Interior photos are also important. A good view is from front to rear, rear to front, the drivers area (if a step van), and more detailed shots of the shelves on each side. If you have a workstation or drawer stack, try to show this in a photo. Again, what would you want to see? What would help you make a better buying decision?
Or, on the other end of the spectrum, if your truck has some body damage and you are selling your truck as is, be sure to show it in a photo. You can always indicate in the Sellers Comments section that more photos are available and can be emailed to any prospective buyers.
When taking pictures, put yourself in a prospective buyers shoeswhat would you want to see? For most tool trucks one or two photos of the exterior are sufficient, and a 3-quarter view seems to work best. Take a photo at the front and rear corners so you see a little of the front and the side or the rear and side in the same shot. You might want to include additional exterior photos if you have options like a self-closing lift gate or a special extension, aluminum wheels, special graphics, etc.
2. Our number two tip has to do with the size of the photos. If you know how to do this (don't sweat it if you don't, send us what you can), the best photo size to send us is 400 pixels x 300 pixels. That's a landscape-style photo, wider than it is tall.
1. Our number one tip for effective photos is - don't turn your camera sideways for tall shots. If you have ever seen a photo of something like a hammer rack with a large white border on each side, that's why it looks that way. We can better adjust your photo to fit if you don't turn the camera. The best photos are "landscape", not "portrait".
Photos help you sell! Not only will they attract prospective buyers to your tool truck ad, photos will also keep prospects looking at your ad, especially if there are similiar trucks for sale with photos.
Interior photos are also important. A good view is from front to rear, rear to front, the drivers area (if a step van), and more detailed shots of the shelves on each side. If you have a workstation or drawer stack, try to show this in a photo. Again, what would you want to see? What would help you make a better buying decision?
JohnHoldun 3 years ago
Or, on the other end of the spectrum, if your truck has some body damage and you are selling your truck as is, be sure to show it in a photo. You can always indicate in the Sellers Comments section that more photos are available and can be emailed to any prospective buyers.
JohnHoldun 3 years ago
When taking pictures, put yourself in a prospective buyers shoeswhat would you want to see? For most tool trucks one or two photos of the exterior are sufficient, and a 3-quarter view seems to work best. Take a photo at the front and rear corners so you see a little of the front and the side or the rear and side in the same shot. You might want to include additional exterior photos if you have options like a self-closing lift gate or a special extension, aluminum wheels, special graphics, etc.
JohnHoldun 3 years ago
What kind of photos work best?
JohnHoldun 3 years ago
2. Our number two tip has to do with the size of the photos. If you know how to do this (don't sweat it if you don't, send us what you can), the best photo size to send us is 400 pixels x 300 pixels. That's a landscape-style photo, wider than it is tall.
JohnHoldun 3 years ago
1. Our number one tip for effective photos is - don't turn your camera sideways for tall shots. If you have ever seen a photo of something like a hammer rack with a large white border on each side, that's why it looks that way. We can better adjust your photo to fit if you don't turn the camera. The best photos are "landscape", not "portrait".
JohnHoldun 3 years ago
Photos help you sell! Not only will they attract prospective buyers to your tool truck ad, photos will also keep prospects looking at your ad, especially if there are similiar trucks for sale with photos.
JohnHoldun 3 years ago