Looking Present on Video: Lighting, Framing, and the First 10 Seconds
Most candidates underinvest in their video setup. The fix takes one afternoon and changes how you're perceived for the rest of your career.
Sasha Romanov
Communications Coach
On video, presence is mostly mechanical. A camera at eye level, a window in front of you, and a quiet room cover most of what people perceive as 'executive presence'. The candidates who look polished aren't more confident — they invested one afternoon in the setup.
Lighting beats camera quality
A $40 webcam with good lighting looks better than a $200 camera in a dim room. The cheapest fix is to face a window during daytime calls. The next-cheapest is a key light in front of you, slightly off-axis, never overhead. Avoid backlight — a window behind you turns your face into a silhouette.
Frame the shot like a portrait
- Camera at eye level — stack books under your laptop until it is.
- Eyes on the upper third of the frame, with a small amount of headroom.
- Shoulders visible. Frames that cut off at the chin look claustrophobic.
- Look at the camera, not the screen, when you're making your most important point.
The first 10 seconds
Smile, say hello using their name, and let them speak first. Most candidates rush into pleasantries to fill the silence and end up sounding nervous. A two-beat pause, a warm hello, and steady eye contact establishes that you're calm — which is most of what they're trying to read in the opening.
Audio is the underrated upgrade
If you can only fix one thing, fix audio. Bad audio is exhausting to listen to and quietly turns the interviewer against you over the course of an hour. A wired headset with a boom mic — even a cheap one — outperforms airpods every time.
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