Markets · 5-min read

A Korean resume photo studio charges $40 and takes 2 hours. The iPhone changed the math.

A LinkedIn-friendly AI headshot, smiling subject in a blue button-up.

Why East Asian resume-photo culture — already obsessed with polish — is the global market most likely to skip the studio entirely.

In Seoul, a basic resume photo (jeungmyeong sajin / 증명사진) costs about ₩50,000 — call it $38. The job takes about two hours, including the wait at the studio, the wardrobe touch-up, and the retouching. There are roughly 8,000 photo studios in the country that do this as their primary business.

In Tokyo the math is similar. ¥5,500 for the basic package, half a day for a "polished" set. A walk-up at a chain studio in Shibuya is so routine it's a stop on the way to the interview.

This is the largest, most price-tolerant, most polish-obsessed market for a single category of photo in the world. And it's being disrupted by an iPhone app.

Why these markets matter

The resume photo isn't optional in Korea and Japan. It's printed on the application. The recruiter is going to see it before they see the resume. The professional studio exists in every neighborhood because the demand is constant.

The relevant cultural fact is that polish is not the cultural taste in East Asian resume-photo culture — polish is the cultural minimum. The studio's only product was speed-to-polish, and the iPhone now matches it.

Polish is not the cultural taste — polish is the cultural minimum. The studio's only product was speed-to-polish, and the iPhone now matches it.
Formal Corporate style headshot — same person across all four panels
Formal Corporate
LinkedIn Friendly style headshot — same person across all four panels
LinkedIn Friendly
Tech Founder style headshot — same person across all four panels
Tech Founder
Executive Boardroom style headshot — same person across all four panels
Executive Boardroom

Same person. Four prompts. One selfie. ArcFace likeness 0.913 — measured, published, reproducible.

What we've heard from beta users

The pattern in early TestFlight feedback from Korean and Japanese users has been consistent:

The skepticism is about identity preservation. The studio gives you a photo of you. An AI photo that's even 5% off — slightly different jaw, slightly thinner face — fails the cultural quality bar.

This is the bar we built the product against. We publish the likeness number — 0.913 ArcFace similarity, against a studio-photo ceiling of 1.000 — so the claim isn't marketing. It's a measurement you can reproduce.

Pay $2.99 — see your preview

Credit applied to any upgrade. No free-tier tease, no watermark.

The styles that work in these markets

The default Korean/Japanese resume photo style is closest to Formal Corporate in our library. Solid neutral background, navy or dark blazer, white shirt, neutral expression, even lighting from a soft angle. That's what we lead with for the en-KR / en-JP cohort.

Korean university and creative-industry applications increasingly accept LinkedIn Friendly (smiling, daylight, less stiff). This is a recent shift — the formal "passport-style" resume photo is no longer culturally mandatory for tech, design, and content-creation roles in Korea, especially for under-30 applicants applying to younger companies.

Japanese applications remain more conservative, but Editorial B&W and Formal Corporate are both accepted for creative-industry applications.

What we tell first-time users in this market

You can pay $38 and walk to the studio. You can also pay $2.99 and find out in 90 seconds whether the AI version meets the cultural quality bar. If it doesn't, you've lost the price of a coffee and you walk to the studio anyway. If it does, you upgrade to the $35 pack, the $2.99 is credited back, and you have four looks for less than one studio set.

We're not going to win the studio's customers on the high end — the photographer who fixes your makeup and trims your hair before the shoot is selling a different product. We're going to win on the second photo, the third photo, the "I changed companies and need a new headshot" photo, and the under-30 cohort that grew up with iPhones and isn't culturally bound to the walk-to-the-studio ritual.

The math is going to do the rest of the work.

Pay $2.99. See your preview. Decide.

One selfie in. One to three real previews out, identity-locked to your face, in under a minute. If you upgrade, the $2.99 is credited back.

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