Shoot day preparation: a checklist for the client, before and after

A good shoot day doesn’t start on the shoot day. It starts the moment you agree on what you’re going to do. Here’s a practical checklist to keep things running smoothly.

As soon as the project is locked in

  • Agree on the goal — sales, recruitment, brand, campaign
  • Agree on channels and versions — horizontal, vertical, both
  • Agree on dates and any backup days
  • Name a contact person who knows the practical details

2–3 weeks before the shoot

  • Go through the locations and the most important shooting spots
  • Agree on which people appear and when
  • Choose the products, outfits and props to be shot
  • Agree on the key messages and any terms you want to use

A week before the shoot

  • Lock the schedule and the shot list
  • Reserve the spaces and make sure there’s access everywhere
  • Agree on practical matters — parking, entrance, safety instructions internally
  • Check that the spaces to be shot are in tidy condition

The day before

  • Confirm the schedule of key people
  • Have products and props ready in one place
  • If staff are being shot, a reminder about dress and schedule

On the shoot day

  • A 10-minute kick-off meeting — what will be done and in what order
  • Shoot the critical things first, the ones that can’t be moved
  • Keep the pace steady so there’s no rushing
  • Take the photos at the same time, if agreed

After the shoot day

  • Deliver any logos, fonts and brand guidelines if graphics are needed
  • Agree on the schedule for the review round
  • Make versions suitable for publishing, so the content doesn’t sit waiting

With this framework, projects stay light for the client too.

Interested? Let’s talk.

Whether it’s a single project or a long-term partnership — tell us what you have in mind, and we’ll figure it out together.