Iâd like to share a little trick weâve learned to find just the right image for that article you worked so hard on â" and find it fast.
Currently we use Shutterstock images to add visual interest to articles here on Small Business Trends. Â We love Shutterstock images because they are high quality and interesting.
Now we could go directly to the Shutterstock website and search for images. Â Often we do just that.
But thereâs another way to search â" a way that saves us time. Â We search Google first, to find Shutterstock images. Â Thatâs right. Â Shutterstock images are indexed in Google. Googleâs image search is detailed and intelligent enough to narrow down the search results quickly â" and get us started in a matter of a minute or less.
Google search is fast and easy. Â You plug in a keyword to find images by subject matter. Â You can narrow down the search by color (something we often do).
Best of all, with Google search you can load hundreds of results on one page almost instantly. Â Only after we find a promising image through Google, do we jump over to the Shutterstock.com site. There we can either refine our search, or expand on it. Â And then we can download the image under our Shutterstock licensing agreement.
Donât get me wrong. Â Shutterstock has great search tools right on its site â" and we use those tools. Â But using Google as the first step this way saves us time.
Step 1 - Go to Google.com
Go to Google.com. Â Use the site search command (site:[url]). Â That limits your search ONLY to one siteâs content. Â You can also add a keyword for the subject of an image. Weâre going to use the keyword âshopping.â
In the Google.com search box, type in the following:
Site:http://shutterstock.com shopping
Step 2 - Click on Images Search
The results that come up initially will be standard Web search results, i.e., text. Â You want to click on the âImagesâ tab right under the search box. Â See image above, circled in red.
Voila - you should see lots and lots of images.
Step 3 Â - Select âSearch Toolsâ
Click on the âSearch Toolsâ button. Â This will open up some drop-down menus, allowing you to narrow down your search.
So simply use those menus. Letâs say you want to search by color. We often search for a nice warm color such as yellow, orange or red (warm colors get people to take action - see the psychology of color).
You also can narrow it down by type of image. Â For instance, letâs say you just wanted a fun clip art type of image â" you could search âClip art.â Â Or maybe you want an image with a personâs smiling face in it â" for that you select âFace.â
Step 4 - Jump Over to Shutterstock
Once you find a promising image, click back to the Shutterstock site. Â From there you can do related searches for similar images. Maybe the one you chose is good, but you want one slightly different. Often a photographer will have a selection of similar images. Â You can expand or narrow your search to find just the right image you want.
And thatâs all there is to it.
P.S. these instructions âshouldâ work with other stock image sites if you substitute the URL when you search. Â However, we havenât tried many searches on other sites. Â We do know that this method works very well for Shutterstock.com images.