
By Justin T. Shockley · ~12 min read
I'm a NYC commercial photographer whose work spans food, architecture, branding, events, and video for organizations like Google, Pfizer, Nasdaq, and the United Nations — and whose headshot and team portrait clients include law firms, healthcare companies, AI startups, schools, and corporate teams across the city. Here's everything I know about what makes a professional headshot actually work in 2026.
Your headshot is often the first thing a potential client, employer, or collaborator sees before they ever meet you. Not your resume, not your portfolio — your face. And in New York City, where competition is dense and first impressions happen at speed, what that image communicates can open or close doors before a single word is exchanged.
Over the course of my career I've photographed across virtually every category of commercial work — food, architecture, branding, events, and video for organizations like Google, Pfizer, Nasdaq, Under Armour, The New York Times, and the United Nations. On the headshot and team portrait side, I've worked with law firms, healthcare companies, AI startups like Electric AI and ASAPP, health marketing firms like Real Chemistry, schools, real estate teams, and corporate groups across the city. What I've seen consistently is that the professionals who invest in quality headshots carry themselves differently online. Their profiles feel authoritative. Their pitches land better. Their personal brands hold together across every platform.
This guide covers everything I know about professional headshot photography in NYC — the decisions that matter, the mistakes I see most often, and how to get the best possible result from your session regardless of your industry or budget.
Commercial Work Includes
Google · Pfizer · Nasdaq · United Nations · Carnegie Hall · Under Armour · The New York Times · Barclays Center · Shake Shack · Ducati · Lyft · LSEG · MGM Resorts · Tribeca Film Festival · and many more — view the full client list.
Headshot & Team Portrait Clients Include
Electric AI · ASAPP · Real Chemistry · Law firms · Tech startups · Schools · Corporate teams across NYC industries.
Why Professional Headshots Matter More in 2026 Than Ever Before
The LinkedIn algorithm has evolved significantly. Profiles with professional-quality headshots surface more frequently in recruiter searches, receive more connection requests, and generate better InMail response rates — a pattern I hear consistently from clients who update their images and see measurable changes in inbound activity within weeks.
But algorithm performance is only part of the story. The shift to hybrid and remote work has made the headshot the primary first impression in nearly every professional context. Before someone joins a call with you, before they read your proposal, before they walk into your office — they've looked you up. They've seen your LinkedIn. In many cases, your headshot is the first piece of evidence they use to decide whether they're dealing with someone serious.
Computer vision tools are now embedded in many hiring and business development platforms, and image quality is a real signal. Blurry, low-contrast, or poorly-composed images create friction — both algorithmically and psychologically. A strong headshot removes that friction before the conversation even starts.
Personal branding has moved from optional to essential for anyone building a practice, leading a team, or growing a public profile. The headshot is the cornerstone of that brand — everything else in your digital presence sits around it. You can see examples of how I approach branding and lifestyle photography across industries on my site.
The 7-second rule: Research in visual cognition consistently shows that people form impressions of competence, warmth, and trustworthiness within seconds of seeing a face. A professional headshot isn't about looking "perfect" — it's about communicating the traits your clients and employers actually care about.
Professional vs. Amateur Headshots: What Actually Makes the Difference
The gap between a professional headshot and a DIY photo rarely comes down to camera equipment. It comes down to five things: light quality, genuine expression, composition, wardrobe, and post-processing — and the skill to make them work together for a specific person and purpose.
Amateur Headshots Typically Have:
Harsh or flat lighting; backgrounds that compete with the subject; stiff or forced expressions; wardrobe that's either too casual or mismatched to the brand; and when retouching is applied, it looks artificial or overdone.
Professional Headshots Deliver:
Light that flatters and gives dimension; backgrounds that reinforce the brand; genuine, coached expressions; intentional wardrobe choices; and retouching available if needed — done to look like the best version of you, not a different person.
When I work with a corporate team on headshots, the brief is never just "make everyone look nice." It's about creating a cohesive visual language across a diverse group of people so that a team page feels unified and authoritative. That's a systems problem as much as a photography problem — and solving it well is what separates a commercial photographer from someone who shoots weekend portraits.
The same principles apply at the individual level. Browse the headshot gallery to see how this translates across different professionals and industries.
Corporate vs. Creative Headshot Styles: Knowing Which One You Need
One of the most common mistakes I see is professionals using the wrong headshot style for their industry or personal brand. Not all headshots should look the same — and the right choice depends heavily on your audience and what you want the image to communicate.
Corporate / Traditional Headshots
Clean, neutral backgrounds — seamless gray, white, or navy — shot at a flattering focal length with the subject framed from the chest up. Direct eye contact, conservative professional attire, confident and composed expression. The message: reliable, credible, established.
This is the right call for attorneys, financial advisors, wealth managers, consultants, and healthcare executives — anyone whose clients expect conventional signals of professionalism. Law firms, financial institutions, and healthcare organizations benefit from images that communicate institutional authority without distraction.
Environmental / Lifestyle Headshots
Shot on location — in your office, a relevant NYC neighborhood, or an architectural space — with a softly focused background that adds context and personality. The energy is warmer and more contemporary than a plain studio shot.
This works well for entrepreneurs, founders, consultants building personal brands, and executives who want to appear forward-thinking. AI companies like Electric AI and ASAPP, whose work lives at the edge of what's possible, often benefit from images that feel as innovative as what their teams are building. You can see examples of this approach in my advertising and lifestyle gallery.
Creative / Editorial Headshots
More dynamic composition, bolder lighting, editorial framing. This is the territory of designers, architects, media personalities, tech founders, and creative directors whose brand is distinctly non-traditional. The goal is still professionalism — but a version of it that reflects creative confidence and originality.
My rule of thumb: If your most important audience is other large organizations, lean corporate. If your audience is consumers, startup ecosystems, or other creatives, go environmental or editorial. When in doubt, shoot both in a single session — studio images for consistency, location images for personality. Most sessions can be structured to deliver both looks.
What to Wear for Your Professional Headshots (By Industry)
Wardrobe is the number one thing clients underestimate before a session. I send a detailed wardrobe guide to every client ahead of time, and following it makes a meaningful, visible difference in the final images.
Finance, Law, and Consulting
Dark, solid-colored suits or blazers — navy, charcoal, black. White or light blue dress shirts. Avoid busy patterns, which create visual noise on camera and pull the eye away from your face. Jewelry should be minimal and classic. The goal is authority without distraction.
Tech and Startups
Business casual is the sweet spot. A clean blazer over a solid crew-neck or button-down reads as credible without being stiff. Color works well here — muted jewel tones like teal, burgundy, or cobalt create strong contrast on screen. You don't need a tie, but you should look like someone who made a deliberate choice about what they're wearing.
Healthcare and Life Sciences
Clinical professionals often do well in a white coat over professional attire — it creates immediate visual authority. Executives and researchers typically read better in a classic business look. Companies that sit at the intersection of healthcare and creative strategy — like Real Chemistry — often benefit from a polished business casual approach that feels both credible and contemporary.
Creative Industries and Media
Express your brand, but with intention. Whatever you wear should feel natural and communicate something true about how you work. I've photographed creative directors in all black, architects in bold prints, and media executives in everything in between — and all of it works when the choice is deliberate rather than accidental.
Universal Wardrobe Rules
- Solid colors almost always outperform patterns on camera
- Clothing should be freshly laundered and steamed — wrinkles are visible even in close crops
- Avoid logos, brand names, or text on clothing
- Bring two to three outfit options; we can compare on the day
- Glasses wearers: contacts help avoid glare, but I can also work around glasses with adjusted lighting angles
- For women: V-necks and boat necklines tend to photograph particularly well in headshot composition

Posing and Expression: How to Look Natural and Approachable on Camera
This is the part of headshot photography most photographers underinvest in — and where I put a significant amount of my energy. Technical quality is table stakes. Getting a real, genuine expression out of someone who hasn't modeled professionally is the actual craft.
Most people freeze in front of a camera. The jaw tightens, the shoulders creep up, the smile goes flat. I've worked with senior executives who are completely at ease running a board meeting but visibly uncomfortable in front of a lens. My approach is essentially conversational: I'm talking with you throughout the shoot, asking about your work and what you're building. The camera captures your face while your brain is engaged elsewhere — and that's when real expressions emerge.
Posture and Body Position
For a standard headshot, turning the body 20–30 degrees away from the camera while bringing the face back toward the lens creates a more flattering diagonal than a straight-on pose. Shoulders should be relaxed and down, not raised. A slight lean forward from the waist adds energy and engagement to the frame.
Eyes Are Everything
The shot is won or lost in the eyes. A technically perfect image with flat or disengaged eyes simply doesn't work. I shoot tethered — images appear on a large monitor in real time so we can review together, understand what's landing, and adjust before moving on.
The Three Expressions You Need
In every session, I work toward three distinct expressions: the "authority" look — composed, direct, serious — ideal for firm websites and press contexts; the "approachable" look — warm, genuine, slight smile — which performs best on LinkedIn and team pages; and the "engaged" look — mid-expression energy, like you're in the middle of making a point — excellent for speaker bios and thought leadership profiles. Capturing all three from one session gives you maximum versatility across your entire digital presence.
Background Selection: Corporate, Environmental, or Studio?
Background choice is a brand decision, not just an aesthetic preference. Here's how I think through the options.
Seamless Studio Backgrounds
White, gray, and navy seamless paper are timeless for a reason — they're neutral, they keep the focus entirely on the subject, and they reproduce consistently across websites, pitch decks, press kits, and printed materials. When visual consistency across a large group is the priority, seamless is almost always the right call. I carry a full range of background options to on-site shoots so teams can be photographed at their own office without individual variation.
Graduated and Textured Studio Backgrounds
A subtle gradient or handpainted canvas adds depth without introducing narrative. Well-suited for marketing materials, book author photos, and speaker headshots where the image needs to stand alone with some visual interest behind it.
Environmental Backgrounds (On-Location)
Shot on location with the background softly out of focus, environmental headshots communicate context — this is someone who exists in the world, not just in a studio. A tech founder photographed in a modern workspace. A real estate executive against the Manhattan skyline. A healthcare leader in a clinical setting. These images often feel warmer and more contemporary, and they tend to perform well for personal brand use on social media and personal websites.
NYC Headshot Photography Locations and Studio Options
New York City is genuinely one of the best places in the world to shoot headshots. The architectural variety, the quality of natural light at different times of day, and the density of compelling environments within a few blocks give us options most markets simply can't match.
Studio Sessions in NYC
For studio work, I shoot in professional studio spaces across Manhattan — fully equipped with large-format strobes, a complete range of seamless backgrounds, and tethered setups so you can review images in real time. This is the right approach when consistency matters, when you're coordinating a team, or when you want the most controlled and versatile result. Schedule a free consultation to discuss which setup makes sense for your goals.
On-Location Sessions Across NYC
For environmental sessions, I work across the city based on what best serves each client's brand. The Financial District and lower Manhattan suit finance and law clients well — the architecture communicates gravitas. SoHo and Tribeca work beautifully for creative and media professionals. Midtown fits tech and consulting clients who want the scale and energy of the city in their frames.
I've also shot extensively in Brooklyn — DUMBO, Williamsburg, and the Brooklyn Navy Yard — for founders and creative professionals whose brands skew toward innovation and culture. Your own office is often the strongest option for leadership headshots, since the space itself becomes part of the brand story. Check the Native New Yorker Photography Blog for ongoing coverage of shoots across the city.
Lighting Approaches for Professional Headshots
Great lighting for headshots is adaptive, not formulaic. The right approach depends entirely on the context — the environment, the subject, the desired mood, and how the images will ultimately be used. No single setup works for every situation, and photographers who apply the same lighting configuration to every client are cutting corners at the subject's expense.
For studio sessions, the lighting setup depends entirely on what the image calls for. Sometimes multiple light sources are the right call — a key light to model the face, fill to control shadow depth, separation to lift the subject off the background. But plenty of times a single well-placed light source does the job better, and can actually create more depth and dimension than a more complex setup. The configuration is always a decision made in the moment based on the subject, the environment, and the mood the image needs to convey.
For outdoor and on-location team sessions — which I do frequently, including large corporate groups photographed across the city — natural light becomes the primary tool, modified with diffusion panels and supplemented with portable strobes or LED fill to maintain consistent, flattering exposure across the whole group. The goal is always light that looks like it belongs in the environment, not an obvious flash setup dropped into an outdoor scene.
For smaller sessions in a client's office or a rented space, a single well-placed light with a quality modifier can produce beautifully clean results. Some of the most elegant headshots I've made have come from stripped-down setups where the quality of the light — not the quantity of gear — was the only thing that mattered.
AI-Enhanced Headshot Variations: More Versatility From One Session
One of the more significant developments in headshot photography over the past couple of years is how AI tools have matured in post-production workflows. I want to be precise about what this means in practice, because there's a lot of noise in the market right now.
I don't sell AI-generated "headshots" that substitute for a real session. These products have real limitations — they can't capture genuine expression, they frequently produce subtle but unmistakable artifacts, and they can't replicate the interpersonal craft of drawing out an authentic expression from a real person in real time.
What I do use AI tools for is background variation and style extension in post-production. From a set of studio images shot against seamless gray, I can deliver versions with different background colors or subtle environmental contexts — which means the same session can produce one image for a firm's formal team page, another for a personal LinkedIn profile, and a third for a conference speaker bio, without the cost and time of multiple separate shoots.
I've built this into my workflow for corporate clients who need visual flexibility across multiple platforms. You can see some of the creative possibilities in my AI Photo/Video gallery and on the AI Photoshoots page.
Team Headshot Coordination for Companies and Corporate Groups
Coordinating headshot sessions for teams is a completely different discipline from shooting individuals, and it's one I've become genuinely specialized in. I've run team sessions for AI companies, healthcare organizations, financial firms, law offices, real estate companies, schools, and startups — each with different logistical constraints, brand requirements, and visual goals.
What an On-Site Corporate Session Looks Like
For most team sessions, I come to you. I bring a portable studio — backgrounds, lighting, and a tethered shooting setup — and work within your office or a designated space. Most team members move through the session in 10–15 minutes each, which means a team of 20 can typically be completed in a half-day and a team of 50 in a full day, with minimal disruption to the workday.
Pre-session, I send wardrobe guidance to all participants and coordinate individual time slots with your point of contact. Post-session, images are delivered via a private gallery or email download for individual selection.
Outdoor and Mixed-Environment Team Sessions
Some companies want their team photographed on location — on a rooftop, in front of a building, or in a neighborhood that reflects who they are. I've run outdoor team sessions across the city using natural light and portable equipment, for groups ranging from small founding teams to large corporate departments. A good example is Real Chemistry, the global healthcare marketing firm, whose entire team I photographed outdoors at South Street Seaport in downtown Manhattan. These sessions require more advance planning around weather and timing, but they can produce images with a warmth and energy that studio work doesn't always match.
For HR and marketing teams: Consider building a small "refresh pool" of session slots into your annual photography budget. New hires, promotions, and executive changes mean your team page will drift toward inconsistency if you only shoot once a year. A standing arrangement with a photographer is almost always more cost-effective than booking one-off sessions at short notice. Start the conversation through my intake form to discuss a program that fits your organization.
Headshot Pricing and Package Options
Pricing for professional headshots in NYC varies based on scope, the number of people involved, location, and intended use. Here are the core options available for individuals — and how corporate and team pricing works.
LinkedIn Headshot Session
Studio or location session for professionals needing a polished, current LinkedIn and professional profile image.
Branding Photoshoot
Full studio or location branding session for executives, founders, and entrepreneurs building a comprehensive personal brand presence.
For corporate teams, schools, and organizations, pricing is built around your marketing budget and what the program needs to accomplish. Some clients come with a defined budget; others come with specific deliverables — a website rebrand, a press kit refresh, an annual report — and we build the program from the output backward. Every team engagement starts with my intake form for new clients, where we discuss scope, timeline, and budget before anything is booked.
You can also book directly or schedule a free consultation to talk through what makes sense for your situation.
How Often Should You Update Your Professional Headshots?
More often than most professionals do. The practical answer depends on three factors: how much your appearance has changed, how much your role or brand has evolved, and whether your current image is actually working for you.
The Two-Year Baseline
As a general rule, updating your primary headshot every two years keeps you current. Hair changes, faces mature, weight shifts — and a photo from five or six years ago will often create a subtle but real moment of visual dissonance when people meet you in person. Trust is built on consistency, and a significant gap between your headshot and your actual appearance erodes that trust quietly, without anyone ever saying so directly.
Trigger Events That Warrant an Immediate Update
Beyond the two-year cycle, certain career moments should automatically prompt a refresh: a significant promotion or title change; joining a new firm or launching a new company; a major rebrand of your personal or business identity; a meaningful appearance change; or stepping into a more public-facing role — a board position, a speaking circuit, a media presence, or a published book.
How to Know If Your Headshot Is Working Against You
Here's a simple question: when someone searches your name and finds your headshot, does it make them more or less likely to trust you with serious work? If you're not fully confident in the answer, that uncertainty is worth paying attention to. Your professional image should be working for you around the clock — and every day it isn't, it's costing you something.
What to Expect When You Work With Me
I want to close with a practical description of what the process actually looks like — because anxiety about the experience itself is often what keeps professionals from updating a headshot they know isn't serving them.
After you reach out through my new client intake form, we'll discuss your goals, your industry, and how the images will be used. That conversation shapes everything: the location, the session format, the wardrobe guidance I send you, and the look we're aiming for. I respond to all inquiries personally — you won't be handed off to a booking system before we've talked.
On the day of your session, we start with a few minutes of conversation and test frames — getting you comfortable, checking the light, making adjustments before we commit to the real work. Most sessions feel like a focused conversation that happens to have a camera pointed at it. I'm directing your expression, your posture, and your energy — but the goal is always to arrive at something genuine rather than something performed.
Proofs are delivered via a private gallery or email download. You select your favorites; retouching is available if needed.
If you're ready to update your professional image, coordinate a team shoot, or just want to understand what a session would look like for your situation, I'd be glad to hear from you. Browse the headshot gallery, read about my clients and reviews, or get in touch directly.