Business portrait, headshot, executive portrait — what is the difference
Three terms get used interchangeably online and they are not actually the same thing.
A headshot is the narrowest. Shoulders up, face filling the frame, optimized for a circle crop on a profile picture surface. A headshot answers the question "what does this person look like?" in a single tile.
A business portrait is wider. The crop usually includes upper torso — hand visible at the bottom of the frame, body language readable, sometimes a hint of environment. A business portrait answers "what does this person do, and how do they hold themselves doing it?" in a longer impression. It is the picture you reach for when there is more vertical space — an About page hero, a feature article header, a pitch deck team page, a press kit.
An executive portrait is the most formal version of a business portrait. Suit, controlled lighting, deliberate symmetry, traditional crop. Used in finance, law, board rooms, regulated industries, and large-company executive pages. Closer to formal painting than to a candid magazine portrait.
@vustPortraitBot ships two templates that fit business-portrait use: Founder Studio and Boardroom Formal. Founder Studio is the modern business portrait — appropriate for tech founders, operators, modern professional services, and B2B brands where the audience expects competence without rigidity. Boardroom Formal is the executive variant for traditional surfaces. Lifestyle Founder, the third template, leans casual and is usually a step too informal for a business portrait although it works as a softer About-page alternative.
Founder-as-brand and why the picture matters more now
In 2026 founders carry more brand weight than the average company logo. Investors, customers, hiring candidates, journalists, and podcast bookers all do the same thing when they encounter a new company name — they search for the founder's profile, and the first impression is the picture. The picture either reinforces the company's positioning or contradicts it. A scruffy selfie next to a polished company narrative reads as inconsistent; a polished portrait next to a company that has not shipped anything reads as performative.
The pattern that lands cleanest is matching the portrait to the audience the company is trying to convert. A company selling to enterprise-finance customers wants its founder portrait to look like someone an enterprise buyer would have a real conversation with — Boardroom Formal or a clean Founder Studio with formal dress is the right call. A company selling to product teams or developer audiences wants Founder Studio or Lifestyle Founder so the founder reads as part of the same world as the buyer. A company selling to creative or consumer audiences wants the warmest defensible variant — usually Lifestyle Founder if appropriate, Founder Studio with an explicit "warmer" wardrobe if the role demands more formality.
The cost of getting this wrong used to be high enough that founders just did not have a current portrait — better no picture than the wrong one. AI portrait generation collapses the cost of "render it again with a different template" to five crystals. The right picture for the audience is now affordable to test.
Where a business portrait actually appears
Naming the surfaces upfront makes the framing decision easier. The list below is the realistic universe of places a business portrait runs:
- Company About page, leadership grid, team module
- Pitch deck team slide, sometimes a separate slide for the founder personally
- Press kit zip distributed with launches and announcements
- Conference speaker page and the program-printed bio
- Podcast guest tile when the founder appears as a guest
- Substack and personal-essay author bio module
- Crunchbase, AngelList, and other startup-database executive page
- LinkedIn About page hero (in addition to the avatar) when LinkedIn supports it
- Investor relations page and quarterly report cover when the company gets to that scale
- Awards lists, "Forbes 30 Under 30," and similar editorial features
Notice the asymmetry: a single render gets reused across half a dozen surfaces. The marginal cost of one more render is negligible, but the marginal benefit of the right portrait propagates everywhere.
Founder Studio vs Boardroom Formal — choosing between them
Founder Studio defaults: neutral grey backdrop, soft key from upper left, slight rim, casual-business wardrobe with collared option. The picture reads as someone who runs a modern company. The crop is shoulders-up plus a hint of upper torso. Lighting is balanced; no dramatic shadows. This is the right choice for tech, software, fintech where the audience accepts modern dress, B2B SaaS, modern services, design, marketing, content.
Boardroom Formal defaults: darker controlled backdrop, symmetric frontal light, suit and tie or formal collared option, traditional shoulders-up crop with controlled negative space. The picture reads as serious, deliberate, established. This is the right choice for banking, law, traditional consulting, board work, certain executive coaching, regulated healthcare, certain academic surfaces.
The decision is rarely about your personal style; it is about the audience. A modern founder operating in a traditional industry — a fintech CEO selling to large banks, a regtech founder selling to law firms, a healthtech founder selling to hospital procurement — should default to Boardroom Formal even if they would personally prefer the lighter Founder Studio. The audience speaks the formal language; the portrait should speak it too.
For a team page, the strongest pattern is one template across the entire team. If everyone runs Founder Studio, the team page reads as cohesive. If half the team runs Founder Studio and half runs Boardroom Formal, the page reads as inconsistent. Pick a template before the renders and impose it on the whole team for visual unity.
Pitch deck portrait vs About-page portrait — small but real differences
A pitch deck team slide consumes the portrait at small size — usually one of three or four tiles. The face needs to read at thumbnail scale and the wardrobe should match the company's positioning. Founder Studio renders well at thumbnail size; the eye line on the upper third keeps the face readable even when the tile is 200 pixels wide.
An About-page hero portrait runs at a larger size — usually 600 pixels or more in the longest dimension. At that scale, the difference between AI generation and a paid photographer becomes visible to a reviewer who is looking for it; for most audiences, it remains invisible. The render still works for an About-page hero, but if your company is at a stage where every pixel of the About page is reviewed by a brand designer, hire a photographer for that one shot and use AI for the rest of the surfaces.
A press kit portrait is sent to journalists and editorial teams as a high-resolution JPEG. Our portraits ship at sufficient resolution for typical web-print use. Magazines that demand a CMYK 300dpi render at 8 inches will need a paid photographer; modern web journalism and trade publications work fine with AI portraits.
Team consistency without coordinating a photo shoot
The hardest legacy problem for a team page is getting everyone in front of the same photographer on the same day. Two co-founders in different cities, four early operators on different continents — coordinating a photo shoot eats a week and a budget. AI portrait generation collapses the coordination problem to "everyone runs Founder Studio in @vustPortraitBot this week." Same template, similar light, similar backdrop, individual selfies. The team page reads as cohesive without the photo-shoot logistics.
The trade-off is that AI templates are slightly less individually flattering than a photographer who tunes light and angle to each subject. For most companies the trade-off is favorable — cohesion at low cost beats one perfect picture per founder with no team page consistency.
If the company eventually scales to needing a photo-shoot day, the AI portraits make a useful intermediate. Render the team in Founder Studio for the website launch; replace with photographer shots when the brand mature enough to justify the cost.
What a business portrait does not signal
Worth naming the things a business portrait does not actually communicate, because users sometimes overload it.
A business portrait does not signal company stage. A pre-seed founder and a Series C CEO can both render Founder Studio and the picture alone reveals nothing about the company. The signal of stage comes from everything around the portrait — the company description, the press, the team page, the URL. The portrait is one of several signals, not the whole picture.
A business portrait does not signal trustworthiness on its own. Trust is built through the company's track record and the founder's writing and public actions. The portrait removes a negative signal — a missing or weak picture costs trust — but it does not create trust by itself.
A business portrait does not signal industry specialization. Wardrobe and template choice align with audience norms but the picture cannot tell a viewer the founder runs a fintech versus a healthtech versus a B2B SaaS. The signal of specialization comes from the bio sentence next to the portrait.
These limits are not bugs. The point of a business portrait is to remove distractions so the rest of the page can carry the signal. A clean portrait does that job.
Render workflow for business contexts
The honest workflow for a business portrait differs slightly from a casual headshot.
Plan the wardrobe before sending selfies. Wear something close to what the audience expects — collared shirt for Founder Studio, suit-adjacent dress for Boardroom Formal. The model uses your selfie wardrobe as a fitting reference; mismatched wardrobe between selfie and template produces visible synthesis at the neckline.
Send three or four selfies from the same lighting day, all looking at the camera, with the head at neutral angle. Quality of selfie input affects quality of business portrait output more than it affects a casual headshot — the tighter audience expectation amplifies any drift.
Pick the template that matches the audience, not the one that matches your personal preference. If you are unsure, render Founder Studio first and review with a trusted contact before swapping the picture across surfaces.
Render once, evaluate at the actual surface size. A portrait that reads well at hero size may not work at thumbnail size; a portrait that reads well at thumbnail may look thin at hero. The Smart Templates are tuned to work at both, but spot-check before committing.
If you plan to update the picture across multiple surfaces, render once and use the same file everywhere. Consistency across surfaces reinforces the picture in the viewer's memory; different pictures on LinkedIn, About page, and pitch deck dilute the brand.
The five-crystal pay-as-you-go price covers most business-portrait scenarios. Pro is the right purchase if you plan to render the whole team or to A/B test more than three takes: the 30-day Pro pass includes 12 portrait credits, and longer passes include more.
The web page exists so the contract is visible before paying. The work happens in @vustPortraitBot.