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How it started...


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The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. It's often insightful seeing people's journeys and I thought to share my voiceover journey to hopefully help someone out there. This was originally posted as a Twitter thread so I’ll share the outline of my steps below.

Steps

0. I wanted to make audiobooks.

1. Learned from all the free resources provided by ACX.com.

2. Signed up for a website that had a range of lessons for a monthly subscription fee and went through all the beginner lessons.

3. I joined a few monthly zoom meetups with other voiceover artists, took advice on equipment from the course and bought a microphone and audio interface - Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 pack.

4. Learned how to build a makeshift vocal booth with duvets, pillows and a laundry trifold.😎

5. Started auditioning on ACX.com with my set-up and got a few Audiobook gigs

6. I also practised on my own with a few practice scripts I found online and posted these to a SoundCloud playlist with my contact details

7. Moved to a pay-to-play site and auditioned for every appropriate job I was offered to build experience and get faster and better at editing to specifications.

8. I got great client feedback which encouraged me to keep going.

9. I invested in a better microphone and another pay-to-play site with the money I had earned from voiceovers.

10. I continued auditioning and getting paid gigs.

11. Somewhere along the line I bought a course on how to use LinkedIn to market yourself for voiceover and implemented a lot of the strategies proposed.

12. I started getting enquiries from a few people who found me on LinkedIn.

13. Somewhere along the line I also created a website to showcase what I could do and make it easier for people to contact me and send enquiries.

14. I also started uploading voiceover sample excerpts of books I read or liked.

15. After a client said they really enjoyed working with me and asked if I did voiceovers in other languages, I started offering voiceovers in French too.

16. I got asked to speak on a panel at a voiceover conference.

17. I got asked to do the voiceover narration for an author whose first book I read and loved in the past. That was a full-circle moment for me.

18. At some point I started coaching a few people on how to be voiceover artists. Let me know if this is something that might interest you.

19. By the way, I've been providing voiceovers under a company rather than just me as the entity but more on that in a story for another thread.

20. The voiceover journey continues…

TLDR Summary

* Learn as much as you can from free resources

* Start practising very early on and often. You don't need permission to do this.

* Audition as often as possible. Focus on learning from the process first.

* Reinvest money you earn into your craft and equipment.

* Create your own sample content and share on your social profiles

* Make sure you are findable and contactable wherever you post.

Subscribe if you'd like to learn more about my journey as a voiceover artist, entrepreneur and a few of the other things I get up to. Or just drop a DM to say hi 👋 Twitter: @OreApampa. I'm off to do more voiceovers.🏃🏾

About the author

Hi 👋, I'm Ore Apampa. I am an entrepreneur and voiceover artist based in the UK but I do love to travel so I'm not always there. I share stories about my experience being a voiceover artist whilst doing a PhD and being a startup co-founder. I'm hoping sharing the things I learn on my journey will help other people a few steps behind me on their journeys. Subscribe to my newsletter - Ore's Gist to be notified when I post something new.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit oresgist.substack.com
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