Healthcare Professional Headshots for Connecticut Physicians and Practitioners

A patient looking for a new physician, dentist, or specialist will find your name, look at your photo, read a line or two of your bio, and make a decision. The photo does the most work in the least time.

A portrait that looks flat, dated, or generically professional tells a patient nothing. A portrait that reads as competent, present, and approachable tells them they are in good hands before you have said a word. That is a clinical outcome. It happens before the first appointment.

Patients Decide Before They Call

On Location at Your Practice

Every session takes place at your office, clinic, or hospital location. There is no studio to find, no unfamiliar space to navigate before the session starts. Scott comes to you, works within your schedule, and photographs each person efficiently so the day is not disrupted.

For practices with multiple providers, team sessions are coordinated so that every physician, NP, PA, or specialist is photographed with consistent lighting and framing. The result is a provider directory that reads as a unified practice, not a group of individuals photographed at different points in time.

For Individual Practitioners and Full Practice Teams

Some clients are a solo practitioner refreshing a single bio photo for a hospital website or speaking profile. Others are practice administrators coordinating headshots for a department of twenty. Both engagements are handled the same way: on location, on your schedule, scoped to what the practice actually needs.

Sessions are available across Greater Hartford, Litchfield County, and Connecticut.

The Investment

Sessions are scoped to the engagement. Individual practitioners and full practice teams are priced accordingly. Investment begins at $600. Scope and investment are established in the initial conversation, before anything is booked.

Ready to get started?

Tell me a little bit about what you need and I’ll be in touch as soon as possible

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you photograph at our practice or hospital location?

Yes. I come to your office, clinic, or hospital. I have set up and photographed in exam rooms, administrative offices, and hospital corridors. The session fits around your clinical schedule, not the other way around.

How much do healthcare headshots cost?

A: A single practitioner starts at $600. A practice team starts at $1,200. Most of my clients spend around $3,700 once we establish what the practice actually needs. That usually means more than one person and more than one use for the images.

Our provider directory has fifteen physicians. Can you photograph all of them?

Yes. I photograph each provider with consistent lighting and framing so the directory reads as a unified practice. The problem with most provider directories is that they look like a collection of images from different decades. Mine do not.

What should a physician wear for a headshot?

That depends on how the images will be used and what your practice wants to communicate. A white coat reads as clinical authority. Business professional reads as accessible and approachable. I ask about this before the session so the wardrobe decision is intentional, not an afterthought.

How long does a healthcare headshot session take?

Individual practitioners take fifteen to twenty minutes. I schedule around clinical hours so patient care is not disrupted. For larger practice teams, I work as a half-day block and move efficiently through the group.

Why does my headshot matter for patient acquisition?

Patients decide whether to book an appointment based on your photo before they read a single line of your bio. That is not an exaggeration. It is how people evaluate physicians online. A flat or dated image loses that evaluation silently, before you ever know it happened.

Do you work with individual practitioners or only practice groups?

Both. A solo practitioner updating a single bio photo and a hospital department coordinating forty providers are both worth doing well. The scale changes. The standard does not.