Hello new dude!
Build a fan-base. Make some short films, give advice + tutorials, make connections through collaborating.
Once the campaign is up, share it around as much as possible. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Youtube, Vimeo, etc. etc. etc.
Put some money into advertising the campaign.
When making a trailer...
Never say
make my dream come true or
believe.
Get exciting 5 minutes in, and keep the project interesting. It should be able to hold the attention of someone with ADD.
Have a clever gimmick. Awesome VFX, the first film to _______, starring _____, the best film of the ______.
Have the best quality you can possibly have. Put all of your effort and as much money and time put in as humanly possible.
Watch 100 Kickstarter campaigns that worked, and steal from them.
Know how to make a good trailer.
Now time to do some copy and pasting.
Knowing your audience will also help in the making of the film's trailer, which is incredibly important.
A trailer should grab attention within a few seconds, keep it, and not let go until the end. You also want to watch 100+ trailers that are of the genre/type of film you are making, and steal elements from those trailers.
If I type in "most successful movies", the first thing that comes up is this Wikipedia article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_highest-grossing_films
Let's take a look. What do we have here?
1. Avatar
Let's take a look at the Avatar trailer.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1_JBMrrYw8
Within a few seconds, we have cool CG and ROBOTS! Is there anything cooler than that?!
Well, for some people it is. Avatar fits into the category of men under 25. It has action and CG. It will appeal to those who like action and sci-fi, as well as those who have short attention spans. It grabbed the audience's attention, kept it, and didn't let go. That is how you make a good trailer.
Do you have to have explosions and aliens to make a successful film? NO! Let's take a look at the second most successful film of all time, Titanic.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQ6klONCq4s
Now sure, you probably don't have the budget for something this large, and you probably haven't made "the world's most beloved film" ever, but you can stretch the truth by putting in reviews of the film, and adding some text like "comes a masterpiece...". Regardless of the quality of the film, the trailer has to be great.
Now what do these two incredibly different trailers have in common? They both give us an interesting character that we care for, and put them into danger.
Now to some, I can see how comparing mass scale Hollywood films to our 2K features is like comparing apples to oranges. So let's compare apples to apples.
http://www.businesspundit.com/10-most-profitable-low-budget-movies-of-all-time/
1. Paranormal Activity
Why did people go to see Paranormal Activity? Because it had a clever marketing strategy and a strong trailer, just like BWP (number 3). They both convinced audiences that the films were real. They started up lots of hype on the internet, and people flipped out after seeing the trailer and hearing the numerous rumors that traveled around forums and sites.
2. Mad Max
The film had an effective trailer. While it may not hold up to today's standards, it was incredibly effective when it first came out. The film was also banned in Sweden and New Zealand, which some could view as bad for the film's marketing, but it made the film all the more controversial and got people interested in seeing. Same thing with celebrities today like Miley Cyrus. Without all of those angry parents and internet ranters, she'd be nowhere. The only reason she has the Youtube views and attention she has right now is because of people who go on the internet, and rant. That attracts more attention to her videos. Then kids begin watching, and parents are upset when they find out what their kids are watching, then they protest her work. It draws in more and more people, and makes her stinking rich. One of the most clever marketing strategies I've seen in a while if you ask me.
3. BWP (already covered) Clever marketing strategy that stirred up lots of attention.
4. Night of the Living Dead (1968 version)
The film had an african american lead, a very liberal use of violence, and a young girl stabbing her mother to death. While this may seem tame by today's standards, that stirred people up - a lot. People wanted to see this shocking and horrifying film. The film was controversial.
5. Rocky
Now many of us don't have 1 mil, but this film put that 1 mil to good use. There was a rising star in the lead. There was also a romantic relationship and boxing - so it has something for everyone. Again, the trailer had an interesting character put into danger, a conflict, and drama - great music and a VO.
I'll stop here, but if someone wants me to continue I will.
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Having a clever marketing gimmick and fan-base is important as well. Maybe you want to upload in depth BTS of the making of your film to appeal to the indie community, claim that your film is based upon true events, say that your film is a modern masterpiece, or add controversial elements. In Michael Moore's F9/11, he took a controversial and talked about topic, and turned it into a very intense and well... controversial and noticed film because he was making a movie about a controversial and talked about topic.
Note to self: controversy = viewers.
Building a fan-base is important. Ryan Connolly of Film Riot and the filmmakers of IndyMogul make free content to help the indie community. No wonder they're so successful. Outsiders is going to blow up on the internet. You need to put out awesome content and make connections to build a fan-base, which isn't easy. It can take days, weeks, months, most likely years.
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Even though I wrote this for film distribution, the same thing applies to successfully pulling off a crowd-funding campaign.
Do you know how many people have failed on Kickstarter? A LOT. Crawl past all of the other wannabes, and get your head above the water. Your marketing strategy has to be different. You have to offer something and have something others do not have.
A clever gimmick can help. Perhaps you could do a daily BTS released everyday to appeal to the indie filmmaking community. Or offer a chance for people who give ___ amount of money a ____.
Also, check out this thread:
http://www.indietalk.com/showthread.php?t=39742
Thanks Ray
Here's an awesome article:
http://filmmakeriq.com/2013/08/how-...er-for-your-film-before-and-after-case-study/
Here's an IndieTalker that ran a successful
IndieGogo campaign:
http://www.indietalk.com/member.php?u=19635
Best of luck to you
