Monday, October 04, 2010

Is technology devaluing creative services?


A post on a site visited by photographers exposed a series of cases where photographers were expected to work for free. This quickly got picked up on other sites and struck a chord with other creative people, in video, design and web site building to name just a few. 

One correspondent on the Milton Keynes Media Circle pointed out how technology was allowing this and explained, 
"The bottom line is that technology is empowering. At the advent of Desktop Publishing three elements came together to decimate the Pre-Press indusustry, one with many hard links to the technologies in photography. Apple Macintosh, Photoshop, Quark Xpress. Suddenly we could empower a secretary to do page assembly, rudimentary scanning and proofing. The plain fact is that 85% of the colour pre-press didn't NEED the extended qualifications of the trade houses so the work dried up in MONTHS. The phrase GOOD ENOUGH COLOUR was coined and the rest is history." 


Another correspondent volunteered that,


"I partly blame the sophistication of current technology and availability of cheap but reasonably capable equipment on the high-street. It encourages those with little or no experience or training and almost non-existent skills to set themselves up with fairly basic equipment and call themselves 'photographers' or 'videographers'(a term I hate). Because of their lack of investment in skills development and relatively small investment in equipment they often offer their services for free or very low-cost." 


They could have mentioned interns wielding all this equipment for free too. In the past the difference in quality would have been obvious and expertise, talent, skill and the use of professional equipment would be easy to spot. But dumbing down on quality is everywhere. We are all exposed to so much sub standard work that many people appear to lack the ability to distinguish good from poor and focus instead on price. The implication is that subconsciously customers will pick up on  cheap looking publicity material and transfer that expectation to the price and quality of goods the company is offering. 

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