.

Traffic is down, but that’s not the problem

If you’ve noticed fewer visitors from Google lately, you’re not alone.

AI Overviews, ChatGPT answers, and social algorithms now keep users on their platforms. People no longer “click out” to your site, they read summaries, watch clips, and make decisions without leaving their app.

So what happens when the old “SEO traffic = success” formula breaks? You stop treating visitors as numbers and start treating them as humans.

The photographers who are thriving today aren’t necessarily getting the most clicks, they’re building the most trust.

That trust converts casual browsers into loyal clients.

The mindset shift: from traffic to trust

Here’s the hard truth: most photographers don’t need more traffic.

They need more of the right traffic, the kind that turns into leads and bookings.

Your website isn’t a billboard. It’s a filtering machine.

Its job is to attract your ideal clients and quietly repel everyone else.

If you’re currently pouring hours into Instagram posts or blog updates just to “drive traffic,” stop and ask:

  • Do these efforts actually lead to inquiries?

  • Are the visitors you’re attracting even your target clients?

  • Is your site ready to convert when they arrive?

The real metric that matters isn’t how many people visit your site. It’s what happens next.

Metrics that actually matter for photographers

Forget vanity stats like sessions and bounce rates. Here’s what you should track instead:

  • Inquiries submitted: the clearest sign of conversion

  • Portfolio or service page views: proof of real engagement

  • Email signups: your pipeline for long-term relationships

  • Time spent on key pages: an indicator of interest

  • Conversion rate on CTAs and contact forms

And of course, how many clients you book and how much revenue your site helps generate.

When I perform SEO and UX audits for photographers, this is always where I start. Because the prettiest site in the world doesn’t matter if it’s not helping your business grow.

AI search is changing the game, but photographers can still win

AI-driven search isn’t killing visibility. It’s redefining it.

Google’s new AI results pull data not only from websites but also YouTube, social profiles, and local listings. In practice, that means your photography brand, not just your website, needs to demonstrate expertise, experience, and trust (Google’s E-E-A-T signals).

Here’s how to stay visible:

Create people-first content. Ditch keyword stuffing. Write blog posts and portfolio descriptions that answer real client questions.

Show local consistency. Make sure your business name, location, and contact info match across your site, Google Business Profile, and directories.

Expand beyond text. Pair articles or case studies with short how-to videos on YouTube or behind-the-scenes Reels.

Build a “web ecosystem.” Every piece of content you publish should point back to your expertise and style, even if the viewer never clicks through.

Think of it as proof of life for your business: scattered breadcrumbs that show Google (and potential clients) that you’re active, credible, and professional.

“Traffic is vanity. Trust is conversion.”

ChatGPT and AI referrals: small traffic, big intent

Here’s an emerging trend I’ve seen across many industries: ChatGPT is becoming a legitimate referral source.

Yes, people are discovering businesses through AI chat tools, and the visitors that do click through are far more qualified. They’re not casual browsers, they’re problem-solvers looking for you.

Even if these referrals only make up a tiny percentage of your traffic, they can easily outperform social or organic search in conversions.

That’s why it’s more important than ever to have a clear, authoritative website that AI tools can reference confidently.

If your site looks trustworthy, loads fast, and answers client questions clearly, it’s far more likely to be mentioned or surfaced by AI models over time.

Micro-conversions: how small fixes drive big results

Getting traffic but no leads?

That’s usually not a traffic issue, it’s a conversion issue.

Your contact form is more than a submission box, it’s a mini sales funnel. And small details make a huge difference:

  • Cut unnecessary form fields, keep only what you truly need.

  • Add testimonials or trust markers near CTAs.

  • Tell visitors exactly when you’ll reply (“I usually respond within 24 hours”).

  • Guide users from portfolio to contact with clear next steps (“Like what you see? Let’s chat about your project”).

Tools like Hotjar or Microsoft Clarity can show you where people drop off, then you can patch those leaks.

When I audit photographer websites, I often find the same pattern: people click through to galleries, scroll for a bit… and then vanish. Usually because there’s no clear next action.

Fix that, and your conversion rate will jump, even if your total traffic stays the same.

Where social fits in a zero-click world

Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube aren’t traffic generators anymore. They’re relationship platforms.

Their algorithms are designed to keep users inside the app, not send them to your site. So instead of fighting it, use it strategically.

Be useful on those platforms.

Share behind-the-scenes stories, offer short educational snippets, and reply generously in comment threads.

You’re not trying to go viral. You’re trying to stay visible and credible, so when someone’s ready to hire a photographer, your name is already familiar.

And when they finally click through to your website, make sure that visit feels like a natural continuation of what they’ve already seen from you.

The bottom line: your site isn’t a gallery, it’s a business tool

It’s tempting to treat your photography website as a digital portfolio, a nice place to show your best work.

But that’s a missed opportunity.

Your website should be a booking machine, optimized not for admiration but for action.

That means:

  • Clear positioning and copy that reflects who you serve

  • Streamlined navigation (no one wants to dig through 10 menus)

  • Fast-loading, mobile-optimized pages

  • Contact forms that convert

  • Trust signals like testimonials, awards, client logos, and quick response times

And above all, a structure that moves visitors toward inquiry, not just exploration.

As I always tell my clients, and I’ve worked on over 300 photographer websites, good design isn’t about looking pretty. It’s about clarity, connection, and conversion.

So what should photographers focus on?

Here’s your new checklist:

Improve the user experience, simplify navigation and speed up your site.

Strengthen your brand voice and positioning, clarity converts.

Use analytics tools to track conversions, not traffic.

Stay visible across Google, YouTube, and social with consistent content.

Make your website feel human, approachable, not corporate.

This is the sustainable strategy. Because while platforms and algorithms change, trust always converts.

TESTIMONIAL

“The site is LOOKING AMAZING! What an overhaul. It is like going from a drab kitchen with daggy appliances to something super slick like my new kitchen with Bosch appliances and stone kitchen benchtops. This year is the year of upgrade for me!”

Nikki McLennan

Want help turning your website into a true business asset?

That’s exactly what I do at ForegroundWeb: building and optimizing custom photography websites that attract the right clients and turn visits into bookings.

If you want clarity on what’s working and what’s not, book a website review or SEO project and I’ll show you exactly where your site can perform better.

Stop chasing traffic.

Start building trust and conversions.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

"Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage."

Anais Nin

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