A Crash Course in Board Game Marketing & Promotion

Posted on Posted in Start to Finish

Self-publishing a board game is a long, drawn-out process. Some of this goes back to the process of creating your game, getting it manufactured, and raising funds. Yet if there were a single thing that self-publishers regularly fail at, it’s marketing.

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Marketing covers a wide array of activities that convince people to care about and eventually buy your game. Yet that definition doesn’t do it justice. Marketing is best understood as an ongoing process that breathes itself into everything you do as a self-publishing board game developer. As an example, look at this generic project timeline I made a while back. That gray bar at the bottom of the chart that stretches from the beginning to the end is labeled Marketing.

Marketing is something I put tons of time and thought into. I’ve graduated with my MBA and I’m a published researcher in the subject of online viral marketing. Even still, there is so much to learn that even with that background, it took years of effort to get a handle on the entire discipline. It’s only after starting and successfully running a marketing agency and having two successful Kickstarter campaigns that I feel like I understand it well enough to write about it.

For that reason, this is going to be a long post. I’ve broken it into 12 distinct sections for the sake of readability.

  1. Targeting
  2. Attention, Interest, Desire, And Action
  3. Product
  4. Your Niche
  5. Price
  6. Process & Logistics
  7. Core Concepts of Promotion
  8. Outreach
  9. Reviews
  10. Distribution
  11. Kickstarter
  12. Advertising
Targeting
Game of Darts

There is no perfect product. There is no perfect audience. When it comes to marketing, there is no way to make something that is objectively the best in all situations. Because value is so subjective, what you need to focus on is making the perfect product for a very specific audience.

This concept is called product-market fit. If you want to see what happens when you don’t have it, check out this autopsy I did for a failed Kickstarter campaign I attempted in 2018. A close analysis of that campaign will teach you as much as any guide on how to do things right.

In board gaming, there are lots of little communities. Remember, the board game community is not a monolithic singular entity, but rather a whole bunch of different mini-communities with interests that roughly line up. For example, I’ll never get people to play Twilight Struggle with me at a party, but Codenames…now we’re talking. All the considerations that go into making a game –  length, weight, price, art style, gameplay, packaging, and so on – needs to be tailored for a very specific audience. Alternatively, you can make whatever you want and just find the perfect audience later. Both approaches work and have different pros and cons.

The goal of marketing, especially when you’re small and just getting started, is not to broadcast your message. Until you have a big media presence, you can’t really use “the hype machine” to your advantage. You just don’t have the power to do that. You can, however, target a very particular audience – this is the best use of your limited resources and it’s much more effective. Don’t broadcast. Narrowcast instead.

Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action

I’ve mentioned the AIDA model before in How to Get Big on Twitter as a Board Game Dev. Much of what I said there bears repeating.

AIDA Model

AIDA stands for Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action. When you’re a marketer, the first thing you need to do is get people to know you exist – attention. Then you have to make people care about your game – interest. If they start to want your game, that’s a good sign – desire. Next, they get on your website or Amazon with intention to buy – action. Marketing is a slow dance. You have to very slowly build your reputation.

Marketing is not just about garnering attention and targeting a specific audience. It’s about convincing people to buy your game and to talk about. This is a multi-step process and you need to understand that. You cannot simply shout about your game into the void of Twitter and pray for the best. You need to create a “sales funnel.”

Here is an example of a sales funnel:

  • With the board game Tasty Humans, we used Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram to generate leads. We also generated leads with paid advertising, reviews, and a Rahdo review. This is how we attracted attention.
  • We were very careful about how we worded each ad and social media post. We usually said something to the effect of “Become a monster. Eat villagers. A puzzle-solving, tile placement board game for 1-4 players.” This pitch piqued Interest.
  • The Kickstarter campaign page was full of detail, which showed off pretty pictures of the game and really sold it. This stoked Desire.
  • Kickstarter campaigns act as a clear call to Action because time is so limited. This causes people to back while they still have a chance!

There are a million ways to do this and I can’t tell you the best. In fact, I’m still tweaking, learning, and growing all the time on this because I’ve not yet perfected my sales funnel.

Product

If you look on Board Game Geek, you’ll find that there are so many types of games out there. It’ll make your head spin. You want to know exactly what sort of game you’re making so that you can select the ideal target market and tweak around them. If you can’t describe your game, you’re in deep marketing trouble.

I suggest you look on Board Game Geek to find similar games to yours. There will always be similar games. Know how to make comparisons of your game to other games. Tasty Humans, for example, was like AzulSagrada, and Tetris.

Know how to describe mechanics that are in your game and see who it appeals to. Some people dislike “take that” mechanics because they’re too mean-spirited, such as the well-regarded reviewer, Rahdo. It’s no use selling a game with “take that” mechanics to him, then, is it? Likewise, some people really, really love “take that” mechanics and they’re the ones I sell War Co. to.

Know exactly who you’re trying to appeal to. This determines your target audience. Your target audience will differ with each game.

Your Niche

The intersection of your product and your target makes your niche. This is a special place in the market that you occupy better than anyone else (ideally). Your niche in the board game industry is your competitive advantage. You want to own a niche. You want to scratch a particular itch for a particular person better than anyone else.

When you have the perfect product for a specific target, that’s how you get a niche. When you have a working sales funnel that your target audience responds to, that’s how you turn a niche into cash.

Price

Price is very important. I used to claim that it wasn’t, but Kickstarter has changed a lot of the last several years. Namely, backers have become more price-sensitive because of the sheer variety of available board games. This same effect can be found on other online retailers as well as in local gaming stores.

The degree to which customers make decisions based solely on price is called “price sensitivity.” So this naturally brings you to the question of “how exactly do you know what to charge?” There is no easy answer, but here is a method I have found useful:

  • Go to Kickstarter, Amazon, and local gaming stores.
  • Look for games that are similar to the one you are making. They need to be similar and art style, amount of components, and general “feel.”
  • Write down what each one costs – both the base price and shipping.
  • Pay attention to their sales figures. Copy the successful games’ pricing strategies.
  • Make sure you can afford to price competitively, or, reduce the amount of materials you need to produce the game.

This method, slightly modified, works for nearly any industry. In fact, if this sounds really complicated, I can help you with this through my marketing agency.

Process & Logistics

Marketing is more than simply product, niche, pricing, and setting up a marketing system. It’s also about the subjective experiences that people have while they’re dealing with you. It’s also about what people think about when they hear about your game, when they hear about your website, and when they hear your name. This can all be classed under the bailiwick of “customer experience.”

How do you control customer experience? Some people think it’s about branding – your website, logo, and all that stuff. That’s all important, but let’s talk about four specific processes which affect how people experience your brand:

  1. The sales process. Everything about how you approach people affects your brand. From the language you use, the venues you reach out to people through, and the entire process by which you persuade people to buy your product falls under the sales process.
  2. The buying or pre-order process. The website or offline sales channels you use to facilitate buying or pre-ordering affect how people see you. You want purchasing to be as seamless as possible so you appear professional.
  3. The fulfillment process. You need to fulfill games as efficiently and cost-effectively as possible. You want people to think of you as someone who keeps their promises.
  4. The returns process. If people decide they don’t like your game, you need to have a seamless return process. People who return your games but have a good experience returning the game will have a more positive view of your brand. They might choose to buy from you later.

While processes and logistics may seem just like means to an end, it’s important that people feel like they’re being treated well at every step of the process. This is an important part of marketing because these processes will determine your reputation.

Core Concepts of Promotion

Wikipedia says that “[p]romotion covers the methods of communication that a marketer uses to provide information about its product.” In short, promotion is how you spread the word about your business. When you’re a first-time business owner, or especially a first-time game dev, mastery of promotion is absolutely critical to your success. That’s why half this guide is dedicated to promotion and promotion alone.

Promotion is a big tent that covers a lot of different concepts which I cover in more detail below. The first is outreach – how you find first-time customers (also known as “lead generation”). One very specific type of outreach that is critical in the board game industry is the review process. Then you have distribution, which tends to overlap with promotion in some critical ways. Kickstarter itself, which many people falsely see as the means of succeeding in the board game industry in and of itself, is a form of promotion. Finally, there is also advertising – a very effective and nuanced form of promotion that tends to scare people off because it costs money.

Outreach

Outreach is how you find people to care about your game. It is how you find your target and tell them about your product so that you can carve out your niche. Some people call this “lead generation.”

There are a number of great ways you can run an effective outreach campaign. You can use social media, go to conventions, do an email newsletter, start a chat room, create a Facebook group, and even advertise. While there are some methods that are more effective than others, you want to choose a form of outreach that you like and really stick to it. Just try one or two forms of outreach at first and work your way up if you find that you have enough time to do more.

If your ambitions are grand and you want to raise tens of thousands of dollars, you will likely need a promotional mix. I won’t get into all that here, but here’s a good course I’ve found online on the matter.

Social Media

Social media includes Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, and other popular websites where people tend to hang out. This is what people immediately jump to when they think of outreach. However, mastering social media is a challenge all of its own and that requires nuanced thinking which I spell out in Setting Up Social Media as a Board Game Dev: A Primer Course. This is the most approachable way to find and reach out to your target audience, but it’s also a fantastic way to get ignored in the unending shuffle of these constantly noisy networks.

Cons

You can also meet a lot of people very quickly by going to board game cons. By meeting people face-to-face and getting contact information such as phone numbers and email addresses, you can get reach out to lots of people in a short amount of time. Cons, however, are intimidating, cost a lot of money, and take a lot of time. That said, I know beginners who have great experiences with them. Don’t write off cons!

Email

Email newsletters are a great way to reach out to people, too. You have to ask for a lot of email addresses and put out a regular, high-quality newsletter with a service like Mailchimp. It’s tricky to do both of these things, but email is by far one of the greatest ways to contact people online. Given a choice between a mailing list of 100 and a Twitter following of 1000, I would take the mailing list every single time – no contest. I have personally had great results with my newsletter (which you should totally sign up for).

I cannot begin to list all the different forms of outreach. This aspect of business rewards creativity and hard work. As long as you can reach out to a highly targeted group of people and keep in touch with them on a systematic basis, you’re well on your way to succeeding with outreach.

Reviews

Reviews warrant their own section as a very specific form of outreach. They are such a critical credibility-builder for new game devs. Good reviews convince people to buy your game. The occasional bad review still gets your name out there for others to discover you later, plus it makes you look more authentic.

Use Reddit, Board Game Geek, and social media to identify reviewers who fall within your target market. You’ll want to send games to them when it comes time for the review stage of your game’s development. If the reviewer is a professional with an engaged audience and you select based on them falling within your target market, you have a good chance of getting a good review that is seen by people who were already predisposed to like your game’s style from the get-go.

Distribution

Distribution involves ways that your game is seen outside of just your website or company Amazon account. It is sometimes helpful to have third-party retailers or subscription boxes sell your game on your behalf. When you’re starting out, the exposure alone can be extremely useful to you. Good distribution gets your game seen by more people.

Want to know a secret? This is actually something I’ve bungled on War Co. in the past, so I don’t want to purport to be an expert on this. I encourage you to ask questions about the ideal way to distribute your game and do better than I did my first time.

Kickstarter

Kickstarter is the last step in a long marketing dance for a lot of game developers. Your Kickstarter campaign is generally only the Action part of AIDA. Getting people to pay Attention, growing their Interest, and cultivating Desire – those are all up to you. Kickstarter is nothing more than a struck match on a pile of tinder that you assembled yourself.

That said, about 30-40% of backers tend to find you through the search, meaning Kickstarter is a good form of outreach. A lot of people who don’t care at all about social media are trawling Kickstarter in search of the newest new. Still, the degree to which Kickstarter contributes dollars-wise tends to pin itself to how much of an entourage you bring on your own.

I think it’s also worth mentioning that $1 rewards are one of the best things you can have on Kickstarter. Yes, it makes your backer count go up, which is itself a good thing. More importantly, though, once the campaign is done, you can ask everyone to fill out a survey – meaning you can ask for email addresses if you have a newsletter. Kickstarter is not just a way of convincing people to give you money, it can also be a way to capture and hold attention for future games.

Advertising

Advertising is the last thing I wanted to cover. People tend to get spooked by advertising because they hate the idea of giving up their hard-earned cash for something abstract. Plus, it’s super easy to get burned by advertising and you see a lot of smart people talking bad about advertising because they failed to understand more critical, basic marketing lessons. Still, the potential time savings might just be worth a few hundred bucks in Facebook ads. You’d be a fool to dismiss advertising entirely.

Facebook and Board Game Geek tend to be pretty good places to advertise board games. I’d stick to Facebook when you’re new, though, because Board Game Geek has a really high minimum expense. Facebook doesn’t require you to spend much at all and it also comes with robust analytics that let you make the most of your ad.

When you make an ad, you need to act like a scientist, creating ads and seeing how people react to them. You subtly tweak them until you get better and better responses. But where do you begin? Start with something that your target audience will respond to. Start with the tightest, smallest possible audience.

Once you have a tight target and a good basic idea of what to say to grab attention, you need one last thing. You need to make sure your ad goes to a page that leads to high conversions. The word “conversion” here means “a person who does what you want them to do” in marketing jargon. Do you want them to follow you on Twitter, buy your game, back your campaign, or sign up for your newsletter? Think hard about what you want people to do once you start an ad.

Final Thoughts

Marketing board games can be very tricky. This article was designed to give you a broad overview of all the different things that go into marketing. My hope is that by spelling it all out, you’ll be more equipped to pitch your game to people who care. Use this guide to ask more questions, run more tests, and get your wheels turning.

If you have any questions or comments, I encourage you to comment below 🙂





30 thoughts on “A Crash Course in Board Game Marketing & Promotion

  1. Brandon, thanks so much for your insights on marketing board games. I have invented almost 40 of them as a result of finding a real fun hobby after I retired. Most of my efforts have been focused on making the games short (typically 25 to 40 minutes each) and crafting simple foolproof rules. I try for an interesting mix of chance and skill and require players to think about their moves. What do you think should be my next move in perhaps marketing one or more of these games? By the way I had virtually no interest in board games until I retired in 2011.

  2. @Eric
    You may want to pitch your best two games to a publisher instead. Being new to the hobby and the industry make it very risky to publish yourself.
    The best first step is to get some games in front of other people, ideally board game designers or players that like to play prototypes at some board game meetups. Focus on one or two games at once. Once you have cleared that and worked the feedback into a good game, you can pitch it to a publisher – at a trade show for instance, at annual board game designer gatherings or by asking a fitting publisher if they would be interested in the rules. If they are, send them the rules. (Have the rules tested beforehand by having a group of players playing your game only by the rules and the prototype, without any further explanation.)
    If they want a prototype, send it in without question.

    Here an article about that is a bit rough in wording but otherwise mostly accurate:
    http://www.jamesmathe.com/courting-a-game-publisher-dos-and-donts/

    Good luck!

    1. @Eric, I’m with Peter on this one.

      If you’re not up for the emotional rollercoaster and heavy workload of self-publishing, it’s better to go through a publisher. I personally find the whole thing thrilling and meaningful, but it’s not for everybody! If you are up for it, then by all means, we’ll chase our dreams together.

      When pitching to a publisher, it’s good to keep in mind that publishers all cater to different tastes. You’ll want to find someone who publishes games like yours – it’ll be way easier to get their attention that way!

  3. Thanks Brandon! I found this article as a very helpful primer on Kickstarter advertising. From what I’ve been reading, it sounds like the best effective pre-launch strategy is to fun Facebook ads to gather email addresses. Does that sound right from your experience?

    Also, from the ad you ran above targeting board game designers, do you remember approx. how many people that reached?

    Best,
    Rob
    Founder, Cackleberry Games – creator of CASCADE: Gardens of Babylon

  4. Hi Brandon, what a great article, and very useful to me as I’m totally new to the industry. In terms of email addresses for newsletters, I’ve been told not to collect them as there’s so much hassle with the new standards and the fines are huge if you get it wrong. How do you get round that please? Thanks for any advice.

    1. Hey Jo! Regarding email address collection, it is important that you be careful how you collect them. The new standard you’re referring to is most likely GDPR, an EU regulation intended to protect their citizens from harmful data collection and processing.

      My recommendation is that you use a service like Mailchimp and – this is very important – enable GDPR fields. Make sure people are making an informed, conscious decision when they sign up for your list. When collecting emails, get people to go through that form. If you collect emails in person, keep documentation of how you collected their emails just in case.

      Email marketing is very valuable and I think it would be unfortunate to avoid it because of new regulations. You just want to be careful and comply with the law 🙂

      Bonus points for compliance: your open and click rates are higher and your costs are lower 😉

  5. As a person who is not new to business, but is new to the game development world, I really appreciate this!

  6. Good stuff Brandon! I’ve personally struggled with cons, because I feel obligated to play others’ games as well as get others to play my own. So, by the end of the day, maybe 6-8 people have played my game — not a great return on my invested time, unless I get more “pushy” and just demand people play my game all day long, without playing anyone else’s.

  7. Keep Your Distance is a short, absorbing card game that reinforces rules to fight COVID-19 , designed for two or three players 8 to adult and based on the card game Golf. I am an individual who needs an agency to take the process to my target audience, parents homeschooling their kids. I am a retired educational therapist who needs help.

  8. Hi Brandon, thanks for this blog. Its so helpful as someone who is only 6 months into the game developing journey and great to see others enjoying it as well.

    I had a question about the advertising steps. You mention distribution as an important step and it is included before the kickstarter stage. I’m curious how you can expect to distribute prior to generating funds through kickstarter and whether distributors are happy to advertise a product pre-release. Could you elaborate on this please. Thanks, Dom

  9. A client’s customer experience is more important than we think. It can make the difference between continuing to read about a product or stopping altogether and going in another direction. In short, the quality of the customer experience often determines whether a client will buy a product or not, or whether they will return as customers.

  10. I’m not new to game design but am new to the industry. Do you have an article defining board game design jargon? For example, you use the term ‘take that’ mechanics which feels fairly straightforward. But my feeling is there are other terms not in this article that would be handy to know if I am trying to explain my game(s) to others. Any help you could supply here would be useful.

  11. Hi Brandon – thank you for this great blog and covering this topic so well! I hope you can answer a question – I’m more conceptually-minded than business-minded, so here’s where I’m a little stuck: I’ve looked at other games at Kickstarter status and have been very impressed by the level of artwork – including videos, which all look original. But to engage artists requires funds, which I don’t have – hence the need for a Kickstarter. It’s a “which comes first – chicken or the egg” situation and, having little startup capital, I don’t know how to navigate. Any thoughts or advice?

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