The first profile photo of your career sets a tone that follows you for years. Get the first one right.
Recent graduates often default to a senior portrait, a graduation photo, or a casual selfie. None of these are right for a profile that recruiters will scan for the first job. A clean, professional, current portrait signals that you have already crossed into the working world, which is the perception you want from the first day of the search.
Why it matters
Entry-level applicants compete on signals: GPA, internships, and how they present. Most candidates use weak photos. A strong photo lifts you above the median in a stack of similar resumes. The cost is a free AI portrait generated from one selfie.
On GitHub specifically
For engineering grads, GitHub is the second profile recruiters check. A real current photo signals you are reachable.
Specific checklist for this
Avoid the graduation cap and gown photo. It dates you immediately.
Dress for the entry-level role you are applying to. Tech tolerates smart casual. Banking and consulting expect a blazer.
Background neutral. Avoid the dorm room.
Crop tight. Recruiters scan thumbnails. Face must read at 64 pixels.
Expression composed and warm. New grads sometimes overdo the smile.
Same photo on LinkedIn, resume, and any internship application site.
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
No. Graduation photos in cap and gown date the profile and signal entry-level status more strongly than necessary. A professional portrait that does not reference graduation reads as someone already in the working world.
No. Recruiters reviewing entry-level candidates expect to see polished profiles. A strong photo lifts you above the median of grads who use casual selfies.
Match the industry. Banking, consulting, and law expect formal attire. Tech, design, and creative fields tolerate smart casual. The photo should look like you fit in on day one of the role.
Yes. ThePortraitOS generates an 8K, identity-accurate professional portrait from one selfie in 15 seconds. The first portrait is free. For new graduates without budget for a photographer, this is the highest-leverage 15 seconds you can spend on the job search.
Start now
Rate your current photo for free, then generate a polished version. 20 portraits for $29, one-time. Credits never expire.