A few thoughts.
First, £75 for a framed 7x5 is a lot if 1) the client is blindsided by the price and 2) the print quality doesn't stand up to the price.
My framed 5x7's are $195 US (converts to around £95) but there are several key differences:
1) My clients have the complete price list before they book their session.
2) There's no bait and switch; the session fee is high enough to discourage people who would be shell-shocked by my print prices.
3) My prints are hand made on fiber paper and selenium toned. The quality and longevity of the print matches anything you will find in a fine gallery or museum.
4) My work is very unique, and the people who value it are happy to pay the price.
Pete's point is a very good one with regards to car advertising. You do really have to know your market. If you're trying to break into the lower to (maybe) mid-level portrait market, then it would probably work OK for you. However, my target market would avoid you like the plague. LOL.
My clients come to me because I avoid all the gimmicks and cheesiness that tends to come with portrait photography -- and that means in my marketing
and in my portraits. They don't want to hire a portrait shooter; they want to commission an artist.
One of my clients from a few weeks ago is an interior designer married to an art collector. Their walls are plastered with original Edward Westons and Dorothea Langes. When she decided she wanted portraits of her sons to hang on her walls (that wouldn't be shamed by the Westons and Langes) she didn't call 1-800-cutepix.
- CJ