"Minor revisions granted for six (6) years (minor revisions defined as less than 10% change in photo content from the original product), or until a major revision, whichever comes first."
How might you calculate a bump up to your one time use fee to include these revision rights? Would you think doubling it would be fair, or tripling it?
Most of the time, museums rights people consider each format as a separate product and would charge a separate fee for each.
So, if you get a request from a large commercial publisher for use of your image in a print book (2 languages), a cd version of the book, and a web version of the book, do you charge 3-4 times your normal one time use fee, i.e. the full fee for each product, or do you give a discount for the additional formats? If you give a discount, what would you consider fair - full fee for the first format and then 25% off the full fee for each additional format, or maybe 50% off the full fee?
I am just trying to get a sense of what ideas others may have had in dealing with similar types of requests. I would like to be somewhat consistent in how I handle requests, and not just base it on how flush I think the requesting business is.
Felicia Pickering
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