Frequently asked questions
Straight answers before production starts.
Workflow, scope, pricing, confidentiality, and capacity—explained clearly for studios, publishers, producers, and production companies.
Working together
Fit and workflow.
Can Floris Audio work inside our existing process?
Yes. We follow your file structure, naming conventions, specifications, communication channels, and approval flow. The objective is to extend your operation, not replace the workflow you trust.
Can we outsource only one production stage?
Yes. Editing, proofing and QC, pickup management, mastering, and multicast dialogue assembly are available separately. You can also assign the complete post-production chain.
How do you start with a new studio?
We align the scope and success criteria, then normally begin with one controlled title or production stage. After approval, the working process is documented before capacity scales.
Do you work white-label and confidentially?
Yes. Floris Audio can operate behind your brand, inside your workflow, and around your client relationship. File access, communication, retention, and delivery boundaries are agreed before production.
Scope and capacity
Commercial details.
How is work priced?
Projects are generally scoped per finished hour. Final pricing reflects the production stage, language, source quality, QC depth, turnaround, and complexity. A written quote confirms assumptions before work begins.
How does reserved capacity work?
Qualified production partners can reserve an agreed monthly allocation with priority scheduling, response windows, and operating rules defined in advance. Terms depend on expected volume and workflow complexity.
Which languages and formats do you support?
Floris Audio supports English-, Dutch-, and Spanish-language workflows, including fiction, nonfiction, dual narration, and multicast productions. Final scope depends on the required stages and complexity.
What happens after a quote request?
We review the project details and respond promptly with availability, pricing, assumptions, and the most sensible next step.
The next controlled step
Bring the scope, schedule, and specifications.
Request a written quote, or book a capacity call to discuss a more complex workflow.