• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

  • HOME
  • DEMOS
  • AUDIOBOOKS
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Biography & Memoir
    • Business Education
    • Health & Fitness
    • History
    • Religion & Spirituality
    • Science & Technology
    • Self Development
    • Sports
  • ABOUT
  • BLOG
  • CONTACT

724-613-2749

bob@bobsouer.com

Career Advice

A birthday surprise

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

Thursday of this past week (December 20th) was my birthday. My wife and our oldest son, Eric, conspired to surprise me with a voiceover surprise for my birthday and they succeeded wonderfully. We’d made plans to eat at a particular restaurant for dinner with Cinda and our 3 boys driving to meet me there and I would go straight there from work.

Then, during the day, I called Cinda to say that because of a change in plans, would she mind if we met at a different restaurant in a different part of the city? We worked out the details for all of that and I went along my merry way through the rest of my day. What I didn’t know is that my change in the restaurant set off a flurry of behind-the-scenes electronic communication as this change was communicated to the surprise guests.

Later, as I was driving to the second restaurant, I thought about another place we’ve enjoyed eating as a family, so I called Cinda to suggest we switch locations again. Thinking back on it, is can see now that she was just a little too quick to say that she really didn’t want to change restaurants again, but being the somewhat clueless individual that I am, I didn’t really pick up it.

So, we get a table that has a few more places that were needed by the family, which as it turned out was a really good thing because just moments after we were seated in through the door walked my friends Brian Haymond, Kara Edwards-Suchan and Kara’s husband, Chris Suchan. It was such a wonderful surprise that Eric and Cinda cooked up for me. We all had such a delightful time, we ended up spending 3 hours over dinner.

Then right after dinner, one of the restaurant staff was nice enough to take a photo of all of us, using Kara’s camera.

Brian Haymond, Kara Edwards, Chris Suchan, Bob Souer, Cinda Souer, Eric Souer, David Souer and Brian Souer

From left to right are Brian Haymond, Chris Suchan, Kara Edwards-Suchan, Eric Souer, David Souer, Bob Souer, Cinda Souer and (sporting his super hero glowing jacket stripes) Brian Souer.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

Great game voicing info

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

My friends DB Cooper and Pat Fraley have an audio presentation available at the Game Developers Conference website that will give you a boat load of great ideas about doing voiceover work for games. And my thanks to DB for posting the link to this on the VO-BB.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

Planning your publicity

Career Advice, General

My friend Caryn Clark is not only a very talented voice performer, she’s a very good writer as you can see clearly on her blog. While reading through some of her recent posts, I came across this excellent piece chock full of valuable insights and suggestions for every month of the coming year about how to generate publicity for your business. I hope you’ll read the entire article, but in case you don’t have time, here are just a couple of tidbits.

The author of the piece Caryn is quoting in her blog post is Penny C. Sansevieri, CEO and founder of Author Marketing Experts, Inc. She begins by helping you think about where you want to place your article or PR piece: a newsletter, magazine, trade publication, web site…what ever makes the most sense for your niche. Next comes what I think it one of the key paragraphs in this entire article.

Once you define your publicity targets and get an idea of what to pitch when, you’ll want to open up a calendar and start circling dates that will matter to your story. Get creative with this! Often dates are overlooked because they may seem too small (like peanut butter and jelly day) but everyone’s competing for the biggies: Valentine’s Day, Christmas, etc. so why not add some off-beat holidays to your pitching calendar and see what happens? If you’re looking for every holiday under the sun (including international ones) try downloading the Calgoo calendar – this is a free program used to sync Outlook with your Google calendar – but an additional benefit of it is that it comes loaded with every imaginable holiday. A great tool to start your planning session!

Terrific stuff, Caryn. Thank you for sharing it.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General

Taming the Sibilant S

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

The sound of the letter S can be more than a little troublesome for some voiceover talent. Some of us choose to fix this problem with audio processing, though it’s easy to over-do this. On Voice Over Xtra you’ll find an excellent article by Susan Berkley about how to tame this problem without resorting to audio processing.

And if you’re not familiar with Voice Over Xtra, check it out. There’s a ton of valuable resources and membership is free.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

Keep your voice in shape

Career Advice, General, People

My friend Bobbin Beam links to an important article in the San Diego Union Tribune on her blog. The article is chock full of important information about how to stay vocally healthy and avoid problems with your voice. Thank you for the link, Bobbin. This is truly good stuff.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People Tagged With: vocal health, voice health

Getting in on the ground floor

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

The best way to do well with any business opportunity is to get in on the ground floor. My friend Avi Melman may be able to provide you with just such an opportunity with an animation project on which he’s working. I don’t have a lot of details to post for you beyond this very sketchy outline. This is an opportunity only for those who are willing and able to invest in this project in return for some of the equity points in this new action/adventure series.

If you are serious about this opportunity, you’ll find Avi’s contact information on his website. The time to act on this opportunity is now.
(Edited to clarify one statement.)

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

Thinking about goals

Career Advice, General

My fellow voiceover talent, Tim McLaughlin has posted some very cogent thoughts about the value of setting goals and building plans for reaching those goals on this voiceover blog.

And for more insights on this process, because while having goals are good, developing a plan for reaching those goals is also vital, be sure to read Peter O’Connell’s post prompted by Tim’s original post.

Excellent stuff, Tim and Peter. Thank you for the kicks-in-the-pants.
(edited and updated)

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General

It’s a glamorous business

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

Working as a voiceover artist is a lot different today than it was 25 years ago. On her new voiceover blog, Melanie Haynes offers some excellent thoughts about the way things have changed and what it takes today to keep moving forward.

Good stuff, Melanie. You’re right. It is a glamorous business…just not in the way most people think. As I’ve said else where on the blog, I think it’s the best job in the world.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

You can’t hide

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

When we think about marketing, most of the time we think about ways to connect with people, especially people who are looking for what we have to sell. In my case, and the case of my brothers and sisters in the voiceover profession, what we’re selling is our ability to tell stories, to communicate, to read in a way that brings a script to life.
But, Tom Asacker points out that there’s another side of marketing. Maybe one you haven’t thought much about. Here’s a key thought from his post…

The Internet is one humongous story exposure machine. Whether you like it or not, people can now dig and dig and dig and get to the essence of your brand . . . any brand.

What will turn up when folks dig into your brand? Those hastily written posts on someone’s bulletin board, back when you just had to get something off your chest? Or multiple examples of how you lack command of the English language? Snarky product or service reviews?

If there are some cyber-skeletons in your closet, there’s not much you can do about them, thanks to the massive cache servers all over the Internet. Indeed, trying to do something about them could expose you to much more bad publicity that you could possibly want. Transparency isn’t just a marketing buzzword. It’s a fact. There’s no better time than right now to start paying more attention to what, when and how you present yourself.

(edited to fix typo)

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover Tagged With: marketing transparency

No off switch

Career Advice, General, People

Have you ever been in a large meeting where at least one of those speaking is wearing a wireless lavaliere microphone? Sometimes that person will neglect to turn off the microphone, resulting in all kinds of embarrassing or distracting sounds echoing through the meeting room. The solution to this little problem is, of course, to always check to be sure the microphone is turned off except when it’s needed.

Life, on the other hand, doesn’t come with an off switch. Seth Godin offers a vivid illustration of this point on his blog, as he reminds us that we are always marketing, even when we think we’re not.

My thanks to Stu Gray and Joe Szymanski for leading me to this post through links on their blogs.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

On the writer’s strike

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

In the last several months, and with his permission, I’ve re-printed a number of articles written by Bob Fraser on acting and business. I received a very interesting email today from Bob in which he offers the following comments about the writer’s strike. I asked his permission to post them here, because I think there’s much of value for us who are and who hire voice talent.

Word around town is that the companies have no intention of settling the strike before mid-December and that the recent meetings were an attempt to ‘soften up’ the guild.

My take on the situation is that this may turn out to be one of the longest strikes we’ve ever seen in LaLaLand – because what the writers are asking for is a piece of the fast-growing internet pie – and a fair share of the DVD profits. The current contract is not very fair – as I said at the meetings of the Guild, during the ’88 strike.
Now, as a member of six entertainment unions, I’ve gone on strike many times in my career. I’ve been there, done that, and gotten the free t-shirts — and I know that for many actors this current strike causes large worries about work, career progress, and how long the financial stresses are going to last.

While there is little I (or anyone) can do to relieve your natural anxiety about the situation – I do have a few suggestions about how to spend your time more effectively … for as long as this first strike goes on. (I’m pretty sure the Screen Actors Guild is going to have to engage in a work stoppage as well, when their

contract is up in June, to get a fair share of the DVD and internet monies.)

Anyway – how to make the best use of this ‘down’ time:

First, make a commitment to use this time to work at improving your business. Don’t fall into the trap of thinking this is a good time to relax or chill. There are several elements involved in the process of improving your business, including product research and development, strategic planning, marketing improvements and further education.

Product research and development is essentially about sitting down and doing an assessment of precisely what it is that you are trying to sell to the industry. As I have mentioned more than once, selling a generic product is a very bad tactic in a business where brand names and recognizable faces bring in the big bucks.
A good place to start making specific changes is by going over my Unique Character Presentation idea. The UCP is a way of starting to brand your acting business with your own personality. But it’s only a start. There is a lot of work to do, in order to really separate yourself from the great mass of actors.
(You’ll find Bob’s UCP idea detailed in an earlier post on this blog called Actor’s Tool-Kit #15.)

Once you have decided on a unique brand, that is both consistent and congruent with the sort of actor you are, your next step is developing a strategy for marketing this specific product to the buyers (producers) and the buyers representatives (casting directors).

This, naturally, starts with your headshot.
Now, a lot of people will tell you that your headshot is your business card and although it seems ‘right’ – I just don’t happen to agree with the analogy. Your headshot is much more like those pizza shop door hangers we all find on our front doors, almost every day.

Joe, the pizza shop owner, knows perfectly well that most of us will toss his expensive cardboard advertising in the trash. But he also knows that on that day when you have a yen for pizza, his regular and consistent advertising will be there — to remind you to buy from him.

Of course, the slicker and more appetizing the picture of the pizza happens to be, the more likely you are to salivate a little.

This is precisely the goal of your headshots, postcards, zedcards, business cards and now, your website – to be on their ‘front door’ when they are looking for your kind of product – and make sure your advertising is designed to get the buyers’ juices going.

So, use this ‘break’ to assess and replace (if necessary) your marketing tools. Yeah, I’m suggesting that you get new headshots, postcards, etc … and do a ‘make-over’ of your website. What’s that you say? You don’t have your own website.

Then that’s a project you must get started on immediately. I hope it doesn’t come as a surprise to you that this is 2007 and a website is a necessity for every actor. The best thing about a website is that it’s an excellent place to do some actual selling.

A well thought out site can communicate volumes more about your brand, your commitment, your professionalism and your ‘rightness’ – than your headshot could ever do … and at about the same yearly cost.

Don’t know anything about getting a website up and running? Then it’s time for more research and development.

If stars are convinced that they need a website – then you probably need one too.

You’ve probably realized by now that all of this ‘work’ implies a great deal of planning – and if you’re anything like me, the idea of sitting down and writing out a plan is about as appetizing as a mimeographed pizza flyer.

But planning your business is the only way to improve your business – and putting up with the drudgery and labor of making that plan is the price you must pay to get it done. There’s just no question about it … a plan makes life (and career) so much more rewarding.

“Even a bad plan, vigorously executed, is better than no plan at all.” ~ Patton (The general, not the actor.)

So, stop kvetching about the strike and use your ‘free’ time to really get down to planning your business – and executing your plan.

A few months from now you may find that this strike is the best thing that ever happened to your acting career. Or, you could let it slide – and look into the thrilling possibilities of delivering pizzas for Joe. He’s got more business than he can handle – and he never goes on strike.

Now, if you don’t do on camera work, a headshot isn’t going to be part of your package. But, the same advice Bob’s given here applies to your voice demos.
For more about Bob Fraser, get a free subscription to his Show Biz How To, check out ACTION! The Professional Actor’s Workbook and Planner, as well as You Must Act! The #1 Virtual Acting CAREER Course.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

Thanksgiving is over for the year…

Career Advice, General, People

And yes, it’s a cliché to say that we should be thankful all year, but it’s true. A grateful heart is a joyful heart. My friend Dave Courvoisier offers some valuable insights about giving thanks that are well worth practicing all year round. Thank you, Dave, for writing such an excellent blog. And for helping me remember that it’s not enough to just be thankful. We need to express that gratitude in tangible ways.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

What’s the lesson here?

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

With my thanks to my friend Liz for posting the link on the VO-BB, here’s a sage bit of career advice for anyone in the voiceover business: Don’t make fun of your clients, especially not publicly.

Update: In Ms. Clarke’s defense, it appears she was misquoted. I’ll update again if I learn of any further developments.

Further update: Ms. Clarke has written a piece in the Guardian with more detail from her point of view.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

It’s OK to say No

Career Advice, General, People

In fact, sometimes you need to say “no” to a prospective client. Samuel Ryan offers these 10 Reasons to Say No on his site Wake Up Later. While this list is aimed as web writers and developers, much of the information is valuable for us in the voiceover world as well.

My thanks to DB Cooper for posting this link on the VO-BB.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

Boggling

Career Advice, General, People

I’m sure you’ve heard the expression “mind-boggling” at one time or another. This weekend (as I’m typing this I’ve just moments ago walked through the door back in Charlotte after flying home from New York this evening) has given me a new appreciation for this term. For my mind is well and truly boggled.

I think it will likely be weeks before I entirely get my head around all that I’ve learned. I used my Treo 680 and typed notes as fast as my thumbs would allow (and sometimes faster!) at all of the great coaching, ideas and thoughts Marice Tobias shared. A month ago, when I took my previous workshop with Marice on commercials and narration, I thought I understood mind-boggling, but this weekend has topped that experience.

Today was the promo part of the promo/trailer workshop. We worked on several pieces of copy, taking different approaches to each piece. Each of these approaches helped us understand how best to deliver the copy as ourselves. This is so counter-intuitive. After all, who else can I bring into the studio with me? Just me. My natural human tendency is to want to adapt myself to the copy, rather than finding the best way to present the copy as me.

Here’s one other inescapable conclusion I’ve reached regarding all that I learned, there’s no way to really understand how to put into practice what Marice teaches unless you are able to take the workshops with her. The experience is too tightly woven into the fabric of the entire experience.

One last note to this post before I go collapse for a few hours. With us was Stacey Stahl, owner of In Both Ears. What a fantastic experience it was last night at dinner to sit across from Stacey and learn many valuable insights about how voiceover agents like to be treated and (more importantly) don’t like to be treated by voice talent. Eye-opening and more than a little mind-boggling in its own right.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

You have to be amazing

Career Advice, General, People

I’ve written before about a life-changing experience I had in Nashville in the early 90s when I attended a workshop with Marice Tobias. This weekend has been another such experience, and no surprise, it’s again involved the amazing Marice Tobias.

I’m in my hotel room in Manhattan as I type this, still trying to get my head around all that I learned today at day one of a Promo/Trailer workshop this weekend at the Sound Hound in West 45th Street. Today’s study was on movie trailers. And the one thing that stood out to me more than anything else was that everyone in the room brought their A game to this thing. Which meant that we all made ourselves better, as we listened to one another, heard the coaching and direction being given by Marice to one another, and encouraged one another. I literally cannot describe what it was like in more detail. I don’t have the words. But, I know that I’m going to go home to Charlotte tomorrow evening a different, a better, voiceover talent that when I came.

Tomorrow is the promo focus. I’ll write more when I can, but if it’s anything like today, I doubt I’ll be able to put those experiences into words either.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

Getting your first voiceover role

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

In the archive pages of Animation World Magazine I stumbled upon this interesting article tonight that was complied by Heather Kenyon in 1999 about How to Get That First Voice-Over Role. It seems this sort of advice stands the test of time quite well.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

Acting for Advertising teleseminar tomorrow

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

Tomorrow evening, Wednesday, November 14th at 6:00 PM Pacific, (9:00 PM Eastern) you have another opportunity to take part in a teleseminar presented by Nancy Wolfson and Anna Vocino. Each of these teleseminars has been worth far more than the $49 price of admission and this time you can join the call for just $39. Registration details are on the front page of the Break Into Voice Over site.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover

What does the writers’ strike have to do with me?

Career Advice, General, People

I don’t know if you’ve been following the saga of the Writers Guild strike or not. Depending on where you live and what sort of work you do, your interest may be very high or you might not even be aware there’s a strike taking place.

Whatever your level of interest, I strongly encourage you to take a few minutes to read the open letter from David Lawrence published at Vox Daily today. David has taken a significant risk to express himself. You need to read it all.

My thanks to Bobbin Beam for posting the link that led me to this article today.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

The first 5 seconds

Career Advice, General, People

Thanks to Stu Gray’s blog (and a hat tip to Stephanie Ciccarelli for helping me find this post) I’ve just run across a terrific bit of advice about making connections with people from the RainToday blog.

The key point is this: when you first meet someone, if you don’t start a conversation with him or her in the first few seconds, it’s much harder to do so later.

Share this post

Filed Under: Career Advice, General, People

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 45
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Audiobook
Commercial
Documentary
Imaging - News Talk
Imaging - Smooth Jazz
Narration
Trailer

ARCHIVES

CATEGORIES

CAREER

FAVORITE SITES

FEMALE

MALE

OTHER BLOGS

© 2019 Bob Souer // Voice Over Site by Voice Actor Websites

source connect