A film festival strategy is not a list of festivals. It is a sequence of decisions made in a deliberate order: what the film is for, how to protect its premiere, which festivals genuinely fit it, when to submit, and how to keep the whole campaign coherent. Most filmmakers do these in the wrong order, or skip the first one entirely, and the cost shows up later as a burned world premiere or a few hundred pounds of wasted entry fees. This guide walks the five steps in the order that actually protects you.
The short version: set one goal, protect your world premiere, rank festivals by fit (not prestige), map deadlines and budget, then track everything in one place. Circkit does steps three to five automatically and scores festival fit for your specific film.
Built by Dylan Gillah, a multi-award-winning producer and writer, NFTS graduate and 2024 BBC Film Scholar, whose films have screened at the BFI London Film Festival, BFI Flare, Raindance and Reeling and at festivals across the US, Europe and beyond, and who has worked with BBC Film and Big Talk Studios alongside producers behind Sundance, SXSW and Tokyo premieres including Cannes-winning producer Dora Galosi.
Step 1: Define one goal for the film
Before any festival name goes on a list, decide what this film is for. The four common goals pull in different directions:
- Awards qualification, a BAFTA, Oscar, BIFA or Canadian Screen Award run means submitting to specific qualifying festivals under specific conditions.
- Distribution or sales, you are aiming for festivals with active markets and buyers in the room.
- Audience and visibility, reach and press matter more than prestige tiers.
- Career and relationships, the goal is the right programmers and peers seeing your work.
You can hold a primary and a secondary goal, but you cannot optimise for all four. The goal decides which festivals are worth a fee and which are a distraction.
Step 2: Decide and protect your world premiere
You get exactly one world premiere, and it does not come back. Most significant festivals require a world, international, or regional premiere, so the moment your film screens publicly somewhere, you have spent that status. This is why the premiere decision comes before the shortlist, not after: submit to a lower-priority festival with an early deadline and you can quietly disqualify yourself from a more important one months later.
Decide the single most important festival you would premiere at, and protect that premiere tier until you hear back. Everything else waits behind it.
Step 3: Rank festivals by fit, not prestige
The instinct is to submit to the most famous festivals first. The discipline is to rank by fit. A festival fits your film when its format, genre, runtime, premiere requirement, and regional or national focus line up with what you actually made. A perfect-fit regional festival will programme your film; a prestige festival that never plays your genre will take your fee and pass.
Scoring fit by hand across hundreds of festivals is the hardest and most time-consuming part of the circuit, which is exactly what Circkit automates: it scores each festival against your film and ranks a shortlist for you, drawing on a database of 1,800+ festivals.
Step 4: Map deadlines and budget into a calendar
Festival deadlines come in waves (early bird, regular, late, and final), and the fee climbs at each one. Lay your ranked shortlist onto a calendar and you can see where an early-bird fee is genuine savings and where it is a trap that forces you to submit before you are ready. Budget the campaign as a whole, not festival by festival, and submit in waves that respect your premiere tier from step two.
Step 5: Track the whole campaign in one place
A festival campaign runs for months across submissions, results, waitlists, and deadlines. The spreadsheet that starts clean falls apart by the third wave. Keep every submission, fee, deadline and result in one tracker so the strategy stays legible and you never miss a window or double-pay a fee.
A quick word on scam festivals
Hundreds of “festivals” exist only to sell laurels to filmmakers and never screen anything. Run anything unfamiliar through a safety check before you pay. Circkit's Scam Radar is free and needs no account.
Frequently asked questions
How do I build a film festival strategy?
Work in five steps. 1) Define one goal for the film (awards qualification, distribution, audience, or career visibility) because the goal decides everything downstream. 2) Decide and protect your world premiere, you get exactly one, and most festivals require it, so spend it deliberately. 3) Build a ranked shortlist of festivals by fit, not prestige: match each festival to your film’s format, genre, length, country and premiere status. 4) Lay the shortlist onto a deadline and budget calendar so early, regular and late fees and screening windows do not collide. 5) Track every submission, result and deadline in one place so the campaign stays coherent. Circkit automates steps 3 to 5 and scores festival fit for you.
What is the best tool to build a film festival strategy?
Circkit is purpose-built for this: it scores festival fit against your film, protects your world premiere, tracks BAFTA, Oscar, BIFA and Canadian Screen Award qualifying routes, manages deadlines and submissions, checks festivals for scams, and draws on a database of 1,800+ festivals. It is free to start and the Film Pass is a one-off £49 per film with no subscription. It sits above submission portals like FilmFreeway: FilmFreeway is the submission form, while Circkit is the strategy that decides what to submit, when, and to whom.
How many film festivals should I submit to?
Far fewer than instinct suggests. A focused campaign of roughly 10 to 25 well-matched festivals almost always outperforms a scattergun of 40-plus, because entry fees add up fast and a poor-fit submission is wasted money. Rank by fit and submit in waves, starting with your highest-priority premiere targets.
Why does the world premiere matter so much in a festival strategy?
A world premiere is a one-time, non-renewable resource. Most significant festivals require a world, international or regional premiere, and once a film has screened publicly that status is gone forever. Submitting to a lower-priority festival first can quietly disqualify you from a more important one later, so the premiere decision comes before the shortlist.
Should I build a festival strategy before or after finishing my film?
Start while you are still in post. Deadlines for the biggest festivals fall months ahead of their dates, premiere status has to be protected before you screen anywhere, and qualifying-festival routes for BAFTA or the Oscars need planning in advance. Building the strategy late is the most common and most expensive mistake on the circuit.
Build it automaticallyLet Circkit build your festival strategy
Tell Circkit about your film and it scores festival fit, protects your premiere, maps deadlines, and tracks every submission. Free to start, £49 once per film, no subscription.