Bournemouth · Poole · Dorset

Branding Photoshoot Ideas: Building a Brand Library for Your Business

A practical shot list guide for founders, makers and small businesses planning a branding shoot in Bournemouth, Poole or Dorset.

The Shot List

Branding Photoshoot Ideas: Where to Start

A useful brand library needs more than a few portraits. It should include a varied collection of images that can work across your website, social media, PR, email marketing and everyday business content.

The ten shot types in this guide are a practical starting point for founders and small businesses planning a branding photoshoot in Bournemouth, Poole or Dorset. Not every category will suit every business, and some briefs will need more specific imagery, but these are the areas that consistently create the most useful and versatile results.

Use the guide to start thinking about what your business needs rather than as a fixed formula. Every branding photography session in Bournemouth begins with a consultation, so the final shot list is shaped around your business, your audience and where the photographs will be used.

I’m Paul Underhill, a Bournemouth-based commercial photographer with more than 25 years of experience photographing people, businesses and brands across Dorset.

For a wider overview of commercial photography in Bournemouth and Dorset, visit the main commercial photography page.

Foundation Shots

Shots 1 to 5: The Core of Your Brand Library

Shot 01The Core Professional PortraitA clean, strong portrait that represents you at your best across any professional context: LinkedIn, website, press, speaker bio, email signature. This is the image that will carry the most weight and get used the most often. It should be shot in a location that adds something, whether that is a well-composed workspace, an outdoor environment relevant to your work or a distinctive interior. The aim is a portrait that looks like you, not a corporate cliché.
Shot 02A Relaxed Working ShotThe professional portrait establishes who you are. The working shot establishes what you do. This might be you at a desk in focused concentration, in a meeting with a client, working with materials or equipment, or engaged in the active practice of your work. The key is that it should look real. Staged working shots read as staged; shots that capture something true read as evidence.
Shot 03Environment and WorkspaceYour workspace tells a story. A ceramicist’s studio, a consultant’s home office, a co-working space that reflects a particular sector, the corner of a cafe where you work regularly: these images contextualise everything else in the library. Environment shots are particularly useful as background images on websites, as header imagery for email newsletters and for anything editorial where the person needs context.
Shot 04Product or Service in UseContext tells a better story than isolation. The hand holding the ceramic mug, the printed stationery on a desk, the garment on a person rather than a hanger: each says more than a studio product shot alone. For service businesses, the equivalent is a shot that makes the service tangible. A nutrition consultant might feature food preparation or a client conversation; a creative director might show print samples or mood boards.
Shot 05Craft or Process DetailClose detail shots of the materials, tools, processes or outputs of your work are underused by most small businesses and consistently effective when they appear. A detail of a hand at work, a close shot of the raw materials of your craft, an image that shows care and skill in a single frame: these add depth to a brand library and provide content that works across social media, editorial contexts and anywhere a brand needs to demonstrate expertise rather than just assert it.

Supporting Content

Shots 6 to 10: Adding Range and Depth

Shot 06A Lifestyle or Candid ShotDocumentary, natural images that show personality without the structure of a formal portrait. A thoughtful pause, a laugh caught during a break, a quiet moment of concentration. These images are among the most shared on social media because they feel real. They humanise a professional brand without undermining its authority. The distinction from the working shot is that lifestyle images are about personality and energy, while working shots are about demonstrating professional activity.
Shot 07Team ShotsIf you work with a team, images that show the team at work together, rather than individually posed, tell a story about culture and collaboration that words alone cannot easily convey. This includes group shots, but also images of people working together: a two-person meeting, a conversation in a shared space, a collaborative moment that reflects how the business actually operates.
Shot 08Brand Detail and PropsObjects, materials or visual elements distinctively associated with your brand: packaging, stationery, tools, product samples or anything a client would recognise as specifically yours. Detail shots of these elements, well composed and well lit, are useful for social media, website design where background or accent imagery is needed, and press contexts where a publication needs visual material beyond portraits.
Shot 09A Website Banner or Header ImageA wide, landscape-format image with clear compositional space for text overlay. Most websites need at least one hero image that works as a full-width banner, and very few small businesses plan specifically for this when booking a shoot. If you know your website uses a particular image format, share the dimensions and approximate text placement before the shoot so compositions can be planned accordingly.
Shot 10A Secondary Portrait VariantA second portrait option at a different register from the core professional portrait: more relaxed, shot in a different location, in a different outfit or at a different focal length. A more formal portrait works for press and LinkedIn; a slightly warmer version works better for an About page or a social media profile where approachability matters more. Having two options gives flexibility without requiring a second shoot.

Planning Your Shot List

The ten shot types above are a starting point. Your shot list should be shaped by what your business needs and where the images will be used.

A pre-shoot consultation is included with every branding session. Bring a sense of your priority images, the contexts you need to serve and any reference images that reflect the visual direction you are aiming for. The brief is built from there.

In Practice

What a Brand Library Looks Like in Practice

A shot list is only useful once it becomes a working image library. Here are three recent examples, each created around a very different brief.

Brand and website photography for Corbin & Co estate agents in Bournemouth

Commercial · Branding

Brand & Website Photography for Corbin & Co, Bournemouth

A full commercial image library for a Bournemouth estate agency, captured around a live working day.

View project →

Corporate portrait photography near the Bank of England in the City of London

Commercial · Leadership Portraits

Location Portraits for Purposeful Group, City of London

Location portraits for a senior leadership team, shot around the Bank of England, for use across LinkedIn, press and the company website.

View project →

Personal branding photography for a wellness coach on Bournemouth beach

Commercial · Personal Branding

Personal Branding for a Wellness Coach, Dorset

Location lifestyle portraits for a Dorset wellness and fitness coach, building a personal brand library for website and social media.

View project →

Ready to build your brief? Complete the enquiry form below
or call +44 (0) 1202 937 529.

FAQs

Branding Photoshoot Ideas: Frequently Asked Questions

How many of these shots do I actually need?

That depends on what your business needs and where the images will be used. A focused 45-minute session might cover the first three or four. A half-day or full-day brief can work through the full range. The consultation is where that gets decided.

Can I add shots specific to my business?

Yes. These ten are a starting point, not a fixed menu. During the pre-shoot consultation, the shot list is built around your specific brief, your brand and the contexts the images need to serve.

How do I plan for a website banner image if my site is not built yet?

Share what you know about the layout and how much compositional space the banner will need. Reference images from other sites you like are useful. Compositions for common banner formats can be planned even without a finalised design.

Should I plan shots for social media separately from my website?

Not separately, but it helps to know which channels the images will appear on. Images that work well as a website header do not always translate to an Instagram square. Knowing the contexts in advance means the brief can cover all of them.

What if we run out of time to cover everything on the list?

This is why prioritising the shot list before the day matters. The shots most important to your business are covered first. The consultation is where that order gets agreed, so nothing critical gets left to chance.

Get in Touch

Book a Branding Photography Session

Ready to put together a shot list for your business? Get in touch and we will build a brief around what you need. View the full branding photography in Bournemouth service for pricing and session details.

Or call directly on +44 (0) 1202 937 529


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