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The 5 best ways to put your brand photos to use | Boston Brand Photographer

Having your personal brand photos taken is a big leap for any professional. Some reading this may be thinking, “Yeah, that is a big leap - a big, scary leap!” Think of it this way, though: it’s also a leap that announces to anyone and everyone you know - and lots of people you don’t know yet but will soon enough - that you are someone who takes your career seriously enough to start forming your own brand through imagery. You have a message to tell the business world, and you’re going to do it through actions, words, professional business photos - you name it - to reach your ultimate goals.

Getting personal brand photos takes time, investment, and confidence to say to the world, “This is me. Take a look. I’m a professional who’d like to know more about you, so I’m taking the first step and putting myself out there. Let’s collaborate!”

So taking the photos is one thing. You go the session. It’s a beautiful setting. The vibe with the photographer is great. You really feel like your brand and personality were captured during the time, and you feel great after leaving. 

And then you receive the photos. What do you do next?

Using your brand photos effectively

Social Media:

Not that these are necessarily in order, but social is an obvious choice for having professional business photos. Clients, employers, and others in your field not only interact and see the content you post on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook and other platforms; remember, before they knew you, their first impression of you was likely your profile picture. So you want a picture that reflects who you are and how you do business, not only to those who follow and interact with you on social to make the conversations more authentic, but also to people visiting you and may end up becoming followers, friends or colleagues in the future.

Personal Website:

A clear need for personal brand photos is to offer readers a couple different glimpses of you on your personal website. While not everyone has or needs one, for many - for example, freelancers - letting your audience get a peek behind the curtain and see more of you personally is a great way to grow trust before even communicating. In addition, the quality of the photos represents a very obvious investment in your work (think, the old: “Here’s someone who isn’t messing around.”), giving potential clients another reason to consider you for the gig.

Print collateral:

It’s science: we remember things we touch better than things we hear or see. So to real estate agents, attorneys, insurance reps, financial advisors, yoga instructors - to anyone looking for regular clients: Take a good look at your print collateral...does it illustrate your brand as fully as it possibly could? Details matter - in any industry - so some finer points in pictures that more closely define you, and not just a random face in a mailbox, could help set you apart.

Hold onto them:

Obviously you want to use your pictures. But don’t go using all of them! At least not yet. Rotate your profile pictures out with fresh ones. Change up the mailer or brochure looks, or your photos on your site or social platforms. What’s important is that you have some you can turn to periodically to keep your audience giving you a second look. And another reason to hold some pictures in the back pocket: press! If you are ever featured in an article, having a handy folder full of a variety of shots makes you look like a pro.

Repeat:

Eventually, you’re going to run out of photos to cycle through. Your styles may evolve and more importantly, the styles around us change as well. Stay ahead of your competitors’ three-year-old photos. Be that person on your followers’ social feeds who not only has fresh things to say, but has a fresh look as well. So periodically getting brand photos taken - at least once a year - is key to that process.

While getting brand photos taken is a huge first step in establishing yourself as a force-to-be-reckoned-with professional, it’s what you do with them that matters most. Make sure to take full advantage.