Can we see the before the re-edit version?
No doubt, the subject scale in the frame reducing practice of shooting tall narrow subjects, like people, with a horizontal frame has become a standard retail photographer offering.
Despite the fact that from an artistic perspective it makes little sense to have that much negative space in the image frame.
However, using the negative space for advertising purposes does make sense. But how many customers would hang the image on the wall with the advertising still in place?
I would have done some editing under her right eye to minimize the bag and the shadow it casts, and I would have brightened her sclera a tad more.
The above post by KmH is a very polite way of saying that this framing and composition looks very low-end retail shooter-like. I will be more blunt: this is an awful pose and awful framing. It looks like a totally unstudied novice shot it. It looks very unprofessional. Sorry, but it does. I have visual taste and sophistication, honed over decades of making photographs and looking at and evaluating photographs. I cannot look at a portrait like this and think anything positive about it. The girl's attractive enough, but her pose is horrible. She's cut off weirdly, casts a huge shadow, and most of the frame is empty, and she's riding wayyyyyyyyyyy low in the frame with a HUGE amount of dead, empty space above her head. This looks like a snapshot.