Here is the latest news profile on one-cent photo scanning. Click here to view online.
<Update. This Offer Has Expired>
Excerpt reposted from the original article written by Gary Pageau, Dead Pixel Society:
Longtime photo industry entrepreneur Mitch Goldstone knows the value of PR and publicity. Whether it was starting out as a one-hour processing lab and boutique photo store in Irvine, Calif., and later pivoting to bulk photo digitization services, Goldstone has been able to gain national attention from influencers like David Pogue, Jefferson Graham, and even Oprah. The New York Times, USA Today, Huffington Post, and many other national media profiles have reported on ScanMyPhotos. Martha Stewart just profiled us in “Martha Stewart Living.”
In fact, it was a mention on the Oprah Magazine website that kicked off the concept. Citing the âOprah Effectâ â where enormous attention is paid to small businesses mentioned by the superstar â Goldstone decided to try the one-penny per scan offer after more than 3,700 people took tried the initial 1-cent promo. Of course, there are caveats: The scans are â72-dpi “social mediaâ quality, with higher-quality scans available for an upcharge. Other add-on services include same-day scanning and instant uploading. âSame-day scanning and instant uploadingâ means the same day the order is received, it is scanned and uploaded.
All New: Photo Scanning For One Cent From ScanMyPhotos. CLICK for Instant Ordering
âWe beta tested this to refine the process,â says Goldstone. âIt took five or six weeks. The average order now is 4,800 photos, whereas before, the number was a fraction of that. That means, with pricing that low, people can finally digitize all of their photos.
âThe number one question we get is, âwhatâs the catch?’â he adds. âWe have gotten nothing but positive responses. We have people sending 4,000, 5,000, 7,000 photos (7,000 photos cost as low as $70). The hope is they engage and share. The lesson for everyone is to cut prices and use the goodwill you get from it as advertising.
ScanMyPhotos does no advertising. Iâve had people ask about an affiliate program, and I respond, âHow do you do an affiliate program when you charge a penny?ââ
[Tweet “Here’s an article I just read on how to get pictures scanned for one cent each”]
As a promotional opportunity, Goldstone says this is the most significant promotion since David Pogue featured ScanMyPhotos in the New York Times. âThat put us on the map,â he says.
âThe whole point of business today is to dazzle customers so they tell the world,â explains Goldstone. âI did Facebook and Google ads years ago, and it was like a drain. No matter what budget I put into it, the money just disappeared.â
INSPIRED BY GOOGLE PHOTOS
Goldstone says he was inspired to try the promo based on what he saw Google Photos doing (offering free low-resolution storage and paid high-resolution storage) and through customer feedback. Eighty percent of customers are using their scanned images on social media sites, like Instagram, Snapchat, and Facebook, where high resolution is not necessary.
The next innovation popular with customers is the same-day scanning service. âThere is no reason for people to wait months to get their photos back, with todayâs technology and efficiency,â says Goldstone, noting return shipping can be done on a budget, too. If the customerâs photos are scanned and uploaded right away, they arenât in a hurry to get their prints back.â


