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Add You - So You Want To Be A Sound Engineer?
How To Land A Top Sales Or Marketing Job cassette, allowed me to bounce tracks, punch in sounds, etc. It was my most precious possession!Here are a couple of things that you should think about as you’re preparing for an interview with a potential employer:First of all make sure that as you prepare for the interview, you learn as much as you can in advance about the company. What are its core markets? Which customers does it target? Who are the competitors? What is the company unique selling proposition? What is management’s vision & values? What does the leadership stand for? What is the culture about? These are all things that you should study and research prior to going into your interview.You should also prepare questions to the hiring manager on these issues. Their answers will help you to determine the fit between yourself and the company as you explore the job opportunity, and it will demonstrate an advanced understanding of the company to the interview team. This will give you a leg up on other interviewees who don’t do this advanced p One thing led to another and I got involved with video, multimedia and of course, audio. In 1994, I stated a company that provided video and audio production services. My passion was still in audio and that kinda led to jobs where I provided a fair number of voice over recording services. I loved doing he recordings, sweetening them, taking away unwanted noises, etc. We later progressed to doing radio ads and that kinda opened a new challenge for me - with sound effects, background music, and even writing the script. You can say I was fortunate. And the message here is that if you have the PASSION for it - just go for it while time is still on your side. There are now many fine sound engineering schools, not just in the US, but across the globe as well. With the internet, getting the necessary info on the latest equipment, trends, techniques, is a no brainer. But that of course also opens up the competitiveness of the marketplace. But do not worry. If you have the drive, interest and perhaps the natural talent for audio, you will soar and build yourself one of the most satisfying careers possible. It allows you to be creative, adventurous - and when you here you HR Payroll Software Did you know that... if your work and passion are the same, you'll never work - but have fun everyday doing what you love and get paid for it.Human Resource (HR) payroll software can be defined as a comprehensive accounting solution to meet the demands of modern day payroll process. Payroll requirements are unique and most of the HR payroll packages are flexible and diverse to accommodate the most complex requirements across industries and organizations. Modern day HR payroll packages are versatile and user friendly. This enables the user a choice of sort order, selection of branch, department, position, etc. and other parameters to generate payroll output as per requirement, either on screen or as hard copies. Today's HR payroll packages have a built-in facility to directly mail the salary slip electronically to the employees. It will also have facilities to send salary statements to other branches, salary disbursement outputs to banks as per the bank's format.Functionality, quality, and quantity of HR payroll packages have grown over the years and each com If you have a love for all things audio, read on... A lot of people I know choose careers without much thought about what their passions, interest and natural abilities are. They plunge in, some targeting financial rewards as their sole aim, some based on what their buddies are doing, some from suggestions from well meaning friends and relatives. I am writing this to persons who have an interest in audio and want to investigate the possibilities of having a career as a sound engineer. The biggest piece of advice I can give to you is that you have to ask yourself if you have the PASSION deep down in you? Ask yourself - in your teens, did you show any natural interest in things related to sound? Did you take things apart, especially radios, amplifiers, cassette recorders? Did you always tweak the knobs of amplifiers to get that "perfect" sound? Have friends always told you that you have technical ability that is beyond them? If you have a few "yeses", then you have a chance. In fact, I would encourage you to seriously consider digging deeper for more information about being a sound engineer. But that's not all.... Being highly technical alone is not enough to get you far in your career. Sure, it's fun to mess around with buttons and knobs all day long. But if you can't interact properly with clients, they'll probably not come back for more. Unless perhaps you have such great technical and musical skills that make up for your lack of personality. You must realize that being a sound engineer requires you to have great patience and tolerance from sometimes utter rubbish from your clients. You need to know how to say "no" graciously, or to voice your opinion about a mix tactfully so that nobody's feelings are hurt. So, check yourself to see how good you are in this department. If you plan on starting on your own someday, you need to know about how to market your services. Almost all businesses don't make it through the third year in business because they don't have enough business. Many of us think that because we're so good, customers will beat a path to our doors. In my city, I know of long established recording studios that have folded because of competition from smaller but more marketing savvy studios. You're fighting for the same clients in your area - and the one that makes the most "noise" in the market, gets the lion share of the business. So, remember that you need to ALWAYS focus on how to get clients CONTINUOUSLY through your doors if you want to setup a studio of your own. Not everyone gets the opportunity to work in the big studios you see in the audio school brochures. The market is small, but growing because of online content. There will be many opportunities - if you keep up to date with the relevant technologies that people are looking for. Customers want speed, quality and competitive pricing. And you can only deliver on those if you work fast and accurately. You will also need to know online technologies as your productions will be broadcast to the world in so many forms, both offline and online. Continuous study is a must. And if you want to be able to work in a large recording studio or broadcast facility, you need to be really competent in all these areas. And that is where you passion comes in. With passion, learning all this will be second nature to you. It will not be a drag, not a chore, but something you WANT to know - and you can't beat that in any job. So how do you start? If you believe deep down in your heart that being a sound engineer is what you want to be, then you have to be strategic in all that you do. Here's what I mean. Get involved in audio anyway you can. At church, doing recordings for friends, converting audio from one format to another. Messing around for hours on audio software, tweaking software equalizers to see how various frequencies affect the sound. You have to immerse yourself with sound. Work for free in a recording studio while studying. That will teach you valuable lessons and you'll be way ahead of your class. And when you're ready, a job will probably be waiting for you! Read pro audio magazines, attend exhibitions and audio talks. Join the AES (Audio Engineering Society), get involved in audio newsgroups. Start a blog on your audio interest, you'll be surprised how the "word" gets around, and you'll be documenting your own growth in the industry. Get your hands dirty! Perhaps, now would be a great time for me to tel you a bit about myself. When I was a young teenager, I inherited an old but still working reel to reel tape deck from my uncle. I was fascinated that it could record Jimi Hendricks off the radio without much loss in quality. I play guitar, so the next logical thing I did was to record songs that I played. I was thrilled. Fast forward a few years, and I bought my first multi track recorder - a Tascam Portastudio that recorded 4 tracks on high speed cassette, allowed me to bounce tracks, punch in sounds, etc. It was my most precious possession! One thing led to another and I got involved with video, multimedia and of course, audio. In 1994, I stated a company that provided video and audio production services. My passion was still in audio and that kinda led to jobs where I provided a fair number of voice over recording services. I loved doing he recordings, sweetening them, taking away unwanted noises, etc. We later progressed to doing radio ads and that kinda opened a new challenge for me - with sound effects, background music, and even writing the script. You can say I was fortunate. And the message here is that if you have the PASSION for it - just go for it while time is still on your side. There are now many fine sound engineering schools, not just in the US, but across the globe as well. With the internet, getting the necessary info on the latest equipment, trends, techniques, is a no brainer. But that of course also opens up the competitiveness of the marketplace. But do not worry. If you have the drive, interest and perhaps the natural talent for audio, you will soar and build yourself one of the most satisfying careers possible. It allows you to be creative, adventurous - and when you here your Free Small Business Grant Is Within Your Reach! all....Free small business grant is a viable option, where financing of your business expansion presents a problem, especially when running a company or an organization that offers some important benefits to the society at large. What exactly do you have to loose if you lodge an application for a free small business grant? Nothing, but gain some free money. But in case you actually obtain one of the grants for starting a small business, you can consider yourself quite lucky. Basically, such a federal loan can help you fund the company to the stage you have always been dreaming about. In addition, you can expand your commercial activity internationally.In case you are already interested in obtaining a free small business grant, there are a few facts you must know of first. Let’s start with telling you that there are two different things you can obtain. First of all, there is the loan and then, there is the grant. As you might know, Being highly technical alone is not enough to get you far in your career. Sure, it's fun to mess around with buttons and knobs all day long. But if you can't interact properly with clients, they'll probably not come back for more. Unless perhaps you have such great technical and musical skills that make up for your lack of personality. You must realize that being a sound engineer requires you to have great patience and tolerance from sometimes utter rubbish from your clients. You need to know how to say "no" graciously, or to voice your opinion about a mix tactfully so that nobody's feelings are hurt. So, check yourself to see how good you are in this department. If you plan on starting on your own someday, you need to know about how to market your services. Almost all businesses don't make it through the third year in business because they don't have enough business. Many of us think that because we're so good, customers will beat a path to our doors. In my city, I know of long established recording studios that have folded because of competition from smaller but more marketing savvy studios. You're fighting for the same clients in your area - and the one that makes the most "noise" in the market, gets the lion share of the business. So, remember that you need to ALWAYS focus on how to get clients CONTINUOUSLY through your doors if you want to setup a studio of your own. Not everyone gets the opportunity to work in the big studios you see in the audio school brochures. The market is small, but growing because of online content. There will be many opportunities - if you keep up to date with the relevant technologies that people are looking for. Customers want speed, quality and competitive pricing. And you can only deliver on those if you work fast and accurately. You will also need to know online technologies as your productions will be broadcast to the world in so many forms, both offline and online. Continuous study is a must. And if you want to be able to work in a large recording studio or broadcast facility, you need to be really competent in all these areas. And that is where you passion comes in. With passion, learning all this will be second nature to you. It will not be a drag, not a chore, but something you WANT to know - and you can't beat that in any job. So how do you start? If you believe deep down in your heart that being a sound engineer is what you want to be, then you have to be strategic in all that you do. Here's what I mean. Get involved in audio anyway you can. At church, doing recordings for friends, converting audio from one format to another. Messing around for hours on audio software, tweaking software equalizers to see how various frequencies affect the sound. You have to immerse yourself with sound. Work for free in a recording studio while studying. That will teach you valuable lessons and you'll be way ahead of your class. And when you're ready, a job will probably be waiting for you! Read pro audio magazines, attend exhibitions and audio talks. Join the AES (Audio Engineering Society), get involved in audio newsgroups. Start a blog on your audio interest, you'll be surprised how the "word" gets around, and you'll be documenting your own growth in the industry. Get your hands dirty! Perhaps, now would be a great time for me to tel you a bit about myself. When I was a young teenager, I inherited an old but still working reel to reel tape deck from my uncle. I was fascinated that it could record Jimi Hendricks off the radio without much loss in quality. I play guitar, so the next logical thing I did was to record songs that I played. I was thrilled. Fast forward a few years, and I bought my first multi track recorder - a Tascam Portastudio that recorded 4 tracks on high speed cassette, allowed me to bounce tracks, punch in sounds, etc. It was my most precious possession! One thing led to another and I got involved with video, multimedia and of course, audio. In 1994, I stated a company that provided video and audio production services. My passion was still in audio and that kinda led to jobs where I provided a fair number of voice over recording services. I loved doing he recordings, sweetening them, taking away unwanted noises, etc. We later progressed to doing radio ads and that kinda opened a new challenge for me - with sound effects, background music, and even writing the script. You can say I was fortunate. And the message here is that if you have the PASSION for it - just go for it while time is still on your side. There are now many fine sound engineering schools, not just in the US, but across the globe as well. With the internet, getting the necessary info on the latest equipment, trends, techniques, is a no brainer. But that of course also opens up the competitiveness of the marketplace. But do not worry. If you have the drive, interest and perhaps the natural talent for audio, you will soar and build yourself one of the most satisfying careers possible. It allows you to be creative, adventurous - and when you here you Are the Yellow Pages a Dinosaur? ess.As I write my 64th article about the Yellow Pages, it reminds me of how the best things continue to stick around. For example, the YP were started as a pamphlet in Wyoming over 100 years ago. It became an easy way to keep track of a small number of local businesses. Today, they are a household name. They are still the book picked up when someone has a need. There are few service businesses that don’t have an ad in the good ole YP.With the advent of the Internet, most nay-sayers have doomed the YP to the way of the dinosaur. They claim that people prefer the speed of the digital age. They point to more surfers using online newspapers and magazines as their first choice. But there is a fatal flaw in their thinking. You cannot compare ads online.Say you are looking for a plumber on the net. After you do your local search and get a list, a few have ads, which you may click on “one at a time.” So how can you compare featu So, remember that you need to ALWAYS focus on how to get clients CONTINUOUSLY through your doors if you want to setup a studio of your own. Not everyone gets the opportunity to work in the big studios you see in the audio school brochures. The market is small, but growing because of online content. There will be many opportunities - if you keep up to date with the relevant technologies that people are looking for. Customers want speed, quality and competitive pricing. And you can only deliver on those if you work fast and accurately. You will also need to know online technologies as your productions will be broadcast to the world in so many forms, both offline and online. Continuous study is a must. And if you want to be able to work in a large recording studio or broadcast facility, you need to be really competent in all these areas. And that is where you passion comes in. With passion, learning all this will be second nature to you. It will not be a drag, not a chore, but something you WANT to know - and you can't beat that in any job. So how do you start? If you believe deep down in your heart that being a sound engineer is what you want to be, then you have to be strategic in all that you do. Here's what I mean. Get involved in audio anyway you can. At church, doing recordings for friends, converting audio from one format to another. Messing around for hours on audio software, tweaking software equalizers to see how various frequencies affect the sound. You have to immerse yourself with sound. Work for free in a recording studio while studying. That will teach you valuable lessons and you'll be way ahead of your class. And when you're ready, a job will probably be waiting for you! Read pro audio magazines, attend exhibitions and audio talks. Join the AES (Audio Engineering Society), get involved in audio newsgroups. Start a blog on your audio interest, you'll be surprised how the "word" gets around, and you'll be documenting your own growth in the industry. Get your hands dirty! Perhaps, now would be a great time for me to tel you a bit about myself. When I was a young teenager, I inherited an old but still working reel to reel tape deck from my uncle. I was fascinated that it could record Jimi Hendricks off the radio without much loss in quality. I play guitar, so the next logical thing I did was to record songs that I played. I was thrilled. Fast forward a few years, and I bought my first multi track recorder - a Tascam Portastudio that recorded 4 tracks on high speed cassette, allowed me to bounce tracks, punch in sounds, etc. It was my most precious possession! One thing led to another and I got involved with video, multimedia and of course, audio. In 1994, I stated a company that provided video and audio production services. My passion was still in audio and that kinda led to jobs where I provided a fair number of voice over recording services. I loved doing he recordings, sweetening them, taking away unwanted noises, etc. We later progressed to doing radio ads and that kinda opened a new challenge for me - with sound effects, background music, and even writing the script. You can say I was fortunate. And the message here is that if you have the PASSION for it - just go for it while time is still on your side. There are now many fine sound engineering schools, not just in the US, but across the globe as well. With the internet, getting the necessary info on the latest equipment, trends, techniques, is a no brainer. But that of course also opens up the competitiveness of the marketplace. But do not worry. If you have the drive, interest and perhaps the natural talent for audio, you will soar and build yourself one of the most satisfying careers possible. It allows you to be creative, adventurous - and when you here you Is Your Brochure Killing Your Sales? in audio anyway you can.When you go to trade shows you probably pick up brochures.What do you do with them?In the majority of cases I'm willing to bet you either leave them to fester in the lovingly designed show carrier bag or you scan some of them and then throw them away.Do you read any of the brochures you get through the post or left by sales people?If you don't read brochures why do you think your prospects will?If your brochure is all about you and very little about your customer it wont get read. If it's not read it can't sell anything. That means you've just lost another prospect because your brochure didn't do its job right.What A Brochure Isn'tDesigning a brochure is not simply the managing director, marketing director or Mr Average Copywriter simply dumping everything they can think of about your company and its products into a four page 4 colour brochure.Explainin At church, doing recordings for friends, converting audio from one format to another. Messing around for hours on audio software, tweaking software equalizers to see how various frequencies affect the sound. You have to immerse yourself with sound. Work for free in a recording studio while studying. That will teach you valuable lessons and you'll be way ahead of your class. And when you're ready, a job will probably be waiting for you! Read pro audio magazines, attend exhibitions and audio talks. Join the AES (Audio Engineering Society), get involved in audio newsgroups. Start a blog on your audio interest, you'll be surprised how the "word" gets around, and you'll be documenting your own growth in the industry. Get your hands dirty! Perhaps, now would be a great time for me to tel you a bit about myself. When I was a young teenager, I inherited an old but still working reel to reel tape deck from my uncle. I was fascinated that it could record Jimi Hendricks off the radio without much loss in quality. I play guitar, so the next logical thing I did was to record songs that I played. I was thrilled. Fast forward a few years, and I bought my first multi track recorder - a Tascam Portastudio that recorded 4 tracks on high speed cassette, allowed me to bounce tracks, punch in sounds, etc. It was my most precious possession! One thing led to another and I got involved with video, multimedia and of course, audio. In 1994, I stated a company that provided video and audio production services. My passion was still in audio and that kinda led to jobs where I provided a fair number of voice over recording services. I loved doing he recordings, sweetening them, taking away unwanted noises, etc. We later progressed to doing radio ads and that kinda opened a new challenge for me - with sound effects, background music, and even writing the script. You can say I was fortunate. And the message here is that if you have the PASSION for it - just go for it while time is still on your side. There are now many fine sound engineering schools, not just in the US, but across the globe as well. With the internet, getting the necessary info on the latest equipment, trends, techniques, is a no brainer. But that of course also opens up the competitiveness of the marketplace. But do not worry. If you have the drive, interest and perhaps the natural talent for audio, you will soar and build yourself one of the most satisfying careers possible. It allows you to be creative, adventurous - and when you here you Why Avoiding Human Resources is the Only Way to Land a Pharmaceutical Sales Job cassette, allowed me to bounce tracks, punch in sounds, etc. It was my most precious possession!One of the best business analogies I’ve ever heard compares businesses to boats.Small businesses are like small boats. The have the luxury of being quick to respond, controlled by just a handful of people, and communication is as simple as turning over your shoulder and saying, “Land ho!” On the other hand, they don’t have some of the luxuries that big businesses have. Big boats [businesses] are powerful, they have many redundant features – small breeches in the hull aren’t as threatening, and momentum goes anything but unnoticed.What big business doesn’t have is the ability to respond quickly. Communication is often complex, becomes confusing and is often lost. Nearly every pharmaceutical company with a sales force is the equivalent of a big boat.Don’t get me wrong here; human resources officers and internal recruiters do a wonderful job. But if you want a job in the kitchen of a cruise ship, who would you ta One thing led to another and I got involved with video, multimedia and of course, audio. In 1994, I stated a company that provided video and audio production services. My passion was still in audio and that kinda led to jobs where I provided a fair number of voice over recording services. I loved doing he recordings, sweetening them, taking away unwanted noises, etc. We later progressed to doing radio ads and that kinda opened a new challenge for me - with sound effects, background music, and even writing the script. You can say I was fortunate. And the message here is that if you have the PASSION for it - just go for it while time is still on your side. There are now many fine sound engineering schools, not just in the US, but across the globe as well. With the internet, getting the necessary info on the latest equipment, trends, techniques, is a no brainer. But that of course also opens up the competitiveness of the marketplace. But do not worry. If you have the drive, interest and perhaps the natural talent for audio, you will soar and build yourself one of the most satisfying careers possible. It allows you to be creative, adventurous - and when you here your mix on the radio, it's euphoric! Get involved in sound everytime you can. If you go to church, join in the sound ministry. Churches are some of the biggest customers of sound reinforcement companies - just because there are so many churches. If you're fortunate enough to be in a large church, you probably have an opportunity to build up you live mixing chops - which is quite different from studio work. So I'll say it again - if you have the fire... go for it. ------------------------------------------------------------ So there you have it - I hope you have the same fortune I have in having a business and career which is also my passion. I never work. Everyday, I am engaged in my hobby. Don't you want to do that too? So take the first step if you know deep down that this is for you. You'll never regret it. ------------------------------------------------------------
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