Internal candidates lose to external ones partly because their profile still shows the version of them that got hired three years ago.
A promotion is awarded to the version of you the decision makers can already imagine in the role. That picture forms partly from the way you present yourself, and the photo is the most controllable input. Updating it before the promotion conversation is one of the highest-leverage actions you can take.
Why it matters
Internal promotion committees often review profiles alongside external candidates. If the external candidates have current, polished photos and the internal one does not, the visual gap influences decisions even when the work history is stronger. Closing that gap costs nothing.
On LinkedIn specifically
Internal mobility teams and external executive searchers both review LinkedIn during promotion windows. A photo that signals readiness for the next level is more influential than most people realise.
Specific checklist for this
Dress for the role you want, not the role you currently hold. One level up.
Refresh the photo at least three months before performance review season.
Update LinkedIn first. Internal recruiters often pull LinkedIn for promotion calibration.
Match the formality of leaders one level above you in your organisation.
Avoid casual wear, even if your team dresses casually. Promotion photos are reviewed by people outside your team.
Sharpen the expression. Junior photos often look approachable. Senior photos look decisive.
What good looks like on LinkedIn
Attire: Tailored blazer or sharp shirt. Solid colour. No logos. The fabric should look intentional, not laundry day. Lighting: Soft directional light from camera left at roughly 45 degrees. Catchlights in both eyes. Shadow on the off-cheek to add structure without drama. Expression: Closed-mouth confident smile or relaxed neutral. Eyes engaged with the lens. The look that says I have done this before. Framing: Head and shoulders, eyes on the upper third. Tight enough that face fills 60 percent of the square crop, loose enough to not feel claustrophobic. Background: Soft neutral, slightly defocused. Office or studio grey. Never a vacation photo, never a wall texture you cannot identify. Tone: True-to-life skin tones. No heavy filter. The photo should look like a good day, not a different person.
Rate your current photo against this standardCommon questions
Promotion calibration committees increasingly include people who do not work with you daily. Their first impression forms from your profile, and the photo is the strongest visual signal. A photo that looks the part of the next role helps the committee picture you in it.
Yes. Convention is to present yourself one level above your current title. If you are a senior IC pursuing a manager role, dress like a manager. If you are a director pursuing VP, dress like a VP at your company. Generic business attire reads as either too formal or not formal enough.
At least 90 days. Calibration typically pulls profile snapshots well before the formal conversation, and you want the new photo to be the one in the file when committees review.
No. A studio-quality AI portrait generated from one selfie is indistinguishable from a photographer's work and avoids the scheduling overhead during a busy work period. ThePortraitOS produces 8K, identity-accurate output in 15 seconds.
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