Your images aren’t improving. Here’s why

Photography is one of those skills where you can put in years and still feel stuck.

Not because you're not trying. But because you're probably not fixing the right things.

Here's what actually might be holding you back

1. Too much focus on technicality

Some people need to remember that photography is an art form first.

Beginners bombard themselves with YouTube tutorials and courses because they stress about knowing everything about the camera before they even go out and shoot.

Instead, be instinctive. Learn the camera while you're in the field.

Another thing I've noticed is that some people hyper-fixate on camera settings rather than the actual image. You don't need to know every setting unless you're actively using it or learning what it does.

Camera settings are important at first. But the goal is to move them from conscious thought to instinct.

Once that happens, your focus switches to actually creating, because now you have control of your tools, instead of your tools having control of you.

Don't be the guy showing off the gear rather than the photo.

The gear is a tool. The eye is everything.

2. Fear of technology

On the flip side...

I get it, technology can feel scary, especially with the pace of advancements. It's just so hard to keep up.

Because of that, some photographers decide to stay 'old school'.

Some even hate on newer cameras because they're stuck in the retro era.

Apparently, 'that was real photography'.

Unless you're consciously going for a vintage vibe, the photos suffer from it.

Due to tech, apart from regular single sharp images, we have various photography styles/forms simply due to unique technical execution.

Motion blur, composites, zoom bursts, star trails, light painting, etc.

Embrace the tools. They exist to help you execute your vision.

3. Lack of meaning

Most of us start photography purely for fun, either from curiosity, influence from someone, looking for a sense of belonging, or even a way to kill boredom. And that's totally okay.

But it only sticks when you find your why. And it's helpful to dig deep.

For some, it starts as an escape from a busy city life.

For others, it becomes a pure love and care for animals.

For others, it evolves to writing emails to people about photography because they love inspiring them. wink

Find your meaning. It'll carry you through the uninspiring days.

4. Same environment, over and over

How many times are you going to visit the same national park, year after year, shooting the same species?

Of course, you might be restrained by location, cost, or time. But all I can ask is for you to try a different environment.

If you're documenting something specific - great, that's intentional.

But if you want to grow your portfolio, and overall skill, then you must get exposed to different situations.

Try to plan for new things. Challenge yourself.

You definitely learn the most when you bump into the unknown.

5. Lack of inspiration

To those who say "I want to create original work", did you know that creativity is actually stealing?

Steal like an artist, book written by Austin Kleon. It defines creativity as a collection of pre-existing ideas that are formed in one perspective.

Yes, my photography style may be unique, but it is because it's a cocktail of all of my favorite photographers' styles.

Get inspired. Stalk your favourite photographers on Instagram. Imitate their styles.

In the process of failing to imitate them fully, you end up finding your own.

I'd also warn against locking yourself into one rigid style.

You can master it, yes.

But the cost?

You completely limit your potential, and it will be very easy to remain uninspired then.

Always evolve.

6. Chasing social media validation

Harsh one. And I'll put my hand up too. Guilty.

For some, engagement directly impacts earning potential - so it matters. For others, it genuinely doesn't.

I know outstanding photographers who've won international awards and have never cared for Instagram. Some don't even have accounts.

If you're going pro, social media isn't the most important thing. It's branding and selling yourself.

If you're not going pro, stop letting the algorithm decide whether your work is good.

Submit to contests instead. Treat Instagram like a portfolio and an inspiration source, nothing more.

7. You consume more than you create

In today's world, we are suffering from information overload. We consume way more than we are biologically designed for.

And when consumption has no outlet, the brain fogs up. That's why you can feel mentally exhausted all the time.

Creation is an outlet. Information is leaving your mind and being executed into the world.

Creating helps create space in your head, which then allows ideas to flow.

Go out there and just shoot!

8. Poor trip planning

Many photographers have huge lenses and serious budgets - and still plan their trips like regular tourists.

And it goes both ways.

Some spend way more on a regular trip than a specialised one would've cost, and still wonder why the experience wasn't great.

Others go for the cheaper option hoping to maximise opportunity, only to get a frustrating experience that ultimately costs them more. In time, in shots, in motivation.

Serious photographers don't behave like tourists.

You need the right vehicle, the right location, the right season, the right access.

Without that, you're leaving your best shots behind before you even arrive.

9. No mentor

Having a mentor helps you improve significantly more than most other methods of learning - in terms of pace, retention, and accountability.

It's a shortcut.

Someone who spent hundreds of hours learning something hands it to you in ten minutes.

Someone who gives you real-time feedback.

Someone who genuinely wants you to become the best version of yourself.

Those last two points? Not a coincidence.

The fastest shortcut in photography is finding someone who's already walked the path.

P.S. Where this comes alive

All 9 points above? They trace back to two root problems - the wrong environment, and no one in your corner.

That's it.

Fix those two, and most of the list sorts itself out.

I have two ways to make that happen.

First is The Full Frame:

Not a photo tour. Not a safari with some tips thrown in.

It's a private, end-to-end photography experience with preparation sessions before you fly, 10 days across Maasai Mara, Amboseli, and Solio Reserve with me beside you on every single drive, evening editing sessions after each day in the field, and three post-trip sessions to build a finished portfolio you're genuinely proud of.

It comes with a Portfolio Guarantee. If by the end you don't feel the work represents you - we keep going until it does.

4 spots. Per year. Contact for more info.

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A Beginner’s Guide to Wildlife Photography