Voiceover Hacks That Work for Yoga Teachers
I straddle two worlds.
I’m a seasoned voiceover pro, with a huge clientele and a solid reputation as one of the busiest and most-recognized voices on telephone systems globally.
And I coach yoga instructors to speak better while they’re teaching. It grew from me wanting to suggest alternative ways for a teacher to speak in class; it’s grown into a private coaching business, with workshops for yoga studios in their Yoga Teacher Training.
The idea that I had ideas and insight to impart in an industry that’s largely unrelated to mine was something I couldn’t predict – and now, many of the yoga studios who hire me to coach can’t imagine their Yoga Teacher Training without it – and that there’s been a huge lack of emphasis on voice in traditional YTT.
There’s actually a lot of crossover between voice talent and yoga instructors, and the care and maintenance required to be effective speakers in both realms. Your voice is an instrument, whether you speak professionally in front of a mic, you do presentations or instruct a class, or even if you’re barking the same instruction over and over to an endless lineup of passengers. It’s all voiceover.
Here are some areas in which there’s strong similarities between voiceover talent and other professional speakers, with the same hacks and discipline required to speak effectively:
We get Nervous, Too
Nerves are a big thing that I tackle in my workshops, and I emphasise that we who spend our days in front of a mic are not immune to the havoc that nerves play on our voice. When I speak a conference, when I do a session that is being directed remotely by the client, and especially if I do a voiceover session at a public studio, nerves most definitely play into the equation. The sooner that you can control your breath, focus on the material, and trust in your ability, the sooner that nerves dissipate and you can focus on the task at hand.
We Adopt Affectations, Too
Something strange and “precious” happens when we get in front of the mic. We feel obligated to put on the “announcer voice”, much like many yoga instructors putting on the earthy, over-serene “yoga teacher voice.” With my line of work – voicing phone systems – my trend is to slip into efficient, smooth, reassuring “automaton” voice. While suitable for a lot of phone platforms, that default voice is incongruent when a client needs something more candid, natural, and conversational.
The Self Care Is The Same
Good Hydration, adequate sleep, and gentle self-care serves any speaker, regardless of your venue. Whether you’re getting humidifiers going in the fall, heading off that tickle in your throat with mega doses of vitamin C and/or Nin Jiom, and ensuring that your body is well hydrated are crossover strategies that singers and voice talent have known for years – and are cornerstones for good vocal health for anyone, regardless of where you speak.






