The background that disappears
You are choosing a background for one headshot, or for two hundred. Either way the question is the same: what sits behind the face, and will it still look right next to the next person you hire. This is a decision marketing and HR leads make under more pressure than it deserves, usually the week before a website refresh or a new-hire orientation.
The menu is short, the rule for choosing is simpler, and the part that matters most is the one teams skip: keeping it consistent across the whole team.
The right background disappears.It never competes with the face.
The menu is short:a white, grey, or brand-colour backdrop, or your office blurred or in focus.
Choose by destination:the firm website grid, LinkedIn, a bar or board directory, press, the annual report.
Consistency across the teammatters more than any single background choice.
The common mistakesare busy backgrounds, letting everyone pick their own, and chasing trends that date.
The short answer: pick the background that disappears
The right background is the one a viewer never notices. Its job is to isolate the face, hold colour and brightness steady from person to person, and survive being placed in a grid next to forty colleagues. Everything else is preference.
That is why we choose by destination, not by taste. A headshot bound for a clean website team grid wants a different background than a leadership portrait for the annual report, and a regulator's directory has its own rules. Decide where the photo will live first, and the background almost picks itself.
Since 2017, photographing 25,000+ professionals across 800+ organizations, we offer more than 100 backdrop options, yet nearly every corporate brief resolves to the same short menu. We call the way we choose the Where-It-Appears Rule.
The Where-It-Appears Rule: with 100+ backdrops on the shelf, nearly every corporate headshot still comes down to white, grey, a brand colour, or your own office blurred or in focus. The right one is decided by where the photo will appear, not by personal preference.
Why the background decides more than you think
A background is never neutral, even when it looks like it should be. People judge a face fast. In a Princeton study, a 100-millisecond exposure was enough for viewers to form an impression of trustworthiness and competence, and longer looks barely changed the verdict. The background is inside that first glance, framing the face before anyone reads a name.
It also moves the verdict on its own. A 2023 study in PLOS ONE found that background affected both trustworthiness and competence judgements of the same person on a video call. That research tested call backgrounds rather than studio backdrops, but the principle carries: what sits behind a face changes how that face is read. There is a mechanical reason too. Researchers at the National Eye Institute note that too much visual clutter makes it difficult to identify what we are seeing, so a plain background frees the viewer to spend that first glance on the person. A busy or mismatched background spends some of that first 100 milliseconds on itself instead of on your people.
For a firm, the cost shows up at the team level. Visit any law firm or finance website and the pages that look organized share one trait: the headshots match. The pages that look improvised have a different background behind every third person.
Your options, and who each is for
The menu narrows from 100+ backdrops to five choices that fit a corporate brief. Two are studio backdrops you pick by colour. Two are your own office. Choose by where the photo will appear.
Match the background to where the headshot will appear
Start with the destination and the background follows. Most firms photograph once and use the same file everywhere, so choose for the most demanding surface the photo has to serve.
| // where it appears | White | Grey | Colour | Office blurred |
Office in focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Firm website team gridReads as one unit | |||||
| LinkedInSurvives a small circle | |||||
| Bar, board, or regulator directoryPlain light background | |||||
| Press & media kitCuts out cleanly | |||||
| Annual report & leadershipGravitas and context | |||||
| Branded marketing & campaignsThe palette is the point | |||||
| White fits four of six surfaces and wins more often than not, because it fails the fewest. | |||||
A firm website team grid rewards one backdrop, usually white or a single grey, so the page reads as a unit. LinkedIn favours a clean, uncluttered background that survives being shrunk to a small circle. A bar, board, or regulator directory commonly specifies a plain light background and a head-and-shoulders crop, which points straight at white. The same advice runs through institutional style guides, which tell staff to keep the background simple and avoid busy backgrounds. Press and media kits need a background that cuts out cleanly, again white or grey. The annual report and leadership features are the one place a blurred or in-focus office earns its keep, because the brief there is gravitas and context rather than a uniform grid.
When a firm needs one set of photos to do all of these jobs, white wins more often than not, because it is the background that fails the fewest surfaces.
Getting one consistent background across a whole team
Consistency beats the background choice itself. A team page looks professional when one background, one lighting setup, and one crop standard run through every photo, whichever option you picked. University brand guides land on the same rule: a consistent focal distance and backdrop create a unified appearance when portraits appear next to each other on directory pages. Get those three locked and even a modest background looks deliberate. Let them drift and the best backdrop in the world looks accidental.
This is mostly a logistics problem, and it is where studio control and on-location control differ. A backdrop travels with us and sets up the same way in any boardroom, so person number 4 and person number 40 match. On a large team day we agree the single backdrop and lighting before anyone sits down, and the booking window is the same 20 minutes per person whether you choose white or your own office. For Express sessions, which run about 30 seconds per person, everyone shares one backdrop and one lighting setup precisely so a 200-person rollout stays identical from the first frame to the last.
The harder part is time. The people you hire after the shoot still need to match the ones who were there. The fix is to record the background, the lighting, and the crop as a short spec, then photograph new hires against the same setup between full-team sessions, rather than rebooking everyone. For teams spread across offices or working remotely, the same discipline keeps a remote or hybrid team's headshots consistent even when people are photographed in different cities.






Mistakes that cheapen a team page
Many firms assume a darker or busier background looks more premium. In practice, the busier the background, the more it competes with the face, and the faster it dates the page. The expensive-looking team pages are almost always the simplest ones.
The team page becomes a patchwork instead of one organization.
It reads as two shoots stitched together.
It looks dated within a year.
Outlets, signage, or a fire exit end up in the frame.
A white shirt on white, or black on dark grey, where the shoulders disappear into the backdrop.
The recurring mistakes we are called in to fix are the same few. Letting each person choose their own background, so the team page is a patchwork. Mixing white and grey across one set of photos, which reads as two shoots stitched together. Chasing a fad, a heavy vignette or a novelty filter, that looks dated within a year. Photographing against a real office wall with outlets, signage, or a fire exit in the frame. And wardrobe that fights the background, such as a white shirt on white with no separation, or black on a dark grey, where the shoulders disappear into the backdrop. Workplace photo guidance flags this too, advising staff to avoid low-contrast backgrounds and backgrounds that match your hair, skin, or clothing colour. Wardrobe and background are one decision, which is why we brief them together; if you are planning a shoot, the headshot day wardrobe memo covers the clothing side.
How we handle backgrounds, and what it costs
We treat the background as a setup decision made before the shoot, not a choice people make in the chair. You pick the option that fits the destination, we lock the lighting and crop to match it, and every person runs through the same setup. The full catalogue of more than 100 backdrops lives on our backdrops page; the short menu above is what nearly every corporate brief actually uses.
Team-day discounts start at 20% for two or more people and deepen as headcount rises.
The background you choose maps to the session package. A Blurred session, your office softened behind the subject, starts at $226.98 per person. In Focus, with the workplace kept sharp, is $236.98. A White Backdrop session is $264.98, and a Studio White Backdrop session is $374.98. A single brand-colour backdrop starts at $304.98 per person. Team-day discounts start at 20% for two or more people and increase with headcount, so the per-person cost falls as the team grows. Everything beyond the package, such as added retouching or travel outside the GTA, is quoted separately rather than guessed at here.
Every figure above is the per-person package rate; the full rate card, group discount brackets, and what each package includes live on the corporate headshot pricing page.
For teams that refresh headshots every year as people join and leave, our subscription plans hold the same background, lighting, and crop spec on file, which is the cleanest way to keep new hires matching the original set.
Choosing a corporate headshot background: the questions that remain
What is the best background colour for a professional headshot?
For most corporate use, a clean white or a single neutral grey is the best background colour, because both keep attention on the face and match easily across a team. White is the safest for directories, press, and website grids since it cuts out cleanly. Grey reads as more contemporary and flatters more wardrobe colours. A brand colour works only when the firm's palette is genuinely part of its identity and the photos will live on branded marketing rather than a neutral directory.
Should everyone on a team use the same headshot background?
Yes. A consistent background is the single biggest factor in whether a team page looks professional. One background, one lighting setup, and one crop standard across every photo make the page read as a unit, even with dozens of people. The most common reason a team page looks improvised is that the background changes from person to person. If you do nothing else, lock one background for the whole team and hold it for new hires.
Is white or grey the better background for corporate headshots?
Both are excellent; the tie-breaker is where the photos will appear. Choose white when headshots need to cut out cleanly for directories, press, or a white website grid, and when absolute consistency over years matters most. Choose grey when you want a softer, more modern feel and your wardrobe colours vary across the team. The mistake is mixing the two in one set, which reads as two separate shoots.
Can corporate headshots be taken on a coloured or branded background?
Yes, and a single brand colour can look strong when the colour is core to the firm's identity. The discipline is to use one controlled colour, set and lit identically for everyone, rather than letting each person pick a shade. Brand-colour backgrounds suit marketing pages and campaigns more than neutral directories or press, which usually expect a plain light background. A brand colour is available as a session option.
Is a blurred office background still professional?
A blurred office background is fully professional and is a strong choice for leadership portraits and culture pages. Photographed on location, it keeps focus on the face while the workplace softens into shapes and colour behind, which feels warmer than a plain backdrop. The caveat is consistency: an office is harder to keep identical across a large team than a portable backdrop, so it works best for smaller leadership sets or where some variation is acceptable.
What background works best for a LinkedIn headshot?
For LinkedIn, choose a clean, uncluttered background that still reads when shrunk to a small circle, which usually means white, a light grey, or a softly blurred office. Avoid busy or dark backgrounds that turn into a muddy shape at thumbnail size. If the goal is to stand out rather than blend in, a soft pastel colour backdrop can make a profile photo pop next to the usual white and grey. A profile photo also pulls its weight, so a clean, well-lit shot earns the click. If your LinkedIn photo should match your firm's website headshot, use the same background on both so the two line up.
What background do law firms and finance firms usually choose?
Law, finance, and accounting firms most often choose a white background, because it reads as precise and consistent, cuts out cleanly for bar and board directories, and matches across partners and associates photographed years apart. Some modern firms prefer a single neutral grey for a softer feel. Branded or environmental backgrounds appear mainly on leadership or annual-report features rather than the standard team directory.
How do you keep headshot backgrounds consistent as you hire new people?
Record the background, lighting, and crop as a short written spec after the first shoot, then photograph each new hire against that same setup rather than rebooking the whole team. A portable backdrop makes this straightforward, since it sets up the same way in any room. Firms that hire steadily keep the spec on file through a subscription so every new headshot matches the original set automatically.