Mahi Sall, Advisor, Fintech-Bank Partnerships, Payments and Financial Inclusivity
January 25th, 2023
Entrepreneur by Jodi Helmer | August 14, 2015
Before introducing PopSlate, a case that turns the back of a smartphone into a second screen, Yashar Behzadi needed to test the market for the high-tech product and get feedback from first-generation users. Crowdfunding, he suspected, would achieve both goals.
Behzadi launched a 30-day campaign on Indiegogo in December 2012 seeking $150,000 and ended up raising more than $219,000 in funding from 1,532 backers.
“A consumer-based crowdfunding campaign helped us engage early adopters and hone the product before it went to market,” explains the Palo Alto, Calif.-based entrepreneur. “For us, it was less about the funding and more about the crowd.”
Crowdfunding, once a niche model for those who couldn’t get traditional financing, has gone mainstream. Active global crowdfunding platforms generated $16.2 billion in 2014—a figure that is expected to more than double in 2015 to $34.4 billion, according to crowdfunding research firm Massolution.
That explosive growth has led to innovations, and entrepreneurs are racing to keep up with the changes. To increase the odds of securing funding and standing out from the crowd, startup execs are analyzing six key crowdfunding trends.
The number of crowdfunding platforms jumped from 308 in 2013 to 1,250 in 2014, according to Massolution.
But despite the rise in niche sites that serve startups in specific market segments—such as AppStori for app development, MedStartr for healthcare and Barnraiser for food and agriculture—major players like Kickstarter and Indiegogo continue to dominate. Consider this: At press time, Kickstarter had more than 7,500 active campaigns. Meanwhile, AppStori had one; MedStartr, five; and Barnraiser, 12.
“Crowdfunding is a lot like social media; a few sites dominate the landscape,” notes Richard Swart, global crowdfunding and alternative finance researcher at the University of California, Berkeley’s Haas School of Business.
Before launching his PopSlate campaign, Behzadi researched several platforms. “Indiegogo had good global reach and could better amplify our product and brand compared with the more niche tech [platforms],” he says.
While some niche sites have potential, Swart believes there is little likelihood they will become major players in the crowdfunding sector. “Larger platforms are sitting on large war chests of money from operations and VC, giving them a powerful ability to outspend smaller niche sites on marketing,” he points out.
The trade newsletter Crowdfund Insider has predicted that a number of mergers and acquisitions this year will help smaller platforms scale and better compete against the virtual monopoly of the leaders.
Whether the goal is to attract backers via rewards-based campaigns or to offer a percentage of their companies to investors through equity platforms, more startups are hiring specialists to run their crowd-funding campaigns.
Los Angeles-based Agency 2.0 began managing crowdfunding campaigns in 2010. The team has managed more than 200 campaigns, with average funding increasing from $168,000 in 2010 to $850,000 in 2014.
“Our clients are great at creating new products but have no experience with crowdfunding,” founder Chris Olenik explains. “We have the processes in place to deliver a successful campaign.”
Agency 2.0 and its competitors handle everything from writing sales pitches and shooting campaign videos to attracting backers. In exchange for their services, most agencies charge setup fees (Agency 2.0 charges between $3,000 and $25,000, depending on the complexity of the work), as well as a percentage of the total campaign funds raised, often 3 percent to 20 percent.
In the middle of a 2014 Indiegogo campaign, Jeffrey Maganis, founder and CEO of Newport Beach, Calif.-based ChargeTech, contracted Agency 2.0, hoping the added support could raise the profile of his campaign and attract additional funding.
“We took the campaign as far as we could on our own,” he says. “The agency helped bring more relevant backers and increased conversions.”
Building on the initial $120,000 the campaign had brought in, Agency 2.0 helped raise $326,000 to bring ChargeTech’s flagship product—billed as the world’s smallest cell phone charger—to market. Maganis says that bump made the agency fees worthwhile.
Even though he plans to contract with an agency for an upcoming campaign, Maganis is aware that bringing in experts doesn’t guarantee success. “An agency can only take you so far,” he says. “At the end of the day, you have to have a good product for crowdfunding to be successful.”
Corporate America is into crowdfunding, too. Swart notes that major brands, including Kia and Kimberly-Clark, have launched campaigns to test the market for new products.
“Corporations are realizing there is a lot of social engagement on crowdfunding platforms that can drive corporate innovation and offer alternatives to focus groups,” Swart says.
In many cases, these companies launch campaigns under the names of smaller subsidiaries to prevent prospective backers from reacting to the established brand instead of the product at hand. When Sony ran a crowdfunding campaign for an E-Ink concept watch on a Japanese platform, it was listed as a project of Fashion Entertainments, a division of the tech company charged with developing next-gen wearable devices.
With more corporations launching projects on crowdfunding sites, Swart worries that the trend could change the ethos of the once-grassroots campaigns.
“Does the entrance of Fortune 100 companies destroy the crowdfunding culture?” he ponders. “It’s definitely making it harder for startups to stand out.”
Startups seeking venture capital sometimes launch crowdfunding campaigns to test their products and solicit customer feedback before engaging investors. The reason? They believe it will draw interest from venture capital firms.
In fact, an increasing number of VCs want startups to engage in crowdfunding before requesting backing, according to Ethan Mollick, professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.
“[A crowdfunding campaign] is a good sign of traction before raising VC,” he says.
A 2014 study conducted by CB Insights found that the 440-plus hardware startups that raised more than $100,000 on Kickstarter or Indiegogo between 2009 and 2013 went on to
secure a total of $312 million in VC.
In 2013, Colorado-based venture capital firm Foundry Group made headlines by announcing that it would commit $2.5 million to investing in crowdfunding campaigns posted on AngelList.
“Crowdfunding has gone mainstream, and VCs are taking notice,” Mollick notes.
The National Crowdfunding Association of Canada (NCFA Canada) is a cross-Canada non-profit actively engaged with both social and investment crowdfunding stakeholders across the country. NCFA Canada provides education, research, leadership, support and networking opportunities to over 1100+ members and works closely with industry, government, academia, community and eco-system partners and affiliates to create a strong and vibrant crowdfunding industry in Canada. Learn more About Us or visit ncfacanada.org.
Leave a Reply