Category: Professional Development

  • Getting Started in VO? Start With Product Quality

    Getting Started in VO? Start With Product Quality

    The business of VO is like most other businesses, in that it is multi-faceted. That is, you are providing a product (or service), which must be marketed/sold within your potential marketplace, and the necessary business administration systems (bookkeeping, accounts payable, accounts receivable) must be in place to keep the business running smoothly.

    When you are just starting out, it can be overwhelming. An independent VO provider, like myself, wears all of the business hats. You are the featured artist, you are the recording engineer, you are the studio designer, you are the bookkeeper, you are the business systems selection committee, you are the customer service department, you are the social media director, the sales and marketing director, the operations manager… whew!

    Obviously, over time you will have to learn to switch roles quickly and smoothly. Having a weekly plan is, for me, a necessary tool to both reduce the cognitive waste associated with context switching and also ensure that I don’t overlook one of my important business roles. It is easy to get caught up recording in the booth, or producing, and neglect aspects like marketing or billing. Until you run out of work, or money, or both!

    But what aspect of the VO business is most important at the start? In my opinion: product (audio) quality. By this I do not mean the quality of your performance, although that is obviously very important. I mean the quality of the sound file you produce. Is it Lo-Fi? Are there noticeable, or perhaps, subtle room echoes? Can we hear a distant rumble or hum? Is it too soft, or too loud (clipping)?

    Ask yourself: would you rather listen to an audiobook with an “OK performance” narrator and pristine audio, or a “world class performance” with quality so poor it sounds like it was recorded over POTS telephone line? I suspect most people will choose the higher quality every time.

    The coveted Neumann U87 <drool>
    (Do you really have CA$4000 to spend?)

    If that is true, then there is no point in starting your marketing campaign if you have poor quality audio. If you manage to establish a potential customer relationship, you will be known as the ‘bad audio’ guy/gal! Even if your quality improves greatly over time, you now have your ‘bad audio quality’ reputation working against you.

    Therefore, first things first: work on your audio product quality!

    Does this mean go out on day one and buy that wallet crushing Neumann U87? NO!

    In fact, that will likely cause more audio quality problems. How so? Well, I’ll bet that most audio product quality problems encountered by new VO entrepreneurs are caused by their recording booth, or lack thereof. If you are recording in a bad (noisy, reflective, etc.) environment, a great microphone will do a great job of capturing all those problems!

    “OK, PeMo, you are saying I must go out, on day one, and buy a professional Whisper Room?” NO! (Although, if you have the money to spend, it is not a bad thing to do; but do you really have several thousand dollars to start?)

    The venerated Whisper Room <drool>
    (Do you really have CA$5000-$8000 to spend?)

    What I am saying is you have to get your recording environment optimized.

    “But PeMo, what about the production processing chain optimization?” you ask. My response: if your recording is bad, because of bad recording environment, your are wasting your time trying to ‘fix it in post’. Garbage in, garbage out.

    When I started out, I custom built my recording booth. Even before that, I spent time auditing the ambient sound at various locations so that my booth would be placed in the best location I have available.

    So, before you start spending your precious business capital on mics, pre-amps, audio interfaces, computers, DAW software, or DAW plug-ins, spend your even more precious time working on your recording booth/environment.

    Cheers!

  • Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Six Rules For Success

    Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Six Rules For Success

    I’ve been a fan of Arnold since the mid 1980s, when I was a skinny teen and thirty-something Arnold was successfully changing careers from bodybuilding (in which he was best in the word, many times over) to movie star leading man (in which he became Hollywood’s highest paid actor up to that time).

    On a business trip to Graz, Austria in November 2017, I was within striking distance of the Arnold Schwarzenegger Museum, in Thal, just outside Graz. A short city-to-countryside cab ride later, I was standing outside the very house that Arnold lived in, from childhood until he left Austria to go conquer America.

    Open since 2011, the home had been carefully converted into a Museum of Arnold’s life and career. More correctly, careers: bodybuilding champ, movie star, Governor of California.

    Arnold: Mr. Olympia
    Arnold: T-800 Terminator, Conan, Commando, Predator Killer, etc.
    Arnold: California Governor

    At one point in the tour, there was a video display showing “Arnold’s 6 Rules for Success”. I shamefacedly admit, I was not familiar with these prior to this, despite my fandom and respect for Arnold.

    Arnold’s 6 Rules For Success

    Arnold’s 6 Rules are:

    1. Trust Yourself
    2. Break Some Rules
    3. Don’t Be Afraid to Fail
    4. Ignore the Naysayers
    5. Work Like Hell
    6. Give Something Back

    There are plenty of these rules for success around; it seems every life coach wanna-be has their own. It would be silly for me to claim that Arnold’s rules are the best or ultimate success rules. No doubt, I find these special, in large part, due to my longtime admiration of Arnold.

    I’m also familiar with the logical error “survivorship bias” when it comes to this type of thing, as there are other factors at play. In particular, Arnold possessed the genetic potential for bodybuilding that many people don’t, and no amount of effort will overcome your ultimate genetic potential, in any field of human endeavour. For example: you can train everyday at hockey, and you will improve and find your own level of “personal best”. You may even get to the professional NHL level, but you probably won’t ever be as good as Gretzky — unless, of course, you have the genetic potential for hockey greatness that rivals Gretzky’s.

    “Luck” is also a factor in achieving success. However, “LUCK occurs when PREPARATION meats OPPORTUNITY”. You cannot get lucky if you are not prepared. And you’ll never experience “luck” if you don’t go out and hunt those opportunities.

    So get prepared, start hunting, and push yourself to find your own personal best, no matter what you do!

    Note: this is not exactly the same video I saw at the Arnold Museum, but it is close enough. Enjoy!

    Deeper Dive

  • Audio Compression Explained Clearly

    Audio Compression Explained Clearly

    There are many videos on YouTube explaining audio compression. But this one is quick and includes helpful graphics, in addition to audio samples, to drive home the point.

     

     

    If you are new to mastering and thought that a compressor was part of a refrigerator (yes, a compressor is part of a fridge but that’s a different type of compressor altogether), this is a good place to start. The vocal example presented is singing, not VO narration, but this is still a good explainer video for VO newbies looking to understand exactly what audio compression is and why it is important and useful.

    The video refers to a particular Waves product Renaissance Compressor but the concepts presented apply generally to audio compression using any Compressor plug-in and with any (Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) software.

    Transparency Disclaimer: I have not been paid by Waves for this video recommendation. There are no affiliate links on this page. I have no agreement or relationship with Waves for promotion of their products. I have purchased and use some Waves audio FX plug-in tools.