/ The actual process

Three phases. Nothing hidden.

We learn your operation, document it in honest light, then put it in front of the people already looking for what you make. You see every piece before it goes anywhere.

Phase one

We learn your operation first

Before any camera comes out, we spend time on-site — watching service, talking to your team, understanding what you actually sell and who buys it. Strategy built on guesswork doesn't hold.

Phase two

We shoot on-site, in existing light

No studio rigs, no rearranged dining rooms. We work with the light your space already has — morning windows, tungsten over the pass, the stall at golden hour. Service doesn't pause for us.

Phase three

You approve it. Then we distribute.

Every caption, every image, every posting schedule lands in your inbox before it goes live. The strategy is yours to keep — we're not holding it hostage behind a retainer clause.

Extreme close-up, photographer's hands adjusting a lens on a mirrorless camera body rested on a worn wooden market table, soil faintly visible on the table edge, warm tungsten light from the left casting soft directional shadow, tight portrait framing with the background falling away naturally
Extreme close-up, photographer's hands adjusting a lens on a mirrorless camera body rested on a worn wooden market table, soil faintly visible on the table edge, warm tungsten light from the left casting soft directional shadow, tight portrait framing with the background falling away naturally
— Visible labor

Good documentation looks like real work

We bring a camera and a plan — not a crew. One or two shoots a month, scheduled around your service window. The result looks like your place, not a set built to look like it.

Common questions

What owners ask before they engage

Do you work with very small operations?

How long before we see posts go live?

What happens if we part ways?

Everything we've built — the strategy doc, the content calendar, the archive of images — transfers to you outright. You're not starting from zero; you're taking over something that already works.

Yes. Most of our clients have fewer than ten staff. We built our intake around operations that size — the process doesn't assume you have a marketing budget or a PR team.

First content typically publishes three to four weeks after the initial intake session — enough time to shoot, write, and get your approval without rushing anything out the door.

Ready to see how this fits your operation?