Your corporate video content carries your brand. When the narration sounds stiff, stuffy, or robotic, you lose the room before slide two. You need a voice who can interpret your scripts and deliver them with genuine comprehension.
I spent nearly 20 years in tech, project management, product management and corporate communications before stepping behind the microphone, and that experience shows up in every corporate narration project I touch. Companies like Google, Amazon, Microsoft, LinkedIn, and Apple News+ trust me to infuse their corporate voice over projects with warmth and real comprehension of the business content I’m voicing.
Corporate narration portfolio
I’ve delivered corporate narration for Fortune 500 companies across industries including technology, logistics, retail, and healthcare. Below you’ll find samples from brand videos, product walkthroughs, and internal communications that reflect the range of tone and subject matter I work with every week.
Why hire a voice over artist for corporate narration?
I hear this question from prospective clients at least once a month. Someone in marketing or L&D has been asked to “just record it themselves,” or the VP of communications volunteers a colleague with “a nice voice.” The result is almost always the same: the audio quality is low, the pacing is off, and the content gets ignored.
Your corporate video is often the first impression a prospect, partner, or investor gets of your company. The production team spent weeks on motion graphics, scripting, and approvals. If the narration sounds like someone recorded it on a laptop mic during lunch, you risk undercutting all of that investment. A professional corporate voice over brings broadcast-level quality and a delivery calibrated to the specific audience you’re speaking to: C-suite executives, sales prospects, a ballroom full of employees, or broader audiences on social media.
Hiring a professional corporate voice over artist also reclaims hours of your team’s time. Recording clean audio takes skill and professional studio equipment. Redoing takes, editing out breath sounds, normalizing levels: that’s time your communications team could be spending on strategy instead.
My background gives me an edge most voice actors can’t offer. I am a certified Project Management Professional (PMP), hold an Advanced Certified Scrum Product Owner (A-CSPO) certification, and earned an MBA alongside a BA in Human Communication. I’d managed projects and directed software dev teams for both the federal government and private sector before I ever stepped into a voice over recording booth.
That combination is exactly why Amazon’s AWS division has booked me repeatedly. Their scripts were technical. Creative Directors would preface sessions with, “I know this is a technical script.” I’d read them without stumbling because I was working with dev teams daily in my corporate career. The same contact who booked that AWS work brought me on for Microsoft projects with the same dynamic: technical video voice over content that needed to sound natural, engaging and conversational. They kept coming back because the read was accurate and listenable at the same time.
As an LGBTQ-identifying Black woman with ADHD, I also bring representation to corporate content in a way that many voice actors cannot. When your audience is diverse, the voice in your business content should reflect that.
Corporate voice over for websites and organic video
A growing share of corporate narration work lives on company websites. These are the brand overview videos on your homepage, the product walkthrough on your solutions page, the “about us” story that plays when a prospect is deciding if they should book a call. They’re not paid media. These non-broadcast assets sit in organic placements and work around the clock.
This type of corporate video is where I see the most crossover between my voice over skill set and my business background. When I voice a brand video for a tech company, I’m not reading the script cold. I’ve spent nearly two decades inside organizations like the ones hiring me. I understand what a product manager needs from a positioning video. I know how a stakeholder presentation should pace. I know when a script is trying too hard and when it’s landing.
I recently voiced a brand video for a corporate client that was designed to get their employees fired up at a company event. The video played; the room loved it. Later, the same client came back asking for pricing on a connected TV run. What started as an internal piece performed well enough to justify a paid media buy. That kind of content flexibility is built into how I approach corporate narration. I deliver files at broadcast quality from my Source-Connect enabled studio, so when a project’s scope expands, the audio is already ready.
My work for companies like Google, Facebook, and Apple News+ falls squarely in this category: corporate voice over that needs to be polished and human at the same time, sitting on websites and in presentations where it represents the brand to external audiences.
Voice over for B2B sales, conferences, and presentations
The 60-to-90-second video that plays before a keynote. The sizzle reel a sales team sends to prospects before a demo. The investor update that goes out quarterly. These are high-stakes corporate narration projects where every second of audio carries weight, and the voice you choose signals how seriously you take the message.
I’ve been on the other side of these presentations. In my corporate career, I sat through hundreds of conference openers, sales kickoff videos, and quarterly business reviews. I know what makes a room lean in and what makes people pull out their phones. That lived experience informs my delivery. When I read a B2B pitch video, I’m thinking about pacing the way a presenter would, building energy where the content needs it, and pulling back when the data should speak on its own.
Corporate clients are often the ones most impressed by my live directed session capability. Live direction means you can adjust tone, pacing, and emphasis in real time during the session, which matters when the video needs to land with a specific audience at a specific event. I offer complimentary live directed sessions through my Source-Connect enabled studio so you can listen in and give feedback as I record.
The training video voice over work I’ve done for AWS and Microsoft has a direct throughline to this kind of B2B content. Technical concepts that need to sound conversational. Dense scripts that need to breathe. Audiences who are smart, busy, and skeptical of anything that sounds like it was phoned in.
Voice over for internal company videos
Internal communications set the tone for how employees experience your organization. Onboarding videos introduce new hires to company culture before they’ve met half their team. Policy update announcements shape how people understand changes to benefits, scheduling, or workplace expectations. HR communications address everything from open enrollment to organizational restructuring. These are high-stakes moments wrapped in everyday packaging, and the voice carrying that message matters.
A consistent, professional voice across your internal video library creates a unified brand experience for employees. When someone hears the same warm, clear voice in their onboarding video and their annual compliance refresher six months later, the content feels intentional and cohesive. Switching voices between modules creates a disjointed experience that undercuts the professionalism your organization is trying to communicate.
I’ve provided in-store voice work for Burlington and Marshalls, corporate narration for Peterbilt (which won a SOVAS Award for Outstanding Consumer Sales Video), and internal communications across technology and retail. For organizations with larger e-training video voice over needs (such as multi-module onboarding programs, compliance series, or e-learning voice over libraries) I also offer that as a dedicated service . Each of these projects required a voice that could adapt to the audience and subject matter while keeping the energy level right for the context.
Diverse representation in internal video content sends a signal to your workforce: this company sees all of us. When employees from different backgrounds hear a voice that reflects their own experience, it sparks real engagement with the material. That kind of intentional casting builds trust from the inside out.
Frequently asked questions
How do you handle technical terminology and industry jargon?
I research pronunciation and context before every session. My background includes nearly 20 years working in tech, military, government, and corporate communications, so terms like API, SaaS, LMS, CONUS/OCONUS, and regulatory acronyms are familiar territory. For highly specialized content, I’ll review your glossary or pronunciation guide in advance and confirm any ambiguous terms during the session.
Do you sign NDAs for confidential corporate content?
Yes. I regularly work with pre-release product content, internal HR materials, and proprietary training scripts. I’m happy to sign your NDA before we begin. Confidentiality is standard practice for my corporate narration work.
Can you match an existing brand voice or style guide?
Absolutely. Send me a sample of the voice you’re matching or a written style guide describing the tone, pace, and energy level. I’ll record a test clip for your approval before we start the full project. Corporate voice over projects often require matching an established sonic identity, and I approach that as a collaborative process.
Can corporate narration be repurposed for paid media later?
It can. I record all corporate voice over and training video voice over projects at broadcast quality from my professional Source-Connect enabled studio, so the audio is ready for paid placement if the scope changes. Several of my clients have started with website or event videos and later expanded to connected TV or digital ad buys with the same recordings. All you’d need to do is get in contact with me about the scope of your ad buy, intended usage, and desired budget so we can get the broadcast license underway.
Get in contact with Erikka
Your next corporate narration project deserves a voice that understands business content from the inside. I’ve partnered with Fortune 500 companies, government agencies, and growing startups to deliver corporate voice over that sounds polished and human at the same time.
I’d love to hear about what you’re working on. Reach me by email or phone; I respond within one business day. Start your project today, request a custom quote, or request a complimentary audition to hear how I’d approach your script.


