How to improve your voiceover skills: 7 tips for better narration

Vimeo Staff
a video still with a man talking to the camera while making a recording with Vimeo

Most creators who record voiceovers aren’t trained actors. They’re marketers, educators, and video producers who need to sound clear and confident to impress their audiences, but who don’t have time for formal voiceover training.

If that sounds like you, the good news is you can improve your narration with a handful of simple habits. You’ll need to carefully consider how to prepare yourself and your script before hitting record, control pace and breath during each take, and set up your environment to make the process as smooth as possible.

This article explains how to improve your voiceover skills, sharing practical tips you can apply right away.

Why voiceover quality matters

Understanding how to do voiceovers well starts with knowing what pulls listeners out of the experience. If your content is good enough, many viewers will tolerate a shaky camera or low-resolution frame. On the other hand, rushed or muffled narration pulls attention away from your message and toward its delivery, losing viewers’ attention fast. 

Your voiceover’s quality affects how much viewers trust what they hear and whether they watch to the end. Tone matters as well, since a recording that matches the content's mood — warm for a welcome video, clear and direct for a training module — signals that care went into the work.

7 ways to improve your voiceover skills

These voice acting tips will help you get more out of every recording session.

1. Warm up your voice

Your vocal cords are muscles, so don’t go straight into recording without warming up. That makes your voice sound stiff and your delivery harder to sustain across a full session.

A five-minute warmup loosens your voice and steadies your breath control. Start with a hum, hold a steady note, then slide your pitch gradually higher until you feel your voice open up. Run through a tongue twister or two to sharpen your articulation, and try a yawn-sigh: open your mouth wide, yawn fully, then let the breath out slowly through your nose.

Each of these exercises shifts your voice from resting state to recording state before you speak a single line.

2. Prepare your body

Posture affects breath, and breath controls your voice. A slouched posture compresses your diaphragm and restricts airflow, shortening phrases and flattening delivery.

Instead, sit upright or stand. Keep your shoulders back and your chest open, and hold your head level over your spine. This gives your lungs the full range they need to support longer sentences without faltering.

Also, don't forget to drink water at least two hours before your session, so your vocal cords are properly lubricated by the time you record. A warm drink nearby during a long session also keeps your vocal cords strong throughout.

3. Study your script

Before you record, go through the script at least twice. Identify which words carry the most weight in each sentence and mark them. Note where natural pauses fall, and decide on the tone you need for this particular piece. Is it calm and reassuring, direct and factual, or warm and conversational?

Cold reads also help you flag problem lines, since a sentence that looks clean on the page can read awkwardly aloud. If you need a starting point, an AI script writer can help you get a working draft down before you start rehearsing.

4. Speak to one person

Voiceovers for a general audience tend to take on an announcement-like tone. That tone is often slightly too formal and disconnected.

To avoid that, picture a specific person and imagine you’re speaking directly to them. This shift in mindset changes your cadence and delivery without requiring any technical adjustments. Your pacing should slow slightly, while your sentences become more natural. 

5. Control your pacing and breathing

Nerves push you to rush, and the result is a recording where words blur together and viewers have to work to keep up. The opposite problem, deliberate over-pacing, makes the narration feel stilted and dull.

Aim for a pace slightly slower than your natural speaking cadence. Also, mark your script with breath cues at natural pause points, like transitions between ideas or right before key definitions. Breathing at these moments, rather than mid-sentence, gives your audio a steady rhythm and prevents your phrases from running out of air before the end. 

6. Set up a convenient recording environment

Background noise is hard to remove in post, so record in the quietest space available. You don’t need a purpose-built studio — some basic video equipment and a spare room or closet produces clean audio for most voiceover work.

If possible, opt for a small room with soft furnishings, as that absorbs echoes better than large open spaces do. You can also hang a thick blanket or heavy curtain behind you. Before hitting play, close all doors and windows, then turn off fans and air conditioning. Also, don’t forget to silence any devices that produce notification sounds. 

Your microphone’s position matters just as much as the room. Keep the mic 6–8 inches from your mouth, positioned slightly off-center to reduce plosive sounds on hard consonants. A pop filter between your mouth and the mic handles the rest. 

7. Record multiple takes

The first take is rarely the best one. Record at least two or three versions of each section, then listen back before moving on. What feels right in the moment sometimes sounds wrong through headphones. You may find phrases that seemed natural came out rushed, or pauses that felt too long were actually perfect. 

Reviewing your takes in-session also helps you catch technical issues early. Mic clipping and background noise are easier to fix when you spot them before moving on. A good video editor also speeds up the review-and-trim process, so you spend less time in post-production and more time getting the next take right.

Learn about Vimeo's editing tools

Improve your video and audio quality with Vimeo

It’s easy to feel intimidated when you’re standing before a mic, but it’s not that difficult to record strong narration. Just keep the above tips in mind, and get as much practice as possible. Repetition improves your technique, but it also helps you feel more confident and natural.

Still, better technique only goes so far without the right tools to back it up. Vimeo's built-in video editor makes it easy to fix your voiceovers and polish your recordings. Thanks to Vimeo’s AI, you can streamline productions with text-based editing, automatic transcription, and voice cloning for translated audio. 

Edit your voiceovers with Vimeo

FAQ

Is voice acting a skill or a talent?

Voice acting is a learned skill, where consistent practice, proper preparation, and attention to pacing improve your delivery over time.

What skills do you need to record professional voiceovers?

To record a voiceover that sounds professional, you need clear articulation, controlled pacing, breath awareness, and a basic understanding of mic technique and acoustic setup.

Can I do a voiceover with no experience?

You don’t need experience to record a voiceover. Most creators who record narration for tutorials, training videos, or marketing content aren't trained voice actors. All you need to get started is a willingness to plan and record carefully, examine the results, and adjust until it sounds right.

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