Event, Portrait, Commercial, and Headshot Photography
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Your Personal Brand and Your Profile Photo

portland business portrait headshot of a manAs our economy is shifting, one’s personal brand becomes important. Managing one’s presence has always been important for the self-employed but in an increasingly-connected world, even employees of larger companies find it important to manage one’s identity such that they’re perceived in a favorable way. Social media options such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Google+ heighten the importance of being able to present a consistent, professional image.

Last week I read an article called “The CEO of ME” which discussed ten tips for establishing and maintaining your personal brand. Number six on their list is “Get a headshot.”

I couldn’t agree more. Let’s work together and create some photos which show you in your element, either traditional headshots or environmental portraits. Here’s how to contact me.

Free Photos for WordCamp Seattle Attendees

I’m excited to offer some free photos for WordCamp Seattle attendees. Next month, a few hundred blogging enthusiasts will gather in Seattle for a day-long conference and Hockley Photography will be sponsoring by offering free social media avatar photos for all attendees. I’ll be onsite with my gear including backdrop and lighting and will create images of anyone at the event. And no, this isn’t a joke even though I’m posting it here on April 1st…

Photos will be made available digitally after the conference.

If you’re in the Seattle area I’d love to meet you at WordCamp Seattle and give you a photo you can use online. If you need additional photos for other uses (headshots or otherwise), contact me and I can help you out.

WordCamp Seattle logo

Facebook: Rights vs. Business

Recently Facebook was in the news over a change to its terms of service. Specifically, Facebook removed a clause that explicitly stated that their license to display and use content would expire if a user removed their content from the service*.

Photographers have a dilemma when it comes to using Facebook to promote their business. Facebook is a major social network, and having a presence on Facebook is a good marketing move to increase exposure to a wide audience. On the other hand, even after the recent public outcry over Facebook’s terms, the content licensing terms continue to give Facebook a non-exclusive license to use uploaded content in any form they choose, including resale, creating derivative works, and displaying the content outside Facebook.

This becomes a dilemma when one considers things such as uploading portfolio images. Displaying your work for potential clients = good. Giving Facebook the rights to do anything they want with your work = bad.

I made the choice to leave Facebook, at least until they move to more reasonable licensing. Other photographers love Facebook. It’s a personal choice, but one should know what is at stake.

Last week, I gave a presentation at Ignite Portland giving a quick overview of social media, social networks, and content licensing:

* I was actually the first to blog about the expiration clause being removed. See Facebook Terms of Service Change: Content is now Licensed Forever which was a followup to Facebook’s Rights Grab: I’m Out on another one of my blogs.