How To Use Flickr Images for Your Event Website

Images set the tone

Zombies chasing your family. Now that is an image…. it actually took me a long time to find this, about 10 minutes to be exact and this is the reason why images are the bane of many an event marketer. They want to add images but to do it correctly takes time, effort and purpose. You have to go hunting like the good ol Zombie above and that is something that most event marketers are loathe to do because we are notoriously short on time.

Because most marketers can’t or won’t find the time and can’t be bothered to add images to their websites, this hurts their marketing efforts and that is so WICKED awesome for YOU!

Why is it awesome for you? Because! I am going to show you how to find images quickly and easily so your event can kick some ass while your competition continues to go through their event’s life-cycle wondering why your event rocks and their’s totally sucks (it is probably more than images, but it fits so run with it).

But why are images so important?

People respond to images and an image of your conference or event that is full of smiling happy people will trigger that part of the brain that wants the attendee to be smiling and happy. This is probably the biggest reason to add images to your event website. Basically, you are giving folks warm fuzzies and there is no dollar figure you can put on fuzzies, puppies, kittens or hugs.

Another reason to add images is social media.

We all know that Facebook and Google+ adds an image to links that are shared and links with no images just look ugly. The image to the right is from the PlannerWire Facebook page. This is how your link should look when I share it…

I cannot tell you how many times I have skipped sharing a post or a page because it did not have an image to go with it. How sad. I wanted to share good stuff but I didn’t because someone was lazy and it wasn’t me.

Yet another reason that I will not dive deep into during this post is SEO. Search Engine Optimization.

In a past post, I talked about SEO and Event Websites and how the best strategy is to simply post quality stuff and this is true. This does not change the fact that you should still do things correctly and when you name your images and add the necessary info, your images will be appealing to Google.

So, how do you find the right image?

The first place you should look is your own computer. You should have a host of images from your past events, hundreds in fact. If you don’t, you can be forgiven but know that this is why it is crucial to have a professional photographer at your event or at the very least, someone with a good camera who kinda knows what they are doing.

A picture can tell a story, is your story kittens or zombies…anyway…

If you are all outta images or are hosting a first time event, there is still hope. You can use Flickr to find images that are available for you to use on your website.

Using Flickr

Flickr is the giant photo sharing site that is run by Yahoo and there are thousands of images just waiting to be used as long as you do it correctly and follow the rules. Remember, following rules is important people, it is what keeps nuclear power plants from blowing up and jetliners from crashing down.

Let’s chat about the rules.

Creative Commons

Creative Commons is a set of licenses that are granted by the producers of original works of art. These artists, musicians, filmmakers and photographers have created cool stuff and they are giving you a certain set of permissions to use this work for no charge as long as you are not an ass.

Here are the basic license types from Wikipedia:

Creative Commons licenses consist of four major condition modules: Attribution (BY), requiring attribution to the original author; Share Alike (SA), allowing derivative works under the same or a similar license (later or jurisdiction version); Non-Commercial (NC), requiring the work is not used for commercial purposes; and No Derivative Works (ND), allowing only the original work, without derivatives. These modules are combined to currently form six major licenses of the Creative Commons:

  • Attribution (CC BY)
  • Attribution Share Alike (CC BY-SA)
  • Attribution No Derivatives (CC BY-ND)
  • Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC)
  • Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike (CC BY-NC-SA)
  • Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND)

These are pretty straight forward for the most part:

  • Attribution – Tell us who made the work
  • Attribution Share Alike – Tell us who made the work and what you make from the work must also be Creative Commons Licensed
  • Attribution No Derivatives - Tell us who made the work and forget changing it so keep it out of Photoshop, must be used as is
  • So on and so on…. BUT

Where the licenses get funky are when you start adding Non-Commercial to the mix so you will want to avoid this license because no one has really defined what constitutes a commercial use.

As I understand it, with a Creative Commons Non Commercial License, you cannot make a profit from the work and you cannot use the work to gain a competitive financial advantage. So if you are a for-profit conference company, you are probably out of luck but if you are an association or in education, you should be good to go…. that would make sense but this may not be the case. This is a fuzzy area and so far all signs point to the fact that it is OK but I always err on the side of caution and that would be always choosing the least restrictive license.  This is not legal advice people, I am just sharing what I have learned.

When you use the Flickr website, you can actually search for images with the proper Creative Commons licenses listed so that you will be able to pick the right image with the right license to use in your posts and on your web pages.

Using Flickr to Find Images, Step by Step

First, I know that there are actually Plugins that you can use to find Creative Commons images and put them right into your WordPress event website but call me old fashioned in this one respect, I always go to the source to search for images. I think that you should too.

Step One

Go to Flickr and enter your search term in the upper right corner and hit search

 

Step Two

When you arrive at the search results, take another step and click on the advanced search link

Searching Event Website Images

Step Three

Once you arrive at the advanced search tab, got to the bottom and check the box marked search for Creative Commons licensed content and also check that you are looking for content to use commercially and let it rip.

 

Step Four

Now, properly licensed images show up and once you have found the image that you want, click on it and it will bring up the image page. You can then RIGHT click on the image and choose the size that you need.

 

Step Five

Once you have gotten the image size, simply download the image

Event Website Easy Image

Step Six

Upload the image to your site

Step Seven

Attribution – This is a must. You have to give attribution to the creator of the original work and follow all of the other license requirements. If you need help in determining what the proper attribution would be, see this article at the Creative Commons Website.

New rules are coming. 

The people that are in charge of Creative Commons licensing are set to release new rules shortly which will add greater clarity to what uses are acceptable. Until that time, follow the rules as they are written without trying to cut any corners and you will be OK. What you NEVER want to do is try to pass it off any images as your own event. An image of an event on a page is much different than saying “check out this image FROM our event”.

That’s all I got, I hope it helps.

UPDATE – Check out Adrian Segar‘s comment below, he has some great thoughts and tips that I will be using and you should too.

Zombie Sign: CoolNWacky.com

 

 

Keith Johnston is the Publisher and Chief Writer Guy of PlannerWire | You can learn more about him here , connect with him on Twitter , Facebook , Google + and LinkedIn.

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  • http://www.conferencesthatwork.com/ Adrian Segar

    This is pretty much what I do Keith; many will appreciate you for explaining the steps so clearly. I’d like to add three other little things I have in my workflow for this process which are all about reusing the images on a later occasion:

    1) In your step #4 I always choose the largest (“Original”) version of the image before downloading. This is because I occasionally will reuse the image in a presentation, and then it’s darn convenient to have the best resolution available.

    2) Right before I download the image, I copy its Flickr URL. Once the image is downloaded, I click it, choose Get Info and post the URL into the Spotlight Comments field (I’m on a Mac). This saves the image source which is invaluable when you’re putting together the aforementioned presentation and want to provide that last slide that acknowledges all of the sources of your images. (You might think that having the unique Flickr name for the image would make it easy to find it again. Not in my experience.)

    3) I change the name of the image by adding a descriptive title to the front of the Flickr name. Then I archive the image in a folder on my hard drive, so I can easily find it for reuse later if needed.

    • http://www.plannerwire.net Keith Johnston

      These are great and I have added them to my workflow as well…. I think I will put a note in the post for people to read your comment.

  • http://jeffhurtblog.com JeffHurt

    Keith:

    Here’s a simplified way to search & use Flickr quickly. I use compfight.com which searches Flicr. I go to the home page, put in the key word, hit enter and it pulls up any license, commercial, creative commons photos. I then click on the creative commons link in the left hand column which automatically refreshes the page for images I can use. I then click on the share button followed by the grab the HTML/BB code which gives me the code to copy for my post. I can change the size of the photo with the dropdown box. I then put the code into my blog post and the photo is automatically linked back to the original. Also if you scroll over the photo in my blog post, it gives you the name of the image as well as the owner of the image. I skip the downloading and uploading steps completely. Then I don’t have to list the owner’s name either under the image.

    • http://www.plannerwire.net Keith Johnston

      Excellent suggestion. I have never used compfight. Just checked it out and it is super easy…. I am getting more from the comments than the original post! 

    • http://www.conferencesthatwork.com/ Adrian Segar

      Jeff, I used compfight for quite a while but have gone back to Flickr for one simple reason. I don’t know why, but I found that compfight returned a lot less image results than the same search performed on Flickr. I was missing some good images that turned up via the Flickr search but did not appear on compfight.

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