What’s more elusive than a resi at Chez Fifi? A house at Point Dume? A win at Sundance?
The playbook for a gold-standard dream-gig portfolio.
That’s why we sat down with Artisan Talent’s pro recruiters, Caroline Imhoff and Rachel Martinic, to find out everything we’ve ever wanted to know.
Say less? Let’s jump in.
Short answer: yes. Before the portfolio, busy recruiters start on your LinkedIn. We're often getting 1000+ applications for one job. This is where we start our review process. Your first impression has to be a great one.
“Sometimes I have five seconds on a LinkedIn profile.” — Rachel Martinic, Director of Recruitment
Have a clean, up-to-date profile. Including a clear, professional photo.
You don't need every bullet point you'd put on your resume, but make sure to include keywords for your space.
Make sure dates line up, gaps are explained, and your About section is proofread.
Even if you don’t love sharing your work with the whole world, it’s part of showing up and getting hired. Having no portfolio link is a red flag. Tough talk? Recruiters don't have time to search to find your work. There are simply too many qualified candidates on the market right now.
“If there isn’t a portfolio link, I often move on.” — Rachel
Treat a missing link as a red flag to fix today. Include it in Contact info → Website and keep it the single canonical link.
If you need privacy, use one simple password on a single page, not the entire portfolio
We asked about PDFs, Dropbox links, and other formats. Our sources were emphatic: it’s website or nothing. It's 2025. Clients want one click, not folders or zips. And that website needs to be strong. Think about it: creatives are often asked to help produce websites, in one capacity or another. If you can't show off that technical capacity, it's a problem.
“In this day and age, there’s no reason not to have a site.” — Caroline Imhoff, Director of Recruitment
Here’s what matters:
“I know within seconds. Clean, modern, and coherent. That’s what wins.”
— Caroline
Curate your portfolio to the job at hand. For example, if you're a designer who works in beauty, make sure the featured projects fit the aesthetic. Expanded work is fine if it fits the brand or highlights relevant experience.
“You’re never going to have a portfolio that’s perfect for every job.” — Caroline
Lead with 2–3 projects that map directly to the role/industry.
The rest shows range, not randomness.
Deep-link the most relevant pieces when you share.
Feel like you’ve tried it all, and your portfolio’s not breaking through? We recently wrote about that here.
Only include your best. Weak work drags the whole thing down.
“Your portfolio is only as good as your weakest project.” — RachelShow your latest work. Ideally, from the past year. Recency signals readiness.
“I check if projects are within the last year.” —Rachel
Keep at least one recent flagship up front.
You can keep one iconic older piece—balance with new work.
No updates in 2+ years? That reads stale.
We've talked a lot about the power of a case study. It's the perfect way to give more without going too far. What was your role? What impact did the project have? How did it fit into the larger campaign or brand setup? Storytelling gives recruiters a reason to care.
“Give me: the ask → what you did → the outcome.” —Rachel
Use a repeatable block: Brief / Role / Team / Outcome.
3–6 lines is plenty for most roles.
UX/Research needs more process, data, and rationale.
One clear portfolio wins. Samples are great as tailored add-ons for a specific brand or role.
“One site as the source of truth—then send what’s most relevant.” — Caroline
Docs alone rarely get read. Show the writing where it lives—ads, pages, emails—so we can see how it performs.
“Don’t send Word docs. Show copy in context.” — Rachel
If you’re shifting lanes, orient us and connect the dots with real work—not fictional projects.
“Compete in the area you can compete best.” — Caroline
An about section is a yes. It helps recruiters connect with you in a sea of similar applicants. Same for your LinkedIn about. A human detail helps you stand out; the usual “coffee + dogs” doesn’t.
“Make it specific and memorable.” — Caroline
One recruiter leaned job-targeted, another leaned applicant-focused. The truth: it’s both. Showing a little of your personality will attract the types of companies that align with it. Sometimes it will help you stand out. With other companies, it might be a disqualifier. That can be frustrating but it will lead you to jobs better suited for you.
The takeaways:
Freelancers and startup consultants, we see you. Sometimes your latest projects aren’t your favorite. Here’s how to handle it:
Caroline's quote about this bears repeating: "You’re never going to have a portfolio that’s the perfect fit for every job.”
She shared the example of a client who’s worked in both tech and fashion. Her portfolio is a mix, and that’s completely fine.
The truth is simple: recruiters want clarity, recency, and a sense of you. That’s it.
Do that, and your portfolio stops being elusive. It becomes your green light for the dream gig.
Ready to put your portfolio to work? Connect with Artisan Talent! Our recruiters know what it takes to get creatives hired.