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People

A student of success

General, People

Stu Gray has tagged me, asking for some insights into success. Specifically he’s asked the following questions.

1. What habits have enabled you to become successful?

First, persistence. No one wins if they quit. Second, not being afraid to ask questions. While I was offering a small bit of advice to a friend the other day I started thinking about how I learned how to edit audio in a digital workstation. The single biggest answer is that I plunged in back when digital editing was new, but second to it is that I’ve asked a lot of questions of people who know more than I do.

2. What habits have blocked you from success?

The single biggest block to greater success, at least for me, is fear. I’m learning to turn my fear on its head and to use it as a motivator to move forward, but it’s not easy.

3. What advice would you give a young VO professional?

Read out loud every day. Record yourself as often as possible. Listen to what you’ve recorded. Compare the results to the kind of work you hear coming from the television. Even more importantly, study with a reputable coach. Don’t rush. Treat the voiceover business like the business it is. Recognize that the vast majority to people trying to make a living at voiceover not only fail, but never make any significant amount of money at it.

4. Whats the best book(s) you have read to help you become successful at what you do?

With all due respect to my several friends who have written books on voiceover, I don’t think this is something you can learn from a book. The books that have most influenced my voiceover work were The Bible, The Chronicles of Narnia, The Velveteen Rabbit, The Little Prince and the three Wizard of Ads books by Roy H. Williams.

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Sometimes the right word is: no

General, People

On this voiceover blog, my friend Brian Haymond details an experience where that was the case. By the way, the fact that he handled things very well is clear from one of the comments left on this site, a comment from the client in question. It’s an interesting opportunity to read both sides of the story.

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RP and much more

General, People

My friend James Lorenz has been digging into some of the various dialects of English as it’s practiced in its home country. That would be England, of course. It’s just the tip of the iceberg, but a very nice start.

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Passionate workers

Career Advice, General, People

Seth Godin has brilliantly captured the essence of my life as a voiceover talent. Some days can be very long. For example, no voiceover project I’ve done has ever taken as much time as the work I’ve been doing while recording of the entire Bible. (We’re almost done. We have a few more corrections and we’re finished.) The amount of time a voiceover project takes or the times of day I have to do work are almost meaningless because doing things right, delivering a great performance, is such delight it hardly seems like work.

The same applies to this blog. I love finding articles like this. I love passing along thoughts and ideas that I hope are helpful to you in your work, whether you do voiceovers or your hire voice talent. This isn’t work, it’s part of the fabric, the passion, of my life.

My thanks to my friend Kitzie Stern for posting the link to Seth’s article. (Kitzie it was such a delight seeing you at Marice’s workshop in Seattle!)

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A typical day for a promo voice

General, People

With my thanks to my friend Greg for posting the link on the VO-BB, and thus leading me to it, here’s an interesting story in the Boston Globe about life as a television promo voice. What I was really delighted to see is that my friend Frank Frederick is featured in this article, starting in the third paragraph.

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Skittles

General, People

Pat Fraley emails this evening with a YouTube link to this amazing bit of work by Sean Donnellan.

Sean is a student of Pat’s. Really superb work, Sean. Really.

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Part Two of the podcast interview is now available

General, People

Tracy Pattin has published the second part of her podcast interview with me on the VoiceRegistry blog. In case you’re interested and you missed it, you can still hear part one, too.

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Brain insight

General, People

Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor speaks about the brain. But don’t let that stop you from watching this video.

My thanks to Tom Asacker for posting this video, thus leading me to it.

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A seminar with Harlan Hogan and Elaine Clark in Portland

Career Advice, General, People

The weekend of April 12th and 13th, Harlan Hogan and Elaine Clark will present a 2-day seminar in Portland, Oregon. Registration details and a link to send in your deposit are on this page of Harlan Hogan’s site.
On Saturday, April 12th, Elaine is going to talk about Acting in the White Space.

Reading the words is only 25% of the voice actor’s job—
The other 75% is what you do in the ‘white space’ around those words…!

Sunday, April 13th, Harlan will speak about The Long Haul, building a voiceover career that lasts.

Winning an audition is great—
a winning career even better—!

My thanks to Stacey Stahl, owner of In Both Ears for reminding me about this upcoming event.
(Update: edited to fix typo.)

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A seminar with Pat Fraley on April 5, 2008

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

Pat Fraley just emailed me the following…

——————————————–
Recently, I’ve been focusing on teaching critical voice over skills, which are not often available. That’s why I’m presenting the Master Comedy Performance Event, Saturday, April 5, in LA, with Candi Milo.

85% of all Animation and Radio Dialogue Spots are Comedy driven. All other voice over genres of advertising and entertainment call upon Comedic Skills to some degree or another. It is a critical skill, and there are many valuable truisms to Comedic Voice Over Performance, which can be effectively taught.

I’ll be teaching with the greatest and most successful performer in animation ever: Candi Milo.

Here’s a link to more information and a Free Lesson from Candi.

http://www.patfraley.com/CandiMilo/CandiMilo.html
To reserve a place in the event, just e-mail me at: patfraleyteaches@aol.com

Regards, Pat Fraley
————————————————-

I’m sure this will be another great learning opportunity.

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Tracy Pattin’s podcast interview with me is live

General, People

I mentioned the other day that I had a very nice conversation with Tracy Pattin, who is the blogger writing the VoiceRegistry Blog. That podcast is now live, in fact, I’m listening to it while I’m writing this post. As you’ll discover, there is a second part that will be published sometime soon. I’ll post again when you can hear that.

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I had such a nice chat with Tracy Pattin the other day

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

Tracy blogs at Voicebank.net’s VoiceRegistry Blog. I’ve linked to several of her posts because she’s had many excellent things to say, interviews, and insights. A few days ago we exchanged several emails and then visited together on the phone for a podcast. Just a bit of the interview is posted for you to read now, and tomorrow the podcast will be live.

Thank you for the delightful visit, Tracy. I look forward to our next connection.

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A glimpse into the Summerset dialect of Southwest England

General, People

Bob Kingsley blogs under the name Somerset Bob and has published several podcasts called Somerset Life. Some of them were written by my friend and mentor Philip Banks. The others were written by Bob. All of them are virtually opaque to this set of ears, but then I’ve never before encountered this Somerset dialect of English. Whatever the case, they are an auditory delight.

Update: Be sure to read Bob Kingsley’s comment, below, for a bit of important clarification about this accent he performs!

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Build-it-yourself DAW

General, People, Tools

My friend Lou Zucaro has written a long, very detailed, and extremely helpful post on his voiceover blog about how he built his own digital audio workstation. As he says, the choices he describes are his own and might not be the same choices you would make; but there’s a lot of great information that will apply, if you decide to take this plunge.

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A new site from an old friend

General, People

While I’m in Nashville for a few days on a business trip (to the National Religious Broadcasters convention) I ran in to one of my very dear friends who has been an inspiration to me for many years. He let me know that he’s just launched a new website, which I want to pass along to you. His name is Wayne Shepherd. He’s also started a blog, by the way, so I’ve added both of these links to my blogroll today.

Welcome to the blogosphere, Wayne. I hope you know I mean that “old friend” comment in the nicest possible way!

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Charlie Supercat

General, People

My good friend Charlie Glaize emails this evening that one of his new voiceover projects is being unveiled at a trade show next week, but the video is already available on YouTube.

Charlie is the campy announcer. Good work, Charlie.

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VOICE 2008 update

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

More and more information is coming from the VOICE 2008 conference. Here is some information about the General Session presenters.

Friday Morning Keynote Speaker is Susan Berkley.
Susan Berkley is a top voice-over artist whose voice has sold millions of dollars worth of products and services on TV and radio commercials. She is the telephone voice of many Fortune 100 companies. Susan is CEO of Berkley Productions, Inc., a company that provides voice mastery training for aspiring voice artists, and well as performance coaching for business and sales professionals. She is the author of Speak to Influence – How to Unlock the Hidden Power of Your Voice. Visit www.greatvoice.com to learn more about this dynamic lady! Susan is a master marketer and a darn good voice coach!!

Keynote Speaker on Monday Morning is Pat Fraley.
Winner of the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the Voicey Awards in 2008, Patrick Fraley has created voices for more than 4,000 characters, placing him among the top ten performers of all time to be cast in animation. Pat teaches 700+ students a year in events, workshops, and seminars on various aspects of voiceover. His unique character voice curriculum is the only one accredited at the university level. He has taught voice for 35 years, is a member of the Voice and Speech Trainers of American and holds a Master’s of Fine Arts degree in Professional Acting from Cornell University.

Pat Fraley is the “Voiceover King” of working outside the box! During his special guest appearance at VOICE 2008, he will reveal his “Secret Dialect System” created for voiceover. You’ll be amazed at how Pat’s dialect secrets will change the way you work with your characters! All that and even more. . . Pat is one of the nicest people we know!
Learn more at www.patfraleyteaches.com

Keynote Speaker on Sunday is Marc Cashman.
Marc Cashman is one of the few voice-acting instructors in the U.S. who is on “both sides of the glass” as a Clio-winning Radio and TV commercial copywriter, producer, and casting director, and as a working voice actor. As a voice actor, he has been heard locally, regionally, nationally and internationally on radio, TV, film, documentaries, radio plays, video games and audio books. Marc has voiced thousands of commercials, dubbed foreign films, narrated dozens of audio books, and created the voices of many CD-Rom, online and video game characters. Oh, and did we mention. . . he’s a really funny guy! Find out why at www.cashmancommercials.com.

VOICE 2008 will be August 8th through the 11th, 2008 in Los Angeles. I hope I see you there.

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Ben Lepley’s VGA Dreams, Episode 1

General, People

One of the things I really like about the various connections I’ve made since I started blogging about voiceover is the way those connections lead to other connections. Here’s an example.

Some Audio Guy’s blog is one I discovered some weeks ago and added to my blogroll. He’s stopped by to leave comments now and then, all of which are appreciated. And as I do with all of the blogs I link, I check out his blog from time to time. So, over this past weekend, he posted a video from one of his friends, Ben Lepley. I enjoyed it so much that I asked if he and Ben would mind if I posted it here, too. They were nice enough to say, yes.

According to Some Audio Guy’s post, Ben does all the voices and all the animation. Nice work, Ben. Really nice.

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While we’re thinking about self-evaluation…

Career Advice, General, Getting started in Voiceover, People

My friend Dan Nachtrab emails in response to my post about Connie Terwilliger’s Self-Evaluation course. He sent me a link to a very interesting article that, at least on the surface, doesn’t seem to have much to do with voiceover work. But, think about these points…

* framing (how you present data is as important as the data itself)
* impact bias (overestimation of possible outcomes),
* confirmation bias (recognising only data that supports your hypothesis)
* loss aversion (we stand to gain more than we would lose, but our fear of loss prevents us)
* selective perception (seeing what you want to see),and
* rosy retrospection (integral to the repeated experience of family Christmas)

Mighty interesting stuff. Thank you for the link, Dan.

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The wrong questions find the wrong answers

Career Advice, General, People

My friend Blaine Parker isn’t just a brilliant voice actor (listen to his demos and you’ll see what I mean), but he’s also a superb writer. He publishes a weekly email missive called Hot Points and reading it is one of the highlights of each Monday for me. Below is the text of Blaine’s release today.
—————————————————————————-
HOT POINTS for The Week for March 3, 2008

WE SOLVE CUSTOMER PROBLEMS, NOT CREATE THEM

The number of times we hear it is staggering.

“We ask everyone who calls how they heard about us.” Makes me want to stamp my feet and scream like a little girl whilst yanking out my hair.

Well, maybe not.

But close.

Our problem: how to attract customers to our clients’ businesses. Our clients’ problem: how to service those customers. It is not our clients’ customers’ problem to provide lead sourcing. To expect customers to do so is rude and intrusive. It’s also a fabulous way for an advertiser to destroy effective marketing.

CUSTOMERS KNOW ONLY ONE THING.

They know what they want. They have a problem to be solved. They want the advertiser to solve it. They do not know, most of the time, how they heard about the advertiser’s business.
Guaranteed.

They might know they heard a radio commercial. They probably don’t know where they heard it. But if the advertiser has any presence in the marketplace, the customer has probably heard the radio commercial.

Many times.

Seen the billboard.

Many times.

Seen the newspaper ad.

Many times.

Seen the company’s trucks.

Many times.

Any business worth its salt has a media mix, with advertising all over town. They’ve been invading the customer’s conscience routinely, possibly for years. If the advertiser has been advertising with any persistence, the customer shouldn’t know how he heard about the business. The customer should simply know in his heart that this business is the one for him.

MOREOVER, THE ADVERTISER SHOULD KNOW IN HIS HEART WHEN THE ADVERTISING IS WORKING.

You can just tell. If new advertising is running, and the phone starts ringing or customers start coming in, guess what. The advertising works. It doesn’t matter what the customers say. I’ve had 50% of customers generated by one of my ads claim they heard it on a station where it never ran. I’ve had advertisers claim they were experiencing zero lead conversion—which we knew was untrue, because one of our own people was a customer, and was meeting other customers generated by our advertising.

As an website customer, I’ve repeatedly been asked to source the lead. And as an ad guy, I want to be helpful. But most of the time, the websites (a) don’t have all the sourcing options available, or (b) don’t let me tell them ALL the places I heard about them.

I’ve had client businesses where the salespeople simply make up their own answers to the lead sourcing questions.

How do we know this?

Because the leads were geographically impossible. You simply can’t be getting 75% of your leads from KXYZ when every one of those callers lives in an area code 100 miles south of KXYZ’s listening area.

“THAT’S CRAZY. I NEVER ASK MY CLIENTS IF THE RADIO COMMERCIALS ARE WORKING.”

I actually had a new radio account rep say this to me last Friday.

We were talking about whether one of his client’s was having success. He had a vague idea that everything was going well. I said to him, “You’re not asking them how the commercials are doing, are you?”

That’s when he told me that was a crazy question.

“I’ll hear from them if it’s NOT working. And they’ll buy more time if it IS working. But I never ask them if our commercials are doing the job.”
I thanked him profusely.

Just like a business will know if their advertising is effective, an account rep can tell if his client is happy—all without sticking a needle in him that says, “Hey, how are WE doing for you?”

All that does is plant a seed of doubt in the client’s mind.

And once the seed of doubt is planted, it gets to germinate and sprout a big, leafy tree full of questions.

OURS IS A BUSINESS OF FAITH.

We have to have faith in our media and our creative product. Our clients have to have share our faith. And we don’t do anything to reinforce their faith by letting them endlessly question us and their customers.

Yes, inquiry has its place.

But the questions need to be smart.

And so does the evaluation process.

And the only way that shows up is in the numbers.

Are the ads running? Is business up?

The ads are working. Pure and simple. But under those exact circumstances, guess what happens when an advertiser has no faith and starts interrogating customers?

The advertising fails.

Because the answers will never be the ones an insecure advertiser wants to hear.

As always,
Blaine Parker
Your Short, Fat Creative Director in
Los Angeles
——————————————————————-
If you’d like to start getting Blaine’s Hot Points each Monday, click through to his website, send him and email and ask him to add you to his distribution list. And thank you, Blaine for permission to publish this tasty treat today.

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