How to grow an organic following on Instagram as a landscape photographer

Jun 28, 2018

Felix Inden

We love it when our readers get in touch with us to share their stories. This article was contributed to DIYP by a member of our community. If you would like to contribute an article, please contact us here.

How to grow an organic following on Instagram as a landscape photographer

Jun 28, 2018

Felix Inden

We love it when our readers get in touch with us to share their stories. This article was contributed to DIYP by a member of our community. If you would like to contribute an article, please contact us here.

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If you are a landscape photographer trying to get his work out there, you have surely heard about that one big imaging platform called Instagram.

So you made yourself a profile and started dropping all your gorgeous work that you worked hard for and suddenly you wonder: Why is nobody liking my images and why do I have 50 followers while others have thousands and just keep growing?

Their reason for it isn´t one- it´s actually many and I´ll try to cover some of them here in this article, giving some tips along the way that have worked for me in the past.

I´ll also cover why this isn´t exactly working super effectively for myself anymore at the end of the article.

The idea for this article came to my mind after receiving many direct messages about the topic on my Instagram account, so I thought my answers might be interesting for others as well.

If you aren´t doing what I´ll talk about now, that is surely part of why Instagram isn´t working for you (so far)

Using Instagram with the expectation to have a growing following isn´t an easygoing thing.

For most people at least, unless you are already a superstar in the worldwide photography business.

BUT we are not one of those right (at least not me).

So for us it will be a decision that more than anything else will involve time spent on the platform and some changes to our imagery done especially to post them effectively on Instagram.

Spend the needed time

You might have read this often, but because it´s true you´ll read it again here: You need to spend time on Instagram in order to grow- „post and run“ does not work!

So prepare to have at least an hour, better two or more per day to spend „working“ on Instagram.

Engage with people that have similar interests and well-running accounts. While it might be effective to simply like and comment whatever stuff you see, don´t do it and choose images and photographers whose work you really cherish and like.

After all you are trying to build a name for yourself and it´s important to stay true to quality. Once you have some kind of „name“ you want people to appreciate a like given by you, because they know it´s honestly telling them that they did something right.

Who you should follow

Same applies for following people, so watch out that you don´t fall in the follow/unfollow trap and instead curate the list of people you follow. I also follow friends that aren´t photographers at all and some people I also follow because they are just fun people. In those cases I don´t care about the imagery they post, but for those photographers that I have been following: I follow you because I appreciate your work.

Optimize your images for Instagram

Different to other imaging platforms, on Instagram you know 100% that people will be seeing your work only on a very small screen. And your image will compete with bazillions of others being posted at the same time. You only have a fraction of a second to capture the viewers’ interest to get him to double tap and maybe even drop a comment.

So your images need to stand out in some way.

Ignoring this might be the biggest mistake causing people to not grow on Instagram. They process the images like they always do and then upload. Most likely it will be looking quite dull on the phone, because the size factor that other platforms offer get´s lost. The image won´t just stand out because of a neat composition and when very subtle colors can totally work seen on a big screen, on a little phone screen they might look less interesting.

Crop your images to vertical format or 1:1

Now comes the hardest part for us landscapers that often tend to shoot landscape formats or even panoramic work.

Landscape format does not work well on Instagram. Why? Because only a small part of the screen is used to display the image. Your phone screen is the canvas that you have to display your image, so make sure to use it to the fullest.

So you´ll have to shoot vertical format (i use this format very often because I love portrait format landscapes, I was lucky there) or if you shoot wide, crop the images to square or portrait format in order to fill the screen with them.

At this point I got some reactions from people that didn´t want to follow the tip of keeping the aspect ratio of posts in mind. They made a principle about not adjusting/applying changes to their work just because of a social network. But in my opinion one can totally do that without losing the realness factor- if you spend time on the platform then do it effectively. At least that´s my view on it.

Instagram is not your real portfolio- that one should be on your homepage or somewhere else where people can really appreciate your shots in full size with all the important details that you worked out carefully in the field and afterwards on your postprocessing system.

Instagram is a valuable tool for self-promotion of your work and it doesn´t make you less of a landscaper if you adapt to it a little bit. It will instead only improve your Insta experience.

Pimp the images with the inbuilt processing tools

It´s a good idea to post the images with a little higher saturation and contrast than you would normally do. Also enhance sharpness and structures slightly in the app.

Don´t go too far, but something like dialing in something in between of +5 and maximum +15 will do your images a favor as they will look more crisp.

Use Hashtags

While it might seem obvious to most of you reading this, there are still some that post on Instagram expecting people to see their work, but have never really spent thoughts about why people keep tagging their images.

In this huge ocean of posted images, hashtags are a way of getting your image seen by people with certain interests. But to use them to their full potential you need to understand how they work.

There are very popular tags that are used very often and others that don´t get used much. Using #landscape (87 million tagged images), #sunset (176 million) or #nature (328 million) is not effective unless you are already getting thousands of likes on your shots in a rather short amount of time. Your tagged image will disappear from the tag list in seconds as so many images get posted with these tags.

Drop them in every now and then, but don´t make it a strategy to use them. Better look out for tags that have between 30k and a million tagged images- there you have the biggest chance of getting your image seen because of the used tag.

Also it´s not the smartest thing to use tags with very low tagged images, because it´s most likely that no one is interested in them (unless a promising new hub or company has just invented the tag- then try it).

While you can use up to 30 hashtags per post, lately it seems to be better to use between 10 to 20 max- don´t ask me why this is the case. I just noticed it in the last year. Same applies to where you drop the tags. I personally prefer to put them in the comments as my captions look cleaner this way, but I don´t think that it has an effect on how the mighty algorithm ranks the image.

Conclusion

If you really want to use Instagram as a landscaper, tripod warrior or whatever you wanna call us, realize that it´s not the best idea to ignore the key factors that can make your work function on the app. Traditional landscape photography is not the ideal kind of imagery for this app- you see it when you look at other photographers that chose the way of a rather documentary style of landscape photography that many call adventure/lifestyle photography. Here they often place humans doing something or interacting with the scene in the frame.

I really love this kind of work by many artists out there when they achieve to create that strong feeling of wanting to get out into nature and gaze at the elements. Often I also find it rather boring when I notice that it was just done to have a potentially popular image.

While this style of imagery is definitely more likely to quickly gain traction I have never considered changing my style just for this fact and I think you shouldn´t do this neither unless that is what inspires you the most.

We only live once- follow your own passion!

Now we come to the point where maybe some of you will think:

OK Felix, thanks for the tips, but if we look close you ain´t really killing it yourself in the great gram anymore.

And yeah… true that!

The days were I spent the needed time for this app are long gone.

There are many different reasons for this fact, the biggest and most important of all beeing my wife and my two sons. They deserve my attention more than my phone and this alone is already a disadvantage if I still wanted to keep my account growing as it once did.

I also don´t feel as inspired by the app as I once was anymore, I don´t want to start circle jerking just exchanging likes and comments with others just for the sake of it.

About the Author

Felix Inden is a landscape photographer from Köln (Cologne), Germany and he describes his imagery as “emotional landscape photography.” Make sure to check out more of his work on his website, Instagram, and Facebook. This article was also published here and shared with permission.

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We love it when our readers get in touch with us to share their stories. This article was contributed to DIYP by a member of our community. If you would like to contribute an article, please contact us here.

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