Entries Tagged as 'voiceover meet-ups'

voice-over mastery & friends

Voice-Over Talents Jaye Delai, Peter K. O'Connell, Dan Friedman, Faith Coons & Doug Turkel at Randy Thomas' Voice-Over Mastery Event in Ft. Meyers, FL

Voice-Over Talents Jaye Delai, Peter K. O’Connell, Dan Friedman, Faith Coons & Doug Turkel at Randy Thomas’ Voice-Over Mastery Event in Ft. Meyers, FL

There had never before been a Voice-Over Mastery Event and I’m not sure even its producer and well-respected voice talent Randy Thomas knew how her event would turn out. But I think it was better than even she expected.

Randy brought together speakers including Joe Cipriano, Melissa Disney, Chris Corley, Anne Ganguzza, David Goldberg & Graeme Spicer among others to have them offer their insights and experience. If I was going to pick my favorite part, it would definitely be the networking with…everybody.

I’ll be very interested to see who Randy brings together next year. Thanks Randy.

audio’connell in charleston, wv

Charlie Cooper from Admix Broadcast Service, Amie Breedlove from Amie Breedlove Voice Talent and Peter K. O'Connell from audio'connell Voice-Over Talent

Charlie Cooper from Admix Broadcast Service, Amie Breedlove from Amie Breedlove Voice Talent and Peter K. O’Connell from audio’connell Voice-Over Talent

The Faffers are in Charleston, West Virginia tonight as I got to have dinner with Amie Breedlove and Charlie Cooper.

The dinner was quick but we didn’t stop talking shop until about 9:00 p.m. What fun this dinner was! It was like a mini-Charleston meet-up which would probably be a great idea for the voice talents in the city to do.

Biggest news was that Amie HAS A BLOG which you can check out HERE.

audio’connell at the atlanta voice-over meet-up

The Atlanta Voice-Over Meet-up with Peter K. O'Connell, Diane Costello Merritt, Ashley Nicole Buchanan, Jeffrey Umberger, Adam Schneider, Bob Carter, September Day Carter, Jill Melancon, Maurice Thomas, Margaret McKee Swarts, Andrew Bates and Sally Rose Bates

The Atlanta Voice-Over Meet-up with Peter K. O’Connell, Diane Costello Merritt, Ashley Nicole Buchanan, Jeffrey Umberger, Adam Schneider, Bob Carter, September Day Carter, Jill Melancon, Maurice Thomas, Margaret McKee Swarts, Andrew Bates and Sally Rose Bates

So since I was going to visit Atlanta, I put out a Facebook message to my area voice-talent friends to see if they wanted to get together. At first it looked like it was just going to be September Day Carter, her husband Bob Carter along with my great voice-over agent Jeffrey Umberger. But then September put the call out to her voice-over pals and the dinner table got wonderfully fuller. Diane Merritt even came over from Greenville, SC!

My thanks to everyone who came out and made it a great night.

nerves are not just for newbies

Voice-Over Talent Peter K. O'Connell shares his marketing insights during a VO in TO Voice-Over Meet-Up at Livingston Studios, May 2014

Voice-Over Talent Peter K. O’Connell shares his marketing insights during a VO in TO Voice-Over Meet-Up at Livingston Studios, May 2014

Recently, I was invited to be the featured speaker at a semi-regular meeting of the VO in TO group, founded by Patrick Sweeney and Jodi Krangle. For professional, intermediate and newbie voice talents, the group used to meet in a billiard room at a bar in Toronto but recently shifted locations to the Livingston Studios in Toronto. It’s an intimate location, with all the VO recording facilities you could want plus a meeting/performance area – which is where the meeting took place.

If you're a good speaker, you get a mug; if you're a great speaker you get a mug AND a t-shirt

If you’re a good speaker, you get a mug; if you’re a great speaker you get a mug AND a t-shirt

Pat asked me to speak about writing a marketing plan for a voice-over business and that part of the night went well enough. Only one audience member almost fell asleep, which for me is an improvement over most of the snoozers I present to 😉

But it was the mixer after the meeting that made the biggest impact on me. A bright, friendly, young woman who wanted to thank me for my presentation approached me. But clearly she had another voice-over matter on her mind that she wanted to talk about, so I invited her to sit down and talk with me.

She was very new to voice-over although she had some performance experience. She had recently done a training session in a studio and was besieged, evidently almost from the moment she walked into the booth, by a case of nerves. She couldn’t get her mouth to do what her brain was asking it to do. Classic symptoms: words not coming out right, breathing irregularly, the whole deal. This perplexed her and bothered her and she needed to talk about it.

We did. I complimented her for being honest enough to talk about it and work through it – that’s a great start to overcoming most problems. I explained – with many embarrassing examples – how I also experienced vocal performance anxiety at various times in my VO career and that when I am in a studio or speaking publicly I still get nervous. She was very surprised by that, given what she had just witnessed.

I explained that I am able to work through it more quickly and seamlessly because of my years of experience performing and presenting but the nerves are still there. And I explained further – that’s a good thing, offering me a heightened sense of awareness to both the work being done and the audience being informed and entertained.

She and I were joined, during the course of our conversation, by two other experienced voice-over pros and fellow Faffers: Mike Pongracz (one of the 3 AmiVos – who still owe me a 3 AmiVos toque) and Elaine Singer. They too offered up to her their experiences with nerves and how they dealt with it (sidebar: sorry to brag but Faffers really do know best how to listen to and help fellow voice talent, with any type of problem better, than any other voice-over group cause I think Amy started the kind of “lend me an ear” VO philosophy – end of brag).

By the end of the conversation, I think this young woman was heartened by the support she received and the insight she was given. She won’t not ever be nervous again but she’ll now know better how to deal with it. And that’s part of how you develop into a professional in this or any other industry: by being just as scared as anyone else but doing it anyway, while everyone else cowers in the corner.

And I offer this story for those readers who aren’t brave enough to talk about their nerves or their performance fears but still want to deal with it somehow. Just know that your fears and obstacles probably aren’t unique. In this case, everyone and anyone in voice-over has and will still have nerves and anxieties. Even us old guys.

Just do it anyway.

why voice-over meet-up groups are so valuable

A meeting on the Buffalo, NY Voice-Over Meetup group (from l-r) Robert W. Taylor, Leslie Diamond, Dan Lenard, Chris Nichter, Peter K. O'Connell, Jen Deyo, Fred Filbrich, Randye Kaye amd Glad Faith Klassen

A meeting on the Buffalo, NY Voice-Over Meetup group (from l-r) Robert W. Taylor, Leslie Diamond, Dan Lenard, Chris Nichter, Peter K. O’Connell, Jen Deyo, Fred Filbrich, Randye Kaye and Glad Faith Klassen

Voice-over talents are a closeted bunch.

Meaning whether in our homes or studios, we spend a lot of time in booths (closets) churning out voice stuff.

It’s great but who do you bounce business, technical or performance ideas off of if you work by yourself? Where are your checks and balances coming from?

It was 2009 when my friend and fellow voice-talent (the lovely and talented) Doug Turkel invited me out to his Voice-Over Mastermind Group in Miami, FL. So I hoped in my private jet that afternoon and join Doug and his pals for what was my first official meet-up group. As with most things Doug, it was terrific.

From that moment forward, I wanted to start some kind of group like that in Buffalo, NY.

But Mrs. audio’connell and I had a child. And another. And another. A bunch of FaffCons later, I still didn’t start my meet-up group. Then finally, after attending a voice-over class that just wasn’t filling my needs, I did what all good leaders do to get things done.

I delegated.

See, I was not going to be able to organize a meet-up group with my family and professional commitments. I’m the guy that had always put this stuff together but this time it wasn’t going to happen and I knew it. But it didn’t mean stuff couldn’t happen. With the advent of FaffCon, more Buffalo voice talents attended together, we realized the power of what we could do and we all wanted to do it.

So I contacted local voice talents and fellow Faffers Dan Lenard and Leslie Diamond and said “help”.

Leslie offered up her house, Dan made some calls, we shared notes on who to invite (lots of people) and in August 2013, we held our first meet-up. I think 5 people showed up. I was stunned there weren’t more with so many talents around.

What I came to understand was that these were the committed ones, the ones who wanted to try. And our monthly meetings have been going on since. And growing!

Our troupe now includes: Robert W. Taylor, >Leslie Diamond, Dan Lenard, Chris Nichter, Jen Deyo, Fred Filbrich and Glad Faith Klassen.

To be clear, this meet-up is not like my traveling lunch dinner tours that Bob Souer and I have made famous over the years.

The Buffalo Voice-Over Meetup Group created our own agenda: reviewing successes, talking about challenges, picking a specific industry related topic and everyone just sharing info. Sometimes one of us volunteers to talk about a subject we know a little more about. We take notes….and we work on scripts. We group direct and one on one direct.

And we remember that we are not alone. Our families may sometimes question our career choices but in a meet-up, we are among those who get it. Meet-up members understand the incurable disease of voice-over performance. And for just those few hours every month, you get to talk shop where nobody looks at you funny. Usually.

They are fragile eco-systems, these voice-over meet-up groups, because they live and die by the quality of the talent (performance and business-wise) in the group. It should be a group, not something led by one individual. Plus people come and go…the success of every meeting is not guaranteed. Which is why everyone who is in an on-going, effective and most importantly interactive meetup group should be very thankful. I know I am.

audio’connell in kansas

Voice-Over Talents Dan Hurst, Matt Wiewel, Andy Barnett and Peter K. O'Connell in Kansas City, Kansas

Voice-Over Talents Dan Hurst, Matt Wiewel, Andy Barnett and Peter K. O’Connell in Kansas City, Kansas

Well Toto, here’s another state you can cross off your bucket list! Welcome to Kansas City, Kansas – home to some of the best BBQ and voice-over talents around.

Tonight I got to visit with my long time pal, fellow Faffer and Voice-Over Swami Dan Hurst and he brought along another fellow Faffer and recent full-time voice-over talent THE Andy Barnett as well as “There’s a Matt for That” and Faffer to-be (if he has his way) Matt Wiewel.

It was over three hours of stories so no, I won’t try and play that all back for you. But a massively great and well-behaved time was had by all and I am so appreciative that Dan, Andy and Matt took time out of their evening to hang out with me. Thanks guys!