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Three essential questions for your next project proposal


As a photographer who works primarily in the art scene, I am often looking for opportunities to share my work. With that said, I think your ability to write and communicate convincingly about your work is a skill all photographers can find useful.

The project pitch and the project proposal are so similar that you might consider approaching them the same way. For example, when pitching a project, you can request funding or resources to actually be able to execute the project. When suggesting a finished project to a gallery or organization, you can instead convince them to give you space to display your work. Similarly, for commercial photographers, project handling can discuss similar ideas and be visible to a potential stakeholder, such as a client or design agency. That said, it hardly matters whether you’re writing in a flashback or a flashback; Your writing purpose is to create a convincing document to get someone to give you something that will give you that thing.

This video narrows down a potential argument to three questions. As a follow-up exercise, you might consider adding the 2-2-2 rule when answering these questions. The 2-2-2 rule means that you write a set of answers where each answer is two pages long. You also write a more concise version, which is only two paragraphs long. Finally, you might consider writing a very concise version of the pitch, where each answer is only two sentences long. Given the nature of the questions, this will help you hone more and better understand your own project.

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