On this episode I talk about how to get used to your voice in podcasting. Most people dont like the sound of their voices. I show some tricks to help people like the sound of their voice.
Welcome everybody to the podcast answers show. Today we are going to be talking about finding
Speaker:your voice in podcasting. But first, what do we do? We are a show that helps you start
Speaker:and grow your podcast, answering any podcasting questions along the way.
Speaker:So without further ado, let's go.
Speaker:Let's get into it.
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Speaker:You can listen wherever you're at.
Speaker:In fact, I just got a notification on my phone that says live podcast answers.
Speaker:Episode 12, finding your voice in podcasting from Podverse.
Speaker:So that's the app that I use for listening live, but there are several
Speaker:other podcast apps that you can listen live on too.
Speaker:So without further ado, let's get into it.
Speaker:Let's talk a little bit today about finding your voice in podcasting and
Speaker:the way that we can do that.
Speaker:So I know a lot of people struggle with, how do I talk to myself?
Speaker:How do I make this sound good?
Speaker:How do I get in there and I actually just do it?
Speaker:Because let's be honest, a lot of people don't like their voice when it comes to
Speaker:when it comes to podcasting, you know, when, when it comes to listening to
Speaker:themselves, a lot of people, a lot of people are going to hear themselves and go,
Speaker:This is not myself. This is not how I sound.
Speaker:So how do you do that?
Speaker:How do you go about, what are some tips and tricks
Speaker:that you can use to get used to your voice
Speaker:and just kind of your style as you're podcasting?
Speaker:So thought for their do, let's go.
Speaker:So one of the first ways that I say you can get used
Speaker:to your voice and podcasting is record yourself
Speaker:and listen to it.
Speaker:So this may be before you put out your first episode,
Speaker:But guys, I've been listening to myself podcast
Speaker:every single episode that I've ever done,
Speaker:not just editing, like I obviously edit it
Speaker:and when I listen to it and trim the ends and things,
Speaker:I don't do a whole lot of editing,
Speaker:but if, because I want my podcast to sound real,
Speaker:I don't want to cut out all of the ums and the ayes
Speaker:because that's one way that you can get to better
Speaker:is listening to yourself.
Speaker:So for me, I'm listening to myself
Speaker:and every single episode that I've ever produced,
Speaker:I listened to it after it comes out.
Speaker:So make sure a couple of things.
Speaker:And I didn't screw up in editing
Speaker:because I've seen a lot of people that
Speaker:you think the job is done
Speaker:and then you get it and there's long pauses
Speaker:or as they left something in, they shouldn't have left.
Speaker:So for me, as one last quality check,
Speaker:even after it's gone out, I listened to it.
Speaker:But so I listened to all of my episodes back again.
Speaker:I listened to every single one of them.
Speaker:And yes, for the first several times,
Speaker:that made me cringe.
Speaker:That made me go, "Oh my goodness, my voice stinks.
Speaker:My voice is terrible."
Speaker:And you know what?
Speaker:The more I listen to it, the more I get used to it.
Speaker:But one of the good things about listening to yourself
Speaker:is it allows you to pick up on the nuances
Speaker:of things that you want to change.
Speaker:So it may be terrible.
Speaker:There may be things that you were actually doing
Speaker:that don't sound good, that aren't helping you.
Speaker:And so by listening back to your episodes, listening to yourself, you get that.
Speaker:You get, you understand what you're sounding like.
Speaker:So for me, I didn't, I, when I listened to myself, I listened and I realized that I
Speaker:have a lot of filler words, like um, and ah.
Speaker:And so one of the things that I've been trying to do is be conscious when I'm
Speaker:talking and slow down a little bit and actually think about what I'm saying before I say it.
Speaker:Because, or a lot of times, the other thing that I do is I get stuck in like the middle
Speaker:of a sentence. I don't completely think about my sentences before I start saying them. So
Speaker:it's me slowing down a little bit and thinking about what I want to say before I say it helps
Speaker:me come across as a better communicator. And so it also, as listening to myself, I realize
Speaker:that I say those filler words quite a lot. So what do I do to get rid of those? I don't
Speaker:cut them out in post because that for one takes a lot of time and it's not helpful because
Speaker:you don't actually get any better by not listening to yourself in post. You actually are going
Speaker:to be the same. And so what I do, I leave those in, I listen to myself and I say, "Hey,
Speaker:Andy, you don't want to say all of those filler words. So think about them and cut
Speaker:them out. So that's one way that you can get better and find and get used to your voice.
Speaker:Because again, you're going to listen to yourself and you're going to listen back and you're
Speaker:going to find out the things that you don't like the nuances that you don't like the way
Speaker:that you didn't necessarily put a tone in the way you that you said filler words. So
Speaker:listening back is going to be one of those ways that helps you out when you're when you're
Speaker:doing a podcast. Another good way to thing to do is also... There I said my
Speaker:filler word because I didn't think of my word. So there you got it. Got it. Another
Speaker:good way to make yourself better at communicating. So I'm doing a solo show
Speaker:now and again this depends on what kind of show that you do because a lot of
Speaker:So a lot of shows, if you do a co-host,
Speaker:it's just like a conversation.
Speaker:But for me, which is fine, I have no problem
Speaker:having a conversation with my co-host.
Speaker:But when I started this show,
Speaker:this is my first solo show ever.
Speaker:I've been doing podcasting since 2007.
Speaker:I've had a lot of different shows that I've started,
Speaker:but all of them have been co-hosted shows.
Speaker:So for me, this is my first solo show.
Speaker:And so I'm doing this show
Speaker:because I wanted to prove to myself that I could do a solo show and not just have a show where I had a co-host that I had to bounce my communication off.
Speaker:And so for me, when I started this show, a lot of the times that I was talking, it was just very matter of faculty.
Speaker:So for me, for help, what I do in this show is I normally have a, I don't really have my Notion app up, which has my notes for the show.
Speaker:And by notes for the show, I usually just have a bullet points on the topics that I want to talk about so that I can make sure that I can get through them.
Speaker:But I don't use that as a crutch. I don't want to be able to have my app or my talk scripted out because scripted podcasts will have their place. That's not what I wanted for this show.
Speaker:And so for me, I just decided to script. I do my bullet points. So I remember what I want to talk about. So I don't have a lot of that filler time in there.
Speaker:and have a lot of chances to use those filler words,
Speaker:but I can talk on a normal basis.
Speaker:So what I do is I'm sitting in front of a computer right now
Speaker:and you can't see it, but what you...
Speaker:Actually, if you wanna take a look at it,
Speaker:I can kinda show you what...
Speaker:If you're looking at the video,
Speaker:here's what my screen actually looks like.
Speaker:So I've got my video, I'm seeing myself how I act.
Speaker:I also have my audio play out system playing up things like that.
Speaker:So that's the way that my screen looks.
Speaker:But I'm looking into my screen, but I'm also pretending not only that I'm
Speaker:I'm seeing myself so I don't make sure that I'm on camera, right?
Speaker:But I'm also pretending that I'm actually talking to you guys out there,
Speaker:to you, the listener, because I am.
Speaker:I'm directly talking to you, even though I can't see you
Speaker:because we're on this thing called a podcast. And so you're not able to see, I'm not able to see you.
Speaker:You can see me if you're watching the video, but I can't see you. But the way that I do this is I just
Speaker:pretend that you're out there. I pretend that there's hundreds and thousands of people out there
Speaker:sitting right outside my window that's right in front of me and listening to me talk, listening to me
Speaker:give this speech, give this talk about how to find your voice. And so what that does for me is it gives
Speaker:me the opportunity to interact like I would if I was talking right to you. Does that make
Speaker:sense? So you're gonna have, you know, I'm not gonna have the feedback from you. I'm
Speaker:not gonna, you're not gonna see, I'm not gonna see if you're boring and checked out, but
Speaker:I'm gonna be able to see, I'm gonna be able to pretend to have a conversation with you.
Speaker:So I can have intonation. So I just don't sound flat like this. And I'm talking about
Speaker:funding your voice in podcasting and I'm just reading something because I want to get this
Speaker:podcast out. No, I actually have intonation in my voice because this is how I actually
Speaker:talk if you talk to me. I have intonation, I have inflections, I have things that are
Speaker:going to make me sound interesting to listen to. And those are the same things that I want
Speaker:to portray on my podcast. So those are a few ways that I can find my voice in podcasting.
Speaker:That is ways that you have found to get used to your voice to make sure that your voice
Speaker:sounds unique in podcasting.
Speaker:I want to know.
Speaker:So contact us at podcastanswers.com/contact.
Speaker:I want to know what your way is that you've got used to listening to your voice if you're
Speaker:in podcasting.
Speaker:If you've not done this before and you're just getting used to your voice, try the things
Speaker:out that I said.
Speaker:Again, those things are listening to each and every episode.
Speaker:So that way you get used to the way you sound.
Speaker:You know that if you're going to speak too quickly, you know that if you make noises
Speaker:with your mouth, you know that if you use a lot of filler words, listen to yourself after
Speaker:you're done recording.
Speaker:Because as we're talking, we don't pick those things up.
Speaker:Because we use those as filler words as we're thinking in our brain, as we're trying to
Speaker:get things out on tape.
Speaker:And so, listen to yourself after the fact, after you're done editing it.
Speaker:Don't edit those imperfections out because you want to be able to hear those and you
Speaker:want to be able to get better.
Speaker:And so, use those things, use those imperfections as ways to get better in your speech, in your
Speaker:podcast episode.
Speaker:And then the next thing to do is pretend that you have an audience.
Speaker:I've always heard that when you're going on stage and you're nervous about being in front
Speaker:of 100,000 people or whatever, pretend that there's someone in the audience sitting in
Speaker:their underwear, or the audience is in their underwear and laugh about it.
Speaker:Something that just kind of breaks that barrier so you're not speaking to a stiff walled people.
Speaker:This is the same thing here.
Speaker:Pretend that you're out there, that your audience is out there.
Speaker:Pretend that they're listening to you.
Speaker:Pretend that they're engaged.
Speaker:Pretend that they're taking notes.
Speaker:Things like that.
Speaker:important things that you want to say and get them out there without saying too many
Speaker:words but use the fact that you were pretending there's an audience in front of you, that
Speaker:way you can not just feel like you're talking at your computer screen, not just feel like
Speaker:you're talking out into the ether, but actually talking to somebody that's listening because
Speaker:people are listening to your podcast.
Speaker:So guys, again, I would love to hear from you the ways that you are finding your voice
Speaker:in podcasting.
Speaker:Again, you can contact me at podcastanswers.com/contact or if you're listening in a new podcast app,
Speaker:you can hit the boost button and just send us a message in there with small amounts of
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Speaker:this show and I want to get better and I want to be able to produce this show for you in
Speaker:the long, long, long haul because I really truly believe that podcasting is the way to
Speaker:go.
Speaker:I believe it is the way to get your message out there.
Speaker:It's the way to feel like you're radio famous.
Speaker:You know, I think all of us have had a dream one day of becoming a radio DJ or a radio
Speaker:speaker or whatever.
Speaker:And this is the way to do it.
Speaker:And so if you want help starting your podcast, I would love to talk to you about this.
Speaker:We do, I do one-on-one consulting with people.
Speaker:You can go to buymeacoffee.com/podcastanswers and you can contact me and we can do a one-on-one
Speaker:consult and we can just I can help you out because it's a lot of fun to do and
Speaker:you know if you have any questions I this is the reason I started this show is
Speaker:is to answer podcast questions so if you have podcasting questions that you want
Speaker:to answer I would love to hear them podcast answers comm slash contact and
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Speaker:answer your questions for you guys with that have a great week
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