{"id":2860,"date":"2018-01-10T20:35:46","date_gmt":"2018-01-10T15:35:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.greatvoice.com\/?p=2860"},"modified":"2018-01-10T20:35:46","modified_gmt":"2018-01-10T15:35:46","slug":"postcards-help-get-voice-jobs-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/greatvoice.com\/postcards-help-get-voice-jobs-2\/","title":{"rendered":"How postcards help you get voice over jobs"},"content":{"rendered":"

If you’re of a certain age, I’m sure you remember how cool it was to receive a postcard from a friend or family member visiting a far-off land. <\/p>\n

Pictures of beautiful scenery, bikini babes, giant lobsters with goofy captions, a circled dot on a distant mountain top with an arrow and a hand-written note: “We were here!!”<\/p>\n

You never went anywhere without mailing a stack of postcards to the folks back home. The best featured beautiful foreign stamps and tweet-length travelogues, the dull ones a scribbled “Wish you were here,” although we knew they were gloating just a little in our absence. <\/p>\n

These days we post photos of our trips on Facebook and Instagram, attach them to texts and emails. But it’s just not the same as opening the mailbox and finding a beautiful handwritten postcard tucked between the bills and the catalogues. <\/p>\n

Postcards are a powerful, inexpensive and underutilized way to keep in touch with your voice over prospects and customers and they work. <\/p>\n

They’re a proven and dependable way to get voice over jobs. And the good news is, you don’t have to handwrite a message on the back of each and every one!<\/p>\n

So what’s the best way to use them?<\/p>\n

In this week’s Inside Voice Over training, I share proven best practices for using postcards in your voice over marketing.<\/p>\n

Watch this week’s short training video Here Now<\/p>\n