Your Questions, Answered

  • I provide voiceover for commercials, corporate videos, financial and investor-facing content, explainers, e-learning, political and advocacy messaging, documentary-style narration, and phone/IVR systems. If your project needs a voice that sounds credible, human, and believable, I’m likely a strong fit.

  • Clients often come to me when they want a read that feels trusted, seasoned, grounded, and genuinely human. I’m especially well suited to projects that need authority without sounding stiff, and warmth without sounding salesy.

  • Yes. I work from a broadcast-quality home studio equipped for clean, professional audio and efficient turnaround. That means you get studio-grade sound without the delays and overhead of booking an outside facility.

  • Yes. I offer remote directed sessions as well as self-recorded sessions. If you’d like to listen in, adjust the tone, or shape the read in real time, we can set that up easily.

  • Turnaround depends on script length, complexity, and scheduling, but many short-form projects can be delivered quickly. I’m a full-time voice actor, so I’m in my studio almost every day. If you’re on a deadline, tell me when you need it and I’ll give you a realistic timeline upfront.

  • I’m not the cheapest option, and I’m not trying to be. But I can work with most budgets. Clients hire me because they want broadcast-quality audio, strong interpretive instincts, a smooth process, and a voice that builds trust. For the right project, that usually saves time, reduces revisions, and gives you a stronger final result.

  • Pricing depends on factors such as script length, usage, turnaround time, revision needs, and whether the session is self-recorded or live-directed. I’m happy to provide a clear quote once I know a little about the project.

  • Yes. One advantage I bring is not just the voice, but the ability to quickly understand intent, audience, and messaging. If you want, I can offer a thoughtful read on tone, pacing, and emphasis so the script lands the way it should.

  • Because some messages need more than sound. They need judgment, nuance, credibility, and human connection. When trust matters — in corporate, financial, political, or brand messaging — a real performance still carries weight that synthetic audio can’t fully replicate.