When to make your voiceover demo - Carrie Olsen Voiceover
when to make your voiceover demo

When to make your voiceover demo

How to make a voice over demo

Have you made your voiceover demo yet?

If you haven’t, when should you get it made?

Got a demo but aren't getting any work from it? 

If so, what could be wrong?

Knowing the answers to these questions will help save you from wasting a lot of time and money unnecessarily, or if you’ve already spent the time and money -- at the very least, you'll know what to do moving forward so you’ll have more success getting voiceover work in the future.

So let's jump into discussing when to get your demo made.

Voiceover demos. What are they and why are they important.

Needless to say, in the world of voiceover, a demo is extremely important. It's like your business card, especially if you’re brand new to this industry. It represents your ability, your talent level, and your style. It’s what you send to potential clients or agents when auditioning or when trying to get onto their rosters.

Why a Demo is Important

It represents your:

  • Ability
  • Talent Level
  • Style

It's what you send to:


  • Potential Clients
  • Agents
  • when auditioning or trying to get onto their rosters

And because it is THAT important, a lot of aspiring voice actors jump into making their voiceover demo ASAP. Now that seems to make sense, right? After all, to become a legit voice actor, you need to have bookings, you need to have projects, and you need to have clients to record for. And you can only start marketing yourself, applying to job posts, and auditioning for work if you have that demo, right?

Wrong.

When NOT to make a voiceover demo

Here's the thing: If the first thing you do when you decide to get into the voiceover industry is to go out and record a demo, you're probably not going to book a lot of jobs with it and you're probably not going to get on any voiceover rosters.

A demo is an art form. To do one correctly, it requires a lot of skill on your part -- a lot of practice, talent, and intuition to be able to interpret copy, read scripts, and take direction. It also takes the skill of an experienced producer or engineer to make sure you're getting the best quality out of your demo.

Let's put this in terms of food. Let’s say that you want to be a chef, and there's a group of potential investors that you want to impress with your cooking so that they will invest in your restaurant and give you a chance. If you have no prior experience cooking, you're probably not going to go out and make your menu first thing, cook up a bunch of food, take it to the investors, and hope for the best. What you should do is learn about the industry, practice, get a mentor, learn how other people made it in the industry, and wait until you know that you’re competitive to make your full menu and put your finished product in front of people who are gatekeepers in the industry.

To put it simply and clearly: You don't need a demo first thing. As a matter of fact, that's the last thing that you should do. 

The reason I was prompted to discuss this today is because I've had several experiences in the past several weeks where someone has reached out to me and said “Hey, so I want to get started in voiceover. I know I need a demo first, so...” And I have to say “Woah, hold on. Pump the brakes a little bit. Getting your demo made right now is actually one of the worst things that you could do."

But what's worse is when someone reaches out who has already spent money on a demo as their first move getting into VO -- before getting any training. These are the saddest conversations I have to have and the very epitome of putting the cart before the horse.

Why you shouldn’t make a voiceover demo first thing

I'm sure you've probably picked up on at least a couple of reasons why you shouldn’t do a voiceover demo first thing through the course of this post. But let’s expound on this some more.

For one, if the first thing you do is make a demo, you are going to outgrow and outperform your demo almost immediately, as soon as you start getting some voice over training. Your performance level will immediately improve, and as you continue training, even as a full time professional (I personally am still continuously getting training), you will get better and better and better.

So when you make your demo, it's going to represent your ability at the time of that recording. And so as soon as you start getting training, you will immediately have outgrown the demo.

Picture this: You’re starting in the voiceover industry, and you go and get your demo made. You spend, $1,500 on it -- that's about an average amount. You think it sounds great, and maybe your mom and your husband think it sounds great, too (but neither of them are in the voiceover industry). Then, you start getting training, and you get a voice over coach, and you start getting better and better. A month goes by and you listen back to your demo that you had made a month ago, and you cringe and go, “Oh my gosh, I am way better than that. I can't believe I sounded like that.” And even worse, “I can't believe I spent money on that!” because now, it doesn't represent you.

Now, another thing that can happen is maybe you pay a bunch of money to get your demo, and the people who are making it for you coach you through that demo, telling you exactly how to perform the copy as you’re recording the demo. Then, when you get the finished demo and listen to it, you think it sounds pretty darn good. But the danger there is that -- since you were so heavily coached getting your demo done -- that performance is not something that you can replicate on your own without someone guiding you and directing you through the scripts.

So if you were to get a job based on that demo, the client who hired you would be disappointed with the final product that you deliver because you wouldn't be able to replicate what you did on the demo.

Since most of us do almost all of our work from home on our own, it means we have to be able to direct ourselves. So as you're performing the copy, you're also directing yourself most of the time. As a new voice actor, you're probably not good at directing yourself yet. So having a coach, or a demo producer, or someone who will coach you through the demo is going to give your demo a false sense of ability... when in reality, you don't have the chops yet to make those decisions or that type of read on your own yet.

Why You Shouldn't Make Your Demo First Thing

  • You will immediately outgrow and outperform it as soon as you start training, and it will not represent your performance level once you start training.
  • If you get heavily coached by the people who make your demo, you most likely won't be able to replicate the same performance quality when you self-direct in the future -- which means that clients will be disappointed with what you'll submit to them because it won't be on par with your demo.

So then, when do you make your voiceover demo?

If you don't make your demo immediately when you get started in voiceover, what should you do? 

And when do you make the demo?

Well, I've good news and bad news.

Let’s talk about the “bad news” first, and it's only bad if you aren't really into voiceover for the long haul anyway. The “bad news” is that, it's going to take a little while before you're at that point where you’re ready to make your demo, depending on your background. If you are an actor and you've taken acting classes before or if you have other skills and experiences that are going to give you a head start in the voiceover field, then you're not going to have to wait as long. But if you are brand new, you're fresh, you're coming from another career, or maybe this is your first career and you're just getting started in voiceover -- it's going to take a little while before you are ready to make that demo.

But if you noticed, I placed quotation marks in “bad news” because its being “bad” is relative. And here’s where the good news comes in.

Despite the fact that you need to wait until you’re ready to make your voiceover demo, this time that you're waiting to do the demo is still fun! If you're in voiceover for the long haul, if you love the work, and if you enjoy the process -- then it's not like you're just waiting around until you’re ready for the demo. You’re training. You're learning about the industry. You’re diving deep and gaining knowledge about the industry.

All of that should be really exciting and fun. 

I had a blast learning everything I could about voice over when I first started. 

You can even be auditioning while you're waiting to be ready to make your demo. So it's not necessarily a bad thing that you're waiting to get your demo done because it's a very active waiting.

I talk about how I booked a lot of voice over work and even landed an agent before I had my demo produced in this post.  


So when should you make a demo?

The simplest answer is: It depends on your individual background.

No one can just make a blanket statement and say, “It's going to take everyone a year from when they start getting training until it's time to make a demo.” Or "After X amount of training session you'll be ready for your demo."

It's just going to vary drastically depending on where you're starting in your voiceover journey.

Truly, the best way to know if you are ready to produce a voice over demo is by working with an experienced coach. See my list of recommended voice over coaches. 

Related article: What Should I Put on My Voiceover Demo Reel

How and when to make a voice over demo is a subject that is often discussed in The Voice Over Success Intensive Membership.

Voiceover Success Intensive

Learn voiceover in a supportive community! Learn the basics of recording, marketing, and more.

Carrie Olsen

I'm a full-time professional voice actor and voiceover business coach. I have done work for Taco Bell, REI, BNSF Railway, Bank of America and ESPN to name a few. I dreamed up this community of voice actors to connect, grow, learn and get mentorship from each other. We're the most dedicated group of voice actors on the net, and we're here to help each other build and sustain profitable voiceover businesses.

Carrie Olsen Voiceover