エピソード

  • You’re Training Your Clients to Walk All Over You (And It Starts With One Word)
    2026/04/05

    Photographers are tired. Burnt out. Fed up of being asked for “just a few more images” or working around tiny budgets for massive expectations.

    But here’s the truth…
    It’s not just the clients. It’s how you’ve trained them.

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, I’m breaking down:

    • Why apologetic language is quietly destroying your business
    • How photographers blur the line between being “nice” and being walked all over
    • The real reason low-budget, high-demand clients keep finding you
    • How to separate YOU from your BUSINESS (and why that changes everything)
    • And the blunt truth about photographers underpricing and dragging the industry down

    If you’re exhausted from repeating yourself, bending your own rules, or feeling guilty for charging properly… this one’s for you.

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    12 分
  • Stop Blaming Cheap Clients. It's You.
    2026/03/29

    If you’re constantly attracting low-budget enquiries, there’s something deeper happening than “people don’t value photography.”

    In this episode, I break down:
    – Why value is subjective– How buyer psychology actually works– What misalignment means in creative business– Why education doesn’t always convert– The difference between premium pricing and premium positioning

    This isn’t about shaming budget clients.

    It’s about understanding markets, perception, and how to attract the right segment without resentment.

    Because the truth?

    You don’t need everyone to value you.

    You need alignment.

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    22 分
  • You Don’t Get a Medal for Staying.
    2026/03/22

    Let’s kill the martyr narrative in photography.

    You don’t get a badge for burnout.

    You don’t get a trophy for sticking it out.

    And “never quit” is not always good advice.

    In this deep dive, Khandie explores:

    • The psychology behind quitting• Why creatives stay too long• When persistence becomes self-sabotage• How to tell if you’re evolving or avoiding• What to ask yourself before walking away

    If you’ve been thinking about quitting something — a niche, a service, a platform, or even photography altogether — this episode will challenge you in the best way.

    This one might sting a little. Good.

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    26 分
  • Jealousy Is Information, So Why Do Photographers Weaponise It?!
    2026/03/15

    Jealousy isn’t rare in photography. It’s constant.

    What’s rare? Emotional maturity.

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, I unpack the real psychology behind jealousy in creative industries, why it hits so hard, why social media amplifies it, and how scarcity thinking keeps photographers stuck.

    I’m answering a listener’s question honestly.Yes, I’ve felt it. Here’s what it taught me.

    This isn’t soft self-help.It’s strategic self-awareness.

    Because jealousy can either sharpen your ambition —or expose your insecurity.

    You choose.

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    25 分
  • Just Because It’s Legal Doesn’t Mean It’s Right? : The Street Photography Ethics Debate
    2026/03/08

    You can photograph people in public. That’s the law.

    But should you?

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, we dive headfirst into one of the most heated debates in photography: shooting the homeless, photographing children, documenting vulnerability, and whether “raising awareness” is sometimes just ego in disguise.

    If a parent asked you why you need their child’s photo… could you justify it?

    If you claim you’re exposing social issues… where’s the action beyond your portfolio?

    We break down:

    • Legal vs ethical responsibility
    • Documentary tradition vs Instagram culture
    • The busker tipping debate
    • “Low hanging fruit” accusations
    • And where personal boundaries should sit

    Balanced. Honest. Uncomfortable. Let’s talk about it properly.


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    29 分
  • Why So Many Photographers Are Quitting (And What To Do If You’re Next)
    2026/03/01

    More photographers than ever are walking away from the industry — not because they’re untalented, but because they’re broke, burnt out, and stuck in oversaturated markets.

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, I answer a listener who’s on the edge of quitting photography and heading back to a 9–5. We break down what’s actually going wrong, the lies photographers are sold about success, and the business shifts that could change everything — or help you walk away without shame.

    If you’ve ever thought, “Is it just me?” — this one’s for you.

    In the episode I mention StudioNinja and so here is the link to that: Use this promo code: BANR82R315P478 and get 20% off your subscription. www.studioninja.co

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    23 分
  • You’re Not Just a Photographer Anymore (And That’s the Problem)
    2026/02/22

    At some point, being “just a photographer” stopped being enough.

    Now you’re expected to show up online, share constantly, build a following, stay relevant, and somehow keep your creativity intact — all while trying to attract clients, brands, and viewers who are quietly judging your legitimacy by your numbers.

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, Khandie gets brutally honest about the reality of sharing your work online. From the dopamine hit of likes and validation, to the burnout that follows, the pressure to perform creativity, and the emotional cost of visibility — this is a no-nonsense conversation for photographers who feel stuck between making work they love and playing the social media game.

    We talk about trolling, copycats, influencer culture, why having a following has become a weird form of credibility, and how marketing photography has fundamentally changed — for better and worse.

    If you’re new to photography and already overwhelmed, or you’ve been doing this long enough to feel jaded by ever-changing platforms, this episode is your reminder that you’re not imagining it — the pressure is real.

    And you’re not failing. You’re just navigating a system that was never built for artists.

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    20 分
  • Doors Closed. Louder Ones Opened.
    2026/02/15

    They called me brave — but courage isn’t free.

    In this episode, Khandie talks openly about what it really costs to speak out in the photography industry. From being offered £100 to cover a fashion show with full usage rights, to calling out exploitative practices, bad behaviour, and industry nonsense that too many people quietly tolerate.

    This isn’t about being controversial for attention — it’s about having standards, boundaries, and integrity in a creative industry that often rewards silence over honesty.

    Khandie shares how speaking up has shut doors, lost opportunities, and made her “difficult”… but also how it’s opened better ones. Books, a loyal community, a reputation built on trust, and a platform rooted in consistency rather than clout.

    If you’ve ever been told to be grateful, keep quiet, or stop rocking the boat — this episode is for you.

    Blunt. Honest. Unapologetic.Welcome to The Loud Lens.

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    17 分