GitHub photo after a recent layoff.

The first thing recruiters notice on a LinkedIn refreshed for a job search is whether the photo looks like someone composed or someone scrambling.

A layoff is one of the most common reasons people refresh their profile, and recruiters know it. A photo that looks polished and current signals composure. A photo that looks rushed (poor lighting, casual clothes, low resolution) reads as exactly what it is. Closing that gap is one of the highest-return actions during the first week of a search.

15 sec
Generation time
1
Selfie required
8K
Output resolution
$29
20 portraits

After being laid off on GitHub.

Recruiters viewing profiles refreshed within the last week pattern-match for layoff signals. A sharp current photo neutralises that pattern. A weak photo confirms it. The photo is the only signal you can change in 15 seconds that materially shifts how the profile reads.

Platform-specific guidance.

Recruiters reaching engineers post-layoff check GitHub. A real, current photo signals reachability and removes friction.

What to fix before publishing the photo.

  1. 1

    Refresh the photo within the first week of starting the search, not later.

  2. 2

    Dress one level above your previous role to signal upward search.

  3. 3

    Background neutral and uncluttered. Avoid the home office.

  4. 4

    Expression composed. Avoid the wide tense smile, which reads as anxious in thumbnail size.

  5. 5

    Same photo across LinkedIn, resume, and any portfolio site.

  6. 6

    Update the photo before the open-to-work badge or banner.

The GitHub photo standard.

Attire: Whatever you wear to write code. Plain shirt or hoodie. The photo should not overdress the medium. Lighting: Soft, even, neutral. The GitHub avatar appears next to commits and pull request comments. You want to look approachable to maintainers, not posed. Expression: Relaxed neutral or small smile. Open eyes, no pose. GitHub culture rewards photos that look like you on a regular Wednesday at your desk. Framing: Round-cropped. Tight. GitHub serves the avatar small in commit lists and large only on profile pages, so face-first composition wins. Background: Solid colour or a clean backdrop. Save the cool office shot for LinkedIn. Tone: Honest. GitHub culture is allergic to anything that looks like marketing.

Rate your current photo against this standard

Should I update my photo right after a layoff?

Yes, within the first week of starting the search. A current, polished photo signals composure and intention. A photo that predates the layoff reads as either complacent or unaware that the search has begun.

Will recruiters know I was laid off from the photo?

Recruiters cannot tell from the photo alone, but they pattern-match against profiles that have been recently refreshed. A strong photo on a recently updated profile reads as someone in motion. A weak photo reads as someone scrambling.

Should I add the open-to-work badge before or after updating the photo?

Update the photo first. The badge surrounds the photo, and a weak photo with the badge reads worse than a weak photo without. The badge amplifies whatever the photo is doing.

Is now a bad time to spend on a photo?

AI portraits cost a fraction of a photographer and produce results comparable in quality. ThePortraitOS generates a portrait from one selfie in 15 seconds with a free first portrait. The trade-off is heavily in favour of refreshing.

One selfie. 20 portraits. 15 seconds.

Rate your current photo for free, then generate a polished version. 20 portraits for $29, one-time. Credits never expire.

Rate your photo free Generate a portrait