I use Ozone. I do NOT use the AI stuff, or the presets.
It definitely pays to try each individual function and learn how they work, and then apply them in MODERATION.
Subtlety is undervalued in mixing/mastering IMO these days.
I believe someone mentioned this above, but push a setting up to an extreme to hear what and how it’s impacting a certain aspect of your sound. Then back it off to almost no effect, then push it up very slowly to get a nice nearly transparent effect.
Use the dynamic EQ, and learn how to use bell and shelf curves to cut certain low frequencies a bit, and boost some low-mids for a little kick, tame the 15-20KHz a little etc. Use the vintage tape effect at 15IPS with a bit of input gain to get a nice saturation effect. Use the Exciter VERY sparingly. Use its learn feature in a dynamic area of your track to pick basic bands to work with. They’ll usually need to be tweaked a bit, as the learn is decent but not perfect. Find the sweet spots, then pick a triode, tube, or analog mode, bump up the range a bit, drop down the mix-send level a bit, then tweak from there.
Use the Imager! It’s great! Use all four available bands. Grab the area between 0 and around 100Hz, and pull the slider down to a negative region to basically remove stereo impact from the lows. This can help solidify the lows, get rid of a bit of phase-related muck etc. Leave the next band alone more or less. (bump slight above or below zero to taste) Boost the next two (mids and highs) up maybe 20%. Turn on the stereo imager, set to mode I. Set about 8ms. You’ll get some nice stereo field effects, and it can crisp up your highs a bit as a side-effect.
If you want to use the multi-band compressor to add a bit of punch, or tame a range, use it SPARINGLY. Put it early in the chain. I usually go right after the EQ. Set the thresholds HIGH. Like just barely in the peaks. (after learning the frequency bands) Set the ratios, knees, attacks decays to your liking. If you want more punch to your sound, keep the attacks quick, and don’t overcompress or you’ll lose the transients. Try to keep the threshold just within the active peak region of each band. Don’t bring it down into the RMS level unless you’re using the compressor as an effect for some reason. You want to see the active compression just barely pushing down on the peaks of what you’re compressing. Go too far, and it squishes it into a brick of sound.
It’s an overused term, but you generally want your music to breathe a bit.
At the end of the chain put the Maximizer. Once again, as with any mixing/mastering tool, learn the sweet spots, and use it sparingly. You want to BARELY hear the effect. If you hear it too much, to where you feel like it’s “ear candy” you may be pushing it a little too far. Let people do that with their own EQs when they’re listening to the music. You want to provide a good frequency range, but if people want to sweeten it further, they can, and probably will just by listening on colorful sound systems. So as with the compressor, watch your threshold levels, don’t push the gain too far. Depending on your source material maybe 3db to 5db. I generally like the IIRC3 setting, and use the “pumping” setting as a default template to work from. Adjust the soft-clipping to moderate to low settings. Choose the band based on the tune you’re working with. Low, medium or high will depend on the type of music. If you’re say, doing some bass heavy minimal techno, use the low setting, but keep it moderate. Boost the transient impact a little bit, keep the attack low, (so use the “fast” setting).
You want your peaks hitting the -.01db level pretty regularly, but not constant hammering. You want your RMS levels to be healthy, but not overbearing.
That’s my process for using Ozone for this. It really does take practice, restraint, and just listening, re-listinening, letting your ears relax in between listening to not get over-fatigued, etc. Trying on as many things as you can. Headphones, monitors, phone, etc. then go back in and re-tweak a bit if needed. It’s not difficult, but it does take repetition and practice to get a process down.
This is just my process for my styles of music, but it works pretty well for me at least. Thought I’d post it.