Tactics · 5-min read
7 LinkedIn headshot mistakes I see in every junior PM's profile
A tactical save-this-and-share-it list. Drawn from coaching ~40 junior product managers through profile reviews in 2025–26.
I do a free 20-minute LinkedIn review for junior PMs every other Friday. After ~40 sessions, the same seven mistakes show up in the profile photo every time. Most of them are not what you'd guess.
1. The "I'm at a wedding" photo
You're cropped out of a group shot. There's someone's shoulder on the left. You can see champagne flute glass at the bottom of the frame. The recruiter notices. The recruiter does not say anything. The recruiter just clicks away.
2. The selfie-from-below angle
Phones live in our laps. Selfies happen from below. Below adds a chin. A chin is fine — what isn't fine is that "from below" reads as "casual," and casual on a LinkedIn header reads as "doesn't take the search seriously."
The fix is camera-at-eye-level. Either prop the phone, ask a friend, or use an app that can correct the framing computationally without distorting your face.




Same person. Four prompts. One selfie. ArcFace likeness 0.913 — measured, published, reproducible.
3. The 2014 photo
If your hair is shorter / longer / a different color now, the photo is doing damage. Recruiters who meet you in person and recognize a different version of you do not say, "great profile photo." They say, "wait, are you Sarah?"
4. The black-and-white "artist" photo
There is exactly one industry where the moody black-and-white headshot earns trust on LinkedIn, and that industry is photography. Outside of it, B&W reads as "trying too hard." If you want the editorial look, save it for your Substack header.
5. The over-filtered photo
LinkedIn's audience is older than Instagram's by about a decade. The Instagram filter — soft skin, smoothing, vibrancy — looks normal on Instagram and looks fake on LinkedIn. The "doesn't look like you" trap is the single largest reason candidates fail to convert profile-views to messages. We've published a likeness benchmark precisely because this number is measurable: ours scores 0.913 ArcFace similarity, where 1.000 is a studio photo of the same person.
6. The four-people-cropped photo
If a recruiter has to figure out which one of the four faces is you, the recruiter does not have to figure it out. The recruiter clicks away.
7. The "I generated this with AI" photo
You can tell. The skin is too smooth. The eyes have the wrong reflection. The shirt collar disappears into the neck. There's a small artifact above the left earlobe that wasn't there in real life.
The fix is not "stop using AI." The fix is using an AI tool that's measured on identity preservation, not just aesthetic generation. We publish the cosine number on every blog post for a reason.
The mistake isn't the photo. The mistake is using a photo that looks like it was taken for someone else.
Credit applied to any upgrade. No free-tier tease, no watermark.
What "good" looks like
- Eye-level framing, head-and-shoulders crop
- Natural light or window light, not overhead
- Solid or softly-blurred background
- One person — you — and nothing distracting
- A look that matches the industry: Formal Corporate for finance, LinkedIn Friendly for tech, Tech Founder for startups, Executive Boardroom for senior IC and management
- Above all: looks like you. Not like a smoothed, generic, recruitable mannequin.
The four panels above are the same person in four prompts. That's the entire pitch — that's the only thing that matters.
Pay $2.99. See your preview. Decide.
One selfie in. One to three real previews out, identity-locked to your face, in under a minute. If you upgrade, the $2.99 is credited back.
Try HeadshotMax