rlineberg wrote in post #8246184
Thanks for the insight Benji, I will keep all that in mind for next time.
(not sure if your last comment was an insult or not, but either way your right... I am still learning)
Not an insult, just wisdom from one who has been there and done that. In 1982 when I first started shooting portraiture I didn't want to do things the way everyone else did them, I wanted to be different. Different poses, different lighting, different everything, I wanted to reinvent the wheel. But after suffering many many setbacks, failed images, mad customers, and shooting hundreds (thousands?) of really really bad images I finally figured out that maybe I should learn how to drive down main street and keep the wheels between the two lines painted on the street, keep the vehicle at the posted speed and shift the gears at the correct time and also know when to apply the brakes and when to accelerate. Then after mastering all of that maybe I could apply to be a driver at the Indy 500. 
In the photographic world this translates to:
1. Knowing the basics of how to pose someone.
2. Knowing how to see available light, and if there is no available light knowing HOW to make light.
3. Knowing your equipment and exactly how to use it all the time even in a hurry or under duress.
4. Knowing how to get proper exposure and correct white balance every time.
5. Knowing how to interact with people to put them at ease when photographing them.
6. Knowing the little posing nuances so you can take a good image and make it a great image.
7. Knowing enough Photoshop to take the image from a "diamond in the rough" to a masterpiece.
Benji