Best Practices

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Tips and tricks to get the most out of Adogen and maximize your Adobe Stock sales.

Before You Upload

  • Use well-lit images with clear subjects. AI models perform best with good lighting and composition.
  • Avoid cluttered backgrounds. If the main subject is unclear, the AI may misidentify it.
  • Crop tightly. Focus on the main subject to give the AI the best chance of accurate analysis.

Crafting Better Metadata

  • Experiment with multiple engines. Groq, Mistral, and OpenRouter may give different results for the same image. Use the engine that produces the most relevant keywords for your style.
  • Review and refine. AI-generated metadata is a starting point. Review the title and keywords before uploading — remove irrelevant keywords and add niche terms the AI might have missed.
  • Use custom prompts. In Settings, add a custom prompt like “Focus on colors and textures” or “Use formal, professional language” to steer the AI toward your preferred style.

Batch Processing Tips

  • Group similar images together. Processing a batch of similar images (e.g., all from the same shoot) helps the AI maintain consistency in keywords and categories.
  • Set an appropriate delay. If you’re processing 50+ images, set the delay to 3–5 seconds to avoid hitting rate limits.
  • Review in batches. After each batch, scan the results for any obvious errors before exporting.

Keywords Strategy

  • Aim for 40–50 keywords. Adobe Stock rewards comprehensive keyword lists. Include synonyms, related concepts, and variations.
  • Order matters. The AI places the most important keywords first — this is what buyers see in search results.
  • Think like a buyer. What words would someone type to find your image? Include those.

Title Strategy

  • Be factual, not creative. Adobe Stock titles should describe what’s in the image, not how it makes you feel.
  • Avoid subjective words. Don’t use “beautiful,” “amazing,” “stunning” — stick to objective descriptions.
  • Include key details. Colors, setting, number of subjects, and perspective all belong in a good title.

Category Selection

  • Trust the AI, but verify. The AI’s category choice is usually correct, but double-check if your image could fit multiple categories.
  • People images go to Category 13. If your image has recognizable people, make sure it’s categorized correctly.
  • Lifestyle vs. Business. Ask yourself: “Would a buyer looking for business content find this?” If yes, use Category 3.

Workflow Integration

  • Export CSV regularly. Don’t let too many results pile up — export after each batch to keep things organized.
  • Use History as a reference. If you shoot similar content regularly, check your History for past metadata you can reuse or adapt.
  • Save engine presets. If you switch between engines for different types of content, save each configuration as a preset for quick access.