“I love the variety of work. When I first started it was all character stuff but I did an iPhone 5 ad for Apple a few years ago and they wanted it all very conversational, it was the one that went “ears are weird, I don’t know what shape that is but they’re not round, so… why would headphones be round?” The moment I put it on the website I got inundated. Everyone wanted ‘conversational’, ‘Apple read’ if you like. I enjoy it, it’s easy, it’s just me talking! And it really hit home that you don’t have to be all shouty; “COME ON DOWN AND BUY THIS!” - just talk to people as you would normally. I started doing more corporate work, explainer videos and radio commercials using that style.
The amount of work I was getting made me change my strategy, I wasn’t going to chase video games anymore as I did when I set out. They’re great and I’ve voiced a few over the years, but they’re exhausting! You’re standing in a booth for hours and you’re shouting and you’re having to do all the different mannerisms. It’s physically quite demanding. Strangely, I used to do 80% character work, now it’s probably only 30% as my natural style is in more demand.
I voice radio, TV, I’m on a lot of kids TV – people say once they put Nickelodeon on there’s no escape from me! – I do a lot of in-store stuff, which I quite enjoy; I’m the voice of Wickes, and you’ll hear me in ASDA, Co-op, Morrisons, there are about 30 stores you’ll her me in. I do on-hold phone work, explainer videos, corporate videos, e-learning. And the weird things Is that it’s very rare that I’ll start a day with any more than three things in the calendar, but by five or six o’clock… even as we’re sitting here now I’ve had two jobs come in, an on-hold and a Voice of God [a term used to describe event announcements]. I did VoG for Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway a few years ago, put a clip on the website and now everyone wants to book me for that!”