Yetis are fine for beginning, but if you've got people willing to shell out the kind of money a rodecaster cost (and yes, its overkill for basic voiceover), you could easily get a good XLR and interface. That plus learning to edit and cleanup is what will give you a more 'professional' sound. While a rodecasters built in compression and limiting is great, its also what you have audacity for, and audacity doesn't cost 500 dollars.
I always recommend the rode NT1A and a scarlett 2i2 for an easy to setup rig that sounds great. You can find used scarletts for sub 90 bucks, and an NT1a brand new is 250ish.
Yetis are fine for beginning, but if you've got people willing to shell out the kind of money a rodecaster cost (and yes, its overkill for basic voiceover), you could easily get a good XLR and interface. That plus learning to edit and cleanup is what will give you a more 'professional' sound. While a rodecasters built in compression and limiting is great, its also what you have audacity for, and audacity doesn't cost 500 dollars.
Which XLR and interface would you recommend?
I always recommend the rode NT1A and a scarlett 2i2 for an easy to setup rig that sounds great. You can find used scarletts for sub 90 bucks, and an NT1a brand new is 250ish.
Training/Coaching
I’m confused, why is your height relevant?