There’s a belief I see playing out in the photography industry every single day, and it’s keeping talented photographers stuck.
The belief is this: if I just get better, the right clients will find me and they’ll pay more.
I believed it too. For years. I kept investing in workshops, upgrading my gear, refining my editing style — and my inquiries stayed exactly the same. Budget clients. Negotiators. Couples who wanted to pay $1,800 for a full day.
It wasn’t a talent problem. It was a positioning problem. And the place that positioning problem showed up most clearly was in my portfolio.

When a couple with a $6,000–$10,000 photography budget lands on your Instagram or website, they’re not evaluating your technical skill the way you think they are. They’re not zooming in on your focus or analyzing your exposure.
They’re asking one question: does this feel like me?
And they answer that question in about three seconds based on the overall impression your portfolio gives them.
If your portfolio is a mix of everything you’ve ever shot — different genres, different editing styles, weddings from five years ago when you were still figuring it out, that one newborn shoot you did as a favor — the answer they give you is no.
Not because your work is bad. Because the story isn’t clear.
Premium clients don’t want to see range. They want to see proof that you were made for them.
Here’s how to tell if your portfolio is the thing standing between you and better bookings:
1. You’re showing more than one photography genre. Weddings next to newborns next to senior portraits sends a signal that you’ll shoot anything — which is the opposite of the signal premium clients are looking for.
2. Your editing style isn’t consistent. If your grid swings between moody and bright, film-inspired and clean, couples can’t picture what their wedding will look like. Inconsistency reads as uncertainty.
3. You’re posting your favorites instead of your best-fit work. Your most technically impressive photo and the photo that speaks to your ideal client are not always the same photo. One impresses photographers. The other books weddings.
4. Your portfolio shows where you’ve been, not where you’re going. If you’ve raised your prices but your portfolio still shows the budget weddings you shot three years ago, there’s a mismatch between what you’re charging and what you’re showing.
5. There’s no clear emotional thread. When someone scrolls your grid, they should feel something consistent — romantic, editorial, documentary, intimate — not a different vibe in every photo.

The photographers booking $7K–$10K weddings aren’t necessarily more talented than you. But they’ve done one thing really well: they’ve made their portfolio speak directly to one specific type of client.
That means:
Showing only the weddings that represent the kind of work they want to keep doing. Even if that means cutting half their portfolio.
Making sure every image on their grid could plausibly be from the same wedding — same feel, same editing, same energy.
Writing captions that talk about the couple’s experience instead of their own technical choices.
Organizing their grid so the first nine photos tell a complete, clear story about who they are and who they serve.
The good news: this is fixable. You don’t need new photos. You don’t need a rebrand. You need a framework for looking at what you already have with honest eyes.
Start here:
Pull up your Instagram grid and ask yourself — if I were my ideal client, would I feel seen in this? Or would I feel like I’m looking at a photographer who does a bit of everything?
Then go through your portfolio image by image and ask: does this photo represent the client I want to attract, or the client I used to attract?
Anything that doesn’t match where you’re going — archive it. Not delete. Archive. You can always bring it back.
This process is uncomfortable. Cutting photos you love feels counterintuitive. But every photographer I know who has done this audit has seen a shift in their inquiry quality within weeks.
If you want a step-by-step framework for doing this audit — not just the concept but the actual process — I have two options for you.
The free Portfolio Audit Checklist walks you through the 10 most common portfolio gaps I see. Comment CHECKLIST on my latest Instagram post or click the link below and I’ll send it right to you.
If you want the full framework — including how to identify your ideal client in specific terms, exactly what to keep vs. archive, how to plan your grid, and what to say in your captions — the Portfolio Glow-Up Kit is $37 and you can finish it in a weekend.
Your work is good. Your portfolio just needs to start telling the right story.
March 9, 2026
@2026 copyrighted | brittany mina
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