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Kickstarter Success: Tips and Tricks to Launch Your Kickstarter Campaign

Kickstart 14 days left

By now, you’ve all heard about our Kickstarter for an Oscar® campaign, and if you haven’t, you can learn more here.

Your Kickstarter Campaign

We wanted to collect all the tips, tricks, and resources we’ve put together for you over the first two-thirds of our Kickstarter campaign into one easy to access page.

(We were able to raise over $20,000 in the first 48 hours, broke our goal in just five days and five hours, and are still raising money for our Indie Oscar® Campaign as we speak.)

We’ll add to these over time. Hope these Kickstarter tips and tricks help you raise thousands of dollars for your passion project.

More Facebook Likes and Tweets on Your Campaign

We believe this little tip helped us get 1,810 likes on our Kickstarter campaign…and growing.

Easily Promote Your Kickstarter Project in the Real World

What happens when you want to tell people outside of cyberspace to visit your Kickstarter campaign? Are you really going to give them a link that looks like this:

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/jokeandbiagio/dying-to-do-letterman-kickstarter-for-an-oscar-and

Try spelling that out for someone! Use this tip to make it far easier to raise money in the real world:

Easily promote your Kickstarter Project in the Real World with Redirects.

Facebook Ads for Filmmakers

Here are the real numbers, facts and figures, dollars and cents, on how our Facebook ads for Filmmakers experiment went.

Better Video Updates

Check out this super-duper top secret tip to make your web videos of any kind shine: How to Fake a Multi-Cam Shoot with Just One Camera.

14 Blog Posts That Helped Us Launch Our Kickstarter Campaign

Raising $20,000 in just 48 hours still has us in shock. How’d we do it? Well, listening to what the good people who wrote these blog posts had to say really helped.

Blog posts that helped us launch our Kickstarter campaign.

Free Graphics for Your Kickstarter Campaign

We made some Kickstarter graphics, along with downloadable Photoshop files, After Effects files, and a tutorial. Here’s the video, and you can download all the supprting files on this post from our Dying to do Letterman Kickstarter campaign.

Supporting files available here.

How to Raise More than Your Kickstarter Goal

Stop raising money once you hit your goal? Of course not!

Right now, we’re 130% funded with two weeks to go, and we believe that’s because we took the time to explain to our audience why we were still raising money. Three reasons we changed our Kickstarter video.

Good Luck!

Hope these resources help you achieve great success on your own Kickstarter campaign. More questions, comments, or resouces we should know about?

Leave a comment below!

Karen Everett Knows How To Improve Your Documentary

Karen Everett keeps a fascinating site called New Doc Editing. At first glance you might think it’s just a promotional site to sell her (highly rated) services, but that would be a huge mistake.

Tons of Free Tips

Karen has dedicated herself to the study of story-telling in documentaries, and puts out tons of great, free, useful information week after week in her newsletter (I read every issue) much of which is also on Karen’s blog. Recent topics include:

  • How to Conduct Documentary Interviews
  • Cut Your Documentary Until it Bleeds
  • Leveraging the ‘Big Bash’ Climax

While she does offer many interesting paid courses on documentary structure — both live classes and downloadable videos — Karen Everett does what any great teacher should: she gives away valuable information to those who are just discovering New Doc Editing.

Terrific Resource

When brainstorming for every new show and project we undertake, we have our “go to” list of references to help us consider our potential story structure from every possible angle. Karen’s work has become a valuable reference right up there with that of Robert McKee, Christopher Vogler, and Blake Edwards.

Thinking of making a documentary?

Be sure to check out Karen’s site, New Doc Editing.

Easily Promote Your Kickstarter Project in the Real World with Redirects

By now, you’ve all heard about our Kickstarter for an Oscar® campaign, and if you haven’t, you can learn more here.

Our Campaign to Give Back to You

Let’s face it…we all know that sometimes Kickstarter campaigns can tire everyone out.

Since we don’t believe in asking without giving, we’re working to provide something of real value every day we bug you to join our effort to fund our Academy Award® campaign.

So far we’ve given back some free motion graphics a tip on getting more FB likes for your own Kickstarter projects, and this post with the best blog posts we found, helping us earn $20,000 in just 48 hours, a benefit screening for Team Lucy, some behind the scenes drama as we decided to change our Kickstarter video, and our piece Facebook Ads for Filmmakers.

Today, we want to give back a super-secret tip to help you campaign in “the real world” and not just cyberspace.

Ugly Links!

When you’re tweeting or Facebooking your kickstarter link, it’s easy to copy this strange-looking code from Kickstarter and share it:

http://kck.st/r7rDZP

Try telling your friends to go there.

“Yeah, you want to hit HTTP colon forward slash forward slash K-C-K dot S-T forward slash R-7-R-D-Z-P. Did you get that?”

Time to Re-Direct!

Much easier to say:

“Just go to DyingToDoLetterman.com forward slash FUND.”

Try it, see what happens:
http://www.dyingtodoletterman.com/fund

How’d We Do That?

You can google and find all kinds of ways to set up simple re-directs of web pages. Since we’re on wordpress, we used the Quick Page/Post Redirect Plugin.

Couldn’t be simpler:

  1. Create your page called “fund”
  2. Check “Make re-direct active”
  3. Check “Add rel=\”nofollow\”
  4. Enter your FULL Kickstarter link (not the short link) in the box the plugin adds.
    Select 302 Temporary for Type of Redirect. Done!

Page redirect

Promote It Everywhere!

Now we’ll be handing out flyers at all of our screenings that say:

Visit http://www.DyingToDoLetterman.com/fund Easy real world promotion of your Kickstarter Campaign!

Added Bonus…

It’s a redirect. You can change the link it points to at any time. So by promoting this link everywhere, when your campagin is over, you can just point the page to a new funding page. IndieGoGo, GoFundMe, PayPal, whatever. If people try the link long after your campaign is over, they can still fund you. Cool, right?

Hope your found this helpful…

Please help us by pledging to our Indie Oscar® Campaign, and sharing this link with all your friends:

http://www.DyingToDoLetterman.com/fund

Thanks!
Joke and Biagio

Facebook Ads For Filmmakers

By now, you’ve all heard about our Kickstarter for an Oscar® campaign, and if you haven’t, you can learn more here.

Our Campaign to Give Back to You

Let’s face it…we all know that sometimes Kickstarter campaigns can tire everyone out.

Since we don’t believe in asking without giving, we’re working to provide something of real value every day we bug you to join our effort to fund our Academy Award® campaign.

So far we’ve given back some free motion graphics a tip on getting more FB likes for your own Kickstarter projects, and this post with the best blog posts we found, helping us earn $20,000 in just 48 hours, a benefit screening for Team Lucy, and some behind the scenes drama as we decided to change our Kickstarter video.

Facebook Ads For Filmmakers

Today, we wanted to share an experiment we tried using Facebook ads to help promote our Kickstarter campaign.

How’s it working? Will we use it again? Should you consider Facebook Ads?

Why Facebook Ads?

We decided to try Facebook Ads because it was so easy to reach out to our target audience.

Also, with Facebook Ads you can pay per click, not just per impression.

So we figured that even if many people never clicked on the ad, Steve’s face would be burning a hole somewhere in their subconscious.

Dying to do letteraman facebook ad

Using this targeting criteria:

Facebook users who…

  1. live in the United States
  2. are age 25 and older
  3. like documentaries, documentary, independent films or indie films

This ad targets 196,900 potential Facebook users.

Bidding for Clicks

Facebook gives you a suggested amount you should bid for clicks (they also state that you’ll likely pay less than what you bid, which turned out to be true for us.)

We went with the lowest suggested bid, which we presume means that if we’re competing with someone for ad space in a similar category, they’ll get the space instead of us if they’ve bid more.

We ended up bidding $1.42 per click, but the average we’ve been charged per click is $1.27.

Daily Budget

You set a budget for how much you’d like to spend so you don’t suddenly owe Facebook thousands of dollars.

We chose $10 per day beginning the first week of our Kickstarter campaign.

Results?

Here’s where we’re at after 26 days of running the ad:

  • Unique Individuals Reached: 32,835
  • Number of impressions: 370,397
  • Number of Clicks: 60
  • Amount Spent: $76.05

We don’t have a way to know if those who’ve clicked have actually contributed to the campaign (if we were sending them to our website we could use Google analytics to figure out how many clicks turned into sales.)

That said, popping up Steve’s face over 370,000 times to over 30,000 people for around $75 seems pretty reasonable to us.

Granted, not everyone sees those ads (Joke keeps her browser small so she doesn’t have to look at Facebook ads, for instance.)

But as indie marketing goes, we’ve spent more on flyers that are hitting less targeted audiences than these Facebook ads.

Will We Use Facebook Ads Again?

Yes.

We’re looking at targeting specific cities and geographic locations through Facebook ads to sell tickets when we start touring Dying to do Letterman theatrically.

We’ll also try ads again when we start selling DVDs of the movie from our site, and can track how many clicks lead to actual sales.

(Shameless Plug: you can get your special collector’s edition of Dying to do Letterman with tons of extras when you pledge $50 or more to our Kickstarter Campaign.)

Should You Try Facebook Ads?

We’d recommend giving it a shot, especially if you have a very niche audience.

We could certainly target our ad to an even tighter group of people (say, folks who are fans of documentaries about comedy, or to people who like movies about inspirational cancer survivors) and will likely experiment with more targeted ads over time.

What’s Your Experience?

Experimented with Facebook ads or some other targeted platform? What’s your experience been?

Let us know in the comments below!

And…if you haven’t already, please pledge to our indie Oscar® campaign.

As little as one dollar will get you a comedy mp3, and $50 and above includes a personalized I’M DYING TO button hand-written by Steve, plus a copy of the special edition DVD with tons of extras.

You can pledge here.

Best,
Joke and Biagio

Final Cut Pro X $299. Ships in June.

Holy Cow. $299 for Final Cut Pro X. Downloads directly to your computer. Available in June. Apple is making a huge statement: we want to rule the editing universe.

If you’ve been around this blog, you know that we have some pretty heavy-duty uses for Final Cut Pro. I edited Dying to do Letterman on FCP, the entire Scream Queens series was edited on Final Cut Pro, and we’ve pretty much built our company on the software.

A Brand New Look and Feel

Photos like this are floating around the web:
The New FCPX Interface #FCP #SuperMeet #apple<br />
 on Twitpic

That’s a very different looking interface. Still, I’m excited about all the changes. Most interesting to me:

  • Big improvements in working with audio
  • 4k editing
  • no more rendering
  • native editing of DSLR footage
  • auto-syncing of multiple cameras

The list goes on. Apple still hasn’t updated their site, so waiting for the official list to pop up.

But this really is a NEW Final Cut Pro…different in every way. So I’m anxious to see how this new version will change my personal editing style.

What do you think? Planning on upgrading? While it’s all very exciting, as always, it’s not the tool, it’s the user that makes a great edit. But nice tools do help.

More to come…

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