I’m pretty good at stringing together some words to tell a story. Images? I’m not as good at creating those. I like images a lot which is why I’m excited about Getty Images announcement that it’s allowing bloggers and social media users to embed selected Getty Images at no charge.
Images improve stories. They add texture and dimension. They set a mood. And images get into the reader’s brain more quickly than words.
Getty Images Library is huge and spans a range of topics, events, people, places, emotions and situations. So when I’m looking to emphasize an idea, I now have ready access to a large set of visual messages that can be embedded without having to either consult a lawyer or open a wallet.
I sense this is good business for Getty Images, too. It’s safe to say this policy change will drive more people to their site. Like most good marketers Getty Images is confident that they can convert visitors into customers. And if they are good modern marketers, they have a predictive model in place that helps them reliably forecast a rosier future.
Remember, the agreement allows you to embed images only. No derivative works. No customization. No mash-ups. No white label. No offline use. For those you need to license images.
Getty Images: New Tool, Not a Replacement for Custom Design
As excited as I am about Getty Images new embedding policy, I’m still improving my visual design skills, taking more photographs and keeping my licenses for Sketch and Pixelmator. There just are too many times when only a custom image will do. A few examples:
- Fact-based charts
- Gradient backgrounds
- Icons
- Specialized items like email headers
- Presentation slides
- Search Engine Optimization (image “alt” tags)
… and much much more.
Today, however, is a day to be joyful about the new possibilities. My keyword searches have found many spectacular images. I feel like a kid excited about the future.
It looks like some lawyers and researchers did more than scan Getty Images’ privacy policy and terms of service for embedded images.
Josh Benton lays out the risks and legal issues in Getty Images blows the web’s mind by setting 35 million photos free (with conditions, of course) on Harvard University’s Nieman Journalism Lab. His well-researched concerns:
– Getty Images is collecting data about your blog and visitors
– Advertising that you don’t control may/will show up in the future
– Prepare for differences of opinion on what constitutes “non-commercial”
Getty isn’t the only source of high quality commercial use images. This article lists several more options. Some I knew about and have used before, others new
The 17 Best Stock Photo Sites Every Designer Should Bookmark
Enjoy