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ART SELLING

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Search Engine Optimization SEO & Google for Art Blogs & Sites. If you sell your art on the internet through your own website it is really really important to ensure that you have a steady stream of interested visitors looking at your work.

Search Engine Optimization SEO & Google for Art Blogs & Sites

I can’t emphasis this enough because you can have the most amazing work in the world out there on the web but if no one sees it nothing exciting is going to happen. You can’t just sit back and wait for people to turn up. You have to help them find you. So, one of the best ways make this happen and make sure you get all those visitors popping their head round the door of your shop is to spend a little bit of time making sure that your website is as “Google Friendly” as possible.

This means tweaking the site so that Google and other search engines find it easy to navigate and index. So here we go – some easy SEO that will give your site a head start. Use keyphrases – not single keywords Keyphrase consists of 2 keywords together – like “Abstract Art” or “Contemporary Art”. Page titles – Sort em out! TripleClicks Home.

Collect Art. Shutter Stock. iStock. Selling Stock Has Never Been Easier iStock pays contributors a base royalty rate of 15% for each file download and up to 45% for exclusive contributors.

iStock

Files are licensed three ways: iStock Credits When someone licenses your content with iStock credits, you earn your royalty based on the net value of the credits used to download your image. Pay As You Go Pricing When someone licenses your content using a credit card, you earn your royalty based on the net amount paid to download your image. Subscriptions We pay your royalty level based on how much of the subscriber's daily limit was used to download your file, with a minimum value of $0.65. How Much Does a Non-Exclusive Contributor Make? iStock pays royalty rates of between 15%-20% to its non-exclusive contributors. How Do I Get Paid? iStock pays in U.S. dollars.

Cheque Mailed every two weeks. PayPal/Moneybookers Processed on business days. Direct Deposit or Pre-Paid iStock MasterCard® Payoneer Curious About the Full Royalty Structure? RED BUBBLE. FLICKR. IMAGEKIND. Marketing: 7 Places to Sell Your Work Online. What if Van Gogh had been able to show his work online?

Marketing: 7 Places to Sell Your Work Online

Before the Internet, artists had very few outlets to sell their work. The main choices were galleries (which took 50% of the selling price) and art fairs. Today there are a whole host of online art retailers, making it much easier to get your work in front of the public. These sites enable you to find buyers for original works, or to offer prints of your work, created when the order is placed. With millions of potential art buyers online, chances are better than ever that you’ll find a market for your work. Determining the “best” sites for selling art is subjective, of course, but I tried to list the best in terms of audience size (traffic), cost, and quality of service.

While Imagekind sticks to artwork printed on paper, canvas, and greeting cards, Redbubble is a place for “framed prints, mounted prints, greeting cards, posters, designer T-Shirts and more.” Etsy calls itself “Your place to buy & sell all things handmade.” WHERE IS THE BEST PLACE ONLINE TO SELL DIGITAL ART. DEVIANT ART.