A laptop computer screen displaying a website with images and text.
A woman holding a camera and taking a photograph in a studio setting.

The 5 Photos Every Brand Needs


Get 30 Pieces of Content from just 5 images
A woman sitting at a desk in a home office, using a computer and surrounded by various office supplies.

The truth: You don’t need a massive gallery of brand photos to make an impact.

You need 5 thoughtfully planned, high-impact images that work harder— so you don’t have to.
A woman standing and holding a large inflatable ring, appearing to be in a studio or home setting.

 

Take the guesswork out of creating content.

 

In this guide, I share the 5 must-have photos I always take in my brand sessions that work overtime for my clients, plus 30+ creative ways you can use them across your social media accounts, website, emails and more.

Use this guide as a content cheat sheet so every post, promo, or update feels faster and easier to create.

Hey, I’m Emily

A woman standing in a studio setting, wearing casual clothing and holding a large inflatable ring.

your new business bff and brand and product photographer. I’m here to create photos that actually do something for your business.

 

Here's what you get

 

PDF guide

clear & easy-to-use

outlining the 5 photos I recommend (and take in every session), whether you’re DIYing your own photos or planning for an upcoming photoshoot

30+ Ideas

for where and how to use those photos so you get the most out of every image

Bonus

pro tips to help you tweak one photo for multiple uses (without it feeling repetitive)

What Jessica had to say about her recent download of

"5 Photos Every Brand Needs"

 

What drew you into wanting to download the guide?

It seemed like a useful tool that could help me when I needed to make content


What did you find most useful?

How to reuse my images

If someone was on the fence about grabbing it, what would you say it was worth downloading?

Why is anyone on the fence about a free tool? Of course they should get it!