As a hair salon owner, landscaping company, tattoo artist or pet groomer, the images you capture of your completed work are more than just records. They are the building blocks of a content strategy that can propel your brand through social media, print marketing and all the other in between channels. The businesses that understand this, are the ones filling their appointment books without spending a dime of any paid advertising.
So how do you turn one quick “after” photo on your phone into an “after” photo that people want to share? Just a little thought and the right tools.
Start With a Consistent Capture Habit
Lack of creativity isn’t the greatest hurdle. It’s consistency.
Most service providers take photos from time to time; perhaps when they perform a great job, or when a customer expressly requests them. However, if you want to create an actual library of brand assets, you should consider any finished project as one that you might be able to use. That’s not to say that all the pictures will make the cut, but the more you get into the habit of taking pictures, the more options you will have.
Tips for Better Captures:
- Prioritize Lighting: 80% of the battle is good lighting. A ring light (for indoors) or natural light near a window can make even a basic photo taken with a smartphone look better.
- Clear the Space: Have backgrounds that are clean and uncluttered.
- Show the Journey: If possible, take a “before” photo as well. The transformation story is usually more interesting than just the outcome.
As soon as you’re able to get in a flow of good photos, you can begin considering what to do with them.
Think Beyond the Square Post
Most business owners think of a “client photo” and immediately picture an Instagram post. That’s fine but it’s just the beginning. One good lighting image of your piece of work could turn into 12 different assets:
- An update to Google Business Profile.
- Highlight cover for a story.
- Printed portfolio page.
- A product mockup.
- Custom branded products.
One underrated option? Stickers. Physical stickers are one of the most shareable branded items that you can give away, and it doesn’t cost much to make them. When providing any sort of personalized product or visual service, utilizing a picture to sticker converter will allow you to instantly convert client outcomes right into print ready die-cut stickers that they can really stick on their laptop or water bottle. It is inexpensive, effective, and a marketing strategy that will continue to promote your brand long after your shop visitors have left.
Let Clients Do the Heavy Lifting (With Permission)
User generated content is more trusted than brand content. Again, this is how people are when it comes to a product or service, they’ll prefer hearing from someone who actually invested money in it versus the business pitching the product.
How to Make Sharing Frictionless:
- Ask at the Peak: If your client is obviously over the moon with their results, that’s when it’s time.
- The Simple Ask: Have an easy question to ask: “Would you mind if I put this on our page?” A majority of individuals say yes, particularly if you’re tagging them.
- Encourage Tagging: Some will even post it without being asked.
Building a small collection of client approved, tagged photos creates social proof that works around the clock. And because these images have real people attached to them with real reactions they consistently outperform polished stock imagery.
A quick tip: set up a simple folder or shared album system for sorting client photos based on permission status. This saves a lot of fumbling down the road when creating a campaign.
Match Your Content Format to Your Platform
Not all pictures are created equal, nor does it help to use the same one in all your channels, as you will end up with a poor performance in all of them.
- Instagram and TikTok: Square and portrait format is predominant for thumbnails.
- Facebook & Google: Landscape is recommended for Facebook Cover images & Google posts.
- Pinterest: Vertical photos with room for an overlay of text are more likely to be repinned, particularly for interior design, wedding services, beauty, and so on.
- Stories and Reels: These appreciate unpolished and authentic behind-the-scenes content.
More polished/composed shots can be taken from feed posts. Understanding the difference will make you more than just cross-publishing the same thing on every platform; you’re adjusting to fit the space.
Niche Industries: Turning Photos Into Custom Brand Merch
For some service businesses, there is an especially organic relationship between their clients and their physical products. Tattoo parlors are case in point. When they receive a custom piece and adore it, a client will typically want to mark it in another manner by using a t-shirt, phone case, or tote bag.
Artists can use a photo to tattoo converter tool to convert their portfolio work into print ready files for use on merchandise, promotional prints or digital lookbooks. It provides a secondary revenue stream, ensuring a consistent aesthetic in the studio on all touchpoints.
This is true of other visual services as well:
- Pet Photographers: Might create a canvas mockup from a compelling shot of the client’s pet.
- Nail Artists: Can develop a signature pattern from the most popular design.
- Florists: Might make a print from a bouquet photo for wrapping paper.
The photo isn’t only a record of the work, it’s the beginning of something that brings your brand to the physical world.
Build a Repeatable System
Businesses that do it well aren’t necessarily more creative. It’s just that they’re more systematic. Keep things simple with this basic workflow:
- Capture: After each completed job take 2-3 photos using the phone.
- Organize: Place them in a labeled folder (date, service type, client-name, etc. whatever is appropriate for your business).
- Review: Every week, take 20-30 minutes to sift through the folder and select your best photos for that week’s content.
- Execute: Plan your batch, schedule your posts & get on with it.
That’s it. No detailed content plan. No expensive photographer. It’s just something that is built up over time.
Closing Thoughts
You know your completed work is your best marketing material. For most service businesses, the problem is not producing great content; it’s realizing that what they are producing each and every day is great content.
- Start capturing consistently.
- Try out various formats and platforms.
- Leverage tools to expand photos beyond the screen and into tangible branded assets.
- Always share with the client’s permission.
When done correctly, your camera roll can be one of your strongest resources in your business tool box. It’s already in place, you just need to use it.