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I’ve worked a lot with Brighton, Michigan based InSights Group, a very hard to describe and very helpful group of people who assist business owners grow their business through coaching and gosh… just a whole bunch of cool stuff.  One of the big things they speak to is persona marketing, or the act of marketing not your business, but you.  One important part of this persona branding is to include your photo on your materials (business cards especially). 

Now before you say “Whoa… I don’t want to put my picture on my business card”, hear this.  I too was a little hesitant until one of their seminars where they threw a fish bowl of business cards out on the floor and asked everyone to pick their favorites.  Everyone in the room picked out a card with a photo on it.  Now imagine your card in a stack on someone’s desk.  Do you want it to stand out?  A photo is a great way to do this.

So… once you’ve made that jump to including your photo on your card, here are a couple of tips.

Consider using a professional photographer.  Headshots can be found for considerably less that you might think, and will look a heck of a lot more professional than the picture of you cropped out from your vacation photos.  There are a number of qualified and affordable portrait photographers here in Brighton, Michigan as well as most any community across the country.

You may want to ask your photographer to use a white background rather than the traditional cloudy portrait backdrop.  Should you want your photo cropped in interesting ways or not want that traditional background, it is considerably easier for your designer (and your pocket-book) to crop you out of a white background than a “noisy” colored one.  If you do decide later you want that traditional background, it is much easier to add a faux background back in than it is to take it out.

Make sure the photographer is giving you full rights to the headshot.  Most will for professional headshots, but you want to make sure you’re not technically supposed to pay them for each time it is reproduced.

Make sure you get a high-resolution version of your headshot.  Most of the time this is a given, but be on the safe side.  And even if it’s a rather large file, make sure to save that high-resolution image for when you need to down the road not only put yourself on a business card, but perhaps large format trade show materials.

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