Tips & Advice
Photo Tips - Small business advice
Using Photos to Convey Your Message
Photos should be an important part of any small
company's publicity program. Photos help to brand
a news release and make it stand out from the
crowd.
The checklist for any company planning a publicity
effort must include an item for photos. The final
decision in a given case may be to use a photo
element in the publicity program, or it may be to
NOT use photos but the issue should be discussed
for every publicity effort. Below are some tips to
make your photo usage successful.
Quality is Key – Hire a Photographer
The next step is to hire a good photographer. A
good photographer may be costly but it is the best
money you can spend. If the pictures are not shot
correctly,the whole photo effort will be wasted.
To determine the quality of the photographer,ask
to see his or her online portfolio. This is a collection
of their photographs.You might also ask to see
pictures from their last several shoots. If you
believe that the pictures are the kind of pictures
that will tell your story, you have your
photographer. If you are not pleased, consult
another. Once you have the photographer lined
up, spend time explaining just what you expect
from the pictures, what story you are trying to tell
and what message you want to deliver to readers
and others who will see the photos. To often,
photographers are poorly assigned, uninformed and
therefore make poor pictures.
Need a photographer? PR Newswire has a global
network of photographers who can get you that
perfect shot.
General Photo Tips
Product Photos:
Photos of a product are useful to
editors when a new product is unveiled, or when a
special sales campaign is planned for an old
product. A simple catalog photo is the first stop.
Shoot a simple picture, well lit and photographed
from the proper angle to show the aspects of the
product that differentiate it from competitive
products.
Headshots:
For personnel announcements, you
should include a headshot of the
executive. Headshots should be well lit and can be
done on a solid background or as an ‘environmental
headshot’ where the person is shot in their office
or outside.For environmental headshots, be sure
to emphasize the person and not the surroundings.
Event Photos:
Photos taken at events should
highlight the theme of the event including any
persons speaking, a rally, group projects,
etc. Avoid large staged group shots.
Additional Tips to Remember
Keep a supply of portraits of company officials
handy, but do not limit these to only headshots.
Action portraits make more of a statement.
Do not make 500 prints of your picture and send it
out through the mail. Most photo editors at media
outlets prefer to receive photos digitally from a
distributor like PR Newswire.
Forget black and white photos! Color pictures are
used almost exclusively on the front pages of
newspapers, always on TV and throughout
magazines.
Captions
Just a few words about captions. Every photo and
graphic needs a good caption. Captions should be
concise and tell a story about the photo. Editors
need to understand what’s in the photo and why it
is important. Give them some background
information on your company and write the caption
in newspaper style -- describe the who, what,
why,when, where and how. In addition to helping
editors, all this information will optimize photos for
search engine pickup. You should also identify
people in the photograph Left to Right. Include the
hometowns of the people pictured, to increase
interest in your photograph among papers that
cover those hometowns. You will want to include
as much information in the caption as possible, but
try to keep it concise -- 80 words is the wire
service standard.
Other Ideas
Once you have a selection of photos you must
decide how to distribute them to the media. That is
where PR Newswire comes in because that is PR
Newswire's business -- distribution of information
to the proper media points. Your PR Newswire
account executive can help you with distribution
suggestions and walk with you through the simple,
but effective, technological steps that will get your
pictures to the right editors. To ensure that your
photograph can be used by print media, you need
to supply a high-resolution photo that looks great
when printed in a newspaper or magazine. The
standard requirements among the wire services and
newspapers are a length of 9 inches on the longest
side and 300 dots per inch resolution. If this all
sounds like a foreign language to you don’t worry
PR Newswire’s Photo Desk is here to help.
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