PSR™ Method
(Presentation Skills & Reading)


Voiceover rip-offs reduce advertiser's profits.
Are your company’s profits being reduced by untrained voiceovers?

Producers wouldn't use an 'out of focus' picture...

Walt Disney    Voiceover Technique

The whole point of advertising is to persuade people to buy a product or service.

Therefore, it is essential that a voiceover should be professionally trained in the correct technique. It seems that some producers working for major television and radio advertising agencies either don't understand that words are the most important and persuasive tools we possess, or perhaps they are trying to save money by using amateurs!

A producer recently told me that he likes to use untrained voiceovers because they sound ‘natural’.

People who think this are living in cloud-cuckoo-land, because sounding natural is the hardest thing for any actor or voiceover to achieve!


Only the very best can do this – Dame Helen Mirren, Jack Nicholson, Dame Judi Dench, Forest Whitaker, Meryl Streep, Robin Williams – and many lesser known voiceovers.

How can any producer possibly imagine that an untrained voiceover can be as effective as a trained professional? Apart from anything else, they are irritating to listen to.

Many thanks again the course. I found it very educating and I learnt a lot about myself, the way I talk and use my voice, and the way people retain information when listening to voices.

It's nice to see, and be taught by, someone who wants to maintain standards in our advertising industry.
So many agency people spend their tight budget on a creative process, aimed primarily at winning awards and forgetting that, ultimately, a commercial has to appeal in some way to the people.

The only way to do this is to do it professionally. It has been proven that ads using trained voices stay with people more then when untrained voiceovers are used. Therefore, from a creative point of view, I now know how trained voices can help me produce the most effective commercial.
Thanks Steve!
Richard Hendry – advertising executive
UK



Orson Welles

Orson Welles, 'War of the Words'

Just listen to Orson Welles trying to record a TV commercial for Findus Frozen Foods as two unfortunate producers from J. Walter Thompson (one of the leading advertising agencies in the world) try to tell him how to do his job.


This was recorded some time ago, but the situation now is even worse because so many TV and radio commercial voiceovers are untrained.

During the last few years, the number of untrained voiceovers used on television and radio commercials has increased dramatically.

The following companies have used an untrained voiceover during the last year (this does not include celebrities) to sell their product or service on radio or television:

Jaguar, Nivea, Findus, L’Oreal, Kellogg’s, All Bran, Kia, IBM, Always, Garnier, Norwich Union, Purple Loans, Lloyds TSB, Great Ormond Street Hospital, Polaris World, Rennie Dual Action, Yellow Pages, Travelsupermarket.com and amazingly, most of the beauty products.
This is unbelievable!

Clangers wot I've 'eard

Here are some of the worst habits of untrained voiceovers and broadcasters. These habits lead to a drop in retention and irritates the listener. These mistakes are contagious. 50% of the people studying the PSR™ Method have picked up these habits from television presenters and news readers in America and the UK.

One of the more common mistakes is that voiceovers and news readers emphasise insignificant words – ‘is’, ‘and’, ‘are’, ‘we’, ‘you’ and ‘your’.
They fail to recognise the most important words in a sentence.

Here’s Findus again.
Findus Frozen Foods used the line, 'Findus – the most tender peas'.
This is meant to evoke the memory of granny’s delicious roast beef and Yorkshire pudding with a pile of steaming fresh, tender peas.
Obviously, ‘tender peas’ are the most important words, together with Findus, the name of the advertiser.

The voiceover said, ‘Findus - THE most tender peas’,
which rather misses the point!

Another unfortunate habit is the insistence by some producers that the voiceover should emphasise the words ‘you’ and ‘your’.

For example:
' Make sure YOUR home is insured with XYZ Insurance Co.'
Whose home would you be insuring, if not your own?

Birdseye and Findus peas are both excellent products so how can anyone tell the difference between them?

Potential customers can only tell by the packaging design, the TV commercial and guess what?
The quality of the voiceover!


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