E639 - Improve your Enunciation, Be Clearly Understood by Speaking Clearly - Behind the Mic Series
MAR 28, 202632 MIN
E639 - Improve your Enunciation, Be Clearly Understood by Speaking Clearly - Behind the Mic Series
MAR 28, 202632 MIN
Description
<p><strong>Episode 639 - Behind the Mic Mini Series - Part 6 - Improve your Enunciation, Be Clearly Understood by Speaking Clearly</strong></p><p><br></p><p>This episode kicks off the "Behind the Mic" mini-series, where host Dave shares practical vocal tips to help podcasters sound clearer and connect deeper with listeners. Focused on improving enunciation, it celebrates diverse accents while tackling common pitfalls that muddy communication, especially for transcription services and global audiences.</p><p>Dave reassures international listeners from Australia, the UK, Africa, Canada, and beyond that the goal is not to erase unique voices or dialects—what makes podcasters stand out and resonate with underrepresented communities. Instead, it's about being clearly understood. He draws from personal experience overcoming mumbling due to introversion and public speaking fears, which once led to mockery and disconnection. </p><p>Rapid speech, like in animated Italian gatherings or high-energy sports chats, often blurs words, frustrating listeners and AI transcription tools that spit back garbled "words." </p><p>Examples include Boston accents dropping consonants ("heartbreaker" sounding like "hot reds") or fast-talking podcast hosts racing through content, spiking listener anxiety and drop-off.</p><p>Key fixes include slowing down for breathable pacing—creating space for contemplation without boredom—and fully pronouncing words, especially ending consonants like T in "important" (not "importan'"). </p><p>Dave advises knowing your audience: a Scottish host targeting locals can lean into dialect, but for broader English speakers, add context to idioms. </p><p>Check transcripts via tools like Adobe Podcasts to spot issues—ums, dropped letters, or "so" factories—and practice reading aloud, focusing on word spacing over robotic stiffness. Southern drawls or Aussie flips ("idea" as "idear") shine when contextualized; one podcaster's deep accent hooked a homesick US service member in Japan.</p><p>Bonus segments promote free twice-weekly Meetups for community support (Tuesdays/Saturdays) and paid coaching to "skip the line" past 500+ episodes. Dave stresses never podcasting alone—accountability beats isolation.</p><p><strong>Key takeaway:</strong> Enunciate clearly by slowing down and finishing words to boost transcript accuracy, listener retention, and professional polish, while owning your accent to forge authentic cultural connections—no one-size-fits-all, just speak intentionally for your audience. </p><p><br></p><p><a href="https://podmatch.com/report" target="_blank" rel="ugc noopener noreferrer"><strong>https://podmatch.com/report</strong></a></p><p>____</p><p><br></p><p>Helping Podcasters Everyday! </p><p><strong></strong><a href="https://howtopodcast.ca/" target="_blank" rel="ugc noopener noreferrer"><strong>https://howtopodcast.ca/</strong></a><br><em>We would love to hear from you - here is our listener survey!</em></p><p><em><strong></strong></em><a href="https://forms.gle/GbrFv9DGszV8N4PW6" target="_blank" rel="ugc noopener noreferrer"><strong>https://forms.gle/GbrFv9DGszV8N4PW6</strong></a></p>