If you run a images enterprise, chances are high that AI hasn’t impacted your backside line but. Because though AI is ready to do issues like generate studio-quality headshots, it is nonetheless a good distance from with the ability to replicate the work of wedding ceremony photographers, sports activities photographers or vogue photographers, for instance. For now, a minimum of.
However, there’s a totally different, extra oblique method that AI would possibly influence your images enterprise. And that is the chance that the present AI increase seems to be a bubble… after which bursts.
If you working in photography back in the late Nineties, this might sound eerily reminiscent. During the so-called “dot-com boom”, start-ups with no real business model were suddenly “worth” billions.
Everyone believed that the fledgling internet would transform business forever – and to be fair, it did – but first came the crash. When it hit in March 2000, tech stocks lost two-thirds of their value in a year. It took over a decade to recover.
Today, economists warn that we could be in an even bigger bubble; this time fuelled by artificial intelligence. Because right now, valuations of the top ten tech companies in the US are higher, relative to their earnings, than at the height of the dot-com craze.
What is a bubble?
So what is a bubble anyway? Well in terms of economics, a bubble happens when prices soar far above what the underlying thing is actually worth (typically driven by hype, speculation and fear of missing out). Eventually, though, reality catches up and the bubble bursts – sending values plummeting.
This matters to everyone, because a tech crash will ripple into industries far beyond Silicon Valley. For instance, gear prices could rise if manufacturers face tighter margins or cut back on research and development.
More broadly, commercial photographers will probably see fewer commissions from clients in advertising, start-ups or other tech-linked sectors. Payments could slow down if your clients’ own revenues take a hit. And if you’ve built your workflow around niche AI editing or imaging tools, some could disappear if their backers pull out, or dramatically up their prices.
What can we do?
So will this actually happen? Well, it’s difficult to say. The danger is that if AI products don’t deliver the promised revolution quickly enough, investor enthusiasm could fade. And because these top 10 companies make up around 40% of the US stock market’s value, any drop in confidence would send shockwaves through the wider economy.
At the very least, then, it’s a possibility. But while you can’t stop a stock market crash, you can make your business more resilient.
Try not to rely too heavily on work from one sector, so you’re insulated if an industry slows. Think carefully before making big kit purchases on credit; consider renting or leasing instead. Aim to keep some savings aside to cushion you against late payers.
Keep an eye on the software you use, and have alternatives ready if they vanish or become too expensive. And more generally, stay aware of what’s happening in tech markets – it can help you spot potential headwinds before they hit your bottom line.