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.
Why it matters
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.
On GitHub specifically
Recruiters reaching engineers post-layoff check GitHub. A real, current photo signals reachability and removes friction.
Specific checklist for this
Refresh the photo within the first week of starting the search, not later.
Dress one level above your previous role to signal upward search.
Background neutral and uncluttered. Avoid the home office.
Expression composed. Avoid the wide tense smile, which reads as anxious in thumbnail size.
Same photo across LinkedIn, resume, and any portfolio site.
Update the photo before the open-to-work badge or banner.
What good looks like on GitHub
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 standardCommon questions
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.
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.
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.
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