---
title: Cordwainer — Authentic Photography Strategy
type: article
created: '2026-04-05'
updated: '2026-04-05'
source_docs:
- raw/2026-03-24-cordwainer-marketing-meeting-132336674.md
tags:
- photography
- website
- credibility
- cordwainer
- content-strategy
layer: 2
client_source: null
industry_context: null
transferable: true
---

# Cordwainer — Authentic Photography Strategy

## Overview

During the [[wiki/clients/cordwainer/index|Cordwainer]] marketing review on 2026-03-24, Bodo Liesenfeld raised a concern about stock photography on the Cordwainer Memory Care website. The core principle: **authentic facility photos, even at slightly lower quality, outperform stock images for credibility and conversion**. Stock photos are immediately recognizable as such, and once a visitor identifies an image as stock, the emotional message it was meant to convey is lost.

This strategy applies to service pages and core site content. Blog posts are explicitly exempted due to their high image volume requirements.

## The Principle

> "I think even a tiny lesser quality photo that shows us, to me, is better than a stock photo, because a stock photo is immediately recognized as a stock photo. And as soon as you know it's a stock photo, the message is gone."
> — Bodo Liesenfeld, 2026-03-24 meeting

Stock photos tend to look "too perfect" — which paradoxically undermines trust. Visitors in high-stakes decision contexts (such as choosing memory care for a family member) are especially sensitive to authenticity signals. A real photo of the actual dining room, actual residents, and actual staff communicates genuine care in a way that a polished stock image cannot.

## Scope

| Content Area | Use Authentic Photos? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Service pages | Yes — preferred | Replace stock where real photos are available and quality is acceptable |
| Homepage / key landing areas | Yes — preferred | High visibility; authenticity matters most here |
| Blog posts | No — stock acceptable | Volume requirements make authentic sourcing impractical |
| PPC landing page | Yes — preferred | High-intent visitors; credibility is critical |

## Implementation

### Photo Audit (Assigned: Bodo Liesenfeld)
Bodo committed to reviewing the full Cordwainer website and emailing Sebastian with a list of stock photos that should be replaced, along with candidate authentic images where available.

### Immediate Replacement (Assigned: Sebastian Gant)
The dining page stock photo was identified as a specific priority. Bodo had previously sent Sebastian a batch of resident dining photos; Sebastian committed to replacing the stock dining image with one of those provided photos.

### Discretion on Quality
The team agreed that quality is not to be sacrificed entirely. If an authentic photo is significantly lower resolution or poorly composed for a given layout, the stock photo may remain. The goal is to replace stock where a real photo can do the job adequately — not to degrade the site's visual quality.

### Blog Exception
Stock photos remain acceptable for blog content. Each post requires approximately four to five images, making authentic sourcing impractical at scale. This exception was explicitly confirmed by both Bodo and Sebastian.

## Related Context

- This discussion occurred in the same meeting where five new SEO-focused blogs were confirmed as built and being added to the "Expert Corner" page. See [[wiki/clients/cordwainer/meetings/2026-03-24-marketing-meeting|2026-03-24 Marketing Meeting]] for full context.
- The new high-intent [[wiki/knowledge/ppc/dedicated-landing-pages|PPC landing page]] (~90% complete at time of meeting) should also follow the authentic photography principle, given that it targets high-intent ad traffic where trust signals are especially important.

## Generalizable Insight

This principle extends beyond Cordwainer. For any client in a trust-sensitive vertical (senior care, healthcare, professional services), authentic facility or team photography consistently outperforms stock. The recommendation: conduct a periodic stock photo audit on client websites and prioritize replacement on high-traffic, high-conversion pages. Blog and filler content can remain stock-sourced.