Brands are like friends – or they should be

Who are your best friends? If you’re like most of us, you can count them on one hand and have fingers left over.

One thing we can say about those friends is that they are always there when we need them. They are the rocks we cling to in dark times. We know what to expect from them and they do not disappoint.

A good brand should be like a good friend. To emphasize that, the story you tell through your creative should be consistent and dependable. That doesn’t mean you can’t shake it up every once in a while, but you should keep your brand and your core exactly as your customers expect. The Internet is filled with examples of companies that changed the expression of their brands in a more radical way that didn’t necessarily reflect the changes in their business and customers reacted in a negative way. The creative above took the form of redesigned Google retargeting ads. These ads could appear anywhere that the Google network had space. The goal was to draw people back to the site after they visited and left without acting. It was essential that the brand expression in these ads – color, message, composition – be consistent with the experience the user had on the site or it was only visual noise. The same goes for your social media and advertising – not just visuals but the tone and messaging as well.

What type of friend is your brand?

What you see is what you eat

One of my favorite subjects to photograph is food.

No other subject out there can drive an immediate, almost unconscious, and visceral reaction like a good food photo can. Light plays a big part in a good food story, but so does color. Not just the color of the food, but the color of what goes with it.

Composition – what’s in the frame and what’s not – helps inform the viewer and shape the story. Is this photo at a restaurant or at a picnic? When were we eating this dish? Who was with us? Was it a cozy dinner with a loved one or an all-out celebration? All of that is told with your composition backed up by good light and spot-on color.

The result? Hold on while I call my favorite Mexican restaurant and order this delicious dish.

It all starts with light

It’s important to know something about light when you photograph a home.

There’s more to it than simply having light. The color, mood, and texture of the light all go into making a great image and drawing the viewer in.

Light plays differently from the inside to the outside of your subject – in this case, a house – and sometimes you need to focus on the light in order to tell a better story.

Warm light is inviting while cool light can be relaxing. Combine the two, as I did in this image, and you can envision a warm hearth on a fall evening and roasting smores over a backyard fire pit. Travelers in winter seek out a roaring fire to escape the cold and the warm yellow light that splashes onto this house and pours out of the window calls to visitors to come inside and sit awhile.

It all starts with light. That’s how we tell this story.