Photographic Training Courses in the UK, from getting started to setting up a photography business

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Annabel on Photography

Is Your Lack Of Confidence Holding You Back?

Do you know what the most difficult thing is about photography?
Do you know what holds you back most of all?
It’s not the camera, or the sales or the lack of clients – it’s CONFIDENCE.  Get that right, and the rest will just follow – trust me.

Having spent 25 years in this industry, this word crops up constantly – in every seminar that I train, the key thing I have to deal with is people’s lack of confidence in themselves and their ability to sell their pictures.

Well the good news is that I understand because I’VE BEEN THERE TOO!

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I too was that fraud!  The person who didn’t really know what they were doing with a camera, but just loved taking pictures and working with people.

When I first started in photography I thought I wasn’t good enough; I thought I needed to know all about the technical side, and I felt a fraud for taking pictures without really understanding my camera.

I bought big cameras, tripods, lights, went on courses – tried everything, until one day I just realised that it wasn’t about what I didn’t know – it wasn’t that I was wrong – I was just different.  That light bulb moment changed my life – I gained the confidence and belief in myself to do what I FELT was right and I’ve never looked back since.

The first seminar I ever went to was in 1988 – it was a week long and held in Tunisia.  I was so scared to go that I took my husband with me, so that when all the other photographers found out I didn’t know what I was doing, I would just be able to have a holiday!

I spent a week learning all sorts of things (some good, a lot bad) and then at the end of the week I put a picture into a print critique – it was totally slated, and I was absolutely gutted.  I left the room, holding back the tears, to pack and go home – I fully intended to give up photography because I felt totally useless and stupid – my belief and dreams had been shattered in the time it took for someone to tell me “the horizon line wasn’t straight” in my picture.

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Fortunately for me I met a highly respected photographer coming out of the lift and he said to me “by the way – I think that is a fantastic picture.”  If he hadn’t said that to me, I would not be where I am today.  I owe my confidence to that person – he taught me that different people have different opinions, and he gave me the confidence to believe in myself.

The following year I went back to the same course, determined to show them I could do it – and I won 4 of the top 5 prizes – losing out on the 4th prize to a picture of a bottle of Harpic toilet cleaner! (no – I have no idea either!)

Do you want to know why I think so many people lack confidence in this industry?

Well I’m going to tell you!  I think it’s because it has always been taught by technical men!  THERE – I’VE SAID IT!

Before I get bombarded by lots of fantastic male photographers – I am not saying that every man is a techy – but in the past, most of them were.  Photography has traditionally been taught as a highly technical subject, and photographers have been led to believe they can’t take a picture unless they have tons of equipment and know everything about it.  Many photography books and courses are totally boring, and you have to wade through so much stuff, you fall asleep and become disinterested.  Amazing for a subject which is actually very creative, being taught in such a non-creative way.

20 years ago I was virtually the only woman on the seminars – I was totally confused by the condescending attitude of many of the teachers, to the way I took photos.  They told me I had to have a tripod and lots of lenses – and I spent lots of money trying to do it their way – but it NEVER FELT RIGHT.  Even people in camera shops made me feel crap because I asked them questions and they laughed at me for the simplicity of those questions.  Camera shops haven’t changed a bit – they are still the same today – full of scary looking equipment and nothing to do with the dream of photography.  If I ran camera shops I would do it completely differently (but that’s a whole new ballgame!)

It was only when another photographer (a nice, non-techy man!) suggested I just do it my way and get on with it – that things started to change for me – I abandoned all my unnecessary equipment and went out and shot pictures the way I wanted.  I got the best camera I could afford and learnt how to set it up easily so I didn’t need to change it – which allowed me to concentrate on WHAT I was photographing, rather than what I was photographing WITH.

I learnt to believe in myself by listening to my clients – THEY ARE THE PEOPLE THAT COUNT – not other photographers and critics.  My clients LOVED what I was doing – so surely that was enough?

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Crucial fact that I’ve learnt from teaching photographers – MEN AND WOMEN LEARN IN DIFFERENT WAYS.

I have found that MOST men love researching on the Internet – they will spend hours looking for the right site/camera/review/blog, etc. and learn from everything they read.  They usually want to know EVERYTHING about a camera before they buy it.

I have found that MOST women do not like learning like this.  They want someone to point them in the right direction, tell them what works best, and then they can just get on with it.  They don’t want to know anything about their camera other than that they can trust it, it is easy to use and it does the job they want it to do.

A lot of men are now also learning like this…

It’s for these reasons that I have invented a new course –

CONFIDENCE WORKSHOP FOR GIRLS (AND OTHER NON-TECHY PEOPLE)

Bring on the revolution!  Let’s change this industry – I’ll show you how to gain confidence – so you will never look back.  You will believe that you can do it – because YOU CAN DO IT!

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If you lack confidence, then this course will change your life, and there will be no stopping you.  I am not a timeshare salesman – I am a person who totally believes in photography and the wonderful hobby or career it can be – sharing this knowledge with you is paramount to what I do – the more people that gain confidence in themselves, both men and women; the more great photographers there will be out there, and the more people there will be who want to have their photographs taken – it’s all about market awareness – but we need YOU to be out there to help us create it.

I look forward to meeting you!

For more information on the Confidence Workshop for Girls (and other non-techy people) – CLICK HERE

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11 Responses to “Is Your Lack Of Confidence Holding You Back?”

  1. Lee Tuckett says:

    Hooray! Enough said?

  2. Debbie says:

    Hi annebel, great blog im half way through my part time college course to hopefully get a btec 2 but this is more like what im after, confidence to just get out there and start shooting photos of people, see you in June :0), im a girl not geeky n dont do techi stuff, so this sounds a gd plan to me :0) x

  3. anite says:

    Thanks annabel. Your courses have been inspirational over the last 12 months and I love my photography. My hobby, my lifeline, has now become my passion and I want it now to become my job.I actually told work today they need to plan to take on my responsibilitys as in 12 months I won’t be there. I’m so proud I have made the decition, I just need now to sort out the rest. Thank to you for all at CPT for what you have given me so far, I will be continuing to seek and learn more so i can succeed.

  4. Tim Hind says:

    I couldn’t agree more! It’s probably my biggest obstacle to overcome, but you only get confidence by getting out there and doing it. I try to keep things as simple as possible and then add more to the shoot as I improve.

  5. Kathy says:

    You have just inspired me not to give up I have had my “nice” camera now for five months and my male photographer mentor has told me “techie” stuff and “don’t do this” or “do this” and my best pictures have been when I have just pointed and clicked. I still don’t get it right all of the time but I am getting there slow but sure! I love it and will hold onto my confidence – thanks!

  6. Fantastic post Annabel! Whilst I do hold value in techy knowledge, especially when things are a bit challenging, I totally agree that it’s the subject that is paramount in photography and that is where your passion should be focused! Too many people (especially men) get enticed by the ‘craft’ of photography when it’s the subject that should be the inspiration for picking up a camera!

    Well done!

  7. John Thornton says:

    You are so right! My first day on one of your courses was a revelation – freed of all those anxieties! There aren’t enough hours in the day to understand my camera, I’d rather be out there taking photographs!

  8. Michael Turner says:

    So true Annabel. Cameras are boring lumps of metal and plastic! People, light and life are what make photography exciting. I’m sure that anyone joining you for this workshop, female or male (from Venus or Mars!), will leave with their confidence and motivation a mile high.

  9. Leela says:

    OH MY GOD! Did you read my mind? How did you know I felt that way?? I am absolutely intimidated by the techy men who laughed at me when I said I wanted to be a wedding photographer and then quizzed me all the time to know what lens and gun I used and the exact f stop for that tree over there in that light blah blah. jeez. But then I found you all here at AW and I can’t wait to get started on your courses. If I hadn’t saved all my pennies to be on another course in June with you I would come on this one. I am posting this to 2 friends who also need to come on this.

    I am so tearfully bored at being grilled buy techy camera men as soon as I get my camera out. I just want to say ‘I just liked how it felt in my hand ok!!’ but I start to want to put it away as I feel like am being watched and judged!! (and they are rolling their eyes at me)

    Here come the girls techy men…

    Brilliant post. THANK YOU.

  10. Mui says:

    Leela… “I just liked how it felt in my hand ok!!”… totally agreed with that and made me laugh. Yes I don’t want to talk too much about my camera equipment (good though they are!) and whether the edges are sharp when an image is magnified to 400%!!

    So often, talking to people who are too technical makes me question and doubt my ability. Just reading this article has given me a tremendous confidence boost! I am definitely coming to some of your courses.

  11. Lisa Smith says:

    To anyone who is unsure whether or not to book on to the confidence workshop, I would suggest you commit, and allow yourself to be inspired. No technical stuff, 100% focus on creativity and self-belief. One week on from doing the course and I have already presented images in my work place and received firm requests for mounted versions – I have been there 2 years and haven’t had the courage to do that until now ! I have changed too, actively encouraging my colleagues to view the images. They aren’t interested in whether or not I can explain the settings on my camera – they just like the images. Enough said I think. Get yourself on it and don’t look back !

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