Submit Your Voice

TrainingLibrary

These courses are designed to answer specific technical questions.
If you’re unsure what’s actually limiting your audio, a diagnostic or custom evaluation is usually the better first step

Optimal Recording Levels For Voice Over

This course explains how to set recording levels correctly for voice-over, and why proper gain staging matters long before processing ever enters the picture. It focuses on helping you understand what a healthy recording level actually is, how to set it consistently for your voice, and how incorrect levels introduce noise, distortion, and room artifacts that can’t be fully fixed later. The emphasis is on building a repeatable method rather than chasing numbers or relying on guesswork. This is especially useful if you’ve been told to “record quieter,” “aim for a specific dB value,” or have found yourself compensating with plugins after the fact. The goal of the course is not to hit a mythical perfect level, but to establish a stable, professional recording baseline that makes editing, processing, and delivery easier and more predictable.

$24.99 USD

Acoustic Treatment For Voice-Over

This course explains how acoustic treatment actually affects voice-over recordings, and just as importantly, what it can’t fix. It focuses on helping you understand what your room is contributing to the sound, how to choose the right type of acoustic treatment, how much treatment is appropriate for your space, and where placement makes a real difference. The goal is to replace guesswork and overbuying with clear, practical decisions. This is especially useful if you’ve added foam, blankets, or panels but still feel like something isn’t quite right in your recordings. The course is designed for voice talent who want to improve their recording environment in a controlled, realistic way, without over-treating their space or chasing unrealistic “studio” expectations.

$49.95 USD

EQ Fundamentals For Voice

This course is designed to help you understand the controls of an equalizer and how they are used when working with voice. Rather than focusing on presets or stylistic outcomes, it walks through what each EQ control does, how different types of EQ bands behave, and how common adjustments affect clarity, balance, and intelligibility in spoken voice. It also explains what balanced voice audio actually means in practical terms, so you’re not guessing at what you’re trying to achieve. A key part of the course is learning how to identify frequency imbalances in a voice recording and use EQ to correct or compensate for them when appropriate. This helps you make measured, intentional adjustments instead of over-boosting or cutting frequencies without a clear goal. This is especially useful if you’ve used EQ before but aren’t fully confident in what you’re adjusting, or if you’ve relied on trial and error without a solid mental model of how EQ works. The course is not about making your voice sound hyped, stylized, or “produced.” It’s about building familiarity with EQ tools so you can restore balance, preserve clarity, and recognize when EQ is being used to compensate for issues earlier in the signal chain.

$39.95 USD

Beginning Voice-Over Production Workflow

This course walks you through the core production workflow used for voice-over recording from a practical, operational perspective. Rather than focusing on performance or advanced sound design, it explains the correct sequence for capturing, editing, and preparing voice-over audio so your work is clean, consistent, and repeatable. The emphasis is on understanding what happens at each stage of the process, why the order matters, and where people commonly introduce problems without realizing it. This is especially helpful if you feel unsure about your current workflow, find yourself second-guessing steps, or get inconsistent results even when using the same setup. The goal of the course is not perfect audio or advanced processing, but a dependable production baseline you can trust and build on as your work progresses.

$49.99 USD

Mastering for Voice Recordings — Preparing Audio for Delivery

This course explains what mastering actually means in the context of voice recordings, and how it differs from mixing, processing, or sound design. Rather than focusing on advanced or music-based mastering techniques, it walks through the practical steps involved in preparing voice audio for final delivery. This includes managing overall level, controlling dynamics, and ensuring recordings meet common technical requirements for platforms such as audiobooks, podcasts, and online distribution. The emphasis is on understanding when mastering is appropriate, what problems it is meant to solve, and what it cannot fix if issues exist earlier in the recording or processing chain. You’ll learn how to make final adjustments responsibly so your audio translates consistently and meets delivery standards without introducing distortion or listener fatigue. This course is especially useful if you’ve reached the final stage of a project and feel unsure about loudness targets, consistency, or compliance requirements. The goal is not to dramatically change the sound of your voice, but to help you prepare clean, controlled recordings that are technically ready for submission and distribution.

$59.99 USD