Kristine Knowlton

Performer/Comedian/Voiceover Artist/Singer/Writer

March 15, 2026 | Kristine Knowlton

How to Start Your Voiceover Career with Just Your Phone (Plus 10 Practice Audition Scripts)

Step 1: Turn Your Phone Into a Recording Studio

Your smartphone is perfectly capable of recording clear audio for practice auditions and beginner projects.

Try these simple tricks for better sound:

• Record in a closet or small room with soft surfaces
• Keep your phone about 6–8 inches away from your mouth
• Speak slightly off to the side of the microphone
• Turn on airplane mode to avoid interruptions

You’ll be surprised how good your recordings can sound with just a few adjustments.

Starting a voiceover career can feel intimidating. Many people think they need expensive microphones, a professional studio, or years of acting experience before they can even try.

The truth is much simpler: you can begin practicing voiceover today using just your phone and your voice.

One of the best places for beginners to gain experience is Casting Call Club, a free platform where creators post casting calls for animation, games, YouTube series, audiobooks, and indie projects.

You don’t need a studio to start building confidence, learning script interpretation, and practicing auditions. All you really need is a quiet space, your phone’s recorder, and a little creativity.

Let’s look at how to get started—and then try the practice scripts below.


Step 2: Practice Reading Scripts Out Loud

Voiceover is acting. The more you read scripts aloud, the more comfortable you become with pacing, tone, and character choices.

The best training is consistent practice. Try recording yourself reading a short script every day.

Below are 10 beginner practice audition scripts you can use to warm up your voice acting skills.


10 Practice Voiceover Audition Scripts 🎭

1. Friendly Commercial

Tone: Warm, conversational

“Some mornings start with coffee. Others start with chaos. But no matter what your day throws at you, BrightSide Coffee is there to keep you going. Smooth, rich, and brewed for real life.”


2. Energetic Product Ad

Tone: Excited, upbeat

“Ready to level up your workout? PowerPulse energy drink fuels your focus and keeps you moving when everyone else is slowing down. Power up. Push harder. Finish stronger.”


3. Cartoon Villain

Tone: Dramatic and mischievous

“So… you think you can stop me? Oh please. I’ve waited centuries for this moment, and I’m not about to let a group of plucky heroes ruin my perfectly evil plan.”


4. Video Game Hero

Tone: Brave, determined

“We’ve come too far to turn back now. The city needs us, and if we stand together, we might just have a chance to save it.”


5. Documentary Narration

Tone: Calm, storytelling

“Hidden deep within the rainforest lives one of nature’s most fascinating creatures. Quiet, elusive, and rarely seen, the golden tree fox has adapted perfectly to life in the canopy.”


6. Comedy Character

Tone: Playful, over-the-top

“Okay, listen. I’m not saying the cat planned the whole thing… but have you ever seen a cat look that innocent? Exactly. Suspicious.”


7. Movie Trailer Voice

Tone: Epic and dramatic

“In a world where nothing is what it seems… one unlikely hero must face the impossible… and discover the power that was inside them all along.”


8. Audiobook Narration

Tone: Storytelling, immersive

“The old house at the end of Willow Lane had been empty for years. At least, that’s what everyone in town believed… until the lights turned on.”


9. Corporate Narration

Tone: Professional and confident

“At Horizon Technologies, innovation isn’t just a goal—it’s our mission. For over twenty years, we’ve been helping businesses build smarter solutions for a changing world.”


10. Silly Cartoon Sidekick

Tone: High-energy and goofy

“Wait… wait… hold on! If the treasure map says ‘Beware of giant spiders,’ maybe—just maybe—we should reconsider this whole adventure thing!”


Step 3: Record and Listen Back

Once you record a script, listen to your performance and ask yourself:

• Did the tone match the script?
• Did I sound natural or rushed?
• Could I add more personality?

This self-review process helps you improve faster.


Step 4: Start Auditioning Online

Once you feel comfortable practicing, you can start auditioning on Casting Call Club.

It’s one of the most beginner-friendly places to:

• Gain experience
• Practice auditioning
• Meet creators and directors
• Build your first voiceover credits

Many voice actors begin with small indie projects before moving on to bigger opportunities.


Final Thoughts

Every professional voice actor started somewhere—and many of them began exactly the same way:

With a script, a microphone… and the courage to try.

If you have a phone, a voice, and a little imagination, you already have everything you need to begin practicing voiceover today.

Start recording. Start experimenting. Start auditioning.

Because the only way to become a voice actor… is to start using your voice

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January 25, 2026 | Kristine Knowlton

Why Vocal Warmups and Rest Matter—Especially When Deadlines Are Looming

In the world of voiceovers, deadlines are part of the gig. Clients want fast turnarounds, last-minute pickups happen at 9 PM, and sometimes you’re juggling multiple projects at once. But here’s the truth every working (or aspiring) VO artist needs to hear:

Your voice is your instrument—and it’s the only one you can’t replace.

Warmups and rest aren’t optional extras or “nice if I have time” tasks. They’re essential, non-negotiable parts of your workflow that actually help you meet your deadlines with better quality and less stress.

Let’s break down why.


1. Warmups Protect Your Voice—So You Don’t Burn Out Mid-Project

Ever try to record a character voice cold? Yeah… that ends in vocal fatigue faster than you can say “copy points.”

Warmups:

  • Increase your vocal flexibility
  • Open up your range
  • Reduce strain during long sessions
  • Help you hit emotional beats with ease

Think of it like stretching before a workout. You can run cold, but you’ll probably regret it halfway through.

Even five minutes of gentle humming, lip trills, or straw phonation can prevent a day’s worth of hoarseness.


2. Resting When You Need It Keeps Your Quality High

Voiceover working culture sometimes pressures artists to grind nonstop:
Wake up → record → edit → submit → repeat.

But here’s the reality: pushing past vocal fatigue doesn’t make you productive—it makes your performance worse.

Your tone drops.
Your diction muddles.
You start sounding tired (because you are tired).

Rest isn’t laziness. It’s maintenance. Hydration, silence breaks, naps, and stepping away from the mic can make the difference between a retake-heavy disaster and a clean recording that gets approved on the first pass.


3. Warmups + Rest = Faster Recording Sessions

This is where deadlines come in.

When you warm up:

  • You do fewer takes
  • You hit emotional shifts more naturally
  • Your pacing gets smoother
  • You avoid vocal cracks and strain

When you rest:

  • You recover quicker between projects
  • You stay consistent in tone
  • You can maintain long-term output

Together, warmups and rest don’t take time—they save time. What’s better than meeting deadlines? Meeting them without sacrificing your voice.


4. Protecting Your Voice Protects Your Career

Deadlines are important—absolutely. Being reliable is how you get hired again and again.

But losing your voice? That’s how you miss deadlines.

A day of forced rest because you pushed too hard can derail more than you planned. A few minutes of prep and listening to your body keeps you in the game for the long haul.

Remember: clients want great work, not rushed work from a strained voice.


5. Create a Workflow That Balances Discipline and Care

Here’s a simple rule of thumb:

Warm up before you record. Rest when you feel strain. Communicate when you need time. Meet deadlines with a healthy voice.

A professional voice actor doesn’t just deliver—it’s how they deliver that makes them successful.


Final Thoughts

Deadlines matter, but your vocal health matters more. Warmups and rest aren’t excuses—they’re part of the job. Taking care of your voice not only keeps you performing at your best, but it also builds a sustainable, long-term VO career.

Treat your voice like the valuable instrument it is, and it will take you further, faster, and with fewer “sorry, I need a redo tomorrow” moments.

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