Ngage World gamifies engagement
AS companies and institutions seek new ways to boost participation and engagement, Jamaican technology firm Ngage World is carving out space with interactive platforms designed to connect audiences across workplaces, campuses and events.
“We are really good at getting people to talk to each other,” said founder and Managing Director Damani Brown.
The company develops digital engagement tools that use gamification and interactive participation to strengthen connections among individuals, an area Brown says organisations often underestimate despite its operational impact. Drawing on his background in information technology management, he began experimenting with gamified activities and friendly competitions within teams to improve morale and participation. His conviction about the value of engagement deepened while managing operational teams in the energy sector, where he observed how employee disengagement could translate into real-world service consequences.
“I realised with my team, staff engagement was a big issue. If people were not engaged, it could cost us millions of dollars. It could mean that many Jamaicans would be without electricity, simply because people feel disengaged and they are not focused or committed to doing their jobs,” Brown said in a Jamaica Observer interview.
The idea that would eventually evolve into Ngage first surfaced outside of the corporate environment, through an initiative Brown said was prompted by a personal spiritual conviction.
“In 2019, God spoke to me and told me to plan a conference,” he said.
That instruction led to the creation of the Adulting 101 Conference, a youth-focused event designed to help university graduates prepare for life after school by building practical life skills and peer connections. While planning the event, Brown recognised that beyond information sharing, participants needed ways to interact and build relationships, a gap he attempted to solve by creating a simple technology-based engagement tool. The concept might have remained a one-off conference tool; however, it drew unexpected interest from a corporate attendee, the then marketing manager at JMMB. Observing how participants responded to the interactive platform, she saw potential beyond the event itself.
“When she came and saw how the people were responding to the game, she said, ‘Oh, man, we need to have this. We need to do something like this,” Brown recalled.
The prototype created for Adulting 101 in 2019 would later be refined and relaunched commercially in 2022 as Ngage’s core engagement platform, with JMMB becoming its earliest corporate validation, and Brown began his journey as a full-time entrepreneur.
“I was uncertain about what to work out, but I am a Christian, and I’m a man of faith, and I do anything that God tells me to do. Once I believe that God said it, then I will,” he told the Sunday Finance.
As Ngage began rolling out its early engagement games, customer feedback quickly began shaping the direction of the platform’s development. The company’s first offering was a simple networking game called Ngage Network Bingo, which allowed participants at events to connect by scanning each other’s assigned QR codes using their mobile phones. While the format generated strong audience interaction, corporate clients soon began seeking measurable outcomes beyond entertainment. As adoption grew, organisations began requesting deeper engagement insights from their events, including audience demographics, product interest and interaction levels. Those demands prompted Ngage to expand its offering from networking games into data-driven engagement tools, leading to the development of additional products such as Ngage Quest and Ngage Treasure Hunt. While the underlying approach to creating the games is repeatable, Brown said the company deliberately keeps aspects of its design methodology proprietary, describing it as a distinguishing element of Ngage’s offering.
“It’s a little bit of magic, you know, I guess, sort of like how Colonel Sanders has the secret sauce for his KFC; we have our secret way of how we made the experiences unique,” he said with a laugh.
Central to that approach is what Brown describes as the “psychology of connection”, a framework that prioritises human interaction dynamics over the technology itself. He noted that while Ngage is often perceived as a tech-driven platform, technology forms only a small portion of the engagement design equation, with behavioural and social dynamics carrying the greater weight. Since formally entering the market in 2022, Ngage World has steadily built a client base across Jamaica, servicing roughly 50 organisations over the past three years through repeat engagements and referrals. Brown said the company now works with a growing pool of corporate clients that return annually for conferences, expos and internal staff-engagement activities. In its early years, Ngage entered largely uncharted territory in the Jamaican market, introducing a gamification approach that Brown said had not previously existed at scale.
“Nobody was using gamification the way we were doing it. We are primarily a gamification company, really and truly. And we didn’t see anything like that. In fact, what ended up happening was that we inspired the marketplace to start adopting games in their events,” he told the Sunday Finance.
Interactive event games are now common across exhibitions and activations, but this was largely absent locally before Ngage’s entry. Despite that early-mover advantage, the company’s first years were marked by typical start-up constraints, particularly around staffing, capital and product development costs. He cited hiring missteps and limited operating capital as early pressures, noting that product development costs required reinvesting much of the company’s revenue back into the business, while cautious lending by financial institutions constrained access to financing.
“As a start-up company, ‘dawg nyam yuh suppa’, as we say here in Jamaica, we don’t get much support,” he said.
Technical execution also posed learning curves, as engagement formats that worked in testing sometimes failed in live environments, teaching Brown that business success depended as much on relationships with clients as on the technology itself.
“We’re very grateful for all the customers that have been with us through all of those difficult moments, and we’re better off for it,” he said humbly.
The company is now preparing to expand beyond Jamaica, with regional and international markets forming the next phase of growth. The strategy will initially build on Ngage’s established niche in corporate staff engagement before broadening into consumer-facing experiences designed for everyday social interaction. He said the longer-term vision is to position Ngage as a widely accessible social gaming tool that extends beyond corporate environments into personal and recreational use.
“We want to be one of those tools that you have or one of those game experiences that you have that you would be using at a games night. So that’s where we really want to take Ngage ultimately,” Brown told the Sunday Finance.