Branding Lessons for Business from Photography

July 17, 20262 min read

I gave a presentation to the Canadian Association of Farm Advisors on how to strengthen their brands. They are all consultants and advisors to farmers. Farmers, as you know, grow our food, feed us, and provide us with safe, cost-effective and nutritious choices for our excellent quality of life.

The best definition of a brand is from my mentor, Alan Weiss. He says: “a brand is your customer’s perception of your quality.”

Here are my branding lessons that I’ve learned from photography and how they can strengthen your business brand.

Sunset over Regina Beach.

Photo by Phil Symchych.

  1. Plan – every photo project starts with a plan. What does the artist want to create? What does the client want and need? What emotions do they want to generate? What are the client’s goals and what are the alternatives to achieve them?

  2. Focus – this is the most important part to highlight what you want the observer to see. What is your brand focused on that reflects your business in the most powerful or favorable way?

  3. Exposure – relates to how much light you want to let in to create the image you see in your mind. Illuminating your brand requires strategic lighting on the most attractive or relevant parts from the customer’s perspective. This is not about your methodology; it’s about the results you create for your customer.

  4. Shutter speed – can freeze high speed motion such as action sports or show background blur to emphasize the focal point of a scene. In business, are you known for responding to your customers quickly and servicing them (and invoicing them) with consistent speed? The best way to build your brand is to take care of the customer you already are helping.

  5. Depth of field – is about how much or how little of the scene is in focus. A good portrait will focus on the eye and the face may appear soft and the background may be blurred. For a good landscape image, everything is in focus. Does your brand highlight your best features or is it diluted with too many distracting and unimportant internal methodologies?

Ultimately, your brand needs to be about how you take care of your customers and clients, and how you make them better, happier, faster, stronger, or wealthier.

What is your brand saying about your business?

From the Vault

Photography is about writing with light to create an image the photographer sees and wants to communicate. This can range from reportage to fine art to abstract. How are you using the power of an artist to communicate your brand?

Did You Know

Many business owners and executives build their brand based on their methodology and what they do. “We’re great builders.” This is wrong. They ignore the powerful benefits and results they create for their customers.

If you’d like help to strengthen your brand around quantifiable and valuable results that you create for your clients and customers, give me a call.


Phil Symchych

Phil Symchych

Phil Symchych is a seasoned expert in business growth for small and medium B2B companies. With over three decades of consulting experience across 64 industry segments, Phil has helped business owners grow their companies, increase profits with less stress, scale operations, strengthen management teams, and build wealth for shareholders.

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