Social media. Gotta love it. Depending on where you look in the voiceover social media sphere, it’s either feast or famine. Folks posting their wins. And others dropping stories of struggle, declining income, and AI fear porn. On any given day you could be forgiven for feeling confused about whether voiceover is a growth sector or an industry on the ropes. The truth is, ultimately, both. And each person’s reality is shaped by factors both within and outside of their control.
Why is there such a chasm between those who seem to be thriving and experiencing continued growth and those who sense a drying up of opportunity? Well, as they say, the cheese has moved. And if you aren’t aware of how or why, you’re going to get left behind, no matter how talented you are, how great your demos are, how on point your marketing is, or how many connected friends you have. Indeed, what the industry is experiencing today is deeply analogous to the advent of the DIY era of voiceover in the mid 2000’s, when suddenly droves of cosseted voice actors who only knew the brick and mortar world of representation, in-person auditions, and working from professional storefront studios experienced a massive shock as the industry democratized.
The folks lamenting on social media today about how hard it is to get an agent, how the P2P landscape is withering and more challenging than ever, the level of competition, how onerous marketing is, and how unfair everything seems, are very much like the talent I encountered 15-20 years ago who didn’t understand why they weren’t earning half a million dollars a year anymore doing a couple dozen jobs per year through their single LA or NYC agent….oh, and what’s a home studio?
Here’s the cold hard truth of what many people are experiencing.
1.) Demographics
The industry has enough 35-65 year-old white people with tons of talent. Male and female.
Sorry, but them’s the facts. If you’re in that demographic, (I am,) have a fairly standard vocal range, (nothing particularly unique about your sound, no matter how good you are,) and don’t have an established base of agency rep, existing clients, fluid marketing processes that yield consistent results, strong SEO, and income to spend on networking in-person and continuing to make your “package” of assets and skills bleeding edge and in tune with market trends and demands, you are going to have a hard road. Period.
It may be harsh, but show me a social media rant on how “unfair” everything is, and I can guarantee with 99% accuracy it’s someone from this category. The simple truth is that after dominating the airwaves since the dawn of the spoken word, middle aged white folks are no longer the in-demand demographic. Which is not to say there isn’t plenty of work for us at fair market rates. There is. But we have to work harder than ever before to land enough of it to sustain and grow careers. Because within this demographic, the industry is simply full.
That doesn’t mean that new entrants can’t still rise and build great careers. Or that you can’t turn around a career that is flagging. But it does mean that it’s harder, and that more than ever before only the very best performers with the thickest skins and strongest dedication to their businesses will come out the other end and thrive. It also means that the time for being honest with yourself is at hand. Listen to the competition. Listen to spots on the air. Listen to demos on major agency websites. Do you know in your heart of hearts that you are as good or can be as good as the people who are landing the jobs today? We want the answer to be yes, but the answer isn’t always yes. And before you go spending thousands on coaching, demos, conferences, whatever, (I’m not a very good salesperson am I?,) it’s time for a tough talk with yourself if you fit into this demographic about whether the investment in time and money is worth it.
And this is not to minimize the struggles and challenges facing BIPOC, minority, LGBTQ+ or other talent outside of this demographic, but the industry now, to its great credit in my opinion, looks much more like America does compared to even 5-10 years ago, and in the under-35 space, the non-white space, and, interestingly, even in the elder-talent space (75+,) there is not the same imbalance of supply and demand.
2.) Agents/Managers
In the past, talent agencies and management companies NEEDED voice actors in order to keep up with the volume of work that was almost strictly flowing through their doors, and great talent even in more saturated demographics could get a good look at top tier rep, fairly easily get regional rep, and could get local agents just with one good demo and no credentials.
In today’s Wild West VO landscape where work is spread out amongst numerous channels, most agents have enough of what they need to cover the submissions they need to send on any given job. Even the regional agencies are now fairly full, so now the onus is on YOU more than ever before to make yourself someone an agency CAN’T say no to. What does that mean? If you’re already an earner, be prepared to walk some existing accounts into an agency if you expect them to take you on. Show them you are willing to put some skin in the game and trust them with your career. Be prepared with a suite of great reels and not just one but several trusted recommendations. And spend time (and yes, money,) putting yourself in front of these folks at every opportunity. People are gonna people, and the simple fact is that ultimately the difference between talent X getting signed and talent Y getting signed is that the agent in question already knows and likes you, and has heard you read on multiple occasions and watched you demonstrate that you can take direction and feedback with grace and respond professionally like you would if one of their buyers hired you.
If you’re not already an earner with a big client list, even when chasing smaller agencies, make sure your package of assets stands out over the competition by leaps and bounds. The days of “hoping for the best” when seeking rep with your very first set of demos are over. What are you doing to show agencies that you can outperform and potentially out-earn the people currently on their roster?
3.) P2P
P2P sites, or online casting, is not dead, but it’s also not what it was.
You can complain about that Voice123 algorithm all you want. I do. It sucks. Even as a Platinum. Though at this point I couldn’t begin to even sort through the 50+ auditions that come through every day. But that’s not gonna change the fact that they’ve implemented a system that reflects a similar reality to what talent agents are facing: More and more buyers are simply moving way from third parties altogether, and aggregate job growth is decreasing as more voice actors find work through their own marketing, and more VO clients find US directly through search. P2P sites are doing what they feel they have to in order to avoid saturating buyers with hundreds of bad auditions and driving them away. If it were up to me, every site would follow the bodalgo model, with every member seeing every job the moment it was posted and having a first come first served opportunity to compete strictly on merit, but clearly that does not meet the needs of the major platforms bottom lines, which are beholden to investors.
What can you do about it? On Voice123 the unfortunate answer is that you must both pay AND excel. If you’ve damaged your ranking to where you are not in the top 20% and you are paying for a tier under their $2200 level, very simply you aren’t going to get great opportunities. Once again, the time for brutal self reflection is upon us. If you’re ranking bottom X percent and you are at the $888 (or whatever it is these days) level, the only solution I’ve seen work for people is to simply abandon that account and start fresh with a new profile and credit card at $2200. But this requires that you have absolute certainty that your ability level, voice type, and willingness to invest the time in auditioning are all sufficiently well-prepared to thrive on the platform. If you are one-read Bob or Betty, no matter how good that read is, P2P is probably not where it’s at for you anymore. I know talent who have created new $2200 accounts who book 3-4 jobs per week and stay in the top 10-20% and are crushing it. But I’ve seen plenty fail, too, because they did not frankly evaluate how in-demand their skills are, how STRONG their skills ACTUALLY are, and how willing they are to engage with the audition process for hours each day.
If you choose to use Voices, you’ll find a different landscape but similar issues in as much as they are now rationing jobs via their algorithm in an opaque manner that most members report leaving them with considerably lower audition numbers overall than in the past, even though their algorithm supposedly does not use your performance metrics to influence distribution like Voice123.
The pandemic brought in huge numbers of new talent, and most went to the P2Ps. With slower job growth on these sites, rationed distribution was inevitable.
Bottom line: In 2024 the P2P landscape isn’t all that different than the agency landscape in the sense that not only do you have to understand how to play the game, but you also then have to be able to consistently and continuously OUTPERFORM the competition in order to thrive, while at the same time recognizing whether or not you are in a demographic that is more saturated than others.
So, why even bother with VO in 2024?
Well, you still see those wins and success stories as much as the laments, right?
Who is posting them, and how are they making success happen in this weird and crowded landscape?
Like those who saw the cheese moving to DIY work in the mid 2000’s, made the pivot, and thrived, today’s generation of VOs, both those who have established careers over the last 15-20 years in a world that the previous generation found foreign but are now seeing THAT world decline due to shifting buying patterns and demographic demands, AND the pandemic entrants who came in around 2020 and have had enough good outcomes to stick and become bookers but are frustrated that they can’t get out of the “occasional booking” zone, now have to shake off much of what they have learned about “the way things are,” and move to meet “the way things are going.”
Where are things going?
1.) At bats are everything.
What’s an at-bat in the VO world? An active audition or a marketing touch that gets your demo into the hands of a potential buyer or roster of interest. One thing that has not changed is the simple reality that the only secret in voice over is that the more people who hear you, the more you will get hired, (assuming of course that skill and ability to deliver are present.) You know who you see posting wins on social media on a weekly basis? The people who are STRONG TALENT, have great auditioning and marketing skills, AND who are being heard by 20 or more potential buyers EVERY SINGLE DAY. Can’t access 20 auditions a day through agents, P2P, other rosters? Market until you bleed. Still not getting results? Double back to reality-check on your skill set and presentation. Been after it for a few years doing everything right and it ain’t happening? Consider the possibility that, in some cases….it might not. Don’t become a victim of the sunk cost fallacy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunk_cost
2.) Diversify.
Agents/management, production company and ad agency rosters, P2P if you choose, direct marketing, SEO, networking in-person. All of these can bring you at bats, which bring you revenue. Don’t become overweighted in one at the expense of the others, a mistake many new talent fall into with P2P sites.
3.) Consistent volume work.
Those big bookings that pay for a vacation or a car are great, but how often do they actually happen? For most talent, once a year at most. You’d be surprised how many of even the most successful talent you know pay their bills primarily on the back of that $400 corporate narration client who has been sending them 5 jobs a month for a decade, or that series of local automotive dealers they voice $250 spots for EVERY SINGLE DAY, or that political production house that hires them weekly during election season, and monthly during off years. It’s great to chase the shiny objects, but you’ll chase more than you catch in most cases. Build a strong foundation of regular clients, even at moderate budgets, and from there you’ll find the resources to chase bigger dreams.
4.) SEO, SEO, SEO.
Make THEM come to YOU! Under-40 buyers are sick and tired of middlemen. Online casting sites are 20 YEARS OLD. This is NOT “the future of casting,” it’s what the last generation did. If you’re not working with SEO experts you are missing the boat on walk-in business that will sustain your career, much of it far higher profile than you might expect.
Times are changing. Dynamics are shifting. Read trends are shifting…fast. Voices that would never have been cast for certain campaigns ten years ago are now the ones most in demand, and the ones that were most in demand are often becoming afterthoughts. Talent who were ahead of the game just a few years ago are suddenly realizing that the goalposts just keep moving. It’s enough to make your head spin. But one thing I’ve seen consistently over three decades in this business is that those who anticipate and adapt thrive, and those who don’t often watch even exceptional careers implode. Change is the only constant. Embrace it, and you’ll be posting your wins soon enough.