Squatch Kick - Tips & Articles for Crowdfunding
Showing posts with label crowdfunding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crowdfunding. Show all posts

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Well, it's Thursday, again, and that means that it's time for another Squatch hunt.

This time around, we look at four projects from the Crafts section of Kickstarter, one of which is under the sub-category of Woodworking and another that is under the sub-category of Glass.

Kickstarter project creators are always on the prowl for advantages, in order to help their crowdfunding project succeed. However, where a lot of project creators go wrong is that they hit the launch button on their project too soon.

These Squatch Hunts continue to encounter a lot of projects launched prematurely. A lot of projects make the same mistakes as many crowdfunding projects that came before them. This indicates that many project creators are not really bothering with doing even a cursory amount of research, prior to hitting the launch button. This approach can easily lead to a crash trajectory, from a funding standpoint.

This week's Squatch Hunt selections are notable in that none of the four projects selected had project videos, at the time that I posted my predictions for them. If you're out there and you're reading this, keep in mind that your project can't get any kind of a backer of pledge boost from a video that doesn't exist.

If you're nervous or apprehensive about making a project video, while you never want to have a bad project video, what you want even less is to have no video, at all. A good project video can not only help you to meet your crowdfunding project's funding goal that you set for it, it can help you to exceed that goal. What that translates into is extra money for you, when all is said and done.


Section: Woodworking
Sorted by: Newest
Candidate: Black Market Guitars


0 Backers
0% funded
$0.00 pledged of $10,000 goal
59 days to go 

Prediction: FAIL
Actual Outcome: FAILED

Section: Crafts
Sorted by: Newest
Candidate: Scorpion Custom Engraving - Motorcycle casings & parts


0 Backers
0% funded
$0 pledged of $1,519 goal
29 days to go

Prediction: SUCCEED
Actual Outcome: FAILED

Section: Glass
Sorted by: Newest
Candidate: BustedBegonias seeks kiln


1 Backers
0% funded
$0 pledged of $6,000 goal
29 days to go 

Prediction: FAIL
Actual Outcome: FAILED

Section: Crafts
Sorted by: Newest
Candidate: Fablossom Craft Kit: Design/Create Fabric Flower Accessories

 

0 Backers
0% funded
$0 pledged of $6,000 goal
31 days to go 

Prediction: SUCCEED
Actual Outcome: SUCCEEDED

Thursday, April 30, 2015


It's possible to launch a crowdfunding project with minimal effort put into it, and succeed. However, what is possible and what is likely are two different things, entirely.

The problem that a lot of Kickstarter projects face is that their creators often enter their respective crowdfunding undertakings, without really having a clue of what they are doing. They simply see Kickstarter as a place of possibilities - which it is, but many of them just plain don't have a clue as to where to start, how to proceed, or how to gain advantage, as far as getting their pet project funded successfully by the public masses through Kickstarter.

No matter who you are, and no matter what kind of crowdfunding project that you have, there is one ace in the hole that is always at your disposal - provided that you're prepared to grab hold of it and not let go.

That ace in the hole is something called enthusiasm!

Enthusiasm, you see, is contagious. But, if you don't have enthusiasm for your own project, then who will? Most likely, no one, that's who.

Which is why it is all the more important that YOU have enthusiasm for your own project.

It should be plain. It should be clear. It should be as obvious as the nose on your face - even more so, in fact.

What is enthusiasm? In layman's terms, as it applies to a crowdfunding project, enthusiasm is the very essence of the power of persuasion.

With faith, you can move mountains. With enthusiasm, you can conquer the world. You do want to be on top of the world, at the end of your crowd funding campaign, don't you? Well, what do you think the rocket fuel is that is most likely to get you there? It's enthusiasm!

As I browse the fertile fields of the Kickstarter website, I encounter all kinds of different crowdfunding projects. Some really have a way of twisting your head and grabbing your eye. Others, however, often appear to be bone dry of enthusiasm. Basically, they are crowdfunding projects in name only. They're just sort of drifting along, hoping like Hell that a crowd will materialize out of thin air and miraculously save them from failing.

Some projects just ooze enthusiasm. These are the ones that scream at you, in some way, shape, or form. They don't just get your attention - they command it! These are the ones that you not only want to succeed, but which move you to help them succeed. These are the ones that leave no real room for doubt, as to whether they will succeed or not. They have success written all over them, and all because somebody bothered to bring along a little enthusiasm.

Enthusiasm is a lot like the splitting or the fusing of atoms. It's power, and it's power in spades! Enthusiasm is the exact opposite of "a little." By its very nature, it is a driving force, and it is a force that can be harnessed for the good of your crowdfunding campaign.

How much does it cost? Nothing, nothing at all. It's free for the taking. It's free for the having. It's free to use. It's possible to have an unlimited amount of it.

Be forewarned, however, that if you grab hold of enthusiasm, your crowdfunding project will never be the same, again.

You've been warned!

Tuesday, April 28, 2015


As someone who has a long term love affair with the superhero comic book medium, imagine my delight as I happened upon the Hero Or Villain: New Equipment project, while browsing crowdfunding projects under the Food category on the Kickstarter website.



It is a great day when people take a theme and run with it. This project oozes creativity. Take the concept of hero sub-sandwiches, and all of a sudden, you've got both heroes and villains - superhero sandwiches and super villain sandwiches. What could be more lovely than that?



They've already got a food truck up and running. It even already has a superhero and super villain wrap on it, providing eye-grabbing imagery to get people's attention. People being people, somebody is always hungry, no matter where this thing roams and prowls the streets, in its never-ending quest to serve up some tasty food. Talk about saving the day!



This Kickstarter has a decent project video, starting off with a full embrace of the underlying theme, and transitioning mid-way through to the project creators giving a good explanation of why they need to crowdfund some repairs and upgrades to their super-powered food truck.



Will you be one of their heroes, and back this project, that their day might be saved?

Or will you be one of the many villains of the crowdfunding universe, and pass them by in their hour of need?



I really wish that they would increase the visual punch of the project page, by adding more photos or art, but let it not be said that the picture of their food truck, which serves as the actual project image, does not set the tone, as one sets about the task of soaking up what they have to say on that page.

The overall superhero theme is worked into the rewards section of the page, and these daring do-gooders of the food service industry make quick work of explaining both their short term goals and their long term goals.



Now, does this mean that the future holds a sequel, somewhere down the road? Possibly. One can only hope.

Their project video does a superb job, I feel, of demonstrating why they need a newer, quieter generator for their food truck.



I just hope that they do a few video updates, as this crowdfunding project progresses, replete with their take on superheros and super villains in action, for some amateur super-powered fun - that the fun factor of this project can be exploited to its maximum potential. I really think that they have a much better chance of getting this project shared on social media, that way.

Unless, of course, ChefBatman has retired his tights, already.

I'm backing this one!

Sunday, April 19, 2015


Take a good, long, and hard look at the flowers in the image that accompanies this posting. They're either dead or dying, and this is as good of a way, as any, of visualizing what your Kickstarter may end up looking like, if you fail to grasp a core fundamental that Rose Spinelli of The CrowdFundamentals drives home in her succinctly titled advice article, "Make Sure Backers Know You Give A S#*&," over on the Crowdsourcing.Org website.

People often create crowdfunding projects, and launch their respective project pages, only to then fall into a deep well of silence. They hit the launch button, and then they head off to parts unknown, and their crowdfunding campaigns turn out to be campaigns in name only.

With little in the way of time, effort, or energy invested into the crafting of their project page, it's actually pretty easy, I think, to grasp why projects that fall into this category ultimately fail. By and large, crowdfunding projects are not self-executing. In other words, they don't tend to get the job done all by themselves. Something - or more specifically, someone - is needed, in order to breathe life into a crowdfunding campaign.

The title of Rose Spinelli's article that I link to, here, is tactfully stated. I will dispense with such formalities here, in the hope of better driving home the point - a point that is well worth repeating, both loudly and often.

People not giving a shit about their own crowdfunding project is a scenario that plays out all too frequently. It's not a problem that is unique to Kickstarter, but Kickstarter certainly has its fair share of such projects in a spiral of self-inflicted doom. I run into them all of the time, while browsing Kickstarter projects.

Of course, who am I to talk, right? Take this blog, for example. It is a site that purports to try and give advice to crowdfunding project creators, and yet, how very few pages populate its pages. Touché!

Then again, I do this as a hobby, of sorts, whereas crowdfunding projects are launched under the auspices of trying to raise funding for something that project creators are interested in and care about. Yet, in many instances, such interests are fleeting, and some of the crowdfunding projects that I encounter along the way, I can't help but to think, "Why even bother?"

The heavy hitting of crowdfunding advice, I am quite content to leave to the likes of the Salvador Briggmans and Rose Spinellis of the world. Suffice it to say that my own crowdfunding ambitions, if you even want to call it that, are considerably less bold and less grand. I mainly try to help some sole individual, here or there, that I encounter along the way down this yellow brick road of crowdfunding confusion.

Which brings me to a comparison that I had not intended to make, when I sat down this morning to begin writing this article. Running a crowdfunding campaign reminds me of The Wizard of Oz. It helps if you have three things: a brain, a heart, and some courage.

Crowdfunding campaigns run the gamut of human interest. Some fall well beyond the pale of zany. Where crowdfunding projects are concerned, many are they which are a horse of a different color.

A lot about crowdfunding requires the use of your brain. The vast bulk of it is plain old common sense, if you get right down to it. But, if you fail to use the brain that God gave you, then the odds are pretty darned good that when your project's campaign cycle ends, your project won't make it to the Emerald City of Funding Success.

I was up well into the wee early morning hours, last night, nosing my way around Salvador Briggman's Crowd Crux website, which is about the closest thing to a Fort Knox of Crowdfunding Advice that you are likely to ever encounter. It was while watching a podcast, there, Crowdfunding Consultant Rose Spinelli Shares Best Practices, that I gained my introduction to this Rose Spinelli person.

As Sal and Rose discussed things in that podcast, they touched upon the importance of humanizing your crowdfunding campaign. In other words, it helps to have a heart. After all, how will you be able to pour your heart into your crowdfunding project, if you don't have a heart? The Tin Man had a heart - he had one all along. He just didn't understand what a real heart actually was.

If you don't pour your heart into your project and its campaign, then how can you expect potential backer passers-by to get swept away by - and caught up in - your passion for your crowdfunding story? You do have passion, don't you? If not, then you are the Tin Man in your own story - the one that is just standing there, rusting away.

Rose and Salvador are what most people would likely call "experts" on crowdfunding. I can hear Sal Briggman groaning now, because anyone can call them self an expert, and anyone can be labeled an expert, at any time and for any reason - or for no reason, at all.

When it comes to crowdfunding, there is no one, single way to success. Did you hear me when I said that? Success can be had many different ways, but if you choose to ignore (or to remain willfully oblivious to) certain fundamental truths about human behavior, then rest assured, you place your crowdfunding campaign on a trajectory of failure.

Projects like the by-now-infamous Potato Salad Kickstarter, and others like it that enjoy a degree of success that properly qualifies as being nothing short of stupendous, shine likes stars in the crowdfunding firmament. Average, ordinary people like you or I look at projects like those, and we can't help but to scratch our heads at how they go viral, in the first instance, or how they raise funds in tsunami like style, in the second instance?

Sometimes in life, it can be helpful to keep your feet planted firmly on the ground of everyday reality. The fact is, most crowdfunding campaigns are never going to go viral. Most of them will never rake in millions of dollars in cash. If they make it, at all, most crowdfunding projects will be fortunate to beat their funding goals by just a little bit. But, if you stop and think about it, the goal is the goal. More is always better, when it comes to pledges received, but as long as you meet the funding goal that you, yourself, have set, then life on Kickstarter Lane is good, is it not?

Granted, there can always be complications, such as miscalculating on rewards offered, and problems can be encountered after the fact (life as a human being is fraught with unforeseen complications), but as long as your project reaches its funding goal, then your project will manage to achieve a degree of real success.

A lot of people starting out as first-time crowdfunding project creators suffer from either a lack of knowledge, a lack of experience, or a lack of courage. This is where the lion in you comes in at.

In the forest of your own life, it falls to you to play the role of the lion. Life can be a jungle, at times, but the lion didn't earn the title of King of the Jungle for no reason, at all, you know.

Life is an excellent adventure through adversity. By the time that most people get around to launching their first Kickstarter, then they should already be well acquainted with the fact that life, like crowdfunding campaigns, can throw you a curve.

Adversity can be approached one of two ways - with courage or without it. The choice, as always, remains with you.

In The Wizard of Oz, the cowardly lion stands out like a thumb in the eye. An actual lion, of course, is anything but cowardly. Thus, to be the lion of your own crowdfunding project, you must not allow yourself to become the prey to your own misgivings. You set the funding goal. You set the tone. You know better than anyone else - better than even Salvador Briggman and Rose Spinelli - why your crowdfunding project matters.

There are so many crowdfunding projects going at any given moment that Sal and Rose would run themselves ragged, trying to lead each and every last one of those project creators, individually, by the hand and out of the woods of danger.

Make no mistake about it, to launch a crowdfunding campaign is to risk an encounter with many different dangers. Once you hit that launch button on your project, the clock is ticking.

Tick, tock. Tick, tock.

But, far more dangerous to a crowdfunding project than that eternal foe - time, itself - is a project creator who is too scared or too sheepish to stand up for their own project. It's your idea. It's your concept. It's your baby.

The cowardly lion of Oz fame actually did possess courage. He just had to find it, that's all. Honestly, he had it all along. He just didn't know it. He allowed himself to become distracted by - and obsessed with - things that were never really a threat to him, at all. He allowed his fears to run rampant. He became - and remains - synonymous with cowardice.

But, lest I remind you, at some point along the way, he found himself - and in the process, he saved the day. I know, I know. He didn't save the day, alone - but then again, that's why you're trying to build a crowd in the first place, isn't it?

Doubt is something that many crowdfunding project creators allow to become dominant in their perspective towards their own project. Doubt, itself, becomes fear, incarnate.

Yet, even doubt, itself, is a gift from God. When people's lives are filled with doubt, it is then that they often turn to God for advice, for guidance, for hope, and for delivering them out of their place of dire straits.

If your crowdfunding project only had a Salvador Briggman or a Rose Spinelli to aid it, then sure, it would prevail, right? To ordinary people who seek to launch crowdfunding campaigns, Sal and Rose take on the appearance of crowdfunding immortals. They possess a pantheonic degree of knowledge about crowdfunding. They are intimately well versed in the subject. To the common man or woman on the street who plunges head first into launching a crowdfunding project for the very first time, individuals like these two keep company at a crowdfunding level that you or I have trouble conceiving.

Even still, even they started somewhere. Both Sal and Rose started somewhere, and what they learned along the way was, in many instance, knowledge acquired after much trial and effort. Neither, to my knowledge, claim to have become so knowledgeable about crowdfunding by way of conversing with a burning bush. Some of what they know was given to them by others, but it is no less equally true that a lot of what they both know, they have shared with others that they have encountered along the way.

Where your crowdfunding project is concerned, though, it is you who should roar the loudest about your own campaign. It is you who should be the lion of your own project. It is you who has to overcome your fears and your doubts and your misgivings.

When my wife and I named our son, after he was born, one of the names that I considered naming him was Oz. That way, when he started school, later in life, and as the kids in his class took turns introducing themselves, after all of the, "Hi, I'm Tommy," and "Hello, I'm Lisa," and "My name is Steve" subsided and it got to his turn, he would have been able to say, "I am Oz, the great and powerful!"

Of course, things didn't turn out quite that way. We ended up naming him Titan, instead.

The titans of mythology fought with the gods, themselves. In other words, they contended with the powers that be. As my son ages and goes through life, he faces adversity. Though I love him enormously and without end, it ultimately falls to him to face - and to overcome - whatever adversity that life throws at him.

Crowdfunding projects, much like life, itself, tend to be exercises in trial and error. Mistakes are made, and corrections need to ensue in the aftermath, thereof. When your crowdfunding project has no backers, no funding, and basks in a dark veil of silence on the part of the rest of the world, one's confidence can be tested.

Even still, it remains possible to summon one's courage, and to face up to the reality of the crowdfunding situation, no matter how harsh that reality might be. When I give advice or feedback to others about their respective crowdfunding campaigns, my words might very well fall harsh upon ears, and especially if they are ears of a crowdfunding project creator whose ears have already adjusted to the silence of a world that seems all too disinterested in what they have to say.

When your crowdfunding project is seemingly lost in a world of silence, all the more important it becomes, then, for you to roar like a lion - that somebody, somewhere might hear you. If you're trying to raise money from potential backers, it helps if they can hear you and if they know that you're there.

Don't you dare let the world forget you, but even more importantly, don't you dare let the world not know that you - and by extension, your crowdfunding project - exist in the here and now.

If you want people to care about your crowdfunding project, enough to share it with others, then you would be well served to care about it, first and foremost, yourself. The less that you care, the less that they will want to share. If it isn't obvious to others  that you care about your own project, then how on Earth or in the Land of Oz do you plan on succeeding?

Friday, April 17, 2015


How time flies! It does, but it doesn't. People often say that. They frequently believe it. Their own experience over the course of their respective lives confirms it. Yet, the clock always ticks and tocks at the same methodical pace.

The same holds true for crowdfunding campaigns. At the beginning of a campaign, there seems to be plenty of time, but as each day passes by, project creators begin to realize that time is of the essence. There's never enough time to get it all done. The clock eventually reaches the end of the funding cycle, and all of a sudden, the end is upon you, for real.

As I stroll through the Kickstarter website, I can't help but to notice how project creators have a dreadful tendency to fail to grasp just how crucial that time management is to a crowdfunding campaign. Invariably, a lot of time gets lost in the learning curves that populate the vast majority of crowdfunding undertakings. Time is money, as the saying goes, and how one manages (or fails to manage) the time allocated for their crowdfunding project can make a decisive difference between ending the campaign either fully funded or not funded, at all.

The grim reaper hangs around each Kickstarter project, biding its time until the hour of reckoning is at hand. Each tick of the clock is an opportunity wasted - unless you're not wasting it!

You may not think that a day or two, here and there, make much of a difference in the outcome of a Kickstarter project, but if you think that, then you could never be more wrong.

At the very beginning, when your project is brand spanking new, the temptation to put things off until tomorrow can be very strong, indeed. All the more reason, then, to double down and press your project's nose to the grindstone. That new smell won't last forever, and neither will the Kickstarter website's focus of attention on your budding project.

It won't be long, until your project makes its way to the dustbin of yesterday's news, and cast into the proverbial dead zone that awaits all projects that prove too weak or too unprepared or too neglected to resist the fate of the ordinary. The dead zone is a common staple of Kickstarter life for most crowdfunding projects. Get used to it!

Or better yet, prepare for it. Plan for it. Count on it.

At times, I interact with project creators on Kickstarter.  Sometimes, I send them a message out of the blue. I might give them a little unsolicited advice, or I may simply share an observation or three. There are so many Kickstarters running at any given moment in time, that it would simply be impractical and unfeasible to try and keep track of them all.

So, I don't even try. Then again, not every Kickstarter project interests me. Some never manage to capture my eye, while I am browsing. If I don't click on them, then there is no way that I will become a backer for those projects.

Waiting until your Kickstarter is in the dead zone, before you take an active and earnest interest in it, can prove to be a death knell for many projects. Why wait until your project's head has already sank beneath the quicksand, before your project's fate begins to take on a palpable sense of urgency? You do both yourself and your crowdfunding project an enormous disservice, that way.

If you stop and think about it, it is nothing short of truly amazing that so many people can tell time with such an unerring degree of accuracy, even as they seemingly have no solid grasp on how time-demanding that an undertaking of a crowdfunding nature can be.

Once you hit the launch button on your Kickstarter project, the race is on! For many, the race actually began well before that button gets pushed. It's called preparation, and unsurprisingly, it's still a relevant consideration in this day and age.

As project creator, the destiny of your project lies in the palm of your hand. You know, the one that wears a watch on its wrist, or the one that holds a Smart phone that is capable of telling you what time it is.

When you lose track of time, you lose track of your project. Don't let that happen!

Sunday, September 28, 2014



I browse a LOT of Kickstarter projects over on the Kickstarter website. In the process, I encounter a LOT of different takes on how a project page is apparently supposed to work. Treating your Kickstarter project as a fire and forget missile is NOT the best way to go about running a crowdfunding campaign.

What I mean by this is that many project creators on Kickstarter have a dreadful tendency to create a project page, hit the launch button, and then go about their business without even seeming to check up on things, again. They let the clock tick away, doing no updates and no revisions to their main project page.

Their comments sections are typically bone dry. Nothing. Nada. Zip. Zilch. None. Not even a tumbleweed blowing by.

Crowdfunding is an exercise in storytelling. There is the project, and there is the story. The project is what you want to raise money for. The story that you tell (or fail to tell) is your primary mechanism for accomplishing the raising of the money in question. In a nutshell, the better that you are at telling your project's story, the bigger your crowdfunding crowd of supporters will likely grow to be.

Storytelling, within the context of a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign, can be comprised of a multitude of different individual components. Things like text, impacting techniques (bold, italics, underline, etc.), photographs, artwork, and videos quickly come to mind as examples of these individual components that, both individually and collectively, work for or against your attempt at storytelling.

What is YOUR project's story?

If you fire (launch) and forget your project, then it is very likely that you won't hit your target (funding goal). The Internet is a big place. It's chock full of all kinds of wonderful and exciting things. If all that you have to offer up is a plain, boring project page, then you make it hard on yourself to grab and retain people's attention.

If you want their support, then grabbing and retaining their attention are crucial.

Because the clock is ticking on your project, after you hit the launch button, what that means is that you don't have the luxury of just sitting around twiddling your thumbs forever and a day - if you want to meet your crowdfunding goal.

Crowdfunding is work. It requires effort. It's not magic, although a good crowdfunding project can seem to work magic upon people, as complete strangers that you've never met suddenly begin tossing money your way.

Many Kickstarters launch their projects, and then the only way that they seem to focus upon for getting their project's story out is by doing updates. Yet, if you start out with your project's main page looking like crap, but never revise it, then the page that most of your project's visitors encounter will still look like crap, no matter when they bother to visit your project page.

Keep an open mind, and be willing to revise your project's main page, even and especially AFTER you hit the launch button. That's not to say that you need to change it every day, but try to remain receptive to updating it directly through revision. If your project's main page is all text, and somewhere along the way you realize that this might not be a good idea, then don't hesitate to change what's on that main page. Your project page can become better through the realizations that you arrive at all through the process of your crowdfunding campaign.

Don't wait until it's too late! Make the changes NOW. Sooner is better than later, when it comes to correcting problem areas of your project page. After all, the sooner you improve the primary vehicle of your crowdfunding campaign, the better your chances become of gaining broader and better support.

As I browse project after project on the Kickstarter website, I am struck by how dead many of the projects look, even when they are still active and ongoing campaigns. No updates. No comments. Those are indicators of lifelessness in a crowdfunding campaign. A lot of updates and a lot of comments tend to scream that a given project has a lot of life in it.

Part of your project's story emanates from the updates and comments sections of your project page, whether you realize it or not.

So, what makes a Kickstarter project's story a good story? Well, by making it visually attractive and interesting is a good starting point.

Project creators may know what their project is, what it's about, like the back of their hand, before they even hit the launch button. But, no project creator knows what their project's story will be, before they launch, because the story is something that evolves over an extended period of time.

It is also something that other people participate in. When people take an interest in your project, the story grows. When they share it, or comment on it, or talk about it to someone else that they know, the story grows. It spreads. It reaches new ears.

What about if your project has no backers, at all? What if nobody is pledging to it?

Well, your project still has a story. It just may not be the story that you wanted it to be, though.

Treating your Kickstarter project as a fire and forget missile will, in all likelihood, mean that your project will go off course - and fail!

You want to succeed, right? You want your project to be a glowing success, don't you? And do you think that you will accomplish that, by launching your project and then going off and forgetting about it? If it's that easy to forget your own project, then how do you suppose that others will find it to be memorable enough to warrant their backing with pledge dollars?

How many people do you know that enjoy being bored? I can't think of a single person that I know that likes or prefers a boring Kickstarter project page.

Why, then, give the world a boring project page to look at? Just exactly how many backers do you expect that such will attract to your project? How many pledges will people be likely to make to something that bores them?

Running a successful Kickstarter campaign is not so much about obsessing over your project every second of the day. Rather, it's about taking an active interest in your own project, and it's about making it interest - and KEEPING it interesting.

You want to be active. You need to keep the story growing and evolving. You need to demonstrate to people that it's not dead, but alive!

It's funny, at times, encountering people who fret endlessly over why people aren't backing their projects on Kickstarter. If they spent even a fraction of the time that they allocate to fretting and stressing, instead, to making their project page even more interesting, then they would probably end up getting much better results.

Investing the finite, limited amount of time that a Kickstarter campaign is allotted by the Kickstarteer clock in stressing and fretting won't make your project page more interesting, nor better in any other way.

A successful crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter isn't about achieving perfection. Rather, it's about getting people interested and motivated. It's about interaction and inspiring. It's about sharing your story, but in a meaningful way. It's also about interacting and encouraging others to become part of your project's story.

And that is about more - far more - than just wanting them to back your project, so that you can have their money.

If your project's story is robust, and meaningful, and has depth to it, then it will be hard for your project to fail. Some might even say impossible!

You don't need to worry so much about attracting a big crowd, in order for your project to be successful on Kickstarter. Rather, you just need it to be big enough, and many times, even a small crowd of backers can be more than enough.

If you want your project to appeal to millions of people, then don't plan on that just happening, all by itself. It's not a question of whether the Kickstarter website has legs or not. Rather, it's about whether your project's story has legs to stand on of its very own.

Tens of thousands of projects of all kinds have been successfully funded on Kickstarter, to date. It seems as if virtually anything and everything gets embraced there. It seems that way, because it is that way.

So, if your Kickstarter project isn't doing so well, there's probably a reason. In my first-hand experience of looking at many, many different Kickstarter projects, what I have concluded is that there is usually not just a reason, but multiple reasons, as to why a given project isn't faring so well.

If you want your Kickstarter project to fail, then just ignore it, after you launch it. Just fire and forget. Do nothing. Let your project's story wither on the vine, before it ever produces any fruit, at all.

But, if you want your project to succeed, then be active, Active, ACTIVE!!

Pour your heart into it. Share bits and pieces from your soul about it. Those are things that will attract people's attention. Those are what people are after. Why? Because, those are the very things that people tend to find the most interesting.

Passion sweeps people up in it, like a fast flowing river. It's a river that other people often want to drown themselves in. Why? Because, passion means that you're full of life about something.

To speak with passion about something means that you are afire with interest. Your eyes light up - and so do the eyes of other people. You become more animated, more full of life, physically, and it can be a contagious thing.

To be passionate about your project is to find yourself at the very apex of persuasiveness on the subject at hand. When you are passionate, you become a better salesman.

Indeed, you become a lighthouse that many can see. In a storm of boring Kickstarter projects tossed to and fro in Internet searches, your project becomes transformed into a safe harbor for those seeking that which is interesting.

Ultimately, it boils down to this - if you can't speak with passion about your own crowdfunding project, then in all fairness, who can?

It's your project. Thus, it's up to you.

Rather than treating your crowdfunding project as a fire and forget missile, why not become the warhead for your project, and explode your interest in your own project all over the place?

Do that, and you won't have time to stress and fret, because you'll be way too busy unleashing the very essence of what makes your project so great upon an unsuspecting world.

Know what else? Your project's progress will reward you for it!

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Magnus Macdonald of Cogent Industries

If you're looking for rock solid advice on crowd funding, then you will definitely want to check out what Magnus Macdonald - a self-professed "serial crowdfunder" - has to say on the subject.

The founder and owner of Cogent Industries is the driving force behind not one, not two, but no less than three successful crowdfunding projects. He's taken Kickstarter by storm, and he's proven to be a tsunami of success.

He's been there. He's done that. He knows how to crowdfund!

And now, he's spilling the beans on how he came to be successful at crowdfunding, but are you willing to listen to. . .



Click on that link, and see for yourself what Magnus has to say on the subject.

When you're finished, feel free to snoop around the three crowdfunding projects that Magnus took from launch to success. Here are some handy links to those past success stories:

TITANIUM: Incredible 12-Function Ultimate Pocket Tool!

TITANIUM: Key-Holder -- Multi-Function and Super-Compact!

TITANIUM: Ultimate Carabiner-Style Mini-Clips For Your Keys

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Crowd Funding Tip # 6 - When in doubt, create quality


So, you're new to crowdfunding, but you've decided to go ahead and take the plunge, and create a crowdfunding project of your very own. You've even went so far as to hit the start button, and actually launched your project. The clock is ticking on your project campaign.

Now what?!

You don't have a clue where to begin, but even worse, you honestly have no idea what to even say about your own crowdfunding project. How much worse can it get?

Is your project doomed? Is there any hope for somebody as completely lost, as yourself? How on Earth will you ever get this project of yours crowd funded? What in God's name were you even thinking?

I love my son. I love him more than anything else in all of God's creation. What does any of this have to do with your crowdfunding project, though?

Quite plain and simply, it has EVERYTHING to do with it!

Your project is YOUR baby. And, much like an actual baby, your role is to comfort it, and to care for it, and to nurture it as it grows. You can either give your project your time and your attention, or you can neglect it, and watch it either fall into trouble or watch it die, outright.

Your project will require an investment of your time. It may even keep you up late at night. At times, it might even cry out for attention.

Will you neglect it? Or will you shower it with love?

Whether you created your project on a whim, or whether you thought long and hard about it, before you launched it, you're going to end up in the same boat - the boat of decision. Whether for good or for ill, you stand at the precipice of your crowdfunding project's fate.

One of the most common maladies that seems to afflict crowdfunding projects of all kinds is so commonplace that it should come as a surprise to no one, yourself included. Namely, it is the problem of not knowing what to say about this project that you, yourself, created.

What else is there to say? Indeed, what else can be said? Haven't you said it all, already?

As most parents could tell you, there's likely no end of things that they could say about their children. My son runs on an infinite loop through my mind. He dominates my thoughts. My affection for him knows no end. In a nutshell, I never tire of talking about my son. Verily, he is the grandest object of my affection.

You don't have to copy and paste things that you have already said about your crowdfunding project. In fact, what you say or what you write about your project will be all the more interesting if you don't.

When you launch a crowdfunding project, you do more - far more - than just create a project. You also spawn a story, one without a finite number of pages. The sum totality of your project's "story" includes all of the bits and pieces, every last morsel and crumb, every last tittle of anything at all that in any way, shape, or form relates or pertains to your project.

And, in case you haven't already noticed or figured it out, by now, your project's "story" also includes YOU.

Yes, your project's story is as much about you, as it is about your project, itself. Don't be the missing link of your project's story. Fill in the gaps, by sharing bit and pieces about yourself, as you travel down the road of your project's journey toward its funding goal.

If you want people to pay attention to you, then don't be a broken record. Rather, tempt them with bits of your heart, with morsels from your soul. Every instance of you talking about your project doesn't have to be on par with a novel the size of War and Peace. A sentence here. A paragraph there. Sometimes, even a whole page of thoughts - your thoughts about your project.

Yesterday was a different day. Today is a different day. Tomorrow shall be a different day, as well.

Regardless of what you were thinking yesterday, tell us what you are thinking, today. Speak to us anew! Try and try, again.

Except, try this, if you haven't already. Focus upon sharing quality thoughts. Quality exists in small portions before it exists in copious amounts. Be sincere - for it lies at the very nexus of what quality is.

If you make it interesting, then truthfully, you can never, ever say too  much about your project.

Not everyone has heard about your project. Don't make the mistake of thinking that they have. In fact, in all likelihood, MOST people probably haven't heard about it, yet. Which is a very good reason why you should keep talking about your project.

Yes, even after you're tired of talking about it. Yes, even well after it may seem to you that anybody has long since quit listening. The world is a big place, and somebody, somewhere out there is always listening. People are bored. They are always on the lookout for something new, for something different.

Be that something different - but, be a quality different.

Imbue your project with personality, by intertwining tales about your project with bits and pieces of yourself. If you want other people to become excited about your project, then you need to be excited about it, first!

You can't create quality, by allowing your enthusiasm to wither on a vine and die. Enthusiasm was never intended to be contained. The inherent nature of enthusiasm is that it was destined to be shared, it's ordained fate is that it be shouted from the rooftops! LONG LIVE ENTHUSIASM!!

Your project is dead. Long live your project!

You don't have to become the perfect speaker to be the perfect spokesman for your project. All of those people that you want to back your project? None of them are perfect, either.

But, the vast majority of them do possess the basic common sense to enable them to discern between substance and hollowness. Quality, you see, speaks everybody's language, no matter who they are, and no matter what language that they speak.

If you stress to death over what the right thing to say is, then you've already missed the train. Focus, instead, upon just speaking from the heart. If you do, then it really won't matter if you stutter and stumble along the way. People will get it. They will grasp what you're trying to say.

Share your struggle. People have struggles of their own. It will give them something that they can relate to. Your trials. Your tribulations. Your ordeals. These are common denominators of the human soul, of human existence. People will relate.

And, because they will relate, many of them will support you, regardless of what they might think about the individual merits or demerits of your project.

Your project is most likely to fail, if you abandon it. So, rather than abandon it, embrace it, instead. Embrace it and enthuse about it. Let your enthusiasm for your wonderful idea overflow you. Enthusiasm is a very contagious thing - but before contagion can spread, someone must possess it, first.

Spread quality, and not just quantity of words.

That may strike you as a bit odd, seeing as how it comes from someone who talks as much as I do. But, my experience in life has been that, quite often, things that matter typically warrant more words, rather than less.

Even if I fail in getting my message across,  that shouldn't inhibit you from trying to get your message across to the public masses about your project, and why it matters - not just to anyone else, but especially to yourself.