With Laura Esmond

Laura Esmond

With Laura Esmond is the unfiltered podcast for women growing creative businesses while raising families and raising themselves. I’m Laura, a mom of three, educator, coach, and photographer. After scaling a portrait studio to multi–six figures in under two years, I realized success without purpose feels empty. Now I help photographers and creative entrepreneurs build businesses that are profitable, sustainable, and aligned with real life. Each week you will hear real talk, mindset shifts, and stories from women entrepreneurs who know the messy middle of business and motherhood. No filters, no highlight reels, just honest conversations to help you grow with confidence.

  1. -4 j

    What Shannon Griffin Taught Me About Letting Go

    As business owners, it's easy to believe that success means doing everything ourselves. Editing the images. Answering every email. Keeping the house clean. Being present with our kids. Growing the business. Holding it all together. But what if that belief is exactly what's keeping us exhausted? In this honest conversation, photographer Shannon Griffin and I talk about the surprising freedom that comes from letting go. From outsourcing editing and household tasks to releasing the guilt about not wanting to play with Barbies, we explore what it looks like to build a business around who you actually are, not who you think you're supposed to be. Shannon shares her journey as a low-volume, high-end photographer, mother, editor, and entrepreneur, and why embracing support and a secondary source of income has allowed her to create a business and life she truly loves. Together, we discuss: Why doing everything yourself isn't a badge of honorThe emotional challenge of letting go of controlHow outsourcing can create more space for creativity and familyThe reality of balancing motherhood and entrepreneurshipWhy your business should reflect your personality, values, and season of lifeThe difference between being busy and being intentionalHow understanding your "why" can guide every business decisionThe guilt many women feel around work, motherhood, and wanting moreBuilding a low-volume business that prioritizes relationships and artistryLearning to trust others with parts of your businessWhether you're struggling to delegate, feeling stretched thin, or simply wondering how to create more breathing room in your life, this conversation will remind you that you don't have to carry it all. Sometimes the greatest growth comes from letting something go. Connect with Shannon Griffin:https://www.shannongriffin.com/ Connect with Laura:https://www.lauraesmond.com/ If this episode resonated with you, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a friend who needs the reminder that she was never meant to do it all alone.

    59 min
  2. 21 avr.

    Katie Lamb On How To Stop Getting Price Shopped

    If it feels harder than ever to stand out as a portrait photographer right now, you’re not imagining it. In this conversation, Laura sits down with photographer and educator Katie Lamb to unpack one of the biggest challenges in today’s industry: everything looks the same. From identical editing styles to repeated locations and trends pulled from Instagram and Pinterest, photographers are unintentionally blending in and when that happens, clients default to one thing: price shopping. But standing out isn’t about being more talented. It’s about being more intentional. In this episode, Laura and Katie break down what actually differentiates a photography business today (hint: it’s not your presets), how to create an experience clients can’t compare, and why adding something like video + a guided sales process can completely transform your profit per session. What You’ll Learn  Why photographers are blending together more than ever  The real reason clients price shop (and how to stop it)  Why your photography style alone isn’t enough anymore  The two key ways to stand out: experience + product How video creates an emotional, undeniable “I have to have this” moment  What happens when you guide clients instead of just delivering a gallery  Why in-person sales (IPS) isn’t about pressure—it’s about service  How to create a full-circle client experience that leads to higher sales and stronger referrals The Create & Sell Bundle: www.katielamb.com/bundle Katie’s Creating Session Videos CourseLaura’s The Art of Selling CourseA one hour live Q&A with both of usTogether, these approaches help photographers:  Create something unique your clients will love And confidently guide clients to go beyond digitals 🔥 Why This Matters Your clients aren’t just buying photos. They’re navigating:  Busy schedules  Emotional expectations  The pressure of “getting it right” for their family If the experience ends with a digital gallery they never print, the value fades. But when you:  Create something tangible  Guide them through decisions  Help them see the meaning behind the images You don’t just sell more, you create lasting impact. About Katie Lamb Katie Lamb is a photographer and educator who has been in the industry since 2008. With a background in fine art photography, she’s known for simplifying complex things and helping photographers create meaningful, standout work—especially through session films.Find her education at: www.katielamb.comInstagram: @katiebethlamb

    45 min
  3. 7 avr.

    The Industry Is Shifting, Are You Ready? A Conversation With Suzy Brown

    In this episode, I’m joined by family photographer and educator Suzzane Brown for a conversation that feels a little different, in the best way. We didn’t come in with a strict plan, but what unfolded was an honest, layered discussion about what it looks like to be a photographer right now, in an industry that’s changing quickly, in a world that feels louder than ever, and in a season where so many of us are questioning how we want to show up. Suzzane is known for creating deeply connected, high-touch client experiences, especially with families in the luxury market, and she brings such a thoughtful, intuitive perspective to both her work and her business. Together, we explore everything from building trust with our clients to navigating the growing conversation around sharing children’s images online, to the pressure of social media and what it might look like to step outside of it. But underneath all of that, this episode is really about something deeper: coming back to yourself. Your voice. Your values. Your way of creating and connecting. We talk about what happens when your work starts to feel disconnected, how to rediscover what actually lights you up, and why the future of this industry may look a lot more human, relational, and experience-driven than we’ve been taught. If you’ve been feeling a little burnt out, a little unsure, or like you’re craving something more aligned in your business, this conversation will meet you right where you are. In this episode, we cover: Why over-planning sessions can actually block connection, and what to do insteadWhat high-end clients really want, and why trust matters more than everThe evolving conversation around sharing children’s images onlineSocial media fatigue and alternative ways to grow your businessThe opportunity to rebrand family photography around connection and experienceHow to rediscover your voice when your work starts to feel staleWhy burnout often has more to do with overwhelm than creativityThe power of in-person connection and community-based marketingHow repetition and discomfort lead to real growthThe mindset shifts that separate photographers who feel stuck from those who move forwardThis one feels like sitting down with a friend and talking through the big questions, the ones that don’t always have clear answers, but are so worth exploring.

    1 h 10 min
  4. 31 mars

    Stop Acting Like A Content Creator

    Stop Acting Like a Content Creator Somewhere along the way, the portrait photography industry traded permanence for convenience. We stopped making things and started delivering files. We told ourselves it was progress. This episode is my pushback on that. If you have been handing over galleries and hoping clients do something with them, this episode is going to reframe what your job actually is and why the photographer who understands that is running an entirely different business than the one who doesn't.  We talk about the world your client grew up in, why she has no frame of reference for what you're capable of giving her, and what it actually looks like to cross the finish line instead of stopping at mile 25. This is not a tips episode. It is a line in the sand. In this episode: Why delivering a gallery is not finishing the job and what finishing the job actually looks likeThe identity shift that changes everything downstream: from the photographer who hopes to the photographer who leadsWhy your client isn't nostalgic for printed photographs, she's never had them, and what that means for how you show upWhy we are memory keepers, not content creators, and why that distinction matters more right now than it ever hasGet Rooted enrollment closes this week for our April start. This is the program where the philosophy in this episode becomes a practice: the pricing, the client process, the ordering meeting, all of it. lauraesmond.com/getrooted Follow Laura Instagram: @reeseandcoportraits Website: lauraesmond.com Loved This Episode? Leave a review! This helps expand our reach and continue doing this work. And come say hi to Laura on Instagram at @reeseandcoportraits — she actually reads her DMs. Sources Referenced in This Episode: Professional Photographers of America Consumer Technology Information Official Google blog UCLA Health Chatbooks Psychology Today

    25 min
  5. 24 mars

    Why Your Email List Is Failing You (And How to Fix It)

    Why Your Email List Is Failing You (And How to Fix It) with Laura Esmond  About This Episode If you have an email list that feels like it is just sitting there — people opted in, you send something occasionally, and then nothing really happens — this episode is going to reframe the whole thing for you. Laura Esmond is a portrait photographer with 26 years of experience and the founder of Get Rooted group coaching. In this follow-up to her guest episode on The Motherhood Anthology podcast, Laura gets into something she dropped into the TMA Facebook group that sparked a lot of questions: how she built her email list to over 4,000 people with open rates above 50%, click rates above 30%, and consistent bookings directly from email — and why almost none of it came from a lead magnet or a paid ad. The answer is community marketing. Not the kind that lives on Instagram. The kind that happens in actual rooms with actual people — dance studios, country clubs, women's networking events, real estate partnerships, library storytimes. Laura walks through five specific community approaches her studio used, why she never charged for the events themselves, and what the difference really is between a warm lead and a soft one. She also shares the one thing she always does before sending a single email to a potential partner — and why brownies have been part of her marketing strategy for years. This is a longer conversation but every part of it is practical. Grab a notebook. What You'll Hear in This Episode Why the size of your email list is not the point — and what actually determines whether it convertsThe difference between a warm lead and a soft lead, and why it changes everything about your open rates and bookingsHow Laura's studio used country club events to collect engaged emails from exactly the right familiesWhy dance studios are one of the most underutilized marketing partnerships in portrait photographyWhat a Headshot Happy Hour is and how it puts you in a room full of women who will refer you for yearsHow a real estate agent partnership became one of Laura's most reliable long-term referral sourcesWhat Laura did with her studio space every week that kept a steady stream of new mothers walking through her doorWhy she never charged for community events — and exactly what she was charging for insteadThe brownies-before-email rule and why humans don't get ignored the way emails doHow to take one concrete first step this week without overhauling your entire marketing strategy Key Topics Covered Warm Leads vs. Cold Leads Not all email subscribers are the same. Someone who opted in for a freebie is a starting point — you still have to earn their attention. Someone who met you in person, watched you work, and handed you their email in a real conversation is already yours. Laura breaks down why that distinction is the entire reason her email list performs the way it does. The Five Community Approaches Country club events — photographing member gatherings to collect engaged emails from young familiesDance studio pop-ups — hosted as client appreciation for the studio, not as a revenue event for LauraHeadshot Happy Hours — quick professional headshots at women's networking events as a community value-addReal estate agent partnership — showing up, supporting, and building a long-term referral relationshipStudio events — monthly Storytime with the local library and weekly lactation classes for new mothersThe Brownies Rule Before you ever send an email to a potential partner, stop in. Bring something for the staff. Ask to speak with the owner or the person in charge of client happiness. The pitch is simple: let me help you show your clients how much you appreciate them. Emails get ignored. Humans don't. Links & Resources Get Rooted Group Coaching For portrait photographers ready to build a client process that earns — ordering meetings, product pricing, and the full system: lauraesmond.com/getrooted Mentioned in This Episode 10 Tips To Be Seen — lauraesmond.com/beseen Follow Laura Instagram: @reeseandcoportraits Website: lauraesmond.com Loved This Episode? Leave a review! Share it with a photographer friend who has an email list that isn't doing what it should — this one will reframe the whole conversation for them. And come say hi to Laura on Instagram at @reeseandcoportraits — she actually reads her DMs. Keywords: email list for photographers, community marketing, portrait photography business, in-person marketing, photography studio marketing, warm leads, motherhood photographer, email open rates, Get Rooted, Laura Esmond, The Motherhood Anthology

    34 min

À propos

With Laura Esmond is the unfiltered podcast for women growing creative businesses while raising families and raising themselves. I’m Laura, a mom of three, educator, coach, and photographer. After scaling a portrait studio to multi–six figures in under two years, I realized success without purpose feels empty. Now I help photographers and creative entrepreneurs build businesses that are profitable, sustainable, and aligned with real life. Each week you will hear real talk, mindset shifts, and stories from women entrepreneurs who know the messy middle of business and motherhood. No filters, no highlight reels, just honest conversations to help you grow with confidence.

Vous aimeriez peut‑être aussi