Alexandra P

Concert photographers deserve better than 48 hours in a feed.

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Concert photography is one of the most undervalued creative disciplines in the music industry.

You fight for a photo pass. You squeeze into the pit with 10 other photographers. Three songs, no flash, elbows everywhere. You spend the rest of the night editing. You post and 48 hours later, your work has disappeared into the feed.

But the problem goes deeper than that.

Your photos end up on band pages, festival recaps and editorial pieces, often without credit. Fans who were at that exact show will never know who shot the moment they've saved to their camera roll.

Most platforms weren't built with concert photographers in mind:

  • No permanent home for your work per show

  • No connection between your photos and the fans who were actually there

  • No way to build a portfolio organized the way you actually work - by artist, by venue, by night

  • Credit that disappears as fast as the algorithm moves on

The real opportunity for concert photographers is so much bigger.

Imagine a platform where your name lives permanently on every concert page you cover. Where fans tracking that show see your profile. Where your portfolio is organized by concert, not by upload date. Where credit follows the photo automatically, forever.

That's what we built with Gigvault Photographer Pro.

Your shots. Your name. Your stage, in front of the fans who were actually there.

Are you a concert photographer? Would love to hear how you currently handle credit and visibility for your work. 👇

👉 gigvault.app/photographers 🎶

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