Corey Snow has prepared a simply fabulous two part set of blog posts about phone patches. You’ll find Part 1 and Part 2 on his blog.
General
Spotlight on Whitney
Value
With thanks to my friend Pam Tierney for pointing me toward it this morning, you need to read what Seth Godin says today “On Pricing Power.”
Agents and work
There’s a discussion going on over a Voiceover Universe about whether or not having an agent is important for getting voiceover work. One of my favorite agents is Elynne Dale. She’s sent me the following comments, which I share with you here because I think these are very cogent thoughts, well worth some of your time to read.
A little agent perspective.
First, you can get work without an agent, though it begs the question my Dad used to ask, do you want to date a million men who have a dollar, or 1 man with a million dollars?
Can you have an agent while living remotely? yes you can, the business is virtual now, this is de rigueur. Wide open rosters, non-exclusive for the most part, a vast expanse for talent and agents alike, few boundaries left on the wild vo frontier.
You can have as many agents as you like, you can live wherever you like if you have crack broadcast studio capability in-house or nearby. Dear talent, you really are the masters of your own destiny unlike ever before, nothing is out of reach as far as your breadth of opportunities.
Can you book the work?
Ahh, there’s the rub. You will book all day long if you can compete with the top 10% of world talent, since state lines and oceans no longer separate clients from talent and there are only a few clients left (holdouts, mostly in NYC) who will not consider an ISDN session if it will give their project the edge critical for them to also remain competitive.
Regional work, yes there is some to be had, but everyday I hear from new local clients (we are in NY, Chicago, Denver & Seattle ) who want to dip their toes into out of town waters. I continue seeing any vestigial local/ regional mindset being replaced swiftly by the global market sensibility.
Therefore, the idea of having many regional agents to cover your bases in my potentially biased 🙂 yet extremely educated and well studied opinion is fast becoming a concept only. Liken it to saying you live in, let’s say Omaha, therefore you are an Omahanian voice talent.
Or, is it that you are a talent that works in any market you can compete in, but you’ve chosen to live in Omaha. This is much how we perceive and represent talent today, on your merits alone, your geographics are a ‘free swim’ and irrelevant. Clients choose the voice they like for the project, we relay SPIDS and dial-in patch numbers, done and done. Except for time zone, it’s your talent of concern and not your whereabouts. (there are the exceptions to this scenario, much TV series VO and ADR is done where the writers and producers reside)
So where does that leave us besides anywhere the climate, townsfolk and pizza crusts are to our liking? I say find the agent (or more than one but not a baseball team!) who truly believe in YOU and understand the big picture, that alone will open the most doors for you. It will also keep rates much healthier if you cannot be found somewhere for two worn nickels. Also, you’ll keep your agent(s) happier with you if they are not made to race to get you the same project every other agent is privy to.
For those of you who do book, you already know it is your talent that that keeps you on the radar and not your proximity. Staying a little exclusive in my opinion is a privilege that you have earned at this point. While many new ‘voice huts’ may spring up today, the actual number of real and bookable voice talent (for the better projects) stays small & pretty static. You are the ones large and in charge now I tell ya’, so don’t ever sell yourself short.
Trust me, this one action alone will be the one that can keep our industry proud.
J.S. Gilbert talks about voiceovers for games
My friend J.S. Gilbert is interviewed by the U.K. gaming site The Gaming Liberty.
Marice in Chicago
Marice Tobias will be in Chicago the last weekend in March. I hope to see you there.
The power of a single space
While I was reading Seth Godin’s blog today, catching up on a few posts I missed, I couldn’t help notice this small post called Autarky is dead. The thing that was so striking to me was that the central point of Seth’s post hinged on the difference in meaning wrought by a single space, which is all that separates “apart” from “a part.” That in turn underscores a point made many years ago by John Donne, (quoted here in the original 1624 language and spelling).
“No man is an iland, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if a clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as if a Mannor of thy friends or of thine owne were; any mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee….”
It’s alive
I’ve added a link to my blogroll today because I’m excited to see that Mags n Mel, the site for a new webisode series starring my friends Pam Tierney and MarÂitza CabrÂera is now live. I have it on good authority that the episodes themselves will begin appearing very soon. Meanwhile, we can get a couple of glimpses of the behind-the-scenes stuff.
Spotlight on Caryn
Work-Life balance
With thanks to my friend and manager Stacey Stahl who emailed this link, take about 10 minutes and watch this wonderful TED video from Nigel Marsh:
Audacity basics part 3
My friend Michael Minetree has now posted part 3 of a tutorial he’s recording on how to use the free cross-platform audio editor Audacity.
Telling your story
You as a voiceover talent need to grow your business just like any other small business. Fame Foundry provides some solid advice about how to tell your story most effectively. Well worth a few minutes of your time.
Audacity basics part 2
My friend Michael Minetree has now posted part 2 of a tutorial he’s recording on how to use the free cross-platform audio editor Audacity.
Audacity basics
My friend Michael Minetree is a guy filled with excellent ideas and he’s willing to give away at least some of them. Here is part 1 of a tutorial he’s recording on how to use the free cross-platform audio editor Audacity.
Faffcon 2
You still have an opportunity to register for Faffcon 2 in Atlanta and we hope you’ll make plans now to join us there the last weekend of this month.
Faffcon 1 in Portland last fall was a game-changing experience for many of us. We picked up gold nuggets all weekend as they were shared from one peer to another. Insights about places to find work. Ideas about working with agents. Working without an agent. How to use our websites to greater effect. How to start a Mastermind group. And the list goes on. The price of admission will be worth it no matter what.
If you are a working professional voiceover talent, full or part-time, you don’t want to miss Faffcon 2, February 25 through 27, 2011 in Atlanta. All the details, including registration information is at the Faffcon site. I hope to see you there.
Scott Brick on audiobook pacing
Pat Fraley has posted this video featuring Scott Brick, teaching on pacing in audiobook narration.
Why do I recommend Pat Fraley?
Any time someone asks me how to get started narrating audiobooks, my reply is the same. Take Pat Fraley‘s audiobook workshop. You’ll learn everything you need to know. Now, Pat has provided a YouTube video that makes the case for me.
A video for Iomega
Here’s a fun project I voiced a few weeks ago.
Iomega – Ego from Ethan Miller Productions on Vimeo.
Kudos to the producer of this piece, Ethan Miller and for the production company, Blink.
Cookies, cutters and voiceover
My friend Blaine Parker writes a weekly screed called Hot Points. From time to time his hits on a subject so germane to voiceover that I have to re-publish his article. This is one of those times. I’ll offer a couple of thoughts after I present:
HOT POINTS for The Week of January 31, 2011
YES, YOU MIGHT BE DOING IT WITH STYLE–BUT ARE YOU DOING IT ALL WRONG?
There’s a whole world of dark and dangerous advertising out there. It exists purely to entice people who are distracted by shiny objects. Often, expensive shiny objects. The world were talking about is the exciting and invigorating template advertisement.
If you’re unfamiliar with the term “template advertising,” you certainly know it by its characteristics.
Often, it appears as a radio commercial. (They exist in other media as well.) Some production company has assembled a very clever and well-produced scenario–most likely humorous–and they’ve left a donut hole for the advertiser to put in his name and contact information.
So, let’s say it’s a 10-second, amusing comedy sketch about the problem with needing glasses, 10 seconds about why you should really have Lasik, and 10 more empty seconds where the advertiser says his name and utters his phone number a couple of times.
Let’s go back to Advertising 101, friends.The key word here is “empty.”
THIS IS NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE BUSINESS
It’s an advertisement for the generic idea of what the business sells. In this case, we have a 10-second comedy about the problem with glasses. It’s followed by a 10-second sales pitch for the idea of Lasik. Then, it’s followed by 10 seconds of, “Call Dr. Joe’s Lasik Emporium at 123-555-1212. That’s 123-555-1212. Dr. Joe’s Lasik Emporium: For all your Lasik needs.”
It tells me nothing about Dr. Joe’s Lasik Emporium and why I should care. To borrow from the legendary Dick Orkin, it’s a Post-It Note that says, “We do Lasik, too.”
There is nothing representing Dr. Joe’s brand. There is nothing about how Dr. Joe solves the prospect’s problem better than anyone else. There is no emotional hook for Dr. Joe that makes me say, “I’d be crazy to go anywhere else to have my eyes done.”
We have a little “Ha ha ha!” happening with regard to the generic problem, a mention of the generic solution, and a name and phone number–which, by association, is generic.
You remember generics, right?
GENERICS ARE THE WHITE PACKAGES WITH THE BLACK LETTERS THAT SAY THINGS LIKE, “MACARONI & CHEESE” OR “COLA”
Generics are designed for people who care nothing about quality. They are designed purely for people who want to buy a commodity product at the lowest possible price. They are often risky purchases, offering subpar and even inedible versions of the branded food products they wish to imitate.
Generics are bad news. So, why would you want your brand to be generic?
“But it’s a funny commercial! It made me laugh because the guy has glasses!”
We hear this kind of response about bad ads all the time. We always reply, “But did it make you want the product?” They always look at us like we’re crazy–like the whole concept of an advertisement making you want the product is unfathomable.
Think this points to a problem with advertising in general?
TEMPLATES ARE OFTEN DESIGNED BY PEOPLE WHO DON’T GET IT FOR PEOPLE WHO DON’T KNOW ANYTHING
I hate to say that, because many of the people creating these template ads are otherwise talented. It’s just clearly evident that they don’t know anything about effective advertising, brand or (gasp) USP. Or, worse, they do know and they just don’t care. That’s utter hack cynicism. They know that so many advertisers are either handed crap advertising for their businesses, or are unwilling to pay for good ads, that they can dangle these bright and shiny geegaws out there and get a bite.
It’s like a brook trout on a Mepps lure. The trout has no idea the lure is metallic and fish-free, he just knows it looks good. So he bites. And he’s hooked. He’s been fooled.
Sorry, Charlie.
A TEMPLATE CAN SAVE YOUR LIFE
Yes, I said it. This screed is not a generic swipe at the world of templates. At Slow Burn Marketing, we use template websites for small clients on tight budgets. The difference is that we’re using a skilled art director and a skilled copywriter to fill a template framework with information that matters to the prospect.
We’re not letting someone sell us a generic website already filled with copy, then slapping a client’s name on it.
We’re doing our job, which is building a brand, then building unique, message-driven advertising, and using a template framework to continue spreading the unique message.
Conversely, I’ve seen people say, “Yeah, but we can use the template ad to drive traffic and THEN sell them the uniqueness!” It doesn’t work that way. To drive traffic, you must first make the prospect care. You can’t just jingle a set of keys and expect someone to go, “Wow! Whatcha selling!?”
They need to come away from the ad knowing exactly what you’re selling and why it’s better than what Dr. Joe is selling. If the prospect doesn’t know, if the message isn’t conveyed convincingly, the ad is a failure and will convince no one.
COOKIE CUTTERS ARE NOT MADE FOR MARKETING
When a prospect sees or hears an advertisement, the desired reaction should be, “Wow, he’s talking to me. He understands my problem, and has the answer that’s so much better than those other guys! Give me the phone!” But with an advertising cookie cutter, the only reaction is likely to be, “So what?” And as we’ve all seen before, if the message doesn’t pass the So What Test, it isn’t yet a message.
Build your brand. Craft your message. Make it pointed. And then, break the mold.
There is no template for greatness–only guts and glory.
As always,
Blaine Parker
Your Lean, Mean Creative Director in
Park Citywww.slowburnmarketing.com
www.spotsbeforeyoureyes.net
Follow on Twitter @blaineparker
Now, why do I think Blaine is writing about voiceover this week? Because I see a lot of people working the generic angle (if it can be called that) in their voiceover business. The thing that you have to sell, the only thing you have to sell, is you. Yes, your voice; but more than that, the whole package. Or are you just another nice voice?
Build your brand. Craft your message. Make is pointed and specific. Remember, there is no template for greatness nor for excellence.
Acting for Advertising part 10, tonight
Join Nancy Wolfson and Anna Vocino tonight, February 2nd at 9pm Eastern/6pm Pacific for Acting for Advertising Part 10.
This is not a sequel. Each of these Teleseminars reveals a chapter from Nancy’s core curriculum, useful Q and A from your peers, plus more marketing and business tips that you can put to use immediately.
Each moment offers unique behind the velvet rope of the agency/casting scene advice not available anywhere else.
60 minute lecture, 15 min Q and A…so bring your questions and notebooks!
Just $49 gets you on the call.
Go to www.breakintovoiceover.com to sign up.
Here are just a few of the topics to be covered:
* PATTERN RECOGNITION 101: Standard sentence structure contains word(s) you should NOT emphasize. Hit ’em, and you’ll miss the mark, big time.
What to hit instead? And how?
Hint: Rhetorical Antithesis.
(we’ll wait while you go fetch your Shakespeare Studies manual).
* FOLLOWING UP ON YOUR AUDITIONS Do’s and Don’ts.
* WAYS TO GET BETTER AT RESPONDING TO A LINE READ.
* HOW TO INTERVIEW WITH A NEW AGENT WITHOUT LYING. – You might be surprised by what’s okay to mention.
* Don’t Pretty Up the Mom (and how this applies to you GUYS,too).
* Three reasons why demos will never go away.
* Plus, a killer Q and A!!!
Go to www.breakintovoiceover.com to sign up!