Five ways to improve your game's marketing campaign

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Friday, June 22, 2012
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Sam Barsanti

Hey, game publishers, Nathaniel has some good tips here on how to annoy your audience a little less. I'd pay attention to him.

Dante's Inferno protest

When I saw the Bitmob Writing Challenge for this month, I didn’t give it a second thought. After all, I don’t have a game that I’m trying to promote, and I’ve never been to a gaming convention in my life. What do I know about advertising?

Then it hit me: We’re constantly subjected to companies’ attempts to pique our interest in their products. Teaser trailers, page banners on websites, “leaked” gameplay videos, previews, I’ll bet you’ve seen them all. If anyone is qualified to talk about advertising, it’s people like us.

Which ads are the most effective? When’s the right time to advertise? Here are some tips on how I think companies could promote their games better.

1. Don’t create controversy for controversy’s sake

I understand the misconception here. It’s easy to assume that if a big controversy is associated with your game, more people will search for it on the internet. That’s basically free advertising, and all advertising is good, right? Unfortunately, that’s bullshit. The Dante's Inferno fake controversy (where EA hired people to stage a mock protest) is the kind of stunt that makes people believe that gamers are all a bunch of fat, foul-mouthed, violent losers. Don’t make us look bad just to manufacture some extra attention.

 

2. Don’t give fans full disclosure, even if we ask for it

We all want to know about your game, but don’t pull a Super Smash Brothers Brawl. In that case, Nintendo slowly revealed all of the characters and stages over the months before they released it. Telling fans every little detail like that ruins all the mystery. Keep your game mysterious and elusive; only the need-to-know information (improvements, additions, basic story summary and gameplay) should be made available to the public.

3. Use trailers correctly

Remember that amazing Dead Island teaser? That’s what an early trailer should be. Shown off maybe a year before the actual title’s release, they give us time to speculate and hype the game. Gameplay trailers are great as well and should be used to help potential customers understand how a game actually works.

4. Advertise at the right time

“Shown off maybe a year before the actual title’s release” is the key. Internet users have notoriously short attention spans, and it doesn’t make sense to show us a game too much unless it’s coming out in the next year.


Hmm…I seemed to have missed the E3 coverage for this one. Oh, wait…*searches internet*…I guess I’m too early.

5. Engage the community

Get people involved, encourage the fans to spread the word, and make people work to see the really exciting stuff. A great example is Ubisoft’s recent “Unlock the Assassin’s Creed 3 Trailer” promotion. The person who posts a video of your game on Twitter and Facebook is worth far more than some banner on a page. All you have to do is make them want to show their friends.

That’s how I think companies should advertise, but I’m not the only one who’s affected by stuff like this, so hit up the comments and let the world know what you think!

 
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Comments (5)
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June 16, 2012

I think 2 and 5 are often hard for companies to find a balance in carrying out effectively. When done right, they can string fans along for months, when done badly, they just intensely piss everyone off. Nice points.

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June 22, 2012

I completely agree with number 2. Showing too much too soon leaves, leaves me without surprises when I finally play the game.

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June 23, 2012

It's really weird to me that you cite Dead Island trailer as an example of what trailers should be like. The final game was nothing like what the trailer depicted and a lot of gamers where pissed off by this fact, which probably was held against the title even though it had a lot going for it. 

Personnaly, I like when the exact opposite is done. A trailer should only show in-game footage (whether it is gameplay or of actual cutscenes that actually happen in the actual game). Maybe it's because i'm too old to get excited by the 100dth CG trailer I see but nowadays when I see a trailer like Dead Island (or Lost Planet 3) I turn it off as soon as I realize that it probably as nothing to do with the actual game. And don't even get me started on trailers that used licensed pop music instead of the actual game music.

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June 23, 2012

 

I did mention that ONLY teaser trailers should be like that. Those CG trailers should only be used to arouse interest in the game. After the initial announcement, gameplay footage is much better.

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June 23, 2012

Yea, I mean that's a given (almost) nobody will buy a game they never heard off if they have'nt seen any footage of the gameplay. What I mean is that I don't really see the point of those CG teasers, except lying to the audience and impressing your stock holders. I agree with your other points thought.

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