Originally Posted by
Tringa
Hello Vyas,
I was going to say that I could understand Andrew's view and that I, more or less, go along with him, but that would not be correct. I agree with him 100%.
What you have been asked to do reminds me of another request - someone is getting married and because they know you have a camera says, "Can you take the photos at my wedding?"
Your position sounds even worse. You are being asked to produce high quality images suitable for advertising purposes and, as you indicate, you have very little experience.
I'd suggest if at all possible, unless you are given plenty of time to learn and experiment, you walk away from this.
However, I appreciate your post sounds as if you have been given little choice. If so, I'd use Andrew's suggestion and point out the advantages of getting a product photographer.
If that is not an option then I'd try to make clear that just buying a potentially very expensive camera, lenses and any other additional equipment does not mean the company will get high quality photographs. I am not having a go at you here, you have made it clear you are an amateur with little experience and it is unreasonable that you are expected to produce the types of images that could be used to advertise the business, without a good background in photography.
Dave