What Are My next Moves to Embark in to a Career of Voice over Work?

Filed under:Great Marketing Tips, Info, Life Of Media — posted on December 10, 2009 @ 12:08 pm

Chances are someone has said to you, “You have a great sound, you should do commercials!” or some variation of that. The fact of the matter is, having a great sound is like having a great piano. It’s nice, but will do you no good until you learn how to play it!

Many people are told that they should get into voiceovers because they have a good phonation.

If you have ever been told that you have a great phonation, then you may have thought of making use of that great sound in a professional way, as a singer, announcer or as a voice over talent. phonation over, or adding your phonation to advertisements and recorded messages, can be a very lucrative field for a trained talent.

But first before I give the step-by-step guide to a vocation in voice over, in the commercial world all kinds of voices are needed; low voices, whiny voices, gravelly voices, flat voices and even average voices. So, even if you don?t have a classic ?good voice? you can enter the field if you have determination.

sound Over work is an exciting vocation for phonation-over talent but you need training to develop professional voice-over skills to participate effectively in this industry.

One of the particular challenges of this occupation of ours is that there is indeed a very highly paid and highly visible tip of the iceberg in almost every branch of the profession.

You can never read enough books, news clippings, pieces of ad copy or audition scripts. The more you practice reading a range of scripts, the wider your vocabulary will become, and the more versatile your voice acting skills. Diversify the material you are reading with regard to content, application and style to tone up your reading skills. Nurture a voracious appetite for reading.

Social bookmarks These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • OnlyWire
  • Socialize-It
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Furl
  • StumbleUpon
  • Netscape
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Reddit
  • Slashdot
  • Ma.gnolia
  • RawSugar

zero comments so far

Please won't you leave a comment, below? It'll put some text here!

Copy link for RSS feed for comments on this post

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.