World of Goo is the top game at our house right now, and 2D Boy shared some lessons from the launch of the hit game on their blog. First, they talk about the importance of merchandising:
As far as we could tell, there are three ways an app can be effectively promoted:
1. Get it featured by Apple,
2. Get press to write about it, and
3. Be in the top selling / top grossing charts.
It was intuitively clear to us that the most important promotion we could get is to get the game featured by Apple. Promotion inside the sales channel is effective in both retail (the reason publishers buy end-cap space for their games and why impulse items are shoved in your face at the checkout line at the grocery store) and in digital (which is one of the reasons Steam promotions are so incredibly effective and why publishers buy dashboard placements for their XBLA games).
On the importance of correctly pricing your app:
If a game earns 50% more revenue at a lower price point, it’s a pure win situation as the developer makes more money AND more people get to enjoy the game. And if those two things are true, does it really matter what the sale price is? If we all charged double for our games we might all earn more money, but we could also end up earning less money because people would buy much fewer apps.
That, along with examining the top selling games on the iPhone App Store made us realize that if we end up releasing an iPhone version we would need to sell it at a very low price point if we want it to be a top seller in the long run. At the time of writing, 18 out of the top 20 selling iPhone apps are priced at 99 cents. Of the top 20 grossing apps, 15 are either free or cost 99 cents.
On iPad sales vs the Wii and Steam:
World of Goo’s launch on iPad gave us a new perspective on that discussion. In the first month of sales on the iPad App Store, World of Goo sold 125k copies (thanks to being prominently featured by Apple). In comparison, World of Goo’s best 31 day period on WiiWare was 68k copies (thanks to a mass mailing by Nintendo), and on Steam it was 97k copies (thanks to two promotions at discounted prices). So far, the iPad version is by far the fastest selling version of the game, both in terms of number of units sold and in revenue generated.
via TouchArcade.