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What to Say When You Don't Know What to Say at Family Photo Sessions
Ever freeze up at a family session and wonder what to actually say to get real, genuine moments? In this episode, Roz breaks down the difference between posing and prompting — and why that shift changed everything about how she shoots. You'll walk away with a practical toolkit of prompts organized by purpose: getting kids to cooperate, creating genuine connection, and what to do when something falls completely flat.
[00:01] Welcome + Episode Intro
[01:33] Mom Life Update
[05:15] Being New to This + Doing the Hard Thing
[05:59] Posing vs. Prompting — The Real Difference
The distinction that changes everything. Posing is about where you place people and how their bodies look. Prompting is about creating conditions where something real can develop. Roz shares how she started her photography career leaning into posing — and why it quickly became clear that prompting was a better fit for lifestyle and family work.
[09:05] What to Do After a Prompt Lands
One of the most overlooked skills: give the prompt, then stop talking. Roz talks about the importance of letting the moment unfold rather than over-directing, and why the in-between moments are usually the ones worth capturing.
[10:42] Episode Structure Overview
A quick roadmap — kid cooperation prompts, connection-based prompts, and what to do when things flop.
[11:57] Setting Expectations With Families Before You Start
Roz's go-to move before any family session: a quick five-minute chat that normalizes the chaos. Kids crying, toddler meltdowns, someone needing a time-out — all of it is fine. The goal isn't perfect smiles; it's connection and real moments.
[14:38] Getting Kids to Trust You First
Before any prompt lands, you need the child. Roz talks about getting low, using the client questionnaire to gather talking points, and giving toddlers a sense of ownership and control — because toddlers who feel in control are toddlers who cooperate.
[18:04] Kid Cooperation Prompts
Six prompts specifically designed to get kids engaged, interacting, and (occasionally) forgetting there's a camera:[29:20] Connection-Based Prompts
The prompts that make parents tear up when they get their gallery back. Roz talks about reading the room before pulling these out — high energy is not the moment for a deeply emotional prompt.
[42:10] Reading the Room + When Prompts Flop
Prompts fall flat. It's normal. Roz's real-session story: trying the airplane prompt with a toddler who said no — and how she eventually got him flying by having mom do it first.
The lesson: timing matters more than the prompt itself. If you're talking too much and the family isn't buying in, move on. Come back to it later.
[46:38] How Roz Approaches the Flow of a Session
She tells families upfront: we're going with the flow today. No rigid list, no working through poses in order. Just try something, see where it goes, stay in observation mode. That's where the organic moments come from.
[47:53] Wrapping Up + What's Coming Next
A tease for the next full episode: 30 poses organized by category and energy level — the complete session toolkit. Plus Roz's reminder that all of this gets easier with practice. Work with friends, work with families you're already comfortable with, and let the prompts become second nature.
CONNECT WITH ROZ ACKERMAN:
Instagram: @rozackermanphoto
Website: https://rozackerman.com
Submit a question or topic: [email protected]
Roz Ackerman is a lifestyle family & couples photographer based near Denver, Colorado.
By Roz Ackerman PhotographyWhat to Say When You Don't Know What to Say at Family Photo Sessions
Ever freeze up at a family session and wonder what to actually say to get real, genuine moments? In this episode, Roz breaks down the difference between posing and prompting — and why that shift changed everything about how she shoots. You'll walk away with a practical toolkit of prompts organized by purpose: getting kids to cooperate, creating genuine connection, and what to do when something falls completely flat.
[00:01] Welcome + Episode Intro
[01:33] Mom Life Update
[05:15] Being New to This + Doing the Hard Thing
[05:59] Posing vs. Prompting — The Real Difference
The distinction that changes everything. Posing is about where you place people and how their bodies look. Prompting is about creating conditions where something real can develop. Roz shares how she started her photography career leaning into posing — and why it quickly became clear that prompting was a better fit for lifestyle and family work.
[09:05] What to Do After a Prompt Lands
One of the most overlooked skills: give the prompt, then stop talking. Roz talks about the importance of letting the moment unfold rather than over-directing, and why the in-between moments are usually the ones worth capturing.
[10:42] Episode Structure Overview
A quick roadmap — kid cooperation prompts, connection-based prompts, and what to do when things flop.
[11:57] Setting Expectations With Families Before You Start
Roz's go-to move before any family session: a quick five-minute chat that normalizes the chaos. Kids crying, toddler meltdowns, someone needing a time-out — all of it is fine. The goal isn't perfect smiles; it's connection and real moments.
[14:38] Getting Kids to Trust You First
Before any prompt lands, you need the child. Roz talks about getting low, using the client questionnaire to gather talking points, and giving toddlers a sense of ownership and control — because toddlers who feel in control are toddlers who cooperate.
[18:04] Kid Cooperation Prompts
Six prompts specifically designed to get kids engaged, interacting, and (occasionally) forgetting there's a camera:[29:20] Connection-Based Prompts
The prompts that make parents tear up when they get their gallery back. Roz talks about reading the room before pulling these out — high energy is not the moment for a deeply emotional prompt.
[42:10] Reading the Room + When Prompts Flop
Prompts fall flat. It's normal. Roz's real-session story: trying the airplane prompt with a toddler who said no — and how she eventually got him flying by having mom do it first.
The lesson: timing matters more than the prompt itself. If you're talking too much and the family isn't buying in, move on. Come back to it later.
[46:38] How Roz Approaches the Flow of a Session
She tells families upfront: we're going with the flow today. No rigid list, no working through poses in order. Just try something, see where it goes, stay in observation mode. That's where the organic moments come from.
[47:53] Wrapping Up + What's Coming Next
A tease for the next full episode: 30 poses organized by category and energy level — the complete session toolkit. Plus Roz's reminder that all of this gets easier with practice. Work with friends, work with families you're already comfortable with, and let the prompts become second nature.
CONNECT WITH ROZ ACKERMAN:
Instagram: @rozackermanphoto
Website: https://rozackerman.com
Submit a question or topic: [email protected]
Roz Ackerman is a lifestyle family & couples photographer based near Denver, Colorado.