Your portfolio isn't just a gallery of pretty food photos. It's your most powerful sales tool.
When I started as a private chef, I had a decent Instagram account with restaurant dishes. But it didn't convert. Clients would browse, compliment my work, then... nothing.
The problem? I was showing off my cooking, not selling my service.
Once I rebuilt my portfolio with a conversion focus—testimonials, clear pricing context, proof of credentials, easy booking path—everything changed. My inquiry rate tripled. Serious clients started reaching out ready to book, not just browse.
Here's exactly how to build a private chef portfolio that turns browsers into bookings.
Before you keep reading, grab my free chapter from How to Become a Private Chef. You'll get the exact client acquisition system I used to go from zero to fully booked.
I see this constantly: talented chefs with stunning portfolios that don't book clients.
The mistakes are predictable:
Your portfolio needs to do three things simultaneously: prove you can cook, prove you're trustworthy, and make booking easy.
Yes, you need great photos. But not only plated dishes.
Show the full experience:
Why? Because clients aren't buying a plate of food. They're buying an experience, and they want to see you delivering it.
Photography tip: You don't need a professional photographer at first. Good smartphone photos with natural light work fine. Invest in pro photography once you're booking regularly—aim for 3-5 signature dishes shot professionally.
Generic praise doesn't convert. "Justin's food was amazing!" tells me nothing.
What works:
Collect testimonials immediately after every event. Send a follow-up email 2-3 days later asking for feedback. Make it easy: "Would you mind sharing a quick sentence about your experience? I'd love to feature it on my website."
Pro tip: Testimonials with photos (client with you, or the table setup) convert 2-3x better than text alone.
Don't hide pricing. Serious clients want to self-qualify.
My portfolio includes:
Each tier shows sample dishes, so clients understand what they're getting. This filters out price shoppers and attracts clients who value quality.
Include a note: "All menus customized to dietary needs, preferences, and event theme. Contact for bespoke pricing."
Clients hire people, not anonymous chefs.
Your "About" section should hit:
Keep it conversational. Avoid chef-speak ("I create transcendent gastronomic journeys"). Just be human.
This is where you separate yourself from hobbyists:
This single section can be the difference between "interesting" and "let's book this person."
Your portfolio should end with one clear next step.
Options:
Include response time expectations: "I reply to all inquiries within 24 hours."
I've included my exact portfolio structure, client inquiry script, and testimonial collection system in How to Become a Private Chef.
You'll get the full business blueprint—from zero to fully booked in 90 days.
Get the Complete GuideYou need both a website and social media. They serve different purposes.
This is your home base. Full control, professional presentation, optimized for booking.
Must-have pages:
You don't need a complex site. A clean, mobile-friendly WordPress or Squarespace site works perfectly. I use a custom-built site, but I started with a $12/month Squarespace template.
Instagram is where potential clients find you. It's your top-of-funnel.
What to post:
Every post should link to your website in bio. Use Instagram to build trust, website to convert.
If your target market is dinner parties for 8-12 people, don't only show Michelin-star micro-plating. Show approachable, beautiful food that matches your service.
I have two portfolios: one for high-end private events (more technical, refined plating) and one for casual family dinners (generous portions, rustic presentation). Know your audience.
Never. Clients can reverse-image search. It kills trust instantly.
If you don't have client photos yet, cook and photograph your own work. Host a "portfolio dinner" for friends (get their permission to photograph and testimonial).
Quality over quantity. 15-20 stunning photos beat 100 mediocre ones.
Curate ruthlessly. Remove anything that doesn't represent your current skill level or target market.
Photos alone don't build trust. You need testimonials, credentials, press mentions, repeat client stories.
Start collecting testimonials from day one. Even if your first event is for friends, ask for honest feedback and permission to share it.
Refresh your portfolio quarterly. Remove anything more than 12-18 months old unless it's signature work.
Your portfolio should reflect your current skill and style, not archive everything you've ever cooked.
Month 1: Created basic one-page website with 10 photos, short bio, contact form. Cost: €12 (Squarespace). Launched Instagram, posted 3x per week.
Month 2: Added first three client testimonials (two were friends who paid, one was a paid event). Updated portfolio with event photos (not just dishes).
Month 3: Invested €350 in professional photos of 5 signature dishes. Massive difference in inquiries. Added sample menus with pricing tiers.
Month 6: Added "as featured on" section (local press, food blog mentions). Collected 12 testimonials. Started seeing repeat bookings.
Year 1: Full website refresh. Separate galleries for event types (weddings, corporate, intimate dinners). Added blog (recipes, behind-the-scenes). Inquiry rate 3x higher than launch.
The key: start simple, iterate based on feedback, invest in quality as you grow.
Here's what I track:
That means for every 1000 Instagram profile visits, I book 6-7 events.
Before I optimized my portfolio (no testimonials, no pricing, unclear CTA), those numbers were 3%, 5%, and 40%. Same food, better presentation = 3x conversion.
Your portfolio isn't set-and-forget. Here's my maintenance schedule:
This keeps your portfolio current, relevant, and optimized for booking.
Everything I've shared here is just scratching the surface. In How to Become a Private Chef, you get:
Skip years of trial and error. Get the exact system I used to go from zero to fully booked.
Get the Complete GuideYour portfolio isn't about showing off your cooking. It's about making potential clients feel confident hiring you.
Great photos get attention. But conversion happens when you combine those photos with social proof, clear pricing, trust signals, and an easy booking process.
Start simple. Build as you go. Focus on conversion, not perfection.
The chefs who book consistently aren't always the best cooks—they're chefs who book consistently aren't always the best cooks—they're the best marketers.
Include high-quality photos of finished dishes, process shots showing technique, client testimonials with results, sample menus with pricing context, your story and credentials, and proof of insurance and certifications. Focus on transformation: show what you create and the experience you deliver.
Not at first. Good smartphone photos with natural light work fine when starting. Invest in professional photography once you're booking regularly (aim for 3-5 signature dishes professionally shot). What matters most is the food looks delicious and the composition is clean.
Start with 15-20 strong images covering appetizers, mains, and desserts. Quality beats quantity. Better to show 15 stunning dishes than 50 mediocre ones. Update seasonally and rotate in your best new work.
Show pricing context, not exact prices. Use ranges or tiers (e.g., "Premium Menu €105pp") rather than itemized costs. This filters out price shoppers while giving serious inquiries enough info to self-qualify. Always include a "contact for custom quote" option.
Cook and photograph your own work. Host a "portfolio dinner" for friends (with permission to photograph). Offer one discounted event in exchange for photos and testimonial. Never use stock photos or other chefs' work—authenticity matters more than perfection.
You need both: a dedicated website (your home base) and social media (discovery tool). Instagram for engagement and reach, website for conversions. Your website should have a dedicated portfolio/gallery page with filtering by course or event type.
Major refresh quarterly (seasonal menus), minor updates monthly (new signature dishes), continuous updates on social media. Remove dated work and keep only your best. Your portfolio should reflect your current skill and style, not archive everything you've ever made.
Conversion happens when you combine great visuals with social proof, clear next steps, and trust signals. Show the food, prove you're legit (credentials, testimonials, insurance), make it easy to contact you, and demonstrate you understand their needs (varied menus, dietary options, event types).