ottawa corporate headshots

Chris P

I am terrible at social media, blogging, posting, or anything I am suppose to do to draw attention to myself. To be honest I hate all all of it.  It is a shame it is absolutely necessary to do social media, except a few who are way more talented than I will ever dream of being.  For now I will shamefully keep posting. It doesn't help I suck at writing in general or just have nothing to write about. In fact, I have said nothing about this headshot or how I really like the look of it and how I need make a nice image like this for myself. Maybe I need some "fluff" generator, there must be an app for that right? 

Aquaman

Francois is businessman by day and scuba instructor by night. He makes million-dollar deals during the day and fights monsters under the sea on the weekends. Actually, I have no idea what he does but he looks good infront of the camera, don't you think?

Canadian Automobile Association

CAA was probably one of my biggest jobs for 2015. It was three days of shooting with many people from different office locations. Just coordinating everyone to show up when they were supposed to was a headache, at least I imagine it was as I didn't have anything to do with it. My friend Tessa coordinated the whole thing for me and it definitely didn't seem very fun at all. Anyhow, thank you Tessa for setting this all up and giving me the opportunity to bid on this job. It was a great experience and everyone was super patient and easy going.

I like doing big corporate headshot contracts because it is good money for me and I also get to meet a lot of people and have that familiar feeling of stress I used to get photographing weddings. The stress where you can potentially muck this up and waste the time of many people.  Luckily, this never happened to me.

I have noticed some similarities through a few corporate shoots. This is purely from my limited experience but...

  • 50 % don't want to be photographed and are there because they have to
  • 5 % sabotage their own picture by holding on to their non-interest by not being prepared (didn't do hair, makeup etc), just to realize "oh crap, ready or not these pics are going to be on the website"
  • You know when you see yourself on video and you look and sound weird? Well, this seems to be the case with headshots. Some people are outright shocked at what they look like. 
  • 99 percent of people say "I am not photogenic", right after they say hi to me. Reality is everyone is photogenic in some shape or form.
  • The people who seemingly don't care about how they look, are the people who spend the most time agonizing over their selection, and requesting more time. 

Money is always the killer of creativity. I often spend an hour with people when they come to me for headshots. We usually get something nice within 15 minutes, but in an hour, you keep getting better and better images. It also gives you time to experiment, and relax. Unfortunately with corporate gigs, it would be impossible to stay within budget to allow for that amount of time. I do hope one day I will get a crazy gig where time and budget is not a factor, and non-traditional headshot are the deliverable. 

R.G. Packman & Associates Ltd.

R.G. Packman & Associates Ltd.

Recently I did corporate headshots for the entire staff at R.G. Packman and Associates Ltd. The hardest thing about doing a gig like this is basically I am going in blind. I bring some lights, cross my fingers there is good space to take photos and hope for the best. 

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