Check Your Mic Before You Wreck Your Project — from learningguild.com by Kendal Rasnake

While a lot of our narration may be produced by AI nowadays, there are times when you need to record audio, such as when you need someone in-house to do a voiceover, or you are recording an interview, job shadow video, demonstration video, etc. Now, the responsibility of recording high-quality audio falls on you.

Well, all you have to do is grab a mic and point, right? Wrong!

The last thing you need is to record the CEO and have him/her sound horrible or look ridiculous because they are holding a fuzzy mic on a long wire up to their mouth. Instead, just learn a little about mics and you can purchase and/or choose the right one.

All Mics Are Not Built Equally
I had someone who was having audio trouble tell me that they used a “Brand Name” mic before and it sounded good, so maybe they would go back to using a “Brand Name” mic. As you can imagine, choosing a mic for a certain purpose based on the brand name is equivalent to choosing a Chevy mini-hybrid car to tow an RV because your truck used to tow the RV well and it was a Chevy. Brands make different types of microphones and understanding how mics are built can help you to choose the right one, no matter the brand.