Hire a Pro VO

 jackinthebox

Doncha just love the irreverent spokesman/mascot for Jack In the Box restaurants? 

No?  Too silly for ya?

Lemme ask you this:  if you had a chance to audition for the voice of “Jack” would you jump at it?

Uh-huh, ‘cause it’s a high-profile, lucrative national Radio/TV campaign.  And it’s not the kind of voice that should be created by “the guy down the hall”. 

‘Sad that so many (esp. local advertisers) decide to grab their secretary or thelowry sales guy to voice their spots ‘cause it saves ‘em a few media dollars.

Why I’ve never actually written my own apologetic for hiring a professional voice actor I couldn’t tell ya.  I’ve chewed on the concept, but seemed lacking in the motivation.

That ended when The Lowry Agency asked me to write just that kind of article for a snazzy culinary blog called: CULINARY SCHMOOZE.

culinary schmooze

Given the probable audience for that blog, I decided to drag out “Jack” as part of my argument.

The resulting article is seen on the Culinary Schmooze website, and is reprinted below.  Let me know what you think.

CourVO

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Say what you want about Jack In the Box restaurants…you have to admit the company has a professional operation. The food is hot, delivered in an orderly fashion, and comes at a fair price no matter where you happen to find a franchise.

But do you want just “professional” when you’re eating? No. That’s why a chain like Macaroni Grill might be a more quality choice. The ambience is pleasing. Food is prepared with care from a unique menu, and the service is usually charming. Absolutely professional, but with a quality component added.

Still, for a top-of-class experience, something is missing even at Macaroni Grill. That element is refinement. In Las Vegas, for instance, when you visit Ferraro’s new restaurant across from the Hard Rock resort, you’ll see the added attraction of gourmet food from award-winning chefs, a table setting and service second-to-none, even a Sommelier to suggest the perfect wine to go with your choice of entre’.
Professional? Absolutely.
Quality? Unquestionably.
Refined? But of course, Monsieur!

IT’S NOT BRAIN SALAD SURGERY
There are no posted signs to indicate Ferraro’s combines professionalism, quality and refinement. People just know. Enjoy a meal at Ferroro’s and there’s no mistaking the impression that you’ve reached a position near the top of the culinary dining experience.

This is not a put-down of fast-food restaurants. Quite the opposite, because, you see…even Jack In the Box understands that to be successful in the marketplace, their working-class product must nonetheless be portrayed in popular media with professionalism, quality, and refinement.

Make no mistake, the voice behind that silly guy with the white cone-head was chosen through a talent agency audition process that weeded out the un-professional, poor quality candidates with little refinement of their craft.

SPARE ME!
Puh-leez!….how many cheesy late-night, local TV ads have you suffered through, where the spokesman is likely the company’s owner, president, or maybe the secretary. There’s no mistaking the impression that you’ve reached a position near the bottom of the advertising experience. People just know. The unprofessionalism, lack of quality, and absence of refinement portrays no product you would ever buy, visit, consider for purchase, or otherwise patronize.

Viewers, listeners, buyers, and consumers can smell the odor of “cheap” a mile away. It’s a turn-off. No – more than that, it engenders an internal promise never to participate in THAT product.

PUT YOUR VOICE WHERE YOUR MONEY IS
Savvy company owners, presidents, managers, and ad agency executives choose a quality, professional, refined portrayal of their product/service with fancy graphics, good copywriting, enduring images, and the delivery — either on camera, or through voice-over — of a talented, experienced actor.

A voice-actor can bring the worst copy to life….can elicit emotion from the most colorless pictures…and can do it all in 30 seconds. There’s no mistaking the impression that you’ve reached a position near the top of the advertising spectrum. People just know.

Like a fine chef, a true voice actor takes pride in his/her work…achieves professionalism by working their way up the ranks…exudes quality through years of practice and training… and proves again and again a sense of refinement from experience. Most have found success in voiceovers by means of a tough evolutionary process known as survival-of-the-hardest working and most talented.

You could pay a lot less, and grab Clancy, the clean-up guy to be the voice of “Jack” the cone-head. Clancy may be able to mop floors, but it actually takes a professional, quality actor to produce a refined sound as sarcastically silly and convincing as the brand spokesman for Jack In the Box.

People just know.

 

Social Media: Got Time?

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At 3:54am PST, I ponder this issue.

How much more of my personal time can I afford to give over to Social Media?

That simple question begets a rash of other questions that belie the complexity of the issue.

  • First of all is the question: “Can I afford NOT to give that time, if I want a successful freelance Voiceover business under today’s new internet paradigm?”
  • Secondly: “Is it really a burden if I’m having fun?”
  • Thirdly: “Is it really a waste of time if it’s bringing me clients?”
  • Finally: “If I DO draw a line…WHERE do I draw the line?”

(There are even more caveats, but again, you have to draw the line somewhere.)

RETURN ON INVESTMENT

I’ve been especially pondering this issue on behalf of the upcoming attendees of June’s VOICE2010 conference in LA.  Along with voice-actor Terry Daniel, I’ll be expounding on the ROI of Social Media for VO’s in a morning general session, and I hope to have some darn good answers for people who paid good money to learn something.

‘Trouble is, Social Media is such a moving target these days.  There’s a lot of flailing around in a pushing-the-envelope environment that sees trial-and-error success and failure in weeks, days, sometimes even hours.

Yet, in this new frontier, there are gold mines to be found.  Luckily there are also volumes being written daily…mostly in the blogosphere…to help.

RESOURCES

HERE is an extremely helpful, informative article entitled 10+ TIPS FOR USING TWITTER TO GROW YOUR FREELANCE BUSINESS.

And for those of you brave enough to take on Google’s latest Twitter challenge called BUZZ,  HERE is a primer for getting around, called HOW TO DO EVRYTHING IN GOOGLE BUZZ (INCLUDING TURN IT OFF).

Will you be there in June?  It really will be fun and worthwhile. I hope you try to make it.  See the registration site HERE.

CourVO

Inside Chirbit

chirbit A chance mention on Twitter of a new website I found, grew into a full-blown exchange between me and the developer of the site.

The site is CHIRBIT

Briefly, Chirbit: “…enables you to record, upload, listen to and share sound bites easily. Chirbit is simple, useful and fun….”

It’s all true, actually.  Here’s the YouTube video I borrowed from the Chirbit site:

The site struck me as a delightful use of the potential of audio and social networking.  I eventually asked the originator of the site – Ivan Reyes – if he’d mind responding to a few pointed questions about Chirbit, specifically the possibilities for voice-actors.

Click below to see Ivan’s succinct, informative answers.  Pay special attention to the plans he has to apply the usability of Chirbit for voice-actors (answer 3rd from the last paragraph).

Whadya think? Any real-world application to the business of Voice-Over you can think of?

Thanks, Ivan!

CourVO

[Read more...]

Free, Loaded, PDF Reader

nuance pdf Gee, ‘hope I’m not going to get into trouble for spreading this around, but it seems like a pretty good product, and they’re giving away the software.

Sure, you’ve got Adobe Reader installed, but can it do what the Nuance PDF Reader can do?

From their website:

“Nuance PDF Reader enables you to do much more than just view PDF files. You can convert PDF files to Word®, Excel®, and RTF via a hosted web service. Use annotation tools to highlight, cross-out, and underline text for more effective collaboration. Even fill out and save PDF forms. Nuance PDF Reader takes up less disk space, is more secure than Adobe® Reader®, and works with virtually any PDF file.”nuance2

I don’t know about you, but that part about converting to Word and Excel sounds mighty handy for some of the VO projects you get from time-to-time….’cause why the heck doesn’t Adobe (or Nuance for that matter) offer a word-counter integrated into the program?

Click on the picture above or HERE to go to the Nuance site for that free download.

 

CourVO

The Trouble With Taji….

pavilion ….is really no trouble at all…’cause he constantly brings a fresh look – a fresh perspective on the business of voiceover.

His “Frankenstein” idea (see blog here) garnered attention from some of the major P2P sites, and the exchange of concepts led to some significant revisions in the plans for David Ciccarelli’s new Beta roll-out of Voices.com.

See more about that HERE, including a chance to participate in that Voices.com Beta site.

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But Taj’s latest brainstorm (although not entirely novel) has likely never been applied to VO in the sense that he states in his latest blog TAJI’S BIG IDEA.

Oh, no…I’m not going to summarize it here… you have to click on the big tent, or the link in the line above to read all about it yourself. 

Then be sure to comment at the bottom of his blog to further the conversation.

Yeah, we need more trouble like this.  Nice going Taji!

 

CourVO

VO Jobs Blog

30445578 Maybe I’m the last person on the planet to hear about this site, but on the off-chance that I’m NOT, I’m posting the link to this BlogSpot blog that lists VoiceOver jobs… or reportedly so.

I have no idea how reliable/helpful/authentic these listings are…just passing it along.

Click HERE.

CourVO

Straight Talk on Studios

danlenard2 No it doesn’t have to be complicated, and no it doesn’t have to be expensive to build a quality VO recording studio.

Despite what all the equipment vendors want to tell you, it’s not Rocket Surgery to build a home studio.

Dan Lenard would tell you that.  He WILL tell you that, if you join the teleseminar being hosted by VoiceOverXtra.

What a combination!  The accessability and support of VoiceOverXtra, and the common sense practicality of home-studio guru Dan Lenard!  What’s not to like??!!

Click HERE for details. 

Better get signed up fast, though, it starts Tuesday.  Oh, and BTW, this is a steal at the price they’re offering!

CourVO

Splitting Hairs Redux

Take a moment, if you haven’t, to read the comments to my blog Splitting Hairs from a couple of days ago.  I appreciate it so much when people respond to thoughts here, so thanks to Anthony and Wayne.

Let me just reprint another comment made by a close personal friend here in Las Vegas.  A guy who’s successfully run his own company for 25+ years before the economy shot his legs out from under him.  His response to my re-post of the blog on FaceBook sparked a lively debate between us over hors d’oeuvres tonite.

His argument comes from the perspective from that many some years of dealing with all kinds of hardball knuckleheads in his business (civil engineering), and it made me open my eyes.

Dave, welcome to my world!! If I had a dime for every discounted service I prepared in the hopes of landing the “big project”, I would be rich.

I call this the “call girl principal”…… The value of services rendered diminishes rapidly upon delivery of those services! Don’t take it personally and don’t enter into an agreement expecting a pat on the back just because you thought you did good work. The only way you will know if your services are valued is if they send you more work.

I have learned after 25 years in business that it is not about what you think is good, but what value your goods/service brings to THEM. Don’t assume you know what is best for them because you will be wrong every time. Your “rich” client didn’t get to where he was by being freindly and compassionate. He got there because of adherence to strict business rules.

What should you do? You should realize you’ve just learned a very valuable lesson and use it to strengthen your business acumen. Secondly, get a retainer!!!

His comment drew this remark from another LV friend:

I have only been in the business of providing a fee based service for a relatively short time but I too have learned that any service provided without a signed agreement, if not an agreement and a deposit, is a service provided for free.

Take solace in the fact that your willingness to work on ahandshake is noble, and I admire you for that. Although it does not provide the monetary reward you may have expected your talent and dedication will.

Thank you for sharing your story and opening it to the rest of us to comment.

CourVO

Thanks for all the constructive thoughts, people!

Kuhl Cooliris

cooliris VO People tell me they like my occasional web wanderings… returning with stuff that may or may not benefit your voice acting business, but nonetheless deserves a peak.

 

Such is the case with CoolIris.  That’s COOL IRIS.

 

A stunningly slick interface that lets you browse pictures, stories, videos…but offers a decidedly visual way to manipulate and make your selection.

 

Check out the video below, or just go there and check it out yourself.  Don’t miss the settings (gear sprocket) icon in the bottom right, and feel free to click and drag either way to move around the interface.

 

If you really like using this interface, get the Google Chrome Browser CoolIris extension.

 

CourVO

 

Splitting Hairs

What’s a fair price for earnest work?

The quibbling over that simple question can cost you money if things aren’t laid out clearly from the outset.  Now I understand why some Voice actors demand a contract, and at least some pay up front.

Here’s a real-life example (names omitted to protect the innocent):

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APPROACH

A friend approached me about recording the first chapter of a newly-written book.  The author is a multi-millionaire, rags-to-riches CEO of a hugely successful XYZ firm.  The book is his inspirational personal story of how entrepreneurship lifted him out of life’s early disarray to find wild success.

My friend is handling some of the online marketing and SEO challenges for this company, and needed the chapter narrated ASAP for a deadline to launch a certain milestone for this company.

COMPLETION

Within 24 hours, I had the chapter narration done, editing completed, and file delivered with a smile.  My friend was grateful for the favor, and promised payment whenever I invoiced.

The uncertain but hoped-for promise in all this was that I may eventually get the nod to narrate the entire book. 

CONFLICT

When the author heard my read, he liked it, but HIS public relations people were telling him since it was such a personal story, that maybe HE should narrate it.  That’s still undecided.  We all know there are just a handful of authors who have the wherewithal to artfully narrate their own book.  I don’t know…maybe he’s one of those.

Regardless, when my friend attempted to pass the cost of my narration on to the author, this is the response we got:

“I asked for a test version just to hear how he sounds with the book. I wasn’t expecting an invoice for the test or I would have had him reread it with changes until it was a finished to my satisfaction. I am considering him for the full audio, but that phase isn’t ready as of yet. My understanding was this was his bid for the entire project and not something I was paying to test."

ANALYSIS

Let me offer a handful of observations:

It strikes me as somewhat insincere that a guy who’s a self-made millionaire based on principles of entrepreneurship (as stated in this very book)…is unwilling to recognize the efforts of another entrepreneur in setting a fair price for earnest work.

Granted, there may have been a miscommunication between my friend and the author, and it’s to his credit that my friend is stepping up to offer compensation even though the author is unwilling.

Finally, disregarding the quibbling about whether the narration was an “audition” for the whole book, or verbally-contracted work…an “audition” or “scratch-track” of this length (18 mins) would certainly demand SOME renumeration.  No?

LESSON

Some voice actors have a hard ‘n’ fast rule about signed contracts, and at least some pay up front.  They say it’s just a matter of time before you get burned.  I haven’t been burned yet, and my business doesn’t have the force of, say, a Jennifer Vaughn or a Harlan Hogan.

How do you, or would you handle this?

CourVO