How to fit your voice into your message
Are you struggling to get your message across to engage your audience? Voice-over speakers, podcasters and radio announcers simply have their voices in order to effectively influence the audience. Your voice is a listener or attraction, to tune you in or to give you tune for your audience.
Here are three key ways to talk to a microphone to engage your audience and increase the volume of your voice if you are not voice-overs of unique characters.
# 1. Set the overall melody to fit your audience
The first three words you say are critical. Instead of "talking" to the listener, the tone of the conversation will always prevail over the listener member because it instantly warms up your voice. By avoiding the static tone, you can expand your vocal effect to be more upbeat, persuasive and even dramatic as you move forward.
A good practice is to take three deep breaths with the diaphragm to relax before you speak and then continue to breathe silently into your microphone.
# 2. Emphasize keywords with different pitch techniques
The instantaneous way to emphasize the importance of your message is to say specific words or phrases with extra volume. But if you use different pitch levels to emphasize your miss, you will gain more attraction. Selecting nouns with changes in high activity, adjective or noun or higher or lower pitch level can avoid monotony. Practicing saying "ah" will increase and decrease the level of your pitch.
Choose which melody matches your keywords, for example, curious, mysterious, exciting, joyful, professional, sad, calm, or any other emotion. Play with vocal precision in your keywords. There is no need to emphasize every word, so if you have a real conversation with a friend or colleague, choose what words will work.
Avoid the word that you are reading your own content, for example, record your speech and then listen with your eyes closed. Are you allowing your audience to keep pace with you in order to express themselves and understand your message?
# 3. Get acquainted (gain, obtain) with a microphone
Maintain the same distance between your face and your microphone Use your microphone in rehearsals to analyze your voice, your breathing, your volume, and the level of expressive pitch.
A big challenge is to test the speech for clear speech to avoid blurring your words and to test your speed with the flow from one idea to another.
Overall, use your breath to relax before your next broadcast episode and do a vocal warmup to prepare your voice for work. It's time to give your best quality sound at your next broadcast event!
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