Are you writing off opportunities, people, and situations before you've really given them a chance? Your snap judgments might be limiting your potential more than you realize.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the hidden cost of instant judgments and why stopping at your first impression could actually be costing your business. You'll discover how to find unexpected value in scripts, people, and situations while developing the curiosity that separates exceptional leaders from average ones.
Episode Highlights:
Hold Your First Reactions As Data, Not Decisions Your initial impression that something is boring, difficult, or not worth your time is valuable information about your immediate reaction, but it shouldn't be your final verdict. Research shows that snap judgments stick even when we encounter contradictory evidence later, so the key is to notice your reaction without letting it become your conclusion. Ask yourself "why am I reacting this way?" as the beginning of curiosity, not the end of analysis.
Find The Logic That Makes Complexity Coherent Whether you're interpreting a voice over script or understanding a difficult team member, your job is to find what makes their complexity make sense from the inside. The employee everyone has written off as lazy, the client who seems impossible to please, or the business partner who just doesn't get it—they're not one-dimensional. They're navigating complexity, pressures, fears, and motivations you can't see from the outside. The richness isn't in making everything simple; it's in honoring the fact that human behavior is layered, complex, and sometimes contradictory.
Professionals Bring Deep Engagement To Everything, Not Just The Exciting Stuff As a voice actor, when you only dig deep on scripts that immediately inspire you, you're leaving money on the table. The scripts that appear less interesting on the surface are actually where you can add the most value. The same is true in leadership—when you only deeply engage with easy people and exciting opportunities, you're leaving massive potential untapped. The people and situations that require the most work to understand are often the places where you can create the most significant transformations.
I used to be terrified of what people thought about me, wasting mental energy obsessing over every conversation. But voice acting taught me that the more authentic I was behind the microphone, the better I performed. That authenticity started spilling over into everything else. I stopped micromanaging other people's experience of me and started showing up as myself. This same principle applies to how we see others—when we stop flattening people into simple categories and start honoring their complexity, relationships transform.
Apply this systematic approach to one person or situation you've already judged this week:
(1) Observe without deciding—notice your reaction but don't let it become your conclusion
(2) Research the context—what's happening in their world that you can't see?
(3) Get curious—why would their behavior make perfect sense from their perspective?
(4) Make it coherent—don't stop until their actions make complete sense,
(5) Test interpretations—could this be something other than what you assumed?
Document what you find and notice when your first judgment was wrong.
Text VOICE to 55444 to receive the framework, or visit CarrieOlsenVO.com/finding-gold to leave a voice message about your own experiences finding gold in unexpected places.
"The best leaders aren't the ones who only engage with easy people and exciting opportunities. They're the ones who find gold everywhere, even in the scripts nobody else wants to read." - Carrie Olsen
What if the reason your auditions don't reflect your training has nothing to do with your skills—and everything to do with how your brain compartmentalizes practice versus performance?
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the disconnect between training and performance and why it matters for your voice acting career and beyond. You'll discover how to bring all your hard-earned skills into every audition while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Treat Performance As Practice Under Observation The mental barrier between practice and performance is artificial. When you reframe auditions as practice sessions where someone happens to be listening, you remove the threat response that blocks access to your acquired skills. This simple mindset shift allows your brain to engage the same way it does in coaching sessions.
Allocate Time That Matches Your Reality If you respect practice enough to block dedicated time for it, your auditions deserve the same intentionality. Start with at least 30 minutes of focused prep work for each audition, treating it with the same priority as a paid coaching session. The time problem is really a priority problem—you prioritize what you truly care about.
Consciously Activate Your Training Skills don't automatically transfer from practice to performance. Before every audition, spend 2-3 minutes asking yourself: What did I learn in my last coaching session? What technique applies to this script? How would I approach this if my coach were listening? This conscious connection tells your brain to bring forward everything you've learned.
I used to wait until right before auditions were due to start working on them, even when I had lead time. I was over-prioritizing practice as "the real work" while treating auditions like they should just flow automatically. But once I started treating every audition like a coaching session—complete with prep time, intentionality, and my notes from past sessions—everything changed. The work I'd put into training finally showed up where it counted.
Next week, we'll continue our implementation series with more practical strategies for bringing your best work to every performance moment.
For the next week, treat every single performance moment—whether it's a practice session, coaching session, or actual audition—with the same level of intentionality. Block at least 30 minutes for preparation, use a pre-performance activation ritual to connect your training to the present moment, and apply a checklist to ensure you're using your training rather than just going through the motions. Document what happens: Do your auditions feel different? Do you access skills you forgot you had? Notice when your brain wants to separate practice mode from performance mode.
Visit CarrieOlsenVO.com/consistent-performance to share your experience.
"You're not starting from scratch with every audition. You have extensive training and capability. The question is, are you bringing it into the moment or leaving it back in practice mode?" - Carrie Olsen
Voice actors receive more real-time feedback than almost any other profession, but this constant direction doesn't just make us better performers—it prepares us for every area of life where feedback matters. Which is pretty much everywhere.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the psychology of taking direction and why it matters for your voice acting career and beyond. You'll discover how to transform feedback from a threat into collaboration while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Develop Rapid Emotional Regulation Skills When feedback arrives, you can't spend five minutes processing your feelings about it. Voice actors learn to instantly reframe feedback as information rather than judgment through cognitive reappraisal. This skill of maintaining a calm face, voice, and body when receiving correction transfers to every relationship and professional situation.
Practice Empathetic Implementation Understanding what the client really needs goes beyond following instructions—it requires stepping into their perspective. When someone says "we need more energy," they might actually mean "this sounds too corporate for our brand." This empathetic skill helps you serve others' needs in business, relationships, and team collaboration.
Implement First, Evaluate Later Resist the urge to immediately analyze why a suggestion won't work. Often what sounds wrong in theory feels right in practice. Try the "yes, and" approach from improv—internalize the feedback, work your magic to turn it into output, then deliver having integrated the direction.
I've been working on taking direction better from my husband Derek, who works in our business with me. I realized I was treating his input like criticism instead of collaboration, getting defensive about things that weren't even criticisms. Voice acting taught me that when everyone has the same goal—whether it's a successful project, business, or family—all feedback is just constructive collaboration.
Next week, we'll explore how to maintain your creative flow while implementing direction, including specific techniques for staying connected to your material even when feedback feels challenging.
Pick one relationship or work context where you typically struggle with feedback. Before responding to any direction from this person, pause for two seconds and reset your emotional state. Then practice clarifying the goal by asking "What outcome are you looking for?" Finally, try implementing the suggestion first before evaluating whether it will work.
Text VOICE to 55444 to get additional resources for practicing feedback integration skills, including voice acting techniques that transfer to other areas of life.
I am enamored by talented people, and I have such respect for hardworking people. Sion is both. As a longtime member of the Voiceover Success Intensive, I’m privileged to have known her for 5 years now, and my respect and admiration for her has only grown as time has gone on. Her smile literally lights up the room, and I’ve been inspired by her commitment to give back to the voiceover community.
But this might be the most magical thing about Sion: She turned an inherently isolating business into fertile ground for community, support, and lasting friendships.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I lean in with Sion as we discuss the power of combining authenticity with strategic business planning and why building genuine relationships matter more than perfecting every technical detail. You'll discover how to leverage your existing background while staying true to who you are as you build your voice acting career.
Episode Highlights:
Trust Your Intuition But Get The Training You Need When that inner voice tells you voice acting might be your path, listen to it - but pair that intuition with serious skill development. Sion spent nine months in intensive training before launching her business, working with multiple coaches and taking various classes. This foundation gave her the confidence to tackle major projects like multiple-hour live direction sessions early in her career.
Build Community Before You Need It Voice acting can be isolating, but successful voice actors actively cultivate relationships from the beginning. Join programs, attend conferences, participate in online communities. And don't just lurk - engage authentically. These connections become your support system, accountability partners, and often your source of referrals and opportunities.
Embrace Your Authentic Voice Over Perfection When Sion lost a significant job because a client disliked her "sparkly S," she had a choice: spend months trying to eliminate this natural speech pattern or embrace it as part of her unique sound. She chose authenticity and has continued booking work consistently. Your natural voice and background bring value that AI cannot replicate.
Sion's story reminds me why I'm so passionate about the intersection of voice acting skills and life skills. Her journey from ESL teacher to successful voice actor wasn't just about learning technique - it was about learning to trust herself, build meaningful relationships, and show up authentically in both her work and personal life.
What's Coming Next:
Next week, we're exploring the psychology of taking direction and how voice actors develop feedback integration skills that transfer to every area of life. We'll cover the three-step framework for getting systematically better at receiving and implementing feedback, whether you're in the booth or navigating everyday relationships and work situations.
Begin recording daily audio diaries - not for performance, but simply to get comfortable talking naturally into a microphone. Spend 5-10 minutes each day sharing what's happening in your life, your thoughts, or your goals. This practice helps you forget about the equipment and remember how to be conversational and authentic behind the mic.
No special equipment needed - use your phone, computer, or any recording device you have available.
"Trust your gut and get the training. The two go hand in hand. You have to trust your instincts, but you don't know what you don't know." - Sion Dayson
Ever wonder why you can consume endless courses and workshops but still feel stuck in your voice acting career? The brutal truth is that most voice actors are addicted to learning but allergic to implementing.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the psychology behind why we procrastinate on the very things that would move our careers forward and why implementation beats information every single time. You'll discover how to break the learning-without-doing cycle while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Define Your Clear Purpose Before You Start When you lose sight of why you're doing something, you lose motivation to implement. Being results-focused isn't a flaw - it's a strength when channeled correctly. Before tackling any implementation, get crystal clear on the specific result you want and make that result bigger than your fear of failure.
Use Systematic Implementation Over Random Action Moving from random practice to systematic implementation frees up mental energy for creative choices. This means trusting "yesterday you" who made the plan and following through as "today you," even when your mood or motivation shifts. Consistent systems actually make voice actors more spontaneous, not less.
Document The Process, Not Just The Successes The messy middle parts - the stalling, forgetting, and course-correcting - are where real growth happens. When others can see your implementation journey, you're 67% more likely to follow through because social accountability creates natural motivation.
I stalled for three weeks before recording this episode because I lost sight of the podcast's purpose. My brain is wired to need clear results, which has helped me build my career but sometimes makes it hard to enjoy the process. I'm learning to appreciate the process for its own sake while still honoring my results-focused nature in my voice acting work.
Next week, I sit down with voice actor Sion Dayson to explore her remarkable journey from ESL teacher in Spain to full-time voice actor. We'll dive into how a single question from a sound engineer sparked an instant career pivot, her strategic approach to going "all in" during COVID lockdown, and why she chose to embrace her authentic voice rather than polish away her natural speaking patterns when faced with criticism.
Pick one thing you already know works but aren't doing consistently. Not the newest strategy or latest trend, but something you know helps you that you're avoiding. Give yourself a realistic timeline (2 days to 1 week) and document the process - both successes and setbacks.
"Information makes you feel smart, but implementation actually changes you. Smart is nice, but different gets you hired." - Carrie Olsen
What if the preparation work you do as a voice actor could transform every area of your life? Most voice actors focus on the obvious prep work, but the real game-changer is systematic preparation that builds genuine competence and confidence.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the deeper kind of preparation that separates voice actors who thrive from those who just get by and why it matters for your voice acting career and beyond. You'll discover how to build a foundation of competence that creates confidence while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Study Your Market Like Your Career Depends On It Watching commercials isn't just casual viewing—it's systematic preparation that builds market awareness, client psychology understanding, and communication expertise. This foundation makes you better at client meetings, project briefs, and marketplace positioning.
Preparation Creates Competence, Competence Creates Confidence The fundamentals you develop as a voice actor—consistency, reliability, quick thinking under pressure—transfer to every professional relationship you have. Real confidence comes from knowing you've done the systematic work that others skip.
Small, Consistent Actions Beat Intense Bursts Rather than cramming before auditions, commit to regular preparation that compounds over time. The voice actor who systematically studies their craft becomes genuinely confident because their confidence is backed by competence.
This podcast has been its own category of one experience for me, and the engagement around these concepts has confirmed that voice actors are hungry for this type of strategic thinking. I'm excited to document my own systematic preparation process in season two because I believe in practicing what I preach—even after 11 years in this business, I'm still implementing these fundamentals.
Season two returns later this year with an implementation focus, including my husband Derek's strategic insights, guest interviews, and a special reaction episode to entrepreneur Cody Sanchez's video where she mentioned my work as an example of voice acting as an income strategy.
Begin watching commercials with analytical intention. Don't just listen—study the delivery styles, market trends, and communication strategies. Make this a regular practice, not something you do only before auditions.
Text VOICE to 55444 to stay connected and get exclusive resources for building your systematic preparation practice.
"The fundamentals that help you pursue the work you want and thrive in that work create ripple effects throughout your entire life." - Carrie Olsen
Are you tired of constant hustle and auditions? Discover how your authentic background is actually your greatest competitive advantage in voice acting.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the powerful concept of legacy branding and why it matters for your voice acting career and beyond. You'll discover how to leverage your unique experiences to create a brand that attracts opportunities rather than constantly pursuing them while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Transform Your Marketing Approach with Your Unique Background The experiences you've had that seem irrelevant to voice acting often become your most powerful brand elements. Former teachers, for example, have developed exceptional skills in delivering complex information simply and engagingly—exactly what e-learning clients need.
Create a Category of One Through Authentic Positioning When you build a brand based on your unique story and specific value, you're creating a category of one—the voice acting career only you can have. This approach creates space for all voice actors to succeed without competing directly.
Focus on Client Transformation, Not Just Your Services Clients don't buy voice acting; they buy results. Reframe your marketing to focus on how your unique background helps clients achieve their specific goals rather than simply listing your services and qualifications.
My own journey into voice acting was unconventional. I never studied acting and actually hated being in front of people! But my business background and "condition where I can only see possibilities" led me to approach voice acting differently. I broke all the rules—making my own demo, quitting my day job early, and getting signed with a prestigious agency in my first year—because I hadn't been exposed to the "conventional" path.
In our next episode, we'll dig deeper into the second element of the Legacy Branding framework: understanding and connecting with your ideal clients' deepest needs in a way that positions you as the perfect solution.
Take time to identify three unique experiences from your background that could add value for clients. Connect those experiences to specific client problems you're uniquely positioned to solve. Then update one piece of your marketing to reflect this unique position.
Text WEBINAR to 55444 to get the free Category of One Finder worksheet that will help you identify your unique advantages that no other voice actor can claim.
"The voiceover career that only you can have." - Carrie Olsen
Are you stuck in an endless cycle of preparation without ever feeling ready to launch? Perfectionism might be the hidden obstacle preventing your voice acting success.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore how perfectionism impacts every aspect of your voice acting ecosystem and why letting go of "perfect" actually leads to better results. You'll discover how to transform perfectionism from a roadblock into a pathway for authentic connection while staying true to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Reframe "Perfect" as Perfect Service Instead of obsessing over technical perfection, focus on how you can perfectly serve your client's needs and embody their message. This shifts your attention from yourself to the audience and client, allowing you to deliver more authentic performances.
Done Beats Perfect Every Time Sending ten "good enough" marketing emails will teach you more and create more opportunities than spending months perfecting a single email. Progress comes from taking action, learning from the results, and improving incrementally.
Build a Three-Legged Stool for Sustainable Success Your voice acting ecosystem consists of three interconnected elements: physical well-being, mental health, and business practices. Addressing perfectionism requires a holistic approach that strengthens all three areas simultaneously.
I've seen firsthand how the most successful voice actors aren't perfectionists. The irony is that clients aren't looking for perfect—they're looking for authentic, conversational, and human. I've even had clients specifically ask for mistakes in my reads to ensure they sound genuine! Learning this was one of the most liberating moments in my voice acting journey.
Next week, we'll dive deeper into my Legacy Branding Framework. We'll explore how your unique experiences and perspectives can become your greatest marketing assets without requiring a polished, perfect persona.
Choose one area of your voice acting ecosystem (physical, mental, or business) where perfectionism is holding you back. Commit to taking one deliberately imperfect action in that area this week. Notice how it feels, what you learn, and how it moves you forward despite being imperfect.
Download the perfectionism breakthrough worksheet at CarrieOlsenVO.com/ep6 or text VOICE to 55444.
"Voice acting success isn't about perfection. It's about progress, authenticity, and consistency." - Carrie Olsen
Have you been trying to sound like everyone else? That could be your biggest career mistake! Discover how your unique background is actually your secret weapon in voice acting.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore how embracing your distinct perspective and experiences creates a measurable competitive advantage in your voice acting business. You'll discover how to transform your background into a valuable differentiator while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Complete Your Expertise Inventory Take time to document your professional expertise, personal experiences, and passionate interests that could add value to voice acting clients. Don't limit yourself to obviously relevant experiences - sometimes your most powerful differentiator comes from an unexpected place.
Identify High-Value Client Connection Points For each area of your expertise, identify specific industries, companies, or roles that would particularly value your insider knowledge. These become your high-priority outreach targets where you'll have the strongest competitive advantage.
Craft Tailored Value Statements Create customized messaging for each client segment that clearly articulates why your unique background matters to them specifically. Remember, if you're talking to everyone, you're talking to no one.
I've seen firsthand how this approach transformed my own business. When I leveraged my e-learning development background, I wasn't just another voice actor reaching in from outside their industry - I was a fellow insider who understood their challenges. One client even told me she looked forward to editing my audio because it was engaging rather than tedious!
Next week we'll explore the holistic voice actor: mind, body, and business. We'll discuss how physical and mental well-being impact your voice performance, and I'll share productivity systems that have helped me and my students create sustainable voice acting careers.
Download the Standout Strategy worksheet that will guide you through identifying your unique experiences, connecting them to specific client types, and crafting tailored value statements. Identify at least three potential client segments where your background creates specific value.
Get your worksheet at CarrieOlsenVO.com/ep5 or text VOICE to 55444.
"Your distinctive background isn't something to minimize or hide. It's your greatest business asset." - Carrie Olsen
Are you stuck in an endless cycle of learning without taking action? You might be facing the "implementation gap" - the biggest obstacle between where you are and the success you want.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the psychology behind why voice actors often struggle to implement what they've learned and why it matters for your voice acting career and beyond. You'll discover how to transform knowledge into action while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
Make the Invisible Visible When goals live only in your head as vague concepts, they're easy to ignore. Write them down, place them where you'll see them daily, and share them with others. Making your intentions concrete creates accountability and increases your likelihood of taking action.
Focus on the Next Small Step Don't get overwhelmed by the entire mountain you need to climb. Break down your goals into tiny, manageable steps—record three practice scripts daily or research five potential clients. This approach bypasses the psychological resistance that comes with contemplating the entire journey.
Create an Implementation System Willpower and motivation fluctuate, so build systems that don't rely on either. Use tools like the Implementation Action Plan to break down goals into specific, actionable steps with clear timelines and success metrics, making implementation about following a system rather than fighting psychological resistance.
For years, I've wanted to get into animation voice acting. I've trained with notable coaches and received great feedback, but I've never taken that next step. I think part of me is comfortable where I am, or maybe I'm avoiding feeling out of my element. Sound familiar? This implementation gap is what inspired me to create tools that have transformed voice actors' careers by breaking mountains into manageable steps.
In our next episode, we'll dive deeper into how to leverage your authentic self in your voice acting business. We'll explore how your unique experiences can become the foundation of your brand strategy.
Download the free Implementation Action Plan worksheet designed to address the psychological barriers we've discussed. This isn't just another planning tool—it includes space for rewards and celebrations to keep you motivated throughout the process.
Access this resource at CarrieOlsenVO.com/ep4 or text VOICE to 55444.
"Implementation isn't just about doing, it's about becoming. When you choose to cross the Rubicon and take those risks, you're starting to live your life more conversational." - Carrie Olsen
Ever notice how your best performances happen when your personal life feels balanced? There's a profound connection between who you are offstage and your ability to shine on the mic.
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the powerful link between personal development and voice acting success and why it matters for your voice acting career and beyond. You'll discover how to leverage your authentic self as your greatest performance asset while staying true to who you are.
Your physical, mental, and emotional state directly impacts your vocal performance. The work you do on yourself as a person creates depth and dimension that listeners can feel, even if they can't identify exactly why your voice resonates with them.
Technical skills create the vessel, but your authentic self fills it. The most technically perfect read falls flat without the real person behind it, while the most authentic performer still needs technique to effectively communicate.
Voice actors who last in this industry aren't necessarily the most technically skilled—they're the ones who can bounce back from rejection and keep showing up. Personal development builds the resilience needed to navigate the inevitable setbacks in this career.
I've experienced this connection firsthand. During seasons when I feel rushed and scattered, those are inevitably the times when I book the least. Conversely, my HBO Max booking came immediately after a meeting with fellow entrepreneurs studying "The Artist's Way." Nothing had changed about my technical skills, but my mental state and creative engagement were completely different.
Next week, we'll build on this concept by exploring the implementation gap—why knowledge isn't enough and how to actually put these personal development ideas into practice in your voice acting career.
Take time to identify the last three voice acting challenges you faced, then explore what personal development areas might be connected to these challenges. Choose just one area to focus on for the next month. Download the worksheet at CarrieOlsenVO.com/ep3 for guided prompts to help you identify your most promising growth opportunities.
Text VOICE to 55444 to access additional resources related to this exercise and episode.
Alternatively, you can download the worksheet for this exercise at carrieolsenvo.com/podcast-resources
Are you constantly chasing the next microphone, course, or software, believing success is just one more purchase away? What if this "culture of upgrading" is actually preventing your success?
In this episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore the trap of believing that voiceover success requires constant upgrading of equipment and skills, and why focusing on your existing unique qualities is more powerful. You'll discover how to leverage what you already bring to the table while staying authentic to who you are.
Episode Highlights:
CONDUCT AN UPGRADE AUDIT TO BREAK THE CYCLE Before making your next voiceover-related purchase, honestly assess whether it will tangibly improve what clients receive from you or if it's just making you feel like you're progressing. This simple exercise can save you money and redirect your focus toward actions that generate real results.
YOUR PAST EXPERIENCE IS YOUR COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE That customer service job, theater background, or teaching experience isn't something to overcome – it's what sets you apart in a crowded marketplace. Identify the unique perspectives and abilities you already possess and position them as strengths rather than trying to upgrade past them.
IMPLEMENTATION BEATS INFORMATION EVERY TIME While someone is obsessing over the perfect setup or taking one more course, someone else with less perfect equipment is building client relationships and implementing what they learned three courses ago. Break the cycle of endless learning without application.
I've fallen into this trap myself. While I didn't hesitate to jump into voiceover initially, I'm definitely susceptible to "bright shiny object syndrome" when it comes to technology. I once purchased a channel strip because an industry professional recommended it, only to discover it actually made my audio sound worse. It's now sitting unused on a shelf in my booth – a constant reminder that I could have been focused on booking work instead of chasing unnecessary upgrades.
Next week, we'll take this concept further and explore how to find your voice beyond the booth, connecting your authentic self to your performance in ways that make both stronger.
Make a list of all voice-over related purchases or courses you've been considering. Next to each, write exactly how it would tangibly improve what clients receive from you (not just how it makes you feel). Finally, identify one way you could deliver more value using something you already have – a skill, experience, or perspective unique to you.
Download the worksheet for this exercise at CarrieOlsenVO.com/ep2
"Your unique background isn't something to overcome in voice acting. Rather, it's your greatest asset." - Carrie Olsen
The most common direction in the voiceover booth has been "more conversational" for years, but this concept extends far beyond script delivery – it's actually a philosophy that can transform your entire voice acting business and career.
In this debut episode of "Conversational with Carrie Olsen," I explore what it truly means to be conversational in voice acting – not just in how you deliver a script, but in how you approach your entire business. You'll discover why authenticity is your greatest asset and how to leverage your unique background to stand out in a crowded marketplace.
Episode Highlights:
Your Past Experiences Are Your Greatest Differentiators Every unusual job or life experience you've had gives you perspective and insight that other voice actors simply don't have. Instead of hiding what makes you different, leverage these experiences to create a brand and approach that feels uniquely yours and attracts the right clients.
Marketing Feels Difficult When It Doesn't Feel Like You The dread around marketing often comes from trying to adopt someone else's system instead of creating an authentic approach. When you develop marketing that aligns with who you really are, it no longer feels like a chore – it becomes an extension of your natural self-expression.
Voice Acting Success Requires More Than Just Voice Skills The most successful voice actors aren't just working on their craft – they're developing themselves holistically through mindset work, time management, and personal growth. This creates a positive feedback loop where booth confidence builds real-life confidence, and life experiences enrich performances.
When I first started in voiceover, I intuitively created my own outreach methods rather than following established formulas. My husband called my approach "ferocious" – and that determination led to relationships with clients like Disney, Grammarly, and Max. That experience taught me that the more authentic I was in my marketing, the more successful it became.
In our next episode, I'll tackle "The Culture of Upgrading" – revealing why constantly chasing the newest equipment or techniques might actually be holding you back, and how to focus on what truly moves the needle in your voice acting career.
Spend 5 minutes identifying the three most unusual jobs or experiences you've had in your life. How might each one give you perspective or skills that other voice actors don't have? This isn't just a walk down memory lane – it's the beginning of identifying what makes your brand valuable and unique.
Download the worksheet at CarrieOlsenVO.com/ep1
"Remember that your voice is unique, and your path should be too." - Carrie Olsen