by Tim F » Sat Dec 07, 2013 1:05 am
Hi,
Brilliant reply thank you! That really inspired me, reading your link I can see immediately what's missing from my own campaign - I'm trying to do something new in an old genre, but I haven't really tapped into the community around that old genre. That's something I can definitely work on.
However I've discovered that my idea is very difficult to describe properly. It's a simple idea really, but the end result isn't easily defined. I'm forever changing and adding to my description to try to get the idea across properly. Ultimately of course, I might just not have a particularly great idea, but it's hard to tell when I keep finding out that people have misunderstood it. It's a bit like trying to describe a piece of music - you really have to just hear it before it'll make sense.
I think that some ideas - or rather, pitches - will work better on Kickstarter than others, and just as some bad pitches may be good ideas, there are probably lots of pitches that look like a great idea but turn out not to make that much sense in the real world - OUYA is a case in point. I think I'm fundamentally sceptical about pitching - having worked in advertising for years, you get to see that pitching is really all about a particular, skilful type of bluff, a particular use of smoke and mirrors, with usually very little substance. And clients usually buy it, only seeing the holes - often disastrous ones - later on.
I think it's certainly true that the old advertising models are out of date, although I suppose it does depend on what you're advertising. With any art form, if someone really has something new and interesting to say, there will always be people interested in hearing it. The 1000 fans thing works, I know from personal experience! But with washing powder (for instance) it's still really about making sure everyone knows you're making the best product. And incidentally, washing powder companies compete fiercely for market share and it really is all about the quality of the product - my wife used to attend the conferences! But the point is there's probably only 'room' for a few brands of washing powder, people want what they trust and recognise. And in the end it's all controlled by supermarkets deciding, often randomly, what to sell - they're the biggest marketing dictatorship there is!
So maybe, as it says in the Kickstarter FAQs, not all projects are right for Kickstarter. You just have to work out whether your idea is right or not.
Very inspiring reply though, thank you!