Skip to main content

Tips for putting your best face forward in the virtual workplace

Follow these lighting and framing tips from an ASU photographer for online meetings


April 24, 2020

As a huge portion of the population adjusts to working from home, many of us struggle to look professional in virtual meetings. Camera angle, lighting and objects in the background are all factors that can affect your digital image and frame of mind.

To help us put our best faces forward — via web camera — Andy DeLisle, a photographer and multimedia producer for the ASU Knowledge Enterprise, has laid out his best practices for looking good online. Watch the video below to see the following tips in action and the difference they can make.

  1. Raise your camera to eye level. If you are using a laptop, a laptop stand, boxes or books can prop up your device. If using a desktop monitor or webcam, angle the camera to be more level to your face when looking straight ahead.

  2. Avoid having lights in the background of your frame. Open doors, lamps and bright windows can make the camera think your surroundings are very bright — putting you in the shadows.

  3. Add lights behind your camera to illuminate your face. If this creates hard shadows, try bouncing the light off of a smooth, white surface, such as a white wall or even a sheet of paper.

  4. Use daylight bulbs and white LED lights in the space where you Zoom to show your appropriate skin tone. 

  5. Declutter the space that appears in your frame. Dirty dishes, dog toys or piles of laundry can be distracting and take away from your presence. 

  6. If you wear glasses, lower the brightness on your screen to reduce glare and reflection on your lenses. 

 Video and story by Andy DeLisle

More Science and technology

 

A group of people posing around the Arizona State University sign on the ASU Tempe campus with Old Main building in the background

ASU expands hands-on lab opportunities for online biochemistry students

As a New York City autopsy research coordinator, Stephanie McQuillan saw her continued education as a gateway for career advancement. Juggling full-time work in New York, McQuillan thrived in the…

Headshot of Petr Sulc

Blueprints of self-assembly: New design technique advances nanotechnology

Many biological structures of impressive beauty and sophistication arise through processes of self-assembly. Indeed, the natural world is teeming with intricate and useful forms that come together…

Three people sit at a table signing documents

ASU assists Panamanian microelectronics development efforts

Arizona State University continues to expand its efforts to support the development of the semiconductor workforce and supply chain on a global scale. On April 30, Panamanian President Laurentino…