What Does Your Client Want? Tuesday Tech Tip – Studio Workflow
Too frequently, we end up negotiating with ourselves for VO deliverables. What exactly does your client want you to provide? A checklist...
Too frequently, we end up negotiating with ourselves for VO deliverables. What exactly does your client want you to provide? A checklist...
Working from home this past year, you may have noticed a tendency to "slide" rather than switch, then we wonder why our reads seem unfocused.
Friction, focus loss, and momentum failure occur most often during task switching. Parking for the exit means having a clear set of steps to get where you are going next.
With new VO gear, I tend to preach caution. Many assume the first thing they need is more expensive equipment. That's not always the answer.
Every voice actor dreams of having a VO-specific booth. But a voiceover booth doesn’t really fix anything - it just changes the equation.
Saving audio files is an annoying steps when recording. It distracts from delivering a brilliant audition. You can always save later, right?
It’s easy to get focused on the tech end of things. Too easy. Emphasizing only gear shifts focus away from the more important variables...
I don’t really think it’s possible to completely “learn” any software. When you frame things that way, it becomes overwhelming....
Over the years, I’ve developed a simple rule for computers: Don’t watch them work. Set up properly, a Batch Processor automates your voiceover studio workflow. Any time you find yourself repeating steps to more than one file, consider automating that task. Reach for your Batch Processing tool and get back behind the microphone.