Episode 138, March 31, 2014
Guest: Joe Davis from voiceactorwebsites.com
George on gear in or out of your booth
Dan’s Tip of the Week on VO Education
0:03:30 Thanks to sponsors, Harlan Hogan, VO Xtra, and Edge Studio/VO Studio Tech
0:04:00 “Shout-outs” needed for the Third Anniversary show on April 21.
0:04:58 George rolls his “Whittam’s World” (Episode 15) about equipment
in or out of the booth. George gives details on where to keep your
computer and other gear. Go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=mfMi8URfLg8&list=PLpWTD2BQBdrKqkKsnsWMWc4FYrh3mXBpH&index=16 to see
it again.
0:13:00 Discussion between Dan and George about what gear in the booth.
0:14:52 Break
0:16:30 Dan’s rant on VO education. Everybody learns from somebody.
Acting, technology, and business are the three phases of the VO biz. You never stop
studying.
Education for profit? Nothing wrong with that. There’s no certification for teaching
VO acting. No one person can teach it all. Webinars? The question is what is the
information being presented worth to you? Making you a better voice actor is in
their interest. The all-in-one organizations offering guaranteed success—RUN! See
WoVO’s best practices. http://www.worldvo.org//?s=Best+Practices&x=0&y=0
But never stop learning!
Dan and George discuss. Dan says his peers have taught him much, with the
foundation coming in his school days. Next week’s roundtable will include some top
coaches.
Q: Does WoVO offer accreditation? A: No, though WoVO will soon offer home studio
certification.
Coming up: how to make your website better.
0:25:57 Break
0:27:30 They’re back with Joe Davis. Joe demonstrates branding by wearing a Dan
mustache. Joe talks about how he came to the business. His friendship with Dan led
him to learn about VO.
He began thinking about making web design fast, affordable, and relevant for VO. Joe
and Dan now have a business, http://www.voiceactorwebsites.com/
Dan noticed websites can be a pain, with somebody else in charge.
Joe thinks a website’s goal is either for branding (where you’ve had contact with the
clients prior). For those sites, search engine optimization (SEO) isn’t as important.
Example: McDonald’s—lots of graphics, nearly no text. Not good for SEO. http://
www.mcdonalds.com/us/en/home.html
The other type that brings in new traffic. That type needs to have a lot of text.
Example: Dan’s site. http://www.homevoiceoverstudio.com/ It’s got lots of text which is
good for SEO. “Flash” can’t be read by SEO. Example is Dan’s VO site, which can’t be
seen on an iPhone.
So you need to decide your need before you start.
0:37:00 Branding discussion. For Dan, his site is like a business card.
0:38:40 Joe asks what is a brand? A brand on livestock was a way of know who
owned which cow. Ultimately, it’s something people think of someone or something.
Example: Pepsi logo. Sometimes a brand gives you an insight into a company or it can
give a feeling.
For the website Joe runs, he spent hours building a logo with a headset and a mic. And
that turned out not to work since VO’s don’t use headsets so much.
It might be best to bring a brand or logo to your website development, rather than have
the web designer do it.
0:43:20 Dealing with SEO and keywords. What is all that?
When you go to a search engine and type in words, the search engine gives different
weight to different terms. SEO includes on-page and off-page factors. If you don’t have
the words “voice-over” on your page, you won’t get found.
Most webpage viewers don’t go beyond the first page of a search result. Something 60-
85% click on the first three choices brought up by a search engine.
Pay-per-click: Google makes its money by selling advertisers who appear above the
search results. The client sets the amount per click up to a ceiling amount.
This is why most of us won’t make money via our websites since there are deep
pockets getting the most out of their SEO.
Google has 10 spaces for the 1.3 million looking for voice work everyday. So if you can
identify your niche visually and in text at your site.
0:51:15 Harlan Hogan spot. Harlan is having an April Fools Sale, one day only on April
1.
0:53:59 Audience questions.
Q I just bought a domain and I’m trying to “host” it via WordPress. If this OK?
A Yes. This is a good way to manage your site yourself. Joe tells the history of site
management. You can “host” your site through BlueHost. You can have more power
and flexibility by hosting yourself. Hostgater is another ($10 a month).
George uses SquareSpace. His site includes an embedded element (SourceConnect
Now). Joe said you do need to be careful that your embedded content is a trusted
source. The other caution: the more you put on your site the slower it loads. It should
load within 7 seconds.
1:01:10
Q: How do you handle multiple websites?
A: Depends on what you want to do with each site. You probably need a very different
brand for each function if you have a different site for each. If all your sites talk about
the same thing, keep the branding the same.
1:04:08 Often there’s a bar across the top. Then a call to action and services in the
upper right.
English speakers read in an F pattern, looking top left first, then across, back, down,
and across: define the brand first, then call to action, down the side your menu, and a
way to contact on the right. Sidebars are moving to the right to enhance SEO.
1:06:20
Q How much change control do I have?
A Depends on the web design system you’re using.
1:08:25
Q What about mobile sites?
A More than 1 billion use mobile devices to access the internet. Having a site that
works is important. You can build a site specific to mobile devices or a responsive
design. In those, the site changes as it shrinks.
Responsive design is better for SEO. Duplicate content gets punished by Google. You
can also get reported by a competitor.
1:12:19
Q How important is it to have a blog on the website?
A With WordPress you can have both managed on the same system. Google loves
fresh content and old content and domain names. If update regularly, that’s good.
If you’re not doing it at least once a week, you might want to remove your dates so
Google doesn’t think you have an abandoned blog.
1:14:48
Q What about registering a domain with wix.com?
A Joe doesn’t have experience with Wix. The more you use a template service, you’re
limited, but it can be easy to use. If you want more flexibility, then hosting yourself is
just as expensive.
1:16:52
Q Single page website vs multi-tab site?
A It depends on the goal of the site. The more pages the better if you want to bring in
natural traffic. Long single pages could get hit by Google if they’re too long.
Google likes organized content with “bread crumbs.”
George asks Joe about podcasts. Joe says it requires an audience with specific
interests.
Now days we can build websites quickly and inexpensively.
1:24:04 Joe’s final advice: buy domains associated with your domain name and then a
Break.
1:25:38 They’re back. Email your questions to Joe.
Announcements:
Clickers!
Donors thank yous. Subscription donations possible!
The YouTube Channel includes EWABS Essentials, with the “best of.”
Next week: Voice Over Coaches Roundtable.
April 14: DARK. A break.
April 21: Third Anniversary with Voice Peeps. Send a video shout out and put up at
Dropbox.
May 5: Marketing Roundtable
1:31:30 George tests two mics.
1:33:19 End of show
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free