Posts in Branding Your Business
What Your Brand Photographs Can Say About You (Part 2) | P.S. I'm not hungry this time....

In writing last week’s blog, I learned that I shouldn’t necessarily write when I’m hungry!! My goodness, I was chock full of food analogies, haha. (Click Here to read last week’s “Your Brand’s Secret Ingredient | What Your Brand Photographs Can Say About You)

While I stopped myself from going down the rabbit trail last week - let’s face it, I could write a novella about branding your business and brand photography - I do want to take our experience out in chunks to share with you.

Brand Photograph for Mama Mpenzi Doula | This photograph provides the platform for her to talk about the comfort measures she provides for her clients, healthy eating, a client story regarding blood sugar, her own favorite snacks, how to prepare you…

Brand Photograph for Mama Mpenzi Doula | This photograph provides the platform for her to talk about the comfort measures she provides for her clients, healthy eating, a client story regarding blood sugar, her own favorite snacks, how to prepare your go-bag and how she prepares her own doula bag for you, her client. | Supporting Black Businesses | Winston-Salem Business and Brand Photographer Jasper & Fern

You may remember us addressing how you need to catch your target market’s eye with a pretty photograph and capture their attention with the story it’s telling. This week I want to go a little further into that concept and discuss more of what your brand photographs can say about you and how you can stand out aesthetically. In the end, I want to help guide you in the right direction for your own brand photography


But first, I have to get something off my chest….

I have to admit, last year I started to get frustrated with the brand photography industry and the rut I felt it was headed into. Just like any visual industry, there started to be specific “money shots” that are guaranteed best sellers and everyone (myself included) did. These images are still great, however, I felt like our industry was starting to lose the creative images that would truly sell a specific business’s story. Now, don’t get me wrong, these formula shots are still great brand photographs to include in your collection but they do pose a problem : If everybody looks the same, how are people going to stand out?

(Specifically - how will YOU stand out?)

To help guide you in the right direction for your own brand photography, I want to give you a breakdown of how we work with our clients.

First and foremost, we know that the foundation of your brand is your story. That story is essential to how you show up for your customers - and it should be essential to the story your brand photographs tell.

There are many elements that go into properly telling your brand story. From the atmosphere created by texture, lighting and colors to the location, accessories and angles from which the photographs are taken, there’s a sweet spot that should be tailored for your business to accomplish the most successful brand photographs.

Picture, if you will, a crowded coffee shop, bright noon light streaming through the broad windows and bouncing off the white walls and polished concrete floor. Above the register - a large iMac and Square console - hangs a sign detailing each drink, it's crisp white lettering in stark contrast against the chalkboard. In perfectly designed symmetry spreading out from the sign, a golden clock, “coffee is life” quote and white marble potted plants are arranged on seamless floating shelves. Lining the edge of the white and grey marbled counter, cylindrical golden candle votives sit; their formation only broken by the occasional dainty, white coffee mug and saucer keeping a their patrons company. A small white cabinet sits at the very end of the counter, housing three rows of delicious pastries, lined in neat rows. Every element has its intentional home. In the center of the room, stands the owner, a young woman in her 30’s. Her crisp, white assymetric blouse is perfectly offset by a long gold necklace with a simple golden rod at the end. Her designer jeans are immaculate, fitting her form like they were custom made for her. Gracing her feet are a pair of black velvet Birdies, the Starling cut complimenting the hemline of her jeans. With a chic modern hairstyle, she stands relaxed and with poise, a confident closed mouth smile on her face. It’s an uplifting place; a place of productivity, high energy and high performing community.

Now, you find yourself in the same coffee shop. It’s dark, neither dawn nor dusk, the only light falls from the industrial incandescent fixtures above. A warm golden tint casts itself upon the white walls, clinging to the shadows and hollowing the shelves and their contents. Newspapers stack the counter. Chairs are neatly sat at empty tables. A lone coffee mug sits beside its saucer on a table by the window, just out of range of the florescent beams floating down. It’s shadowy presence draws your eye. In the center of the room is the owner, a young woman in her 30’s. She looks at you, leaning halfway against a chair, her arms gently crossed as her charcoal sweater falls untucked from her jeans. A small coffee stain is slightly hidden at her right pocket, the hem of the sweater unveiling the seeping color. While to some it may seem lonely, you instead are reminded of your groggy travel to and from work on the subway at wee hours and of your college trips abroad - travelling at the least appealing hours to get the most out of your money. A sense of comfort and nostalgia greets your distant memories.

Each of these coffee shops, while similar have different stories to tell. Perhaps, one of these spaces even spoke to you while you were reading about them - and that, right there, is the point. You connected with a story. So sure, I can write a pretty description but, what is the story behind each of these places??

For both of these coffee shops, I envisioned the same owner, just with a different story and different passion.

In the first version of the coffee shop, I envisioned a high performing boss babe who - a driven entrepreneur herself - wants to create an inspiring space for other young, energetic entreprenuers and individuals to do their work and host their meetings. She values a lack of distraction and the opportunity for productivity a clear mind can provide. She is concise and speaks with clarity and authority. I built the aesthetics of the coffeeshop around her story through colors, textures, lighting, details (like the perfectly lined candles and pastries) and body language. Her clothing was styled to communicate her minimalist approach to life and directness of business. I knew her target audience would be drawn to her confidence, accomplishments and tidiness.

In the second version, I wanted to take the same coffee shop but alter it to tell the story of a different owner. She grew up a military brat and went to college to be a journalist, inspired to tell the unfiltered truth. After a summer college internship just outside London - which she skrimped and saved to be able to afford - she fell in love with the colorful faces of the late night working crowd; a crowd she often found herself in due to her own late night hours running errands and chasing stories for the journal she interned for. She found home in a late night cup of thick, black coffee. So she set forth to create a space that could harbor the tired, driven, hard working individuals she’d grown accustomed to. Providing a space where she could offer comfort and quiet, she also relished in the stories that would walk through her doors over the years. For her story, I built an image of the same (well, almost the same) coffee shop to illustrate her heart. The setting focused on the quiet while newspapers leant to her history and also her clients’ value of keeping up with the current times. Her shop is clean, soft, comforting and you get the sense you can safely rest here and be appreciated for the work you put in - an idea that can be communicated through something as small as a coffee stain and as simple as a cozy, untucked sweater.

Each of these small business owners had a unique vision for their coffee shop. Their life experiences and the need they saw defined who they wanted to reach and the type of business they wanted to build. If the only photograph they had to showcase their businesses were of them smiling while holding a cup of coffee towards you while standing in front of the coffee menu sign, their story wouldn’t be told. They’d look pretty much just like each other’s businesses and wouldn’t stand out. It’s the details that truly speak volumes.

When we work with our clients, we get to know their origin story, their life experiences, what drives them, what their life philosophies and values are, their goals and interests and so much more. We help them pick a suitable location that will compliment their story. Sometimes that means we curate the look in our studio or at their own home or storefront. We even love going on location for branding photographs. Then, the lighting and textures are built in, coordinating with their brand colors. From there, we storyboard and brainstorm marketing ideas to truly showcase exactly what their brand is about.

When you’re examining where branding photography can take your business, I urge you to think through every aspect of your brand and pick a photographer that’s willing to invest in your story and bring all the details together for you. There are many elements that go into successfully telling your unique brand story. Give your clients something to capture their attention and draw them into your world, not just catch their eye!

Head Photographer, Alyson, coordinating details for Yudy McGuinness Artistry’s branding photographs. | Winston-Salem Business and Brand Photography | Jasper & Fern

Head Photographer, Alyson, coordinating details for Yudy McGuinness Artistry’s branding photographs. | Winston-Salem Business and Brand Photography | Jasper & Fern

3 Ways You can Connect with Your Customer During a Pandemic | Making the Most of Your Brand Photography

What a crazy world to be shifting our lives and small businesses in - right?! With all the time in school studying history and the shaping of our world (not to mention living in a first world country) never did I ever think that I’d face a pandemic in my lifetime! Just like my own, the lives and businesses of my clients and friends have had to swiftly adapt for sustainability (and survival). With all the shifts needing to be made, our small business community needs all the support it can get. I’ve dug in to see how I can give some support to my fellow small business owners and compiled 3 ways you can connect with your customer during this craziness.

3 Ways to Connect with Your clients Making the Most of My Brand Photography Jasper & Fern.jpg

1. Connect on a Human Level

Quote “Let’s be human together” - Jasper & Fern | Winston-Salem Photography Studio

Quote “Let’s be human together” - Jasper & Fern | Winston-Salem Photography Studio

Oof, big one right here!! Connecting with your customer is not just about keeping yourself top-of-mind so they can remain your client. It’s about being real, authentic and relating on a human level.

With the stay-at-home orders, limited re-openings and limits on how many people can get together at one time and how far apart we all need to stand, many of us (if not all of us) are feeling disconnected.

Remember, the more human you are in your business, the more you can connect with your customers on a human level!

How to Connect :

1. Use your brand images to showcase the humanity of your business and your employees. Pair a professional brand image of them - like a headshot or them at work - with a story (with their permission of course!) about what they usually do and what they’re doing now during their time at home. It can be a story of their humanitarianism, what they’re doing with their pets, what hobbies they’ve been able to delve into with the extra time, what they’re doing to give back to their community. Give your post some extra relateability by sharing a selfie or snapshot of them doing what you shared in their story.

2. Take the opportunity to rave about one of your employees or customers, sharing why you enjoy them, and pair it with a brand photograph featuring them (or post a snapshot of that particular customer’s review of your services).

3. Don’t be afraid to get vulnerable. Share your own story or perspective about how this every changing world is impacting you. It could be something you miss doing, people you miss seeing, positive changes that you’re excited to share - and, you guessed it, pair this vulnerability with a brand photograph that shows your face or the product/service you’re talking about missing or being impacted.

4. You can also schedule a Zoom or phone call with a client just to check in and see how they’re doing!


2. Keep the Personal Touch

Team Portrait by Winston-Salem Photography Studio Jasper & Fern for local small business

Team Portrait by Winston-Salem Photography Studio Jasper & Fern for local small business

This has come up in conversation SO much these past few months. With many businesses and corporations realizing that it’s not only cheaper but also more efficient, in many ways, to cut out the face-to-face interactions of employees with customers, personal touch has gone out the window. There’s no more flying to business meetings, grabbing a cup of coffee together, eating lunch with a client - all those personal actions to reinforce a customer’s value. But, as a small business owner, we know that many people are buying our services and products because of US - because of our personal touch - right?! So, how can this face-to-face interaction be so quickly eliminated??

As a small business owner, you likely immediately recognize that for you it’s simply not an option to take away that personal touch. It’s where we can show how much we value people, show that our customer is heard, show that the person we’re interacting with is more than just a bottom-line number. So how do we show up for our customers in this way while still respecting everyone’s health and safety?

Now, more than ever, you want to keep your face in front of people!

Here are our top Ideas :

1. Send a personalized card with your name on it. Give it some extra impact with a smiling picture of you or you and your team in or on the card, putting your supportive faces right in front of them. I guarantee your customer will feel appreciated!
(You can also send an email like this if you don’t have their mailing address on file)

2. Add a brand portrait to your email signature, your Zoom profile and your online business profiles.

3. Start including branded imagery that shows the faces of you or your team in your emails, blogs and social postings.

4. Send your client a small gift with a personalized note with a small photograph of you on it.


3. People are moving online, Stand out in the market!

Sample of branded Layflat style image from Updog Wellness’s branding session | Layflats and brand photographs are images that small businesses and brands can use to market to their target audience while boosting their brand presence, building their …

Sample of branded Layflat style image from Updog Wellness’s branding session | Layflats and brand photographs are images that small businesses and brands can use to market to their target audience while boosting their brand presence, building their brand personality all while keeping their brand aesthetics consistent, building trust and recognition over time.

Almost every single business has faced the urgency of moving online these days. Sure, before the pandemic you could do, meh, “alright” without having an online presence - tough although it might be, especially if you’re still building your presence in your markets. Now though, with all the stay at home orders and mandates for business operations taking out your in-person relationships? Eeesh…. it’s a nightmare if you’re not online and trying to still earn money. Sadly, I’ve seen a few of our amazing Winston-Salem businesses go out of business because they couldn’t adapt quickly enough.

Showing people what you offer - service or product - makes an impact on your bottom line. You don’t want to miss out on your customers who are willing and ready to support their local businesses simply because you’re not online. Having an attractive photograph will help you stand out amongst your competition. I’s truly a bonus if you can do so with engaging imagery that showcases your brand messaging and personality too!

Ideas on How You can Show Up :

1. If you already have brand imagery, put it out there! Getting your images and message out there - even if you’re repeating content - will make more of an impact right now than holding those goods back.

2. Use your brand photography in small video compilations - make a slideshow or ask your photographer to do it for you.

3. Showcase you and your team at work. Showcase your products. Showcase what it’s like working behind the scenes.


What if you don’t have brand photographs to use?

Let’s face it, you may not have brand photography to use right now. If you don’t, here’s what we recommend.

1. Book a brand photographer to come and take socially safe branding photographs for you.

2. Ship or drop off your products for your photographer to photograph. (This one is great especially if you want to practice extra caution and aren’t ready to be around people, even in a socially safe manner)

3. Don’t offer products? Arrange for a photographer to photograph Layflat style images that feature tools you use to conduct business.

Layflats and brand photographs are images that small businesses and brands can use to market to their target audience while boosting their brand presence, building their brand personality all while keeping their brand aesthetics consistent, building trust and recognition over time.

Many times these tools feature your brand aesthetics. If you have these items on hand - like a computer laptop, iPad, phone cover, business cards or decorative items from your storefront - arrange to drop off or ship those items to your photographer. They can get creative and create images that, while they may not feature you, can still help showcase your brand personality or what you do.

If you’re not sure what these items could be for you, schedule a consultation with your photographer and they can help you figure out what would work best for you.

4. If you’re not in the position to hire someone to create polished professional images for you, just try your best to do a few images yourself!


If you need guidance digging in deeper into how you can use brand photography to your advantage during this pandemic, feel free to reach out to us. We’d love to help you out!

Wishing you peace, sanity and sustainability,

The Jasper & Fern Team

Branding Your Business : Helping Businesses Connect with Their Target Audience Using Marketable Imagery
How can pictures help my business?
— - -

I frequently get asked “how can pictures help my business?” This question is exactly why we like to dig into your needs, your vision, your business structure and your branding. Every business’s needs are different. Where you can amplify your business with imagery is dependent on the nature of what you do and what you’re looking to achieve. That’s why we’ve started the Branding Your Business series. Our Branding Your Business series will help you understand what brand photography is, what it can do for you, and will provide examples of what it’s done for our previous clients.


We’ll be sharing insider perspectives from our Service based, Product based, large scale, Corporate, solopreneurial and entrepreneurial clients. From determining their vision and purpose to creating an action plan, we’ll provide you with a peek behind the curtains to see how their branding photography was used and even the results they’ve seen from using their new imagery.

If you’re already curious about what you can do to amplify your business with branding photography, click the link below to schedule your free Brand Assessment.

Exerpt from our Brand Photography session with Blackburn Consulting, a session done with a focus on cultivating and portraying her brand identity, brand personality, and brand presence. The photographs photographs are to be used on her Instagram to …

Exerpt from our Brand Photography session with Blackburn Consulting, a session done with a focus on cultivating and portraying her brand identity, brand personality, and brand presence. The photographs photographs are to be used on her Instagram to keep her feed consistent and on her website to refresh her brand appearance. All photography done by the Jasper & Fern team located in Winston-Salem, NC.

Natalie's Branding Session for Updog Wellness | Winston Salem Photographer Jasper & Fern

The glow was tangible, radiating off our faces. She said EXACTLY what we love to hear - no smoke screens or faking it. She wanted life to be REAL.

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

As a newly wed mom and small business owner running a health and wellness business focusing on virtual personal training, yoga teacher training, yoga classes and nutrition, Natalie knew she needed to buckle down even more in her business to support her family. She’d already been working with a web designer and marketer and quickly found that branding photographs were her next logical step to enhancing her brand’s messaging and building a genuine connection with her audience.

I want to be relatable and show people that I AM them, that I’ve BEEN them.
— Natalie, owner of Updog Wellness

Put-off by brands that too often showed the glamour and left out the grit, she didn’t want her photographs to be the typical clean-cut shots. She wanted to balance the minimalistic life she sought after while also showing the mess that can happen. Having her clients recognize that she’s just as human as them was key - an aspect of her personality we greatly admire.

With a focus on incorporating real life into her photographs, Natalie also wanted to show her clients what they could become. The day of her session, she called out her own body - slightly bloated and fuller than usual - and asked that it not be photoshopped. She needed her clients to see that it is okay to be who they are, start where they are and that even the professionals have very human bodies.

(Can we just take a moment to admire this sentiment here?? How amazing is her vulnerability and willingness to show her 100% human body, curves, bumps and all….??? It’s so UPLIFTING! - Okay, I had to get that admiration out on the table. Pressing on.)

Making sure to incorporate all the elements of her workspace while balancing the real-life aspect and a clean enough look to not be distracting, we made sure to infuse Natalie’s personality and the authenticity she wanted to portray into each shot. We even made a point to work together in capturing her RBF (as she put it) because she’s not the “peppy” trainer type. In all, we love how her photographs turned out and have enjoyed seeing her use them on her new website and social media accounts.

Step into our Winston-Salem studio for a glimpse behind the scenes of what a Personal Branding Session looks like. Whether you're a local small business or a firm looking to grow, we love getting to know who you are and what you stand for so that we can create scroll stopping imagery that engages your clients in your authentic brand experience.

Here’s a small peek at some of our favorite photos from Natalie’s branding session.

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Product Photography | Layflat Ideas | Pinterest Business Photo | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Product Photography | Layflat Ideas | Pinterest Business Photo | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Product Photography | Layflat Ideas | Pinterest Business Photo | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern

Branding Photograph for wellness coach and fitness trainer Natalie - owner of Updog Wellness | Branding Photography for small businesses | Product Photography | Layflat Ideas | Pinterest Business Photo | Women Owned Business | Jasper & Fern