Stocksy United

Stocksy United
Platform cooperative
Genre Stock photography
Founded March 2013 (2013-03)
Founders
Headquarters Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Key people
Brianna Wettlaufer (Co-founder & CEO)
Website www.stocksy.com

Stocksy United, also referred to as Stocksy or Stocksy United Photography, is a Victoria, British Columbia based platform cooperative[1] that accepts and provides Royalty-free stock photography and stock video. Stocksy uses a curated editing approach to select useful and authentic photos.[2] The co-op differs from other stock photography firms by its stated focus on fair pay and creating sustainable careers for its members.[2][3]

History

Stocksy United was founded April 20, 2012 and publicly launched on March 25, 2013.[2] It was started by iStockphoto co-founders Bruce Livingstone and Brianna Wettlaufer.[4] At the time of launch, Stocksy had about 220 contributing photographers, with plans to grow to approximately 500 photographers in its first year.[2] Stocksy now has over 900 contributing members, selected from over 10,000 applications. Its revenue doubled from 2014 to 2015, to $7.9 million. For 2015, Stocksy paid out over half of its revenue as royalties to its contributors, totaling $4.3 million.[5] Revenue for 2016 has grown to $10.7 million, with $4.9 million paid out to contributors.[6] Total for the first four years of business, Stocksy has paid out over $20 million to their nearly 1,000 artists during the period from 2013 to 2017.[7] After starting with 6 founding members, Stocksy’s number of staff reached 50 in early 2018.

Cooperative Structure

Stocksy is a platform cooperative with three classes of shareholders. Class A is made up of advisors, including CEO Brianna Wettlaufer. Class B is made up of staff, and Class C is the artists who contribute content. Currently there are around 980 photographer shareholders in this category. Each member co-owns the cooperative and has one vote. Each class has at least two directors on the board.[6]

Contributors

Contributing photographers live in 65 countries.[6] After two years of closed membership, Stocksy's Call to Artists is now open.[8] Achieving membership into the cooperative is a single step process whereby interested artists submit a portfolio using Stocksy's Call to Artists webpage. Accepted members license creative content and receive 50% royalties on standard license sales, 75% on extended license sales, and year-end profit sharing in the form of patronage returns.[9] Stocksy paid its artists patronage in the amount of $200,000 following financial year 2015 and $300,000 after 2016.

References

  1. http://platformcoop.net/2016/participants/brianna-wettlaufer
  2. 1 2 3 4 CNET. "Stocksy aims to bring the soul back into stock photography". Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  3. FastCompany. "Istockphoto Creator Bruce Livingstone Takes a Second Stab at Stock Photos". Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  4. TechCrunch. "iStockphoto Founder Returns To Stock Photography With Stocksy, A Co-op That Puts Artists (And Quality) Before Profits". Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  5. Cortese, Amy. "A New Wrinkle in the Gig Economy: Workers Get Most of the Money". New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 "Elevating an industry: the Stocksy United story". Co-operatives First. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  7. "Meet Stocksy United, a photography and cinematography stock media company". TheArtHunters. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  8. "stocksy united call to artists is now open". Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  9. Digital Photography Review. "iStockphoto founder launches Stocksy, an artist-owned stock photo service". Retrieved April 23, 2013.
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