
6 pages you need for a successful voiceover website
To help you get found online by clients – here are 6 essential pages and content tips every voice over website should have
Rob and Helen are here to help voiceovers be seen and heard. We write about all sorts of useful things to help your voicing career including home studio setup and maintence, audio production kit and techniques, how to brand your business, websites and SEO advice and more. You can filter articles by topic or scroll from the most recent.
So grab a cuppa and a biscuit and have a read…
To help you get found online by clients – here are 6 essential pages and content tips every voice over website should have
Looks do matter with type. Helen looks at why it’s important to pick fonts that best represent you and brand values.
Taking a look at noise floors; starting with what a noise floor is, how it affects your recording and production, and how to make it better.
There are hundreds of thousands of fonts out there. The choice is huge and overwhelming. The first of 2 blogs about type where I guide you through some dos and don’ts, resources and practical considerations when choosing fonts for your brand or logo.
Read about what prompted Stephanie to start her branding project and her experience of working with Helen
Make sure your website is client-friendly, built to land you that new booking and gives and SEO boost at the same time
What is SEO and why should you you care? Helen looks into the basics and gives some simple tips to improve your website raking.
I want to take a look at an audio production process that is commonly used, but often misunderstood. It’s something that I get asked about fairly regularly and there is definitely a best-practice that can be applied to this process which is often sadly lacking. That process is normalisation (or normalization if you’re American).
As we come out of what has been a strange year it’s time to have a think about how Studio Tickling Tours might work in future.
This month sees the first in an occasional series where we look at some technical terms and things you need to know as a studio owning voiceover. Today, audio resolution, levels and phantom power.
Knowing what to post on social media is a constant problem for most businesses. This Instagram challenge has prompt ideas any voice artist can use for any social platform.
There’s a lot that can go wrong in studio management. Rob takes a look at some of those irritatingly small issues.
In January this year I wrote ‘a month in the life’ as a blog as I hoped it would be interesting. I think it’s time
A blog in which Rob critiques a piece of audio that gets heard by thousands of people every day.
If you’re planning on moving your voiceover studio, or creating a recording space for the first time, here is some advice…
Helping voiceovers to be seen and heard.
Resources