Playbook · 5-min read
Why every solo founder needs four headshots — not one
A short playbook on personal-brand photo strategy for founders who are tired of having one tired LinkedIn photo doing the work of an entire press kit.
The one-photo problem: most founders have a single LinkedIn headshot doing the work of four different audiences. Investors want to see polish. Customers want to see approachable. Press wants to see something visually distinct. The team page on the website wants something consistent with the rest of the team.
One photo cannot do all four jobs.
The four-headshot rule
If you're going to commission (or generate) headshots, do it in fours, not ones. Specifically:
- Formal Corporate — for the investor deck and the cap-table page. Polished, traditional, dressed up.
- Tech Founder — for the startup blog, the product page, the Crunchbase tile. Hoodie or smart casual, modern background.
- LinkedIn Friendly — for the LinkedIn header and the email signature. Smile, approachable, window light.
- Executive Boardroom — for the board page, press features, conference speaker bio. Senior energy without being stiff.
One photo is a profile picture. Four photos is a brand.
Each surface has a different reader and a different signal. A single photo that's good for one surface is usually wrong on the other three.




Same person. Four prompts. One selfie. ArcFace likeness 0.913 — measured, published, reproducible.
How to pick
The trap is to choose styles that don't carry your actual identity across them. If the LinkedIn photo and the press photo are obviously two different people, you've lost the brand consistency you were trying to gain.
This is why identity preservation matters more than pure aesthetic quality. The four panels above are the same face — same eyes, same hairline, same skin texture — in four prompts. That's the trick. You want the four headshots to be unmistakably the same person, not four interpretations of "a tech founder."
We publish a likeness benchmark for exactly this — 0.913 ArcFace similarity across styles, with the studio-photo ceiling at 1.000. The number is the only honest way to claim "consistent across all four looks."
Credit applied to any upgrade. No free-tier tease, no watermark.
The cost equation
The studio approach: $400–$1,200 per shoot, ~4 hours including travel, one look per shoot, sometimes one look across multiple looks of you. Four headshots = four shoots = $1,600–$4,800 and most of a workweek.
The HeadshotMax approach: $2.99 entry preview, $35 pack of 50 images across 4 styles, ~4 minutes. The four-headshot rule costs $32 net of the entry credit. The eight-headshot rule costs the same.
This is the spread that makes the four-headshot rule possible at all. At studio prices it's a hypothesis. At AI prices it's a Tuesday-afternoon experiment.
Where to use which
| Surface | Style | Why |
|---|---|---|
| LinkedIn header / banner | LinkedIn Friendly | This is the photo strangers see first. Lead with warmth. |
| About page on your site | Tech Founder | Visitors scrolling the About page want to see the human, not the suit. |
| Investor deck | Formal Corporate | Investors browse decks. They want trust, not chemistry. |
| Press kit / speaker bio | Executive Boardroom | Editors want senior energy. Give them senior energy. |
| Crunchbase / Pitchbook tile | Tech Founder | The aggregator tiles are tiny. Strong contrast wins. |
| Email signature | LinkedIn Friendly | The signature is the lightest-touch surface. Warm wins. |
The takeaway
Stop trying to find the one "perfect" headshot. Build a four-headshot pack and assign each surface to the right style. The total cost is lower than a single studio shoot, the iteration cycle is measured in minutes, and the result is a consistent brand across every surface where it 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.
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