VOICE-OVER AGENTS - PART 1 Are You Truly Ready For A Voice-Over Agent? This Checklist Helps You Decide ... September 4, 2018 By Tom Dheere Voice Actor and Coach Recently a voice talent asked me for advice about landing an agent. This is what I told him …
Once you answer those questions and determine that pursuing an agent at
this point in your career is worth it, order the latest issue of The
Call Sheet. It lists all of the agents and their submission criteria.
'LANDING AN AGENT' CHECKLIST Now let's take my above advice and turn it into a "landing an agent" checklist: 1. Do you need an agent at this point in your career? Most
aspiring voice talents think they need one immediately, and that is
never the case. You need an agent once you achieve a certain level of
success and want to be considered for projects you can't get on your
own. 2. If you determine you need an agent, what exactly do you need them for? If you want to be more successful in a certain genre (most often
commercials, but also animation and a few others) you need representation
that will submit you for the projects you want to get cast. 3. For which part of the country/world do you need an agent? Usually you're only allowed to have one agent in a 50-mile radius. Make
sure that geography lines up with your genre needs. For example, if you
want high-end animation work, landing an agent in the Los Angeles area
is a good idea. 4. Are you willing to sign with an agent? If you do,
most of the time you're not allowed to be submitted for projects by
other agents. Read the exclusivity clause VERY CAREFULLY. 5. Are you willing to travel for auditions and recording sessions? There are agents and studios in pretty much every metropolitan area. If
you can't or won't commute for auditions and recording sessions, that
will have a big effect on your choice of agent. 6. FYI: there are many
reputable agents out there who submit talent online. 7. Are you union or non-union? Many agents represent
union talent, non-union talent, or both. Don't waste your time (and the
time of the agent) submitting if they won't cast union/non-union
projects. 8. Did you follow ALL of the submission criteria in The Call Sheet ? The best way to never be considered by agent is to ignore the
submission criteria. That will prove to them immediately that you can't
take direction and therefore are useless to them. 9. Are you willing to take "no" for an answer? This is
not the part when I say "don't give up" or "don't take no for an answer"
cliche crap. I have submitted to agents who loved me and my
demos, but had too many people on their roster who sound like me.
That is not a bad thing! It just means there isn't room for you on
their roster right now. Be sure to stay in touch and follow-up in six
months or so. Pinning your hopes on one particular agent is, in my
opinion, starving-artist-like and unrealistic. There are many small
agencies out there who can get you good work and ensure you are paid
well. ------------------ ABOUT TOM Over two decades, Tom Dheere has narrated thousands of projects for clients in over a dozen countries and voiced more than 60 audiobooks. He is also a voice-over business consultant known as the VO Strategist, was the marketing consultant for the Voice Over Virtual online conference, and is writer/producer of the sci-fi action comic book Agent 1.22. Web: www.vostrategist.com Agent 1.22 Your Daily Resource For Voice-Over Success
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Comments (1)
Joe Loesch
9/4/2018 at 9:37 PM
This is an excellent article Tom. I tell my students the same thing, but I really like your technique to handling this topic with a couple of additional truths. Thanks for sharing your wisdom on this topic.
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