ALISON PENTECOST

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Disappointment: When the Business Plan Doesn’t Go As Planned

December 3, 2025 by AlisonP Leave a Comment

Who knew? The Creative Career Doesn’t Always Match the Plan

Every freelance creative professional eventually bumps into the same wall: disappointment.

You can be doing everything “right” — marketing consistently, sending auditions, nurturing clients, improving your demos, updating your portfolio, refining your outreach — and still… the week, the month, or the quarter doesn’t deliver.

I’ve felt the sting.
Like the time I was shortlisted for several “almost guaranteed” voiceover jobs… and lost 
every single one in the same week. One after the other.

You know you shouldn’t count your chickens before the contract is signed — but you still get hopeful, because you’re human. You get excited. You mentally rearrange your schedule. You start imagining what that booking or project means for your momentum.

And when it evaporates?
It feels like the air’s been let out of your tires.

If that’s you today, hear this clearly:
You’re not naïve. You’re not failing. You’re just 
human — and you’re definitely not alone.

Disappointment Isn’t Failure — It’s Data

The emotional rollercoaster is baked into the creative freelance profession.
Voice actors, designers, writers, photographers, editors — we all operate in industries where beautifully executed work can still flop. Outcomes don’t always match effort. It’s not a moral judgment; it’s just reality.

We would never tell a kid learning to skate or ride a bike that they “failed” when they fall. We tell them it’s part of the process.
So why do we talk to ourselves so harshly?

It’s a paradox we all live in:
We crave originality, novelty, boldness… but we punish ourselves when things don’t land.
We want to stand out… but standing out sometimes means 
a very public faceplant.
We want growth… but growth requires attempts that don’t always succeed.

Disappointment isn’t the end.
It’s 
data — about what mattered to you, where your hopes were invested, and what you’re stretching toward next.

How Freelancers Get Back in the Game

Here are practical, mindset-friendly, business-friendly steps to recalibrate when things don’t go as planned.

1. Remind Yourself You Have Agency

Just like twisting that gain knob, choose the variation that works for you.

  • Adjust your marketing strategy.
  • Refresh your demos or portfolio.
  • Try new audition styles or formats.
  • Reconnect with clients.
  • Post something honest about your disappointment — you’ll be surprised how many freelancers show up saying “me too.”

Agency is a muscle. Use it.

2. Separate Feelings From Facts

Your feelings are real and valid — but they aren’t the whole story.

Ask yourself:

  • Why about this disappointment is hitting me so hard?
  • What am I afraid will happen (or won’t happen) as a result of this project falling through?
  • What might just be timing?
  • What’s actually in my control, and what isn’t?

That clarity alone can lower the emotional temperature by half.

3. Aim for Small Wins to Rebuild Momentum

If you’re in a slump, go for the low-hanging fruit:

  • Sort your paperwork
  • Clean your equipment or booth
  • Tidy your files
  • Do a low-stakes creative warm-up. Write, draw, sing, record something just for you.

Momentum doesn’t return through willpower alone — it returns through small actions.

4. Build Emotional Resilience Tools

They’re useful in your business and in your personal life.

  • Feel discouraged, but don’t camp there.
  • Remind yourself how many times you’ve bounced back.
  • Anchor yourself in the long game — not the single gig that fell through.

Resilience is a competitive advantage in creative work.

5. Celebrate What Makes Freelancing Powerful

When things go sideways, you’re still the one steering the ship.
No boss. No approval committee.

You choose how to adapt, evolve, pivot, or experiment.
That kind of autonomy is rare — and worth protecting.

Bad weeks, slow months, or “meh” client relationships don’t define you.
They’re simply one chapter in a much bigger story.

That’s also what I’m covering this week in the Freelance Fitness podcast, so if you like music, movement, and exercise tips along with your business bites, go check it out here.

Filed Under: Freelance Fitness Tagged With: businesstips, CreativeCommunity, female voice, freelance business momentum strategies, freelancehacks, how voice actors and creatives stay motivated during slow months, professional development, professional female voice talent, VoiceActor, voiceover

Alone Together: Why Freelancers Need to Socialize

November 19, 2025 by AlisonP Leave a Comment

Because even the best home studio can’t replace human connection.

The Solitude Trap of Creative Freelancing

One of the main reasons I started my podcasts, Freelance Fitness and Pigiste pas Figiste, besides needing to be constantly reminded of all this good advice myself, was to build community. So if you ever come across me in a studio, workshop, conference, or event — please say hi! I’d love to chat. The real challenge is usually getting me to stop.

But let’s be honest: making friends or even casual work acquaintances as an adult can be hard. Freelancing can be a lonely job, especially for voice actors.

Our job is literally to sit in a small padded room and talk to ourselves. Even when I go record in-studio, I’m escorted into my own little soundproof booth while everyone else gathers in the next room. If I’m lucky, there’s a window so I can see them. Sometimes, not even that. Glamorous, right?

Writers, designers, animators, illustrators — you probably get it. Long hours, headphones on, no coworkers in sight. And many of us actually prefer it that way. As freelancers, we have to be comfortable managing our own time, staying organized, and working independently. But even if you thrive on solitude, you still need connection for your mental health, creativity, and confidence.

Why Connection Fuels Your Voiceover Business

You and I both know that meeting with clients doesn’t count. Chatting during a recording session isn’t the same as real connection, not when there’s a contract in between. Sure, it’s friendly. But you also need interaction that’s not tied to deliverables or invoices.

When you connect with other voice actors or creative freelancers outside of work, you get more than just company — you get perspective. It’s easier to stay inspired, exchange tips about the VO industry, and learn new ways to market your freelance voiceover business.

Socializing also changes your “face” Not the fake smile kind, but the energy you bring into your sessions, your auditions, and your community. It’s about intentional presence: showing up grounded, confident, and real.

And for women in creative industries especially, it’s powerful to claim space. To show up fully and unapologetically. Because your experience matters, your story matters, and your voice matters.

Simple Ways to Reconnect (Without “Working the Room”)

Let’s get practical. Maybe it’s been years since you had to make a new friend. Or maybe you’ve just moved to a new city. I’ve been there. Before I got into voiceover, I was a lonely stay-at-home mom far from friends and family. If you’re not sure where to start, here are a few ways to ease in:

1. Join an accountability or coworking group.
It’s less intimidating than “networking.” Start with a virtual coworking session or a local creative café. Everyone’s just there to get stuff done — and naturally, you end up chatting, sharing experiences, and motivating each other. These small circles can be gold for freelancers and voice talent alike.

2. Reach out to one friendly colleague a week.
No sales pitch, no agenda. Just check in. Comment on their latest project, ask how they’re doing, or suggest a short virtual coffee. One message a week keeps you visible and builds genuine relationships.

3. Show up where your peers hang out.
That could mean a VO conference, a local meetup, or a Facebook group for creative freelancers. Start by listening, engage in small ways, and gradually join the conversation. Familiarity builds comfort — and comfort builds trust.

4. Mix professional and social spaces.
Join a running group, pottery class, or local dog park crew. These non-work spaces often lead to real friendships — and sometimes, surprisingly, work collaborations too.

Freelancing doesn’t mean going it alone.

Whether you’re a voiceover artist, writer, or creative solopreneur, you’re part of a larger community, a network of people creating, adapting, and showing up.

So go forth, connect, and be awesome. Your voice, and your business, will be stronger for it.

Filed Under: Freelance Fitness Tagged With: businesstips, CreativeCommunity, female voice, freelancehacks, Networking, VOCommunity, VoiceActor, voiceover, VoiceTalent

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