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Sponsored: Pokemon Go, and how your games can succeed using licensing

Take a look at this very brief case study on Pokémon Go, as it will help you understand why licensing works as well as help you shop for brands for your game development.

January 17, 2017

4 Min Read
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Author: by Steven Ekstract, License! Global

Brought to you by Licensing Expo, a UBM event

Like it or not, we are a culture that embraces brands. People look to brands as a way to identify with others as well as to show the world who they are. Brands represent values, and each brand stands for something.

In a world that is changing so quickly as a result of new technology, brand values and how they relate to consumers has become that much more important, and brands that are known and trusted can lend an added sense of comfort or excitement.

In the video game world, branded content is ubiquitous—whether it be with movie and TV properties, like Star Wars or The Walking Dead, or brands like Madden NFL, Lego, and Pokémon.

As a game developer, how can you possibly know who to approach to license content or what licensed content is even available for use in a game? Take a look at this very brief case study on Pokémon Go, as it will help you understand why licensing works as well as help you shop for brands for your game development.

Pokémon Go

A recent example of a successful pop culture brand extension is Pokémon Go which became summer of 2016’s hottest game for millions of kids and young adults alike throughout the world. The key to its success is in fact the marriage of smartphone technology–augmented reality and geolocation–with an established, trusted brand name–Pokémon.

An App Annie report said Pokémon Go made its creator, independent developer Niantic, about $600 million in revenue in the first 90 days of its release. Minus royalties paid to the jointly-owned Pokemon Company, Niantic walked away with an estimated $485 million in just the first three months of availability.

"If you want to really be creative in a field, you have to constantly be referring to things totally unconnected to that field."

It is no coincidence that Pokémon Go was introduced during Pokémon’s 20th anniversary year. Twenty years is a magic number for brands in the marketing universe, as the children who grew up with a brand like Pokémon now have children of their own and want to share the joy of the property with their children.

What makes Pokémon even more potent as a brand is the fact that it has remained a popular franchise for 20 years running, making it cross-generational. Having started as a video game in Japan in 1996 that went on to become the number two best-selling video game of all-time, Pokémon quickly extended through licensing into a trading card game with 21.5 billion trading cards now in circulation, as well as a very successful animated TV series and film franchise. Naturally, officially-licensed merchandise in every conceivable category has also been ubiquitous throughout the brands 20-year history.

The power of brand licensing

When you couple that emotional appeal of a multi-generational brand like Pokémon with the technological innovation of a mobile game that utilizes geolocation and augmented reality, you have a pop culture phenomenon that caught on like wildfire.

What Pokémon Go teaches us is that marrying a strong brand to a new technology is a way for millions of consumers to adopt new technological concepts. Niantic Labs, the game company that created Pokémon Go has had a similar AR game in the market since 2012 called Ingress, which has more than 8 million downloads between 2012-2015. In comparison, after only 26 days since launch, Pokémon Go achieved 100 million downloads, with estimated revenue in its first 30 days topping $200 million.

Pokémon Go clearly shows the power of attaching the right brand to a product

What this shows us is the power that branding has in mainstreaming new technology in the consumer product business. Nintendo rightly understood that the Pokémon brand equity is key to successful product marketing and in keeping a 20-year-old brand fresh.

Go For It!

The other salient take away here for game developers is the fact that despite Pokémon Company owning the Pokémon brand and having close ties with joint-owner Nintendo, Pokémon Company licensed Pokémon to a third-party developer, Niantic, to create Pokémon Go. The point here is this, if you have a unique technology or vision for a game, you may very well convince a brand owner to allow you to license that game.

While not every developer seeking a license is going to have access to a huge brand like Pokemon, the opportunities to use licensed, well-known content abound at Licensing Expo.

Learn More

Amazingly, there is one place you can go where every major brand is showing their licenses available. That is Licensing Expo in Las Vegas May 23-25th at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center. Licensing Expo is free to attend and you will see 5000 brands available for licensing.

To learn more about licensing, watch this short video.

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