Let me start this by saying something very clearly before the internet twists it into something it’s not: This is not a diss on photographers.
In fact, my very first business was a photography company that I started with my childhood best friend. She still runs it today and absolutely crushes it. If you’re looking for incredible personal brand/ wedding photography, you should check out Brittney Zivcsak Photography – she’s wildly talented and has been doing this long before “brand shoots” were a thing.
And to make things even funnier…
I was probably one of the worst offenders when I first started my business.
In the early years of Studio West, I spent more money on brand photography than I have in the last 4+ years combined.
Why?
Because when you’re building a business, you often feel like looking legitimate will make you legitimate.
So the instinct is: If I just get the photos… then I’ll look like a real business.
But here’s the hard truth most entrepreneurs eventually learn: Pretty doesn’t build a business. Infrastructure does.
When you’re starting a business with a limited budget, the goal shouldn’t be to look the most polished.
The goal should be to make it easy for people to become customers.
Before you invest thousands into visuals, ask yourself a few simple questions: If someone discovers your brand today… where do they go?
Can they:
Or does your brand mostly exist as a very pretty Instagram feed? Because if there’s nowhere for people to land, your marketing has nowhere to go.
If I were starting a business again tomorrow (which honestly… who knows, I might someday), this is the order I’d build things in.
You do not need a fully flushed out brand.
In the beginning, it can be simple.
A logo + logomark.
A color palette.
On brand fonts.
Enough to make your brand recognizable and cohesive. You don’t need a full brand bible on day one.
This could be:
But people need somewhere to go when they discover you.
Your site should answer the basics:
If someone is ready to buy or inquire, the path should be obvious. And please, for the love of God, make sure you are building it with proper SEO/AEO in place.
Social media is great. But your email list? That’s your insurance policy.
Algorithms change. Platforms disappear. Reach drops overnight. But if someone joins your email list, you can reach them whenever you want.
At minimum, you should have:
That’s the beginning of a relationship.
This doesn’t have to be complicated.
Maybe it’s:
Something that invites people deeper into your brand. You’re building connection, not just traffic.
This one isn’t glamorous, but it’s the truth. Businesses grow from consistent visibility.
Posting. Emailing. Sharing. Talking about your offer. You don’t need perfect content. You just need to show up.
Here’s the other side of the conversation. In today’s world, visual branding absolutely matters. Consumers are more visually aware than ever. Good design and compelling imagery can absolutely accelerate brand growth.
Look at brands like:
These brands built distinctive, scroll-stopping visual identities that helped them explode in popularity.
Good Girl Snacks, for example, reimagined a boring grocery aisle product with bold, playful packaging and culturally relevant marketing that resonated with Gen Z audiences. That kind of branding absolutely matters.
But here’s the key difference:
They didn’t just build something pretty. They built something strategic.
There was:
The visuals amplified the business… they didn’t replace the foundation.
It would be: You don’t need to look like a million-dollar brand on day one.
You just need to make it easy for people to:
The polish can come later. The foundation is what actually builds the business.
© 2023 studio west design co.
photos by Justine Jane Photography, & Milkshop Photography
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