professional portrait

How to organise a photoshoot for team headshots

A recent full-day photoshoot at a client’s premises produced a great series of headshots, in large part thanks to excellent support from the organiser. I thought it might be helpful to others tasked with arranging similar shoots to run through some of the key good practices.

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Preparation for the shoot

Don’t leave it till the last moment to select and brief a photographer. You need time to be sure you’ve found the right one, and he or she needs time to understand your goals and requirements in detail, in order to plan and prepare the shoot.

In this case, my client contacted me a full two weeks in advance. We discussed availability and price, of course. But more importantly we clarified the key points that would enable her to plan the day with team members, and allow me to make decisions about my equipment and approach:

  • Timing – How much time would we need for each person? The 21 subjects were senior staff with busy agendas, so we had to allow for some flexibility, and I wanted to be sure that I’d have enough time to actually meet each person before I started photographing them. We agreed to allow a 20-minute slot per subject, and this turned out to be comfortable.

  • Style and mood – We settled on ‘professional, but open and approachable’ as the best summary of the image we wanted the headshots to project.

  • Framing – We agreed that I should aim to deliver four head and shoulders portraits per person, and where possible a couple of half-body ones as well, all shot in portrait (vertical) orientation.

  • Background – The client asked for a plain black background.

  • Location – They booked a large conference room for the day of the shoot. We arranged a video call a few days before, and I was grateful to my client for showing me the room. It was certainly large enough, but they would need to move some furniture to create an open space of about four metres by four metres.

Set-up and test shoot

Remember to allow up to half an hour for the photographer to set up. I brought a single studio light with an umbrella reflector, a standalone fill-shadow reflector, and a large cloth backdrop with stands and rail.

It took me about twenty minutes to get everything set up and positioned, but I still wasn’t ready for the first subject. First, I invited the organiser herself to pose for a short series of test shots. This is a crucial step. It allowed me to fine tune the settings, position and angle of my strobe light, and to review the tests shots with the client herself to be sure that the framings would give her the images she needed.

Relaxing the subjects

The organiser had briefed each subject to know more or less what to expect. This, combined with the relatively relaxed schedule, which gave me time to start up a conversation with each person before I began to shoot them, meant that they were all pretty comfortable in front of the camera – or, for the couple who obviously found the whole thing a bit stressful, at least more comfortable than they would otherwise have been. No one wept or ran away, and a number clearly enjoyed posing. I was impressed by how many expressed real gratitude to the organiser for arranging the shoot.

Portraits that give context

What a pleasure it was to do an environmental portrait shoot this week, even on a day of -14℃ temperatures. The challenge was to make images that captured both the client’s personality and his institutional context before the client himself succumbed to hypothermia!

Bart Groothuis is a Dutch Member of the European Parliament, with particular expertise and particular responsibilities in the area of cybersecurity. With only the exterior of the European Parliament’s Brussels site to work with as background, I wanted to make at least one image that suggested his deep interest in digital technologies. This is what I came up with:

Why you need a new professional portrait now

Here in Belgium, hairdressers will reopen on 13 February after a long break due to the coronavirus. A number of my clients have delayed a portrait session until they could get their hair done. They will be coming to the studio over the next few weeks. Perhaps you’d like to come too.

There are other good reasons to upgrade your professional image now. Here are the most important:

  1. Top of mind — With travel bans and telework likely to remain the norm for the foreseeable future, meetings with colleagues and collaborators (not to mention family and friends) will continue to take place largely online. It is more important than ever that your contacts retain a positive image of you, and the value of high-quality photographs showing you at your best has never been greater. They should be used everywhere — for your social media profiles, in the signature of your emails. for your chat avatars…

  2. Time’s arrow — None of us look like we did in 2010. It’s important that your professional image shows you as you are today, with all your accumulated experience and wisdom!

  3. The attention economy — People’s online images are in general pretty weak — poorly framed, badly lit, blurred. Many look as if they were shot in the Photomaton at Paris’ Gare de l’Est featured in the film Amélie. Take this as an opportunity. A professionaly composed and lit portrait will help you stand out from the crowd.

  4. Self-image boost — Seeing beautiful images of yourself is pleasing and profoundly reassuring. After the last twelve months, we could all do with a bit of a boost.

See you soon, I hope.