1 / 11

Crowdfunding 101

Crowdfunding 101. Help others help you! . Ariel Alexovich a riel.alexovich (at) gmail.com 9/1 5/13. Meet the girls. Crowdfunding can help.

roman
Download Presentation

Crowdfunding 101

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Crowdfunding 101 Help others help you! Ariel Alexovich ariel.alexovich (at) gmail.com 9/15/13

  2. Meet the girls

  3. Crowdfunding can help • Crowdfunding is “the practice of funding a project or venture by raising many small amounts of money from a large number of people, typically via the Internet.” (Google definition) • Most of us are not millionaires, but we still want to help • With crowdfunding, helping is easier than ever • The average crowdfunding campaign lasts about 9 weeks and raises about $7,000. (visual.ly)

  4. Benefits of crowdfunding • Get more people involved and invested in your mission = awareness • Participants feel engaged with the school • Cross geographical barriers • Grandma in California can donate to build Suzy’s school gym in Chicago • Connect with alums who’ve moved away • Find donors in their living rooms • Easy to share links to fundraising websites via email, social media, smartphone apps • Safe and secure payment by credit card • No checks = less paperwork

  5. Crowdfunding sites • Kickstarter • Primarily for arts; one of the first to create “reward levels” for donors • Indiegogo • Has a dedicated nonprofit section, making it popular with grassroots orgs • Crowdrise • Popular with individuals, a.k.a. “person-to-person” fundraising • Rockethub • Offers “Success School” tips for setting up and managing a campaign • StartSomeGood • Largely for nonprofits or socially conscious businesses • GiveForward • Crowdfunding for medical bills — perhaps helpful in rallying school community around an ill student or parent And many, many more …

  6. Obvious questions • Is it free? • No. The sites earn money by taking a 3-7% cut of funds raised. • Do your research—some offer better deals for registered nonprofits. • Is this legal? • Yes. People making donations to your school online can receive tax credits, so be prepared for that paperwork. • The gray area generally comes with regard to crowdfunding for lending or equity purposes. • How do I collect my money? • Most sites (i.e., Kickstarter) won’t let you collect any money unless you reach your pre-established goal within a certain timeframe. Other sites will transfer any money you earn within a set time period regardless of whether or not you reach your goal.

  7. Let’s see it in practice

  8. The Kenyan girls, with help from a local nonprofit, set up a page on Indiegogo. They wanted to raise $6,000.

  9. They promoted their campaign on Facebook…

  10. … they promoted it on Twitter …

  11. They exceeded their goal! Thanks, donors! Now they can stay in school all year.

More Related