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#1 (permalink) |
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one tall drink of water
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Posts: 17
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hi all: newbie misschessplayer here...can a person specialize in medical voice-overs? any suggestions how to pursue?
thanks mcp
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keep ur i on the prize |
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#3 (permalink) |
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one tall drink of water
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Posts: 17
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well, i almost got cold feet after reading scott pollak's thread 'random thoughts for newbies' but i am determined to forge ahead in VO.....just got first microphone and headphones and seem to be able to say dacryocystorhinostomy with a bit of flair....also am in process of figuring out 'audacity' download...many years in medical field as analyst
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keep ur i on the prize |
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#5 (permalink) |
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User
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Murray, Utah, USA
Posts: 492
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Well, sure...you can be a specialist, but that means your clients will need to be referred by their primary care VO provider, or costs may not be covered by their VOMO.
Being uncharacteristically serious for a moment, even if you feel uniquely qualified in that area, you might want to branch out to at least embrace other technical fields. Being too concentrated on a niche can get boring, to the point you may fight the tendency to actually sound bored. I spent a year once doing nothing but VO for chemical industry safety training films. I'll avoid getting that specialized again. It stopped being fun pretty quickly. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Warm, Real, Natural
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Posts: 1,886
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A v/o can specialize in pretty much whatever they want, but my question would be "why?". Okay, it's a given that maybe you enjoy a certain profession, such as medical, or your voice style fits it well, and certainly pursue where your voice is the best fit. But to focus on one profession to the extent that you're missing potential jobs elsewhere seems suicidal, ESPECIALLY in today's economy.
I've done w LOT of e-learning narration over the years. I'd guess quite literally over a thousand hours of it. For a number of years it was quite steady and paid well. Now it's dried up. Thank goodness I didn't focus on it to the extent of not pursuing other v/o work or else I'd have been screwed. Remember the adage about putting all your eggs in one basket. In 1990 I moved to Atlanta and took a huge career risk by taking a 50% pay cut (after quitting my corporate job with BellSouth) to join forces with an audio-visual producer here who seemed to be doing well. Problem was, he had really only one really BIG client, BASF. He had some others, but BASF provided about 80% or more of our income. When the recession of '91 hit, it took their business and ours with it. I was out the door and job-hunting. A slight digression, but you get my point.
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Scott R. Pollak Warm, Real, Natural... The Voice of NPR Atlanta www.voicebyscott.com |
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#7 (permalink) |
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one tall drink of water
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Posts: 17
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holy *@$! i want my own retro encabulator now.....wonderful, thanks for that....can you comment on the 'Such A Voice' training program for beginners? i passed their first evaluation and they said i had potential, but they may have also told that to the pirate who was smoking a cigar with a parrot on his shoulder who was sitting next to me in the class....
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keep ur i on the prize Last edited by misschessplayer; 06-24-2009 at 02:02 PM. Reason: brain freeze |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Steven Hennecke, Voicer
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Central California
Posts: 239
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I have first hand experience and would not recommend them. I would instead check into two local schools in the SF area that come highly recommended.
See this old post: The Circus is in Town again! Quote:
Last edited by shenecke; 06-24-2009 at 04:26 PM. |
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#9 (permalink) |
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one tall drink of water
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Posts: 17
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that sounds just like the circus who came through our town.....i am glad to know that their price for a demo may be a bit...ur..high, but now i don't know if anything they said was true....will persevere
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keep ur i on the prize |
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#10 (permalink) |
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User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 143
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Welcome Misschessplayer to the forum. I have worked in the pharmaceutical/medical supply industry for 20+ years and am trying to establish myself in this industry as well. I concur with what everyone states above, they're bang on. You need to diversify to make yourself as marketable as possible to prepare for the unknown future. My recommendation would be to get the proper training first and then to get your start in VO maybe start with medical narration as a springboard, leverage any and all relationships that you may have in this field, but at the same time diversify so that you can penetrate other sectors of the VO industry.
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