Nancy Wolfson and Anna Vocino are holding the next in their series of teleseminars on Acting for Advertising one week from today, Wednesday, August 27, 2008 at 9:00 PM Eastern/6:00 PM Pacific. Registration details are at the Break Into Voice Over site. Price is $39.00 for the teleseminar (or $49.00 if you want also get an MP3 copy of the teleseminar afterward).
General
How not to ask for help
If you’re interested in getting starting doing voiceover work, you might have stumbled across this blog. You’ll find a bunch of posts in the Getting Started in Voiceover category through the link over on the right. But, as you’re reading, take a moment to check out this post from my friend Rowell Gormon, which will give you at least one good idea of what not to do.
Certain Vocal Characteristics Can Make or Break an Ad
With thanks to RadioCreativeLand for linking to the story, there’s a very interesting article at RBR.com on vocal performances for commercials.
The article, by the way, is written by Dan Hill, Preseident of Sensory Logic, Inc. and if you’d like to know more about him, he’s featured in another post on the RadioCreativeLand site.
(edited to fix typo, twice.)
Added to the blogroll today
RadioCreativeLand has a new spot on my blogroll, not least because they were kind enough to say some nice things about me.
SAG fact checks the blogs
Where ever you stand on the dust-up between AFTRA and SAG, it’s important to know the facts. SAG has recently posted some details about matters they regard as having been distorted on some blogs.
Another side of Rodney Saulsberry
Rodney Saulsberry has a musical background, something that I’ve learned is highly beneficial for a voiceover talent. Rodney is returning to his roots with a new recording produced by legendary bassist Stanley Clarke. Here’s how to hear a free sample or download his song “Better Than Before“.
A video look behind the scenes of the Dan O’Day Summit 2008
Dan O’Day has posted a video documenting a conversation he had with Dick Orkin shortly before this year’s first segment of the International Radio Creative and Production Summit got underway last weekend.
Rules of Engagement
Do not miss Tom Asacker’s blog post today. Tom quotes extensively from a new book by Phil Fragasso called Marketing for Rainmakers: 52 Rules of Engagement to Attract and Retain Customers for Life .
Here are a couple of key points …
As counterintuitive as it sounds, the surest way to lose customers is to give them too many choices. People are inundated with decision-making responsibilities. Think about your own life. Every single day you’re faced with literally hundreds of personal and professional decisions. Take a walk through your local grocery store and if your choice of cereals, shampoos, sodas, detergents, and breads don’t approach a thousand different options then you’re living in the wrong neighborhood.
And …
We’ve created an environment in which the experience of buyer’s remorse – questioning whether you made the right purchase decision after the purchase has been made – is being replaced with buyer’s aversion, a pre-purchase feeling of angst that leads directly to a paralysis-by-analysis mindset. If we make it too hard to choose, we make it very simple for the consumer to walk away. (Or even worse, we force the consumer into making a quick decision based on the one differentiating factor he actually understands: price. And that’s a lose-lose proposition for anyone who doesn’t happen to work for Wal-Mart.)
You’ll also find some suggestions about how to deal with this paradox that too much choice paralyzes decisions.
Rodney Saulsberry has a one-day class next month in LA
Rodney Saulsberry emails that he’s holding a one-day Commercial Intensive workshop in Los Angeles next month at Tree Falls Studio. The workshop will start at 10:00 AM and end at 4:00 PM on Saturday, September 20, 2008. You can register for this workshop at the registration page of Rodney’s site.
Marc Cashman announces his fall schedule
Marc Cashman, who was one of the featured coached and speakers at VOICE last weekend, emails his fall schedule of Southern California voiceover training classes.
Beginner – Saturdays, Sept. 6th — Oct. 11th from 10 AM-1 PM
Intermediate – Mondays, Sept. 8th — Oct. 13th from 7 PM-10 PM
Advanced – Wednesdays, Sept. 10th — Oct. 15th from 7 PM-10 PM
Marc says to register call 661-222-9300 and leave your name and number clearly. They’ll get back to you with further details.
Simplicity and voiceover work
I had the great pleasure of spending a bit of time with my friend Blaine Parker while I was in Los Angeles for the Dan O’Day Summit last weekend. Blaine is not only a brilliant voiceover talent, he’s perhaps an even more brilliant writer. Case in point, Blaine’s latest Hot Points newsletter, quoted here for your illumination and rumination.
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OVERCOMMUNICATION KILLS THE CAT YOU’RE ADVERTISING TO
OK. A tortured paraphrase at best. But it works. Last week, I’m in an airport. It’s about 20 minutes until my flight boards. I need something to eat. I walk to the nearest concession—a hot dog vendor.
The hot dog. A simple, universally sellable product. I’m hungry. I’m also busy, I’m tired, I’m preoccupied—life is generally happening around me and this hot dog concession has suddenly become part of it. I’m looking at the menu, and after a half minute or so, I turn and walk away.
The menu was impossible.
Down the left side was a cumbersome list of specialty hot dogs—sandwiches with various kinds of toppings. Under that was a cumbersome list of specialty hot dog combo platters. Down the center of the menu was a “Build Your Own†section with a cumbersome list of a la carte toppings. Beneath that was a list of different styles of sausages, hot dogs and frankfurters. To the right side was a whole other list of condiments and beverages and other things I can’t name herein because, frankly (PUN!) I couldn’t take it.
I walked away.
REAL LIFE MADE IT IMPOSSIBLE TO DECIPHER THE BARRAGE OF MENU INFORMATION
There was too much else going on to try and figure out how to choose. So, instead of choosing, the customer left the business behind. It would have been so much more successful if they offered only one choice. Not dozens.
And this is a very apt metaphor for so many radio commercials.
We harp on how a good radio commercial focuses on one thing and one thing only. Yet so often, so many radio commercials are filled with Everything That Can Be Squeezed In There.
I recently heard a car dealer commercial that talked about seven different models of car, had three different offers, and various pointless details about the dealer. I listened to it three times and finally gave up trying to decipher everything that was in it. And it’s my job to try and figure out the message in that commercial. I’m paid to do that.
Listeners aren’t.
Listeners have real life going on around them.
Listeners are standing in the crowded airport of daily existence and trying to contend with the hustle and flow.
If they are hungry for what you offer, but you give them entirely too much information, they will walk away—hungry or not.
I WAS RECENTLY REMINDED OF INCREASING A CLIENT’S CALL VOLUME BY 2,000%
In a time span of four weeks, their radio commercial had generated 2 phone calls. The commercial was sent over for review. No wonder it wasn’t generating call volume. It was about helping people deal with a serious medical problem. Yet the problem was obscured with entirely too much other information.
Information that was offered under the guise of being helpful—much like that hot dog menu (look at all your choices!)—yet wasn’t helpful in the least.
By shearing away all the things that didn’t matter, we cut to the essence of the problem—the listener’s pain—and offered the solution: the advertiser’s product.
Overnight, call volume increased by 2,000%.
All because the message was clear and uncontrived.
ARE YOU HUNGRY? WANT A HOT DOG? HERE’S WHAT WE SELL AND HERE’S THE PRICE
It’s as simple as that. Not, “Are you hungry? Then take this multiple choice quiz.â€
Got a problem?
Here’s the solution.
Now, a lot of advertisers aren’t going to understand that or appreciate it. They’re still going to think they need a Swiss Army Knife. “Look at all the blades in here! Pull them all out! Let the customer see them all! That’s how we get business!†No, that’s how you leave the customer confused. Entirely too many points. But throw a dart at the target, which has only one point, there’s only one option: the dart sticks, driving its message into the bulls eye.
ASSUME ALL POTENTIAL CUSTOMERS ARE LIVING LIFE JUST LIKE WE ARE
That means they’re too busy and they live in an over-communicated world. Add to the over-communication, and they will split.
But…
Give them a reprieve from all the information flying at them from all corners. Give them a simple message of hope and salvation in the form of one solution to one problem, and they will respond. The hungry prospect won’t walk away and go buy a packet of cheese & crackers from the gift shop next door because it’s easier and doesn’t require the effort of deciphering the options.
Simple is best.
Keep it simple.
As Frank Zappa said, “Call any vegetable. Call it by name. And the vegetable will respond to you.†Surreal, perhaps. But surreal with an essential grain of truth for any advertiser.
As Always,
Blaine parker
Your Short, Fat Creative Director in
Los Angeles
www.shortfatadvertising.com
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Now, having read that, you might be tempted to ask, what does this have to do with voiceover? After all we have no control over how the copy is written, we have to read the script that the client gives us.
True enough.
But, at the end of it all, our job as voice actors is to communicate, clearly and effectively on behalf of our clients. So, whether the copy is brilliant or just ordinary, we need to find the essential point of the copy and illuminate it.
While we can’t fix the copy, we need to help the listener understand the message as clearly as possible through the way we read the copy.
Anthony Mendez is scary good
My friend Anthony Mendez is a brilliant voiceover talent. Recently he’s launched a site featuring a rather specialized type of voiceover work.
Rick Party honored at VOICE 2008
Sunday evening at VOICE was an optional banquet. I’d say voiceover people dress up real nice, as you can tell from some of the photos posted here previously. But, one of the very best things that happened at the banquet was the presentation of the Community Award to Rick Party, founder of Voiceover Universe.
Rick Party (on right) receives the Community Award during the Sunday evening banquet at VOICE 2008.
Congratulations Rick. You totally deserve the award. And it was ever so nice to shake your hand and chat with you for a few minutes during the conference.
(Update: My thanks to my friend Rowell Gormon to adding a bight of light to the photo of James, Penny and Rick.)
A video from the Summit (released)
Nancy Wolfson and Dan O’Day spend a few minutes chatting right before her afternoon seminar at the 13th Annual International Radio Creative and Production Summit.
Further update: Dan emails that the video is now released
Come to the Summit next year and find out just how much fun it is for yourself.
Update: Be sure to check Dan’s blog for more information about the video.
Kara Edwards featured in the Charlotte Observer
My friend Kara Edwards gets a wonderful write-up in the Charlotte Observer newspaper. Good for you, Kara. Such fabulous publicity couldn’t happy to a nicer lady.
Update: Be sure you catch the video featuring Kara that’s an add-on to the newspaper article.
Philip Banks in Utah
My friend and mentor Philip Banks is featured as the narrator for a couple of video ads for the Utah State Fair. Quite well done and very much worth a few moments of your time, even if you live far from Utah. And thank you for posting the link on the VO-BB.
(UPDATE: Just to clarify, Philip isn’t in Utah, just his voice.)
Happy Birthday, David
Beau Weaver featured on Minewurx Studio Exchos
Michael Minetree emails today to let me know that he’s just published an interview with voiceover great Beau Weaver.
(edited to update link to new Minewurx blog)
Happy Birthday, Eric
August 11, 1990 was a red letter day in the Souer family as my oldest son, Eric, was born. His older sister Karen, his Mom Cinda and I welcomed him with much happiness. Now, he’s grown into quite a remarkable young man.
I’m especially fond of this shot of Eric with Kara Edwards, me and Caryn Clark from the VOICE 2008 banquet, so I’m using again here just above the original post.
You look great son. I’m very proud of you.
Summit 2008 and VOICE 2008 continued
After attending the Nancy Wolfson branding session on Saturday morning at VOICE 2008, which included this interesting moment as Nancy used life-sized cardboard images of 3 blond celebrities to reinforce one of her branding points …
I returned to the Dan O’Day Summit in time to catch Pat Fraley‘s excellent session on voiceover and copy interpretation.
One key suggestion from Pat’s session that I know is going to stick with me: Force yourself to read your commercial script through without any acting inflections or choices the first time. This will allow you to understand the entire story without locking in any wrong-heading acting choices.
Among the VO-BB folk I ran in to during the day were Caryn Clark, Kara Edwards, Rachel Rauch and Gregory Best.
At the end of the day on Saturday, several of the VO-BB members and other new friends joined up in the VOICE 2008 hotel lobby for some delightful conversation.
Charles Nove, Eric Souer, Gregory Houser, Melissa Exelberth, and Ron Levine are joined by several friends from VOICE 2008.
Also in our group were VO-BB members Rick Reid and Ben Wilson.
On Sunday, one of the highlights of the day was Joyce Castellano’s session on promo work. What a bright and interesting lady. Kara Edwards was in the session with me and spotted the amazing audiobook narrator Scott Brick sitting just behind us. Naturally we asked Scott if he’d be willing to take a quick photo with us, which he was gracious enough to do.
Sunday at VOICE 2008 concluded with a banquet. Since Kara Edwards and Caryn Clark didn’t have anyone to attend with them, my son Eric and I agreed to escort these very talented ladies.
James and Penny presented a Community Award to Rick Party, founder of the Voiceover Universe site. I regret to say my photo of that presentation didn’t turn out; but it was a really lovely moment and a well deserved award for Rick.
And I’ll conclude by pointing out that at the VOICE 2008 banquet, Kara certainly won the Most Amazing dinner award with her vegetarian bowl.