How to Prepare for Corporate and Business Portraits
Start With the Purpose of Your Portrait
Before choosing clothing or thinking about hair and makeup, ask yourself:
Where will this portrait be used? (website, internal company use, media)
What do you want people to feel when they see it?
Do you want to appear more authoritative, approachable, creative, or executive?
Your answers guide everything, from wardrobe to expression. A strong portrait always matches your role, industry, and personality.
What to Wear: Corporate and Business Portraits
For Men
Keep it simple, structured, and timeless.
Solid colors photograph best (navy, charcoal, gray, earth tones)
Avoid busy patterns, logos, and loud prints
Jackets elevate the look instantly, even without a tie
Button-down shirts should be pressed and well-fitted
If wearing a tie, keep patterns subtle and colors complementary
Fit matters more than brand.
A tailored or well-fitted jacket will always photograph better than something expensive but oversized.
What to Wear: Corporate and Business Portraits
For Women
Choose polished, comfortable, and flattering pieces.
Solid colors or subtle textures work best on camera
Avoid bold patterns, tiny prints, and shiny fabrics
Structured blazers, dresses, or tops with clean lines photograph beautifully
Necklines should feel professional and comfortable — not distracting
Layers add dimension and flexibility during the session
Wear something that feels like you.
Confidence shows immediately when you’re comfortable in what you’re wearing.
What Colors Work Best on Camera?
Jewel tones (deep blues, greens, burgundy) photograph very well
Neutral tones create a clean, professional look
Avoid pure white, neon colors, and heavy black if possible
Consider how your clothing contrasts with your skin tone
Hair, Makeup, and Grooming
For Men
Get a haircut 3–7 days before the session
Light grooming is key: clean beard lines or a fresh shave
Use minimal product to avoid shine
Bring a comb or brush for quick touch-ups
For Women
Natural, polished makeup photographs best
Avoid heavy contouring or overly shiny products
Hair should feel controlled but natural — not stiff
Bring basic touch-up items (lip color, powder, brush)
What to Bring to Your Session
An extra outfit option
Glasses (even if you don’t wear them daily)
Hair and makeup touch-up items
A positive mindset
The more prepared you feel, the more confident you’ll appear on camera.
Final Thoughts
A corporate or business portrait should feel authentic, professional, and current. When you prepare with intention — and work with a photographer who guides you — the experience becomes easier than you expect.
Your portrait isn’t about perfection.
It’s about presence.
And when done right, it becomes one of the most powerful tools in your professional life.