Feb 7, 2023
Raising your rates as a voice actor can be a daunting task, but it
doesn't have to be. In this episode, Anne & Lau discuss tips for
approaching money conversations with clients, moving past the fear
around charging what you're worth and deciding when to raise your
rates. It's important that you know what your time is worth and
what kind of value your clients are getting from working with you.
Your voice is an asset. By taking charge of these conversations &
setting your rates accordingly, you can make sure that your
business is running smoothly. Your clients want to work with
someone who knows their own value and isn't afraid of asking for
it. And if you need someone to talk you through the process, keep
on listening…
Transcript
It’s time to take your business to the next level, the BOSS level!
These are the premiere Business Owner Strategies and Successes
being utilized by the industry’s top talent today. Rock your
business like a BOSS, a VO BOSS! Now let’s welcome your host, Anne
Ganguzza.
Anne: Hey everyone, welcome to the VO BOSS podcast and the business
superpower series with my special guest co-host Lau Lapides. Hey
Lau. Woo-hoo! Always so wonderful to see you.
Lau: Always great to be back. .
Anne: Well, Lau it's a change of seasons and so I'm feeling like
I've gone back and reflected upon my business, and it is the time
of year where I make the consideration, do I want to raise my
prices or not? And what a great discussion Lau, because it is so
difficult. How do you raise your prices? How do you raise your
rates? And how do you go about doing that with clients that you've
had for years or new clients for fear of, oh my gosh, your rates
are too high, or rates are too low.
I thought it would be a wonderful thing to discuss today on how we
can raise our rates, because as businesses, we need to be
profitable, right? For the majority of us in this industry, we
would like it to be a business and not a hobby. And so to be a
business, we need to yield a profit and to yield a profit, that
includes pricing yourself. So let's start with you. Talk to me
about, first of all, how do you set your prices for your particular
voiceover jobs, acting jobs? What do you do first in order to set a
fair rate for yourself or a fair price to yourself?
Lau: The question of the year, I say
--
Anne: Isn't it though?
Lau: Not even of the day, but of the year. I can hear all of your
listeners. The BOSSes are moving a little bit closer, and listening
closer. Now, it's a great conversation to have. So I really am
thrilled that we're having it today. In my opinion, there's a lot
of fear around this conversation. There's a lot of apprehension, a
lot of almost terror, I'd say, in really giving yourself as a
person and also your brand, as a business, a price tag. That's very
difficult for people's brains to get around, especially creatives
who are artists and women can have a tough time with that as
well.
Anne: Oh yeah.
Lau: And I think everyone can have a tough time as they move
through their business, not just in early stages either. Like,
people that are at 10, 15, 20 years into the biz having challenges
with this topic. I myself have had many challenges through the
years. I think one of the first things that, when we take a step
back and we look at the whole fee structure of what we are doing,
we have to ask ourself what is our worth? What is our
value?
And it's not, not a simple, oh, this is what I'm worth and this is
my value. It's really something to journal about, something to
think deeply on, to converse with people you know and trust, and to
do some market research, to really go into the market, say, this is
our industry, this is my space. The more I niche down in my space,
the more I can research the industry going rates, and really just
document that. I would take a little bit of time and document that
and update that like every six months to a year, just
update.
Anne: Sure.
Lau: Every six months to a year, get knowledgeable.
Anne: So starting what the industry rates are. And so I totally
agree with you there. In order for you to raise your rates, you
have to set your rates. And so that's the question, number one is
before you can raise them, how do you set them? And I think a great
reference point is, and we've mentioned this multiple times on the
podcast, is the rate guides. GVAA has a fantastic rate guide, Gravy
for the Brain has one, SAG-AFTRA has their rates posted. So that's
a great benchmark to start to set your rates.
And I think we've mentioned this before, but I'll mention it again,
whether you are new to the industry or you've been in the industry
for 20 years, you can price yourself at the standard rate. Just
because you're new doesn't mean that you have to price yourself at
a lower rate than somebody who's been in the business for 15, 20
years. Because in essence, it actually helps the industry if you
are pricing yourself at a fair going rate according to the rate
guides.
Lau: I would agree with that. Totally agree with that. You took the
words out, right outta my head. I was about to say, you almost do
the industry in injustice when you go too far low and too far below
what the industry rates are. Even though there may be times where
you do that and you choose to do that, you need to do that and
that's okay. But as a running rule, you wanna stay at the industry
rates or above because you wanna drive the market up. You don't
wanna drive the market down.
Anne: Exactly.
Lau: We oftentimes hear the sayings like it's a race to the bottom.
What that really means is like we're all excited about working. We
wanna get as much work as we can, charge them anything and just get
anything for the business. And I think that there's a time and
place for that. But for sustainability and longevity of a business,
it just doesn't work. It does not work in any way. And you are
devalued. You're immediately devalued in the eyes of that prospect
client. So to really sit down and say, okay, whether I'm starting
out or whether I'm running my business, you and I have been running
our businesses for 15-plus years, is to say, what is my value
today? How has that changed from a year ago? How have we grown?
What are my products? How have I niched my products? And what are
those products valued at in the market today?
I would start there. That's a good start right there. And then to
start thinking about time. What does time mean to you? How much
value is your time? How valuable is your time? What's your worth?
Your knowledge, your ethos, your education
--
Anne: Your experience.
Lau: Your experience, right? It's, that's where the subjective
force comes in. What makes me unique? What's my value proposition
different from others in the space doing similar work, helps
establish that value.
Anne: Well, I think also one thing that helps us as freelancers is
that I like to break it into different categories. You have the new
clients, the ever evolving, I guess, cycle of new clients that come
along. And for that, it's easy to set a rate or raise your rate.
Okay? Because they've not had previous experience with you. So in a
way that makes it easier for us to either celebrate or raise our
rates. And it is up to us though, to take that step to do
that.
I mean, I myself was guilty for back in the beginning, keeping my
rates, keeping my rates, keeping my rates until I felt that I had
built my business up enough to warrant raising my rates. But I do
feel that every year is a great time to reevaluate your rates, and
the economy too. You've gotta take a look at the economy. Now,
we've got so many different things happening at this point in our
industry.
We have the evolving economy, which is not doing great right now.
So is it a good time to raise my rates? Right? We've got that to
consider. What is the market willing to pay? What is the market
willing to bear for a price of voiceover, especially now with
synthetic voices looming on the horizon. So there's a lot of other
factors that need to be taken into place, and if it wants to play
into our fear, well, that's what does it for sure. Right? A lot of
times the economy and other factors including competition from not
only voice actors but now synthetic voices
--
and so that just builds upon the fear.
If you weren't scared before raising your rates, now we've got a
couple, a couple extra things that are being thrown into the mix,
but I will say that because we are freelancers and because we
continually acquire new clients, this is a good time to be able to
set or raise your rate for the new clients that come aboard. And
you know what? Here's the deal. If you decide to set your rate
higher than you normally do or raise your rate, what's gonna happen
is you will see if the market will bear it, right? If people are
gonna say, yeah, sure, that's great. And not question the rate. And
so when that happens, there's nothing better than that, because
that gives you the confidence to really go forth and raise your
rates for all clients.
So it's a great test bed when you get a new client to either set
your rate higher or actually change your rate for the new clients.
Now I like the whole grandfather clause where I've had a client for
many years, and because they are a good client that continues to
give me business, I will make a decision on an independent basis
whether or not I will raise my rates for them. And then that
becomes a different conversation, right? Because now that's where
you've gotta like own up to saying, look, I appreciate you as a
client, and I'm so thankful for the business and thankful for our
relationship together. How do I say I'm going to raise my rights
now?
Lau: Ooh.
Anne: Oh, there's the tough one.
Lau: Ooh, snap. There's what she did. Well, everyone has a
different thought process. And again, you took the words out of my
head because the way I tend to run my business is I tend to show
loyalty and allegiance to current clients and typically stay at the
rates that they're at. You certainly don't have to. And there are
many businesses that will go up in rates on current clients. I just
haven't done that quite as much. I keep them at the rate,
grandfather them in, have the blank slate on new people with a new
pricing coming in. And typically there just isn't any conflict of
interest with that.
Oftentimes they don't even know the difference. They just see you
coming in, and here's the interesting psychological value to that.
All of a sudden you give a new pricing, and they may not flinch at
all and say, oh, okay, great. And then you think, oh my gosh, I
could have done that years ago.
Anne: Yes.
Lau: I could have done that years ago instead of playing all these
psychological games with myself. To this person, the value is
there. You are worth it. They're ready to go, and why wouldn't they
pay that price? So I think to find good quality clients, the kind
of clients that fit you, fit your business is so important. And to
know that there are going to be clients that are not good for you;
they're not good for you any longer, or they don't fit what your
value is because they see it as a cost.
Anne: Right. Right. Exactly.
Lau: They don't see it as an investment. So I tend to use very
strategic language when I speak to people. Is this your investment
or is this a cost for you? And then educate them on what the
difference is. And once they figure out that this is an investment,
oh yeah, I'm glad you put it that way, then it is worth it to me.
So sometimes it takes the little bit of education in there for them
to shift their mindset to, well, you spent how much on a college
education? You spent how much on your graduate degree? You spent
how much on your online courses, what have you. Was that cost or
was that investment? So this is the same thing. This is the same
thing.
Anne: I love that you say cost or investment, because I think that
clients who look at it as an investment are absolutely going to see
your worth much more readily than a client that sees it as a cost.
And it's also important, I think, for us as actors and creatives to
understand that our voice is an asset. And I know I say it, yes,
your voice is an asset, but what does that really mean? Right? Your
voice contributes to potential millions of dollars in sales ,
right, for a client. And sometimes I think we forget that. We
become so far removed from the product, the end product that we are
providing the voice for that we forget our worth in terms of
that.
So don't forget that your voice as an asset
--
and this, I'll tell you what, I've learned this in my dealings with
trying to talk to, let's say, synthetic voice producers or
directors or companies that are producing synthetic voices
--
to say that the voice is an asset, that it is worthy of
compensation. It is worthy of fair compensation because that asset
is what contributes to a company's brand. And don't forget that,
BOSSes. Your voice contributes to a company's brand, which is no
different than a marketing material or an on-air camera talent that
gets paid a good amount of money to represent the brand of a
company. So I think because we're in our studios, and we're like
alone, we forget that somehow, that our voice really does
contribute to a brand's value and a brand's ability to
sell.
Lau: That's right. Absolutely. And quick anecdote on that one, just
this past week I have a, a new agent colleague from LA who opened
an agency and she was calling me to check in on a contract that
she's working on for voiceover, and she doesn't currently represent
voiceover. And she was going through what would be a fair rate for
this talent, and she kept saying over and over and over again, I
mean, these people are making millions off of this. They're making
millions off of this. And we're talking about the difference
between like, they offered $350, $350, she went up to $1100. I
said, why don't you offer at lea
--
oh my god, 1500 is like still so incredibly
--
and her, there was a fear factor in there. I could hear the fear
slip in. I said, what's the worst that happens?
Anne: They say, no.
Lau: You slide, you do whatever you want to do and feel is right.
But my goodness, the truth is it should be actually so, so, so much
higher than that. She just didn't wanna start at such a high rate
compared to what the original rate they were giving her. She didn't
wanna slide so high. But the truth is, it's so outta whack, it's so
outta bounds in terms of what a company may be doing with that
brand and creating gross versus what the talent is being paid,
which is nothing, pennies, literally less than
pennies.
Anne: There's something to be said for pricing yourself in such a
way that it is value because you've priced yourself higher versus
if you price yourself too low, then it's a perception of, well,
okay, so that's a cheap price, right, for a cheap talent maybe. And
that may or may not be the way that you want your brand to be
perceived. So I always have said that I'm Tiffany's, right? I don't
go on sale. This is my rate. And if a client chooses to accept that
rate, then they are also accepting obviously that that is my worth
and that I'm worth the value of that.
And I think that if they don't, it's okay. You have time to go and
find the people that will pay you the rate that you're worth and
value that charge or your increase in price. And it's a difficult,
difficult thing, especially when you attack it from, well, if I
raise my prices, am I going to raise my prices for everyone? And I
don't think you have to. I think as we've discussed it, I've got
people that are grandfathered in, and each one of those clients
that I've been working with for a certain amount of time, each gets
a special consideration.
Now, I might have worked with people for 10 years already at the
same rate. And I think it makes it a whole lot easier when you
propose to them that your rates, due to increased costs in running
your business, your rates have to change. And this, for anybody
that uses, let's say an audio editor for their work, and they're
paying them as well, if they go up in price, and you're still
charging the same, well, you've gotta recoup those costs somehow as
a business.
Lau: Exactly.
Anne: I've got that. I've got people that I pay for services that
are raising their prices on me. And as a business, I've gotta
somehow figure out how am I going to accommodate that cost? Because
as a business, I don't wanna lose profit on that because I wanna
maintain or elevate my business.
Lau: Right. And there is a huge credence to the philosophy that I
wanna price myself above the market rate.
Anne: Yeah, yeah.
Lau: Not to get into like scamming or anything like that. Nothing
negative. Like, oh, I just wanna make as much money as I can. No,
no. You wanna say, listen, here's my price, here's my value, here's
my investment, and I'm giving you, as you said, the Tiffany's
approach. I'm giving you that Tiffany's approach. So you're
investing in that, and that, that actually psychologically tells
people that your worth is so high, it's so much higher. So it must
be worth the cost of admission.
So I'm going down that road, I've been going down that road for a
number of years now, saying, yes, we are a slightly higher than the
average studio. Yes, we are slightly higher, whatever, because
here's the value prop X, Y, Z. That's what we do. That's what we
give. You don't want that, then we're not the place for
you.
Anne: Right. Right.
Lau: So yes, being able to walk away, being able to say, this
business isn't gonna work, this client isn't gonna be good. They
don't see the value, that's okay. I think that's fine. You know,
you don't have to sort of tear for every single person who comes
your way. They're not always gonna be the right ones for
you.
Anne: You bring up a good point there, and I've seen this as some
discussion on the forums as well lately about some talent feeling
that they have a need to school their clients on a fair price. And
there's a way to do that that is respectful of a client. I think,
again, you have to really put yourself in the client's shoes. Not
all clients are in direct control of the money that can be paid for
your services. Not all clients really do have the budget, and if
they don't, I think it's well worth it for us to say or advise that
you're not rude about it. Because not every company has the budget
to pay voice services for whatever you might be commanding at the
moment. So I think be careful when you are renegotiating with your
clients back and forth for a rate.
I think for me, when it's a new client and I'm negotiating a rate,
I always start on the higher end, which makes it easy to negotiate
down. I always leave an open space in my quote, and a lot of times
that's in an email that says, please let me know if this fits
within your budget. And that sentence alone pretty much just opens
the door for negotiation. And so then a client can come back to me
and say, well, I've only been allocated this much for the budget,
and then I can work with that. So I always kind of shoot higher
anyway. And so that kind of works within my, let's raise the rates
this year.
I think it's a conscious decision that you as a business person,
right
--
put the creative aside for a moment
--
well, keep the creative to know what you're worth, but also put on
your business hat and really put yourself in the position. Here's
what I'm going to do, and stick with it and try to just get past
that fear. I think that's the biggest thing that stops the majority
of us from raising our rates or charging what we're worth in the
first place.
Lau: Yeah. I think you just have to do it. Like you have to go
ahead and do it. Look, what's the worst that happens? It doesn't
work.
Anne: They say no.
Lau: You can go back. You can go back, you can change your rates,
make it lower. Like no one's holding you against a wall. You can do
it, but you've gotta try it. I, this gets into negotiation, Anne, a
little bit, but I would say it's very important to, once you give
that number, once you give that fee, to stop talking. It's very
important to give it, to have a sense of just like you would
deliver copy and say, this is what we do for this investment
company or for this healthcare. We help you, we give you health.
This is what our fee is.
Anne: Mm-hmm. And then wait.
Lau: And then stop.
Anne: Then wait. Say nothing.
Lau: What do they say in sales? Like the first person who speaks
loses.
Anne: Exactly, that's true.
Lau: Because our nature as caring people, many are artists I wanna
say, but you know, we're the lowest, we're kind of cheap, and we're
not gonna take, and to sort of justify and give excuses and tell
you why we selected that fee
--
don't do it. Don't succumb to that seductive force of wanting to
explain or self-deprecate.
Anne: Yeah. Yeah.
Lau: Or say, I shouldn't be doing this and I don't know why I'm
doing this, but hopefully it works for you, and I hope you can do
this. Don't do it. Don't do it.
Anne: Yeah basically
--
Lau: Don't do it.
Anne: Here's my price. Let me know if it fits within your budget.
And then I wait.
Lau: Yes.
Anne: If you start to pursue it or act desperate in any way, then
that's negotiation skills. And I'm so glad in a way that I had to
develop those early on because when I first got into the business,
I waited a long time before I pursued an agent. And so, so until
then I was negotiating for narration, you know, non-broadcast work.
And so that gave me a lot of confidence. I could try things out, I
tried rates out. And it's funny because people will ask me, well,
what do you charge for this? And I'll be like, I pulled that right
outta my butt. I pulled that number right outta my butt. But
honestly, this's where it comes half the time because I've got a
basis. But I don't necessarily know this client.
I try to validate the client first and see what other work they
have and educate myself as much as possible and then give a number.
And sometimes that number, there's no basis for that number other
than it's just I took a benchmark and I priced it up a certain
amount based upon my last experience. And basically it's all trial
and error, and I've always left myself that window open for
negotiation. And that experience has really, I think, educated me
more than just about anything else in this industry, was the
education of being able to negotiate.
And so for that you play a lot of games and you fight a lot of
fear. And it takes just a few times for things to work in your
favor. Always ask the client if they have a budget in mind, because
that budget can also help you to gauge pricing. I asked a client
once what their budget was, and they're like, oh, I can't spend
more than $3,000 for this. And I'm like, whoa. That was like three
times what I was gonna quote.
Lau: So much higher.
Anne: That was three times higher than I was gonna quote. And I
said, I think I can work with that . So that sort of thing can
really give you confidence to understand where your worth is and
then also where you might price and where you might start to raise
your rates. So every year I say, take a look at what you're
charging people,
'cause
I have a base guideline, and by the way, I don't advertise it at
all.
I think that it used to be a thing where some people advertised
their rates, and I think in that kind of a tactic, it's almost like
if you're gonna advertise your rates, you're looking to get people
who are trying to get the lowest cost. Here's my rates, I'll do a
commercial for $100, or you know, a 60-second commercial for $100.
And I think if you're gonna do that, then you're playing the wrong
game there. You're playing the lowest bid wins, and you've kind of
limited yourself in terms of profit that you can make by publishing
your rates. So it's more of a custom boutique service if you say,
contact me or if you're interested, here are my demos. If you're
interested, contact me and then start the
conversation.
Lau: And that's exactly why it's important to stay quiet as much as
you speak, because you're gonna pick up the cues of what that
client is saying to you and you're gonna make your quick notes so
that in your brain you can say, oh I can go hide her. I didn't
realize that. Or I'm way too high. Am I willing to lose this
client? Like you can start that conversation, that inner monologue
going, if you're listening to the cues that are coming
in.
And there was one more point I wanted to make
'cause
you said something so cool and that was about control yourself.
Like control your emotions, control how you react to things. Here's
the psychology of selling. Is that like nothing should get me upset
is the truth. Everything should be objectified just enough so that
whatever comes out of them is not really about me. They're talking
about my business. So they're not
--
so I'm not just like an actor. It's like if I don't get the job,
it's not really about me, it's about what I'm offering is not
really right for that role. Well, it's the same in business.
They're not really talking about me.
'Cause
guess what? They don't know me and they don't know me at all. I'm a
stranger. They're talking about their perception of this whole
business that they may not know anything about. Or they may have
had a, a big history, they may have been burned, who
knows?
Like we don't know when they come in the room, what they've been
through. They may have been through a lot. So you have to give them
the benefit of the doubt that if they get irritated or angry or if
they treat you inappropriately, you have to understand that they're
coming in with a history. But don't fall into it yourself. Like we
used to say in training, leave your trash at the door. You know
what I mean? Like you, well you can pick it up on your way out, but
don't put it in someone else's court. Because you lose your power
when you do that. You talk about superpowers, it renders you
incapable of diplomacy and neutralization, when you start to say,
how could he say that about me? Or how could he downgrade me like
that or whatever, you know?
Anne: That's what it is. I think part of it is the emotional aspect
of it and keep the emotions out of the business. Take it
out.
Lau: Take it out, take it out.
Anne: It's so hard for us because our product is so personal to us.
It is our voice. It is who we are. It is our brand. And so when we
get treated by a potential client and them, I guess, diminishing
our worth in terms of no, I can't pay that. Or no, that's not in
our budget, we have to not take that personally because it's not
about us; it's about business.
Lau: That's right.
Anne: And some clients literally don't have the budget and we have
to just accept that and not be offended, not be angry.
Lau: Mm-Hmm. And isn't it okay, Anne, that they don't want it, they
don't like it, they don't agree with it? It's still a free country.
You know what I mean? It's like they have a right to not think
that's fair or to not wanna put the money into it. They have a
right to do anything they wanna do. One technique that I use that I
found just for my own sake, that preserves me in the process is
whatever happens in terms of the fee structure and the negotiation
and the chit chat, I always immediately redirect. If I hear
something negative coming out, I immediately affirm it. I hear it,
I hear you. And then I redirect it onto something positive, and
nine times outta ten, it works really well.
So like for instance, I say, oh, my fee is this for whatever, for a
demo. And they go, oh my God, that's expensive. And I'll say, well,
you know, it's an investment. You're, you're investing in your
future, whatever. And they'll say, well, I don't know. I don't, I
don't know. Let me think about that. I'll say, great, think about
it. I'm here for you when you come back. And in the meantime, I
appreciate you sharing your story with me. That was valuable to me.
And they go, well, thank you. That's sweet of you to say that. And
then the conversation is redirected. And I mean that, I'm not just
saying it as a sales tactic. I mean it from Lau that I'm gonna walk
away saying I may or may not close a client. But I heard a really
interesting story and I learned something from that conversation,
and now I know something about what I can't do or what I can't
do.
And so you have to have your takeaways too from the selling
process. It's not just about the number, it's about I'm constantly
reevaluating my own worth, reevaluating my own value, reevaluating
how I view the business and perceive the human contact. And that's
worth its weight and gold. Right? .
Anne: Well, it's so funny that you say that. And I have multiple
aspects of my business where I, I, I mean, it's not just about
voiceover clients. I have coaching clients, I have demo clients, I
have VO Peeps memberships, I have VO BOSS marketing that I sell to
people. And I'm constantly having to, if people are like, well,
they're on a subscription, and they decide that
--
end of year, it's always the time when people reevaluate their
expenses and they're saying, well, was it worth it or was it not?
And so whenever I get those emails saying, well, I'm looking to
cancel because you know, I'm not seeing the value, I will always
have, thank you so much for your feedback. I'm grateful for it.
Here's my thought. Here's my thought. Think of this, think of that.
And here's the value that we're providing, and we appreciate you
and the value, and let us try to work something out. And I'll
usually do that once.
And it's amazing how many times I can recoup someone by pointing
out the value that they might have missed over the years or the
month, or this is how we're bringing value to your brand. And so I
think it's worth a shot rather than just saying, well, okay. I
mean, I could just say okay and not care about it. But I'm always
responding back with, thank you for your feedback. Thank you for
your input. I appreciate that. I completely understand. It's hard
at the end of the year for everyone. Here are some thoughts to
consider.
Lau: Perfect.
Anne: And that is something that you can do for a client if you
raise your rates with them. If they say no or they push back, you
can say, thank you, I appreciate your feedback. And that's how you
respond. Really, you have to just respond with grace. There's no
other way really, and gratefulness for them being your client. But
I say, yeah, stay firm with, here's my new rates. And I don't think
that your rates should again, be outside of, you don't wanna go
crazy and price yourself out of the market. I think that there's an
acceptable range where you can raise your rates and it's not
ridiculous. So I have vendors for me right now that are raising
their rates and I have to figure out how I'm going to absorb that
cost or raise my rates in return.
Lau: That's right.
Anne: But as voice talent, voice artist, voice actors, absolutely.
I think it's worth at this point, or at whatever time, once a year
to evaluate what you're charging and then consider whether it's
time to raise your rates. Because we all need to progress. We all
need to continue the profit, the economy, other things happen
around us and we need to accommodate for that.
Lau: Yes. If you work on your plan, you work on your action plan
for the year or for the quarter, you'll know what you wanna be
grossing, you'll know what you wanna be taking in, and you'll know
how close or how far away I am from that based on the rates that
I'm charging right now and the volume that I deal
with.
Anne: Look at the numbers, BOSSes. I know it's scary, but I think
the first thing is look at the numbers. And I think that's probably
the most scary thing for most of us, probably scarier than an
audition or a gig that we really want. It's scarier to look at the
numbers. What's your incoming, what's your outgoing, what are your
rates now? And have the courage to step back, look at it, and raise
those rates if you need to. So great conversation,
Lau.
Lau: Anne, can I throw in one more thing for the road?
Anne: Yeah, absolutely.
Lau: Because. I just thought of this and I know you're like this
and I know I'm like this. I think we care so much and that's why we
get scared. If we didn't care
--
Anne: Makes sense.
Lau:
--
at all, we couldn't give a two hoots about what they think,
whatever, we'll raise it sky high
--
no, it's because we care and the good people deeply care about the
people first. And so we're always regarding their feelings and how
they view things and what, what makes life easier for them. And
that's a wonderful trait to have. We just have to balance that with
taking care of our selves as well.
Anne: Absolutely. Great point. Thank you, Lau. Oh, great topic.
Absolutely great topic. And I think we all need to address it at
one point during the year in our careers. So I'd like to give a
great, big shout-out to our sponsor, ipDTL. You too can connect
network and talk about money and rates like a BOSS. Find out more
at ipdtl.com. And also I want you to know about a chance where you
can use your voice to make an immediate difference in the world and
give back to the communities that give to you. Visit
100voiceswhocare.org to commit. You guys, have an amazing week and
we'll see you next week. Bye!
Lau: See you then! Bye.
Join us next week for another edition of VO BOSS with your host
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