J. Michael Collins guarantees that all work is authentic and will never be created by a voice clone or AI model.

JMC Voiceover Source Connect
jmichael@jmcvoiceover.com
202-329-9044
  • Home
  • My Demos
    • Commercial
    • TV Promo
    • TV Narration
    • Medical
    • eLearning
    • Corporate
    • Automotive
    • Radio Imaging
    • Telephony
    • Political
  • Recent Work
  • Demo Production
    • Demo Production
    • Demo Production Guide
    • Commercial
    • TV Promo
    • TV Narration
    • Animation
    • Video Game
    • eLearning
    • Corporate
    • Explainer
    • Medical
    • Political
    • Radio Imaging
    • TV Affiliate
    • Automotive
    • Telephony
  • Coaching
    • Coaching
    • Voiceover Coaching Guide
  • Photo Gallery
  • Success Club
  • Podcast
  • Events
    • Euro Voiceover Retreat
    • VO Atlanta
    • One Voice Conference USA
  • Public Speaker Training
    • Public Speaker Training
    • Public Speaking Coach
  • Giving Back
  • Blog
  • Contact

Blog

Client Communications Checklist: How to be really successful at live direction

by J. Michael Collins Leave a Comment

Recently, Voice123 asked if they could offer a guest post on my blog about how to handle directed sessions and if I would contribute some of my experiences to their article. Whatever your feelings regarding online casting sites, I believe the content below on client communications brings valuable insights to voice actors dealing with live direction early in their careers, and as such I’m pleased to have it live here. Enjoy!

Client Communications Checklist: How to be really successful at live direction

“No, it’s still too friendly. I keep telling you to dial back the friendliness and sound more natural. It’s just not working.”

Is that the first thought that comes into your mind when you hear the phrase, live direction? 
Is it coupled with the image of a frustrated client and confused voice actor struggling to get through a full read? Perhaps it’s because you had a bad experience in the past or maybe you’re simply hesitant to put your talent in the hands of an unknown director.

Either way, remote recording in live sessions can be a tough line to walk when working with clients. Live direction can help to avoid doing multiple takes that ‘just aren’t there.’ But it also comes with certain doubts. Will the client be able to express themselves clearly? Or will they constantly look over your shoulder, interrupting or questioning your performance?

These doubts lead many voice actors to wonder; is it really possible to have a successful live session when working with clients? Or is live direction simply a license for a client to say and do whatever they want? On the other side, should a voice actor even listen to the client or just go with the flow and do what they think is best?

What are some common issues during remote recording?

The most common delays arise when clients deliver feedback in a negative way. This could mean a client interrupts, nitpicks, asks rhetorical questions, or becomes sarcastic and aggressive. And no voice actor wants to be on the receiving end of this kind of negative communication.

First-hand accounts highlight how convoluted and misguided client direction take after take can confuse and break a voice actor. Sometimes, voice actors have even had to step in and tell the client: “Let’s give this a rest and try again in an hour.”

However, this can also be a two-way street. If a voice actor comes across as arrogant or has a ‘don’t-tell-me-what-to-do’ attitude it can create animosity and things can spiral quickly.

Worst-case scenarios; a voice actor might feel backed into a corner, misunderstand the feedback, or even feel victimized. A client might feel misunderstood, disrespected, and not only cancel the session, but could even pull out of the project altogether.

How can these negative situations be avoided?

The key to successful remote recording sessions is for the voice actor and client to speak the same language, have the right expectations and be willing to listen. Remember there’s a difference between just hearing someone speak, and actually listening to what they’re saying. This can set the scene for open, polite communication that respects the opinion, feedback, and directions of each side.

To help you with this, we’ve made a checklist of vital points that you need to go through beforehand. Once you tick these boxes, you’re ready for your next live session.

  • Choose a date that gives you enough time to prepare and be on time.
  • Send the client a list of acting terminology to help you ‘speak the same language.’
  • Practice the final script so that you can ask questions before the session.
  • Check that your software is working properly; skype, zoom, source connect, etc.
  • Keep the bigger picture in mind; a happy client is a repeat client.
  • Ask polite and well-phrased questions to help you clarify hazy feedback.
  • Don’t assume anything. And if you’re unsure, trust the pit in your stomach and double-check.
  • Stick to what the client has asked. If they asked for a full read with two takes, don’t give half a read with one take.

A key takeaway for clients, in this case, is to contribute to a faster process by knowing what you want, choosing the right VA, and guiding the session with engaging enthusiasm. And if you don’t get it right in five takes, take a coffee break and talk about golf and the weather – anything other than about the recording. Then try again.

“My job is to be a pro, and keep a good attitude until they get what they want. As long as the check clears, we do our job.”
J. Michael Collins

How to use live direction in your favor

Live direction is not something that should be feared or avoided when working with clients. It can save time, boost your confidence and reputation, and prove to a client that you’re a true professional.

But that doesn’t mean that taking live feedback comes naturally to everyone. This is especially true if you’re new to voice acting or have had a previous voice over career that never involved feedback or directions. So, how can you prepare yourself?

As stated in the checklist, before the session you can send your questions to the client to help you get a better understanding of the project. Once you have these answers, you can save them in your CRM and prepare for the role by getting into character, which can save vital session time.

Here are some questions you need to ask: 
  1. What is the style of the read? Friendly, persuasive, hard-sell?
  2. What tempo are you looking for? Pauses, no pauses?
  3. What pace do you need? Should I take my time and be natural or fit it into a :30 spot?
  4. What format would you like the final recording?
  5. If the client sent a video or example you can ask, ‘What do you like about this? What do you want me to focus on when I watch/listen to this?’

Remote Recording dos and don’ts:

  • Don’t give abrupt, blunt answers as if the answer should have been obvious to the client.
  • Don’t continuously interrupt.
  • Don’t use negative body language; avoid rolling your eyes, shrugging your shoulders, or staring into the distance.
  • Do use positive body language; nod and smile to show that you’re open-minded and listening.
  • Do speak politely when asking questions or explaining something; ‘Can you give me an example of that, please?’ 
  • Do use full sentences and examples when asking questions.
  • Do show you’ve heard and understood by acknowledging the direction; ‘Okay, so less friendly and more natural. Got it. I’ll try again.’

To help you with this, we’ve created specific templates that can be copied and tweaked to suit your needs.

Template 1

Hi, Name,

Sure, I’m happy to do a live session with you or the director. Do you prefer zoom, skype, or source connect? Send me some possible times that work for you, then I can choose one that fits in.

Just a quick thing, I’m busy going through the script, so if you could please slot in the info in the gaps below that would really help me prep for the session.
Style:
Speed:
Tone:
Can you provide something similar you had in mind? Video, audio, celebrity voice?
Do you need Mp3, wav, edited or raw files?

This is also a helpful list of acting terminology. You might know some of it already, but if not, it can make remote recording a lot faster.

See you in the session!

Check out the full list of free Client Communications Templates here.   

But, how does this work in real life? J. Michael Collins shares one of his favorite nightmare live direction stories. “I was in Las Vegas for a conference, using a third party studio with the client on ISDN. After exchanging greetings, the first thing out of the director’s mouth was, “Okay, so we’re thinking this should be sort of like Don LaFontaine…..but conversational.” I shared a glance with the engineer behind the glass and may or may not have mimicked firing a gun into my mouth. But, all the client heard was, “you bet,” and off we went trying to make the movie trailer voice sound conversational. 28 takes later we landed on something that sounded like Dennis Leary. I guess that’s what a conversational Don LaFontaine would sound like.”

The key takeaway? “I never expressed frustration to the client. In the booth, I’m the monkey on the microphone, and when they say, “dance,” the monkey dances.”
To sum things up, remote recording during live sessions can be a huge help when working with clients. It saves time, points you in the right direction, and when both sides bring patience and reason to the table, it can even be fun. Keep in mind that the key is to listen to the client very, very carefully. Interpret well. Don’t act; become the character narrating the script. Be cooperative and remember: the client is always right.

But there’s so much more to communicating with clients. Read our complete Client Communications Checklist For Voice Actors in our Voice123 Voice Over Guide.

Filed Under: Blog, Voiceover Coaching

Voice123 and the Coming Divide in Online Casting

by J. Michael Collins Leave a Comment

If you are a voice actor who makes any substantial portion of your income from online casting such as Voice123 or Voices.com, it’s time for you to get on Fiverr.

Buried the lede there, didn’t I?

Has JMC gone off his meds, you ask? No. Not today at least. And let me be very clear……I am NOT advocating the use of Fiverr by professional talent. I do not presume to judge anyone who earns money doing voiceovers on Fiverr or other low-budget platforms. I’m not so arrogant as to believe I can put myself in their shoes and understand their circumstances. It’s not a platform that I find appealing professionally or personally, and therefore I don’t partake, but to each their own.

However, if you are a professional talent earning professional industry-standard rates on the major pay-to-play sites, the acquisition of Voice123 by Backstage demands that you learn how to use Fiverr at your earliest convenience.

If you have been paying attention over the last two years, you’ll have noticed significant changes made to the functionality of Voice123 and Voices.com. Voice123 has had a complete makeover and has begun to incorporate more and more features designed to drive not just traffic, but engagement. From rating and ranking systems to endorsements to direct booking features and an incunabular escrow system, the changes to Voice123 are designed to create more touchpoints to keep buyers and VOs on the platform longer, all of which can potentially be monetized over time.

Voices.com has also made engagement-driven changes and has stepped out front in adding additional voiceover-adjacent services to its offerings to buyers.

These changes are only the very beginnings of the evolution of both of these platforms to become larger multi-service marketplaces based on the Fiverr model.

Why would they do this? Simple. It’s all about the Benjamins.

Fiverr has a market capitalization of $7.8 billion. Billion. With a B.

Now, to be fair, voiceover is but one component of the traffic on Fiverr, which offers a wide array of freelance services often at bargain-basement prices. However, if you add up all of the other P2Ps, including Voices and Voice123, combine them, and multiply the traffic by ten, that’s how much voiceover work is touching Fiverr every day. They are a billion-dollar company with a national-level advertising budget that dwarfs the tens of thousands that Voice123 and Voices can spend. Yes, the vast majority of that work is thirty-dollar-a-holler stuff that pros won’t touch, but that doesn’t matter to investors and big tech. Like a ride share service or food delivery app, the money is made on the churn. Every interaction with the platform is monetized, and it’s all about quantity, not quality. Private equity companies see engagement and transaction volume, and they see dollar signs.

Backstage recently acquired Mandy, a UK-based freelance platform that many voice actors and on-camera actors use, as well as several other freelance platforms that are less well-known among VOs. By adding Voice123, they are capturing as much potential traffic as their bankroll will allow. While these sites may continue to operate independently for a time, eventually you can expect them to evolve into a mega-platform that will be attractive as an acquisition target to even bigger fish like Amazon, Google, Facebook, etc…., and the model that has proven most successful from a sheer revenue and traffic standpoint in this regard is Fiverr.

Voices.com are no dummies either. Guided by relationships with their own institutional investors, they are positioning themselves for their own play into the services marketplace arena on a broader scale, and over time, you can expect that platform to evolve into something that functionally and cosmetically very much resembles Fiverr as well, as they look to capitalize on the freelance services industry’s most effective model.

Meanwhile, boutique platforms like bodalgo.com, VOPlanet, and CastVoices will continue to take more talent-centric approaches that focus on quality over quantity, because the owners of these platforms are industry people first and tech entrepreneurs second who are eager to make a profit, but not obsessed with becoming billionaires. As the coming years unfold, you will see a very stark divide emerge between sites that are smaller and focused on professional quality and professional rates, and massive conglomerates that acquire competitors and focus only on traffic regardless of the value of the transaction, (which is not to say they will be entirely bereft of quality work.)

The Evolution of Online Casting

What does all of this mean for the hundreds of serious pro-VOs who earn consistently from Voice123 and Voices.com? It means you need to start learning the mechanics of Fiverr. Not because you will be using that platform specifically as a place to generate work in the future, (though with a $7.8 billion dollar valuation, who knows, they might eventually just gobble up all the other players,) but because the platforms you are familiar with will start to look a lot more like Fiverr in the not too distant future. You need to learn the algorithmic principles that drive success on Fiverr, how those who use that platform manipulate the system to rank as highly as possible, what it looks like to be ranked, rated, and held at the mercy of the buyer, (having observed quite a few of the Fiverr-centric social media groups over the past two years out of curiosity, and also because I knew this evolution was coming, the unfortunate answer is it is rather soul-sucking,) and be prepared to adapt to the coming changes. Or, perhaps, begin to de-emphasize online casting sites as part of your business plan altogether and focus on the massive growth of search-based casting, direct marketing, and building stronger relationships with the agencies and other gatekeepers who are forward-thinking enough to remain viable.

People have long complained that online casting platforms make commodities of voice actors. While there has always been an element of truth to that, many VOs have been able to use these platforms in a manner that was both highly profitable and respectful of the greater industry at large. But as these sites evolve from mom and pop startups run by smiling Canadians and Colombians into mature corporations controlled by bigger and bigger masters, the future may look a lot more like running the rate race at the direction of the folks in the C-Suite. If you plan to be a part of that future, you need to learn how it works.

Filed Under: Blog, Voiceover Industry

Keeping the Fire Burning: 3 Tips to Stay Motivated as a Voice Actor

by J. Michael Collins Leave a Comment

Being a small business owner is rewarding in many ways, but finding the motivation to keep doing the little things that make a business successful can be challenging. As voice actors, people see our big wins splashed across their TVs, tablets, and movie screens, yet the daily grind is invisible. Here are a few voiceover motivation tips to keep your head in the game when the weight of business building starts to feel heavy on your shoulders.

1.) Have a routine, and stick with it.

If your workday has an established flow, it’s easier to get into a rhythm and feel as though you are operating at a high level. My days start with a check of my email and social media, a shower, and breakfast. Them I’m into admin. I clear my inbox before anything else, starting with messages that simply require a reply. Next are client projects that can be cleared quickly. Commercials, short narrations, promos, etc…. get done in the early part of my day. Then I clear priority auditions from agents, management, and existing clients/rosters. After this I have my task list, which includes invoicing, handling requests from coaching and demo clients, demo scripting, and other admin. Now I’m several hours into my day, and live sessions will dominate the rest of my time, while I handle emails and urgent auditions in the short gaps between sessions. Short breaks for lunch and dinner, lather rinse repeat the next day. This clear and consistent process allows me to keep my deck clear and my inbox as close to zero as possible throughout the day, so things don’t pile up. It also allows me to ease in and out of my week and avoid working weekends as much as possible.

2.) Build in downtime.

I’m a grinder. I go hard in the middle of my week with few breaks, but I intentionally book Mondays and Fridays as light as possible, and I don’t work weekends. I cram 50+ hours into the middle of my week, but that allows a lot of planned 3 and 4-day weekends, and I plan several weeks throughout the year to simply book out. Golden handcuffs clients can interfere with this, but if you build in downtime and stick with it, you’ll have something to look forward to as you are in the whirlwind, which will keep you motivated.

3.) Your income starts at ZERO every month.

I track my numbers religiously, but the number that I keep front and center on my tracking sheet is how much I’ve earned this month. For newer talent, seeing that number climb will often motivate you sufficiently, but for established talent looking at the number you’ve earned so far versus your needs/expectations for monthly income based on past performance helps to gamify the work experience, and adds motivation. No matter how much you’ve earned so far in a given year, seeing a small number staring at you on the second or third….or tenth! of the month can be enough to keep the fire under your ass burning and motivate you not to rest on your laurels or the expectation of repeat business.

Leave your comments below and let us know how YOU stay motivated!

Filed Under: Blog, Voiceover Industry

Negativity Bias in VO Media: Why the Industry is Doing Just Fine

by J. Michael Collins 10 Comments

There has been lots of research over the years in the retail and service industries showing that consumers are more likely to post reviews about and share negative experiences than positive ones. Psychology suggests that this comes from a negativity bias in VO media. It tends toward reporting negative outcomes over positive ones because we tend to simply expect the positive, and feel wounded when those expectations are not met.

Similarly, there has been much written about a similar bias in news media, the, ” If it bleeds it leads,” mantra that negativity gets more eyeballs than positivity. Open any news site, from any perspective, (and let’s be honest, there aren’t many objective ones anymore, are there?,) and you’ll be served heaping portions of what’s wrong with the world today, with perhaps a small side dish of feel-good for balance.

Unfortunately, the voiceover industry is not immune to this phenomenon. Whether in the form of social media, blogs, webinars, or other interactive engagements, we are exposed to a daily barrage of whatever the latest VO outrage may be. Fiverr and P2Ps are fun punching bags. Lately, fear of AI has spread faster than hungry fleas at a dog party. Tomorrow, it will be something new.

Moreover, sorting through VO social media is like navigating a sea of, “Why am I not booking?,” “This client ripped me off,” or, “My agent/manager/Keeper of the Jobs/whatever is screwing me over.” Cream doesn’t rise to the top. What floats in a commode does.

When legitimate, and many of them are, these complaints should never be dismissed…….but, they risk portraying what remains one of the best parts of the entertainment industry in an undeservedly unflattering light. Especially when the noisiest voices are often the ones least invested in the industry in terms of daily client engagement and bookings.

Here’s the actual truth: Not much has changed in the last 5 years or so.

The people who book consistently are still booking consistently. Indeed, many established talent reported 2020 to be the strongest year of their careers, as non-broadcast narration seemed to double in volume and commercial defied expectations and grew in the middle of a pandemic. And many of these same talent are seeing no drop off in 2021 after unprecedented year on year growth. Go ahead…ask any of the pros you know who book regularly what their 2020 looked like compared to 2019. Many have kept quiet what a substantial growth year 2020 was out of respect for those in other industries who were ravaged by the lockdowns, but the bottom line is that VO thrived to the point that agents and managers across the country were hustling to get their on-camera and theater actors trained up in the one side of the business that was still booking. We’ll likely, (and hopefully,) never see a year with that kind of forced growth again, but even just maintaining or slowly growing those gains in 2021 and beyond will take many talent to a whole new place in their career.

Newer talent had a rough ride at the start of the pandemic, but by the end of the summer agents were encouraging submissions and the additional work was starting to spill over. There was and continues to be a flight to familiarity among clients, but there’s more work today than there has ever been, and despite growing numbers entering the field, there are only so many with the requisite natural ability and training to book consistently….and, eventually, many of them do.

Has competition and the dominance of the home studio pushed down commercial rates? Absolutely, especially at the high-end. Local and many regional spots and campaigns remain largely static compared to 5 and 10 years ago, but there’s no question that nationals pay less than 5 years ago, frequently with more versions and lifts attached, and significantly less than 15-20 years ago. Nevertheless, savvy talent have become strong negotiators, and the savviest are making up for anything lost on national rates by feasting on the unprecedented volume of commercial work that new media has introduced. Over time, the very concept of a national commercial will likely fall away into geo-targeted micro-campaigns that may even feature multiple talent reading the same spot and distributed to different parts of the country. Commercial will continue to evolve into a volume game, but those who play the game well will be rewarded for their persistence.

The same is NOT happening in Corporate/Industrial, E-Learning, Explainer, and Medical Narration. Will AI eat some of these jobs? You bet! But there is absolutely no sign of some sort of apocalyptic singularity in which every buyer suddenly embraces Skynet. As with commercial voice over, there is more work out there than quality talent to do it, and those who book continue to book, and in many cases more than ever. Funny thing about busy voices is that they don’t have time to engage in the chattersphere every day, so you just may not hear them as much.

And heavily union and LA/NYC genres like Promo, TV/Documentary Narration, Animation and Video Games are doing just fine, as much of this work continues to be controlled by an iron guard of serious gatekeepers who won’t yield on the rates set by SAG/AFTRA.

If you’re terrified of robots, Fiverr, or P2P, there’s an easy solution: Cultivate the kinds of clients who are not attracted to such outlets. You’ll be surprised to find how many of them are out there.

Folks, the fact is that the voiceover business is doing swell. If that’s not your reality….your best bet might be to spend more time upgrading your performance game, sharpening your auditioning skills, improving your sound, and tuning out the negativity bias that pervades so much of our media.

Will the industry look different in 5 more years? Probably. But chances are it will look far less changed than you might think.

 

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized, Voiceover Industry

Poker Face: Why You Always Have to Project Confidence in a Voiceover Session

by J. Michael Collins 4 Comments

Voice acting can be a struggle. Training, investment, hours and hours of auditioning and marketing. It’s tough. Eventually, though, it can start to pay off. Before you know it, there you are, face-to-face with paying clients from major corporations who are looking to you to bring their message to the masses. It’s intimidating. Like a professional athlete, singer, or stage actor, the spotlight is on you, it’s your voiceover session. It’s time to perform.

And then….suddenly….you have marbles in your mouth. Lots of marbles. It’s practically a game of Hungry Hungry Hippos. And the butterflies in your stomach are flying in formation like insectoid Blue Angels threatening to cause the marbles to depart your mouth in a most inglorious fashion. You’re sweating. They’re looking at you. You start your first read and halfway through…..word salad.

How you react in that moment will define your client’s impression of you. Will you catch your breath and seamlessly hit a pickup? Will you show your fear and apologize? Will you run screaming from the studio in utter panic?

As a coach, demo producer, and commercial producer I have directed a lot of talent. Over time, I have come to see a pattern among the ones who make it versus the ones who don’t. Surprisingly, it doesn’t have as much to do with actual ability and hustle, (both of which are, of course, very important,) as it does with confidence, or at least the ability to project it.

When you are hired and find yourself in a live-directed environment, more and more of which take place with an on-camera component these days as clients are increasingly moving to Zoom and other video platforms to conduct sessions, even if the audio is going through SourceConnect, you are in both an enviable and vulnerable position. Most live-directed sessions pay well. Typically at least close to a thousand dollars, and frequently many thousands. Looking at you are people who would sell their beloved puppy to earn several thousand dollars in thirty or sixty minutes. Most people don’t understand the life of a voice actor…they just see someone with a $5,000 an hour price tag who better be freaking amazing. You’re gonna get a solid payday from your session, but you are now in the dangerous position of providing a high-priced service that is extremely subjective and intangible when it comes to defining quality. You have to own your value.

In a session, WE ALL MAKE MISTAKES. We have good days and bad days. There are good directors and bad directors. There’s good writing and bad writing. You are GOING TO fumble words, slur something, have mouth noise that sounds like Churchill’s bulldog, and otherwise suck from time to time. It’s normal. We aren’t machines.

How you handle these hiccups, however, will often determine whether or not you get hired again by that client.

There are two kinds of voice actors. Those who look at the mic and say, “I hope this goes well,” and those who look at the mic and say, “Wait ’til they see what I can do.” In my experience, the latter find themselves booking far more often than the former.

With your clients, you always want to be respectful, courteous, customer-service-oriented, and professional. With the mic? You need SWAGGER! Blew a word? No worries. Take a beat and hit that pickup like the star you are. On take 10 of a three word script? Make a joke in a cartoon voice and then hit that next ABC like it’s fresh. Client over-direction driving you nuts? Smile, and dance monkey dance. It’s their time. But whatever you do, DO NOT apologize. Do not ask if, “that was okay?” Do not say, “This doesn’t usually happen.” And do not ever show uncertainty on your face.

It’s your job to make the client comfortable that you’ve got things under control, even if you’re panicking inside. Put on your poker face. Project confidence. You can ask a question if you are unsure about their direction, but ask it clearly and concisely and without hesitation. When you screw up, instead of saying, “I’m sorry,” you say, “I’ll take that from the top,” then hit it again. Be the pro, at all times, and the client will respect you and see your value. Show fear, and you lose your credibility.

It doesn’t always take a straight flush to win the hand. Sometimes it’s enough to make the rest of the table BELIEVE you’re holding the winning cards.

Filed Under: Blog, Voiceover Coaching

Lead with Gratitude

by J. Michael Collins 4 Comments

The voiceover industry isn’t perfect. It’s filled with the same little professional hassles and internal squabbles that any field faces. Some of these challenges are more important than others and don’t necessarily deserve to be dismissed. Nevertheless, as people who get to do this work professionally, we should always stop to count our blessings. To lead with gratitude works; it has always carried me past even the most gnawing VO irritations.

Here are a few things I’m grateful for:

Agents

I’m grateful to have great representation in numerous markets. I am not the least bothered if the occasional job is sent to me that I’m not a good fit for or if jobs are duplicated among multiple agencies. I have agents who curate auditions just for me and others who blast the firehose into my inbox. I book with both, and every single agent I have has proprietary work that I don’t see anywhere else.

I’m grateful to be on their rosters in times when agents are fighting harder than ever to uphold rates and feed their own families. The inconvenience of getting an audition for a Hungarian female with a falsetto voice is a small price for having access to quality paying work.

Newbies

I love new talent. I love their enthusiasm, their energy, and their excitement. Do they ask many of the same questions privately and in public forums? Sure. And I think it’s great. The fact that they consider our opinions as pros to having some value is rewarding after putting a quarter of a century into this business. Nothing will dampen the enthusiasm of new talent faster than being ridiculed for a dumb question or being shouted at to use the search tool instead. Noobs, ask away. I’m grateful you think I have advice worth listening to.

Conferences, All of Them

From VO Atlanta to VOcation to One Voice to MAVO and That’s Voiceover and all the others, I’m grateful that the organizers make it their mission to create places where industry colleagues can congregate and learn. The enthusiastic reception, even for virtual content in the middle of a pandemic, is a testament to the quality that these events offer and the need among our tight-knit community to come together, whether in person or remotely, to celebrate what we do.

And I’m grateful to all the presenters. The veteran sages we see at almost every event because their wisdom is too valuable not to have them on the marquee, and the new blood that continues to join the ranks of VO educators each year, offering fresh takes and diverse perspectives that dovetail with the changes taking place in our industry and society.

Clients

Even the demanding ones who dump volumes of work on you the day before vacation, or need just one more ABC, or want you to sound “like Don LaFontaine, but conversational.”

You pay our bills, and in the end, the customer is always right. I’m grateful you value my performance, and I’m dedicated to rewarding that confidence with quality.

The Competition

Otherwise known as our colleagues, for being brilliant at what you do in whatever part of the industry you work and for pushing me to be better at everything that I do so that I can keep up.

Family

For reminding me what this is all about. Not money, visibility, or even the satisfaction of a job well done…….but knowing that another day in the booth is another day that they are taken care of and seeing their smiles as a reward for a hard day’s work.

Gratitude.

It’s so tempting to find frustration in the things we do. To lash out at those who annoy us with their actions or sensibilities. To engage in call-out culture and clubby backbiting.

Leading with gratitude isn’t the easiest choice. But after more than twenty-five years, it is one big reason I wake up each morning pinching myself…..wondering if I really do still get to do this for another day.

Filed Under: Blog, Voiceover Industry

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 21
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Archives

Subscribe

"*" indicates required fields

Receive News & Updates
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

CONTACT
202-329-9044
jmichael@jmcvoiceover.com
  • Home
  • My Demos
  • Recent Work
  • Demo Production
  • Coaching
  • Photo Gallery
  • Success Club
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • Public Speaker Training
  • Giving Back
  • Blog
  • Contact

Privacy Policy
©2025 J. Michael Collins // Voice Over Site by Voice Actor Websites
Website Hosting by UpperLevel Hosting

MENU
  • Home
  • My Demos
    • Commercial
    • TV Promo
    • TV Narration
    • Medical
    • eLearning
    • Corporate
    • Automotive
    • Radio Imaging
    • Telephony
    • Political
  • Recent Work
  • Demo Production
    • Demo Production
    • Demo Production Guide
    • Commercial
    • TV Promo
    • TV Narration
    • Animation
    • Video Game
    • eLearning
    • Corporate
    • Explainer
    • Medical
    • Political
    • Radio Imaging
    • TV Affiliate
    • Automotive
    • Telephony
  • Coaching
    • Coaching
    • Voiceover Coaching Guide
  • Photo Gallery
  • Success Club
  • Podcast
  • Events
    • Euro Voiceover Retreat
    • VO Atlanta
    • One Voice Conference USA
  • Public Speaker Training
    • Public Speaker Training
    • Public Speaking Coach
  • Giving Back
  • Blog
  • Contact