Half the problem is amateurs on the other side of the fence willing to give their shots away for a credit to the teams. The teams the don't see why they should pay the pro x amount per shot when they can get it for nothing from an amateur.
It's not really the teams. I don't mind doing deals or freebies for the teams as they provide me with the whole purpose of why I'm there each weekend, with the exhillarating subject matter and why I enjoyed the racing so much.
It's the mags and large corporations who
expect you to give your work away that hacked me off. They all made or tried to make money from my work but refused to pay me for it. I said no, so didn't get the work used. When this happened over and over again, I walked away from what I loved doing so much.
The zero payment p***-taking was one reason, the other was me trying to produce the highest quality output I could only to see lower quality work published week-in, week-out because it was free. What does that say about the value of the sport as a whole, sub-standard product being used to promote supposedly the best championship in the world????? I had no motivation whatsover to continue aspiring to greater levels of photography and originality, purely because that's evidently not the driving factor on it being used. It's takes a helluva lot of hard work and commitment to get the shots I did and for what..........snubs because I refused to give it away.
What people say about people giving shots away cheapening the whole profession rings true.
It's the same for any industry. You can't compete with free when the client pegs your offering at the same level as the free one regardless of what you know as a critical professional isn't a "like for like" comparison. But when you have zillions of willing hopefuls behiind you after your pass, your honourbale stand against exploitation disintegrates.
I know this all might seem a little off-topic from the original post by Dal, but believe me, it's all very, very relevant.
Getting your pass is a big hurdle, but it's only the 2nd step of the ladder after getting your camera. Have a clear understanding of what you aim to achieve and how you aim to achieve it then read what the people who've been there say about life on the inside. Then decide if that's gonna be worth the whole heap of hard work and hassle you're considering letting yourself in for. That's me talking rationally cos I've been there, but people with the carrot dangling in front of their nose aren't entirely rational so I only hope some of my learnings filter down the line and get through the armour plated enthusiasm.
Regards, Guy