Headshot: Concentrated close-up
A Headshot is a tightly framed close-up from head to shoulder. Background is usually neutral (studio or plain wall). Use: LinkedIn, application databases, speaker profiles, press kits.
Goal: recognition. No storytelling, no atmosphere - just a clear face.
Portrait: More space, more personality
The Portrait is broader - head, shoulders, often also upper body. Background can be charged with meaning (office, workshop, outdoor area). Use: About us pages, career pages, editorial articles, image brochures.
Goal: Personality + context. Who is the person, where do they work, what do they do?
Business photo: Concept and brand
The Business photo is usually a staged shot with a clear message - managing director in a meeting, team in motion, product demonstration. Use: Image campaigns, annual reports, advertising brochures.
Goal: brand + message. This is where concept, light and sometimes composing come together.
Which version do you need?
For a Employee database or LinkedIn seriesHeadshots. For a Career page with story character: Portraits. For a Image campaign with a core message: Business photos.
In most projects, we combine all three - giving you a flexible image package that you can work with for years to come. More in our focus areas Business photography, Business portraits, Team photos, Industrial photography, Advertising photography or Photo reports.
📌 My standard for image rights
At Schepers Photography you get the following as standard full rights of use to all images supplied - unlimited in time, unlimited geographically, for all your own media (website, social media, print, press relations, career, annual report). No extra charge, no small print. An exception only applies if, before the shoot otherwise agreed in writing This happens very rarely.
Also a Copyright attribution is not mandatory. So you don't have to name me as the photographer if it doesn't fit the layout. My experience: If a picture is good, people will ask who took it. You can find more details about my license philosophy at Image rights & rights of use.
What resolution do you need for what?
Headshots for Web: 1200 × 1200 px is sufficient.
For Print3000 × 3000 px for flyers and business cards, 4000 × 4000 px for magazines and posters.
Portraits are often used in 2:3 or 3:2 format.
For Career pages typically 1200 × 1800 px portrait.
For Image brochures 3000 × 4500 px.
Business photos for Campaigns: Here you often need several resolutions - from small social media formats to large billboards. I deliver in several resolutions as standard so that you have the right format for every application.
Lifetime of the images
Headshots: 2-3 years realistic, after that you should renew (appearance changes).
Portraits in an environment: 3-5 years if the environment remains stable (office, workshop). If you move or rebuild, the pictures must go with you.
Business photos: Individual campaign images are often short-lived (3-6 months) because they are linked to specific actions. Image pictures, on the other hand, last 3-5 years.
Tip: A Image audit every 12 months helps. Which pictures are located where? Which ones look outdated? Which ones are missing for new employees or new rooms?
Which variant fits which phase of a brand
Start-up phase: Classic headshots are enough. Nobody looks at image brochures, everyone goes through LinkedIn and websites. Invest here first.
growth phase: Portraits are important. They have stories to tell - employees with backgrounds, workshops in transition, new spaces.
Established phase: Business photos and campaign images are now paying off. Brands that already have a name need to cultivate it - and this can be done with large, well thought-out image motifs.
Inquire now - Schepers Photography
Are you unsure what suits your needs? Let us know what you need - we'll recommend the right mix and make you a clear offer.