How I Kickstarted My Business: Crowdfunding Tips for Online Sellers

Crowdfunding — the process of funding a project, product, or business via money collected from a crowd — has continued to grow the last few years. Where it was once a confusing and somewhat skeptically regarded way to launch a business, it’s now considered a totally viable option.

The only problem? It can be really intimidating to launch a crowdfunding campaign when you don’t know where to begin!

I know how that feels.

In June of 2015, I launched my first Kickstarter — a campaign to help me create the Freelancer Planner. With the final tally putting it at being funded over 150%, it’s safe to say it was a success.

I learned a lot along the way about what can make or break a crowdfunding campaign, and I’m here to share it with you today.

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Which platform should you use?

First, let’s have a look at the most popular crowdfunding websites and understand how they are different.

Kickstarter

Pros: Kickstarter is the most well-recognized crowdfunding platform. Even people who aren’t well-versed in online business typically recognize their branding and understand what a Kickstarter campaign is. That makes it a lot easier to pitch a Kickstarter campaign to journalists, for example.

Cons: When you run a Kickstarter, you have to reach your goal, or you won’t get any money. If you’re five dollars short when the clock runs out, that’s it  no funding for you.

Good for you if:

IndieGoGo

Pros: IndieGoGo’s main differentiator from Kickstarter is that they offer an option called “flex-funding.” If your campaign has “flexible funding” turned on, it means that even if your goal isn’t met, you’ll still receive the money.

Cons: IndieGoGo has been making strides in becoming a leader in crowdfunding in their own right (including their equity crowdfunding features, letting anyone become a startup investor and receive equity for doing so), but they still don’t have quite the same recognition as Kickstarter, especially for ecommerce ventures.

Good for you if:

Celery (or another “embed on your site” crowdfunding option)

Pros: With Celery, you don’t have to pay as much of a cut to payment processors as you do with Kickstarter and IndieGoGo. It also seamlessly integrates with ShipStation, which makes fulfillment easy when it comes time to ship your products.

Cons: You don’t have the platform of IndieGoGo or Kickstarter behind you to help get your product in front of new people, or the associated branding legitimacy that those platforms lend to your product.

I actually wouldn’t recommend Celery (or another DIY crowdfunding option, like setting up a buy-button on a landing page on your site) for crowdfunding.

It’s great as an in-between option to let customers pre-order during the time between your campaign ends and your products start shipping, but through observing others as they ran their own self-hosted (meaning, not hosted on IndieGoGo or Kickstarter) crowdfunding campaigns, it’s much harder to get the momentum needed, capture the attention of journalists and bloggers, and get in front of new people with a self-hosted crowdfunding campaign — and those are all things that can make your campaign much more successful.

Preparing for your crowdfunding campaign

There’s a lot to do when it comes to preparing for your crowdfunding campaign. In fact, preparation is the single factor most likely to create your success — so this section will be a little longer than the rest. Here’s everything you need to know and do to be fully prepped before launch day:

Choose how long your campaign will run. This depends on a few factors:

With my campaign, I chose to run it for 35 days. It was a fairly modest goal (just shy of $6,000), and I felt like I could keep up momentum for a month (and a few extra days) without getting burned out or affecting my health. That put the campaign wrapping up in late July, the money being deposited in August, and plenty of time for me to fulfill the orders before January 1st of the next year (which is when everyone would want their planners, naturally!).

Prepare these things ahead of time:

The video for the Bullrest Travel Pillow, which clocks in at less than two minutes long.

Write your campaign copy and your video script (and then record your video).

When it comes to your copy (the written description) for your campaign, you’ll stick to the basics of good copywriting. That means to make it scannable, focus on features over benefits, keep it simple, and show, don’t tell. (For more on copywriting, head here.)

You can look at other campaigns in your category to “spy” on how they structured their copy (and video) and how well their campaigns are doing — you’ll probably learn some good do’s/don’t’s from that.

Here’s a teardown video I did of my campaign copy that should give you an idea of what makes for good copy:

For your video, shorter is better. Your main campaign video should be as short as you can get it while still touching on the main features and benefits of your product. Don’t try to cover every single tiny thing about you, your background, your business, your inspiration, and your product in one video. It’ll wind up being too long. Instead, cut straight to the chase of why your product is needed and what makes it different from other options out there.

If you want to, you can add videos that go more in-depth later on in the campaign page. In my case, after requests for more in-depth coverage on the details of the planner pages, I added a six and a half minute long video going over each page in detail. It was viewed over 1,000 times during the campaign, indicating that people did want to see more details. But even with that many views, that’s only a little over 20% of the views that the main campaign video got, proving that shorter is better.

Read also: Facebook Video on a Budget: Create and Run Ads in No Time

Familiarize yourself with the tools you’ll be using throughout the campaign. The last thing you want to do is find yourself at 9 AM on launch day puzzling over an interface you aren’t familiar with. For me, the indispensable apps were:

Directly before your campaign launches you’ll want to get a few good night’s sleep. You’ll be working on the crowdfunding campaign every day for the length of time it’s running, plus working on it quite a bit even after it’s wrapped and you’ve received your funding. Take care of yourself and make sure your body isn’t going to quit on you a week into the campaign because you’re running on fumes.

Pre-launch stage resources:

What to do while you’re running the campaign

Now that the campaign is running, a lot of your work is already done. That’s not to say you can cost, but your to-do list is much shorter and will mostly involve doing the same actions every day. Indeed, that’s the main rule for this part of your campaign — do something every single day. Maintaining momentum is crucial and when I slacked off on any of the below items for even a day, there was a corresponding drop in backers.

I added the logos and links to reviews/press I got throughout the campaign to my campaign page

It’s also important to remember not to panic. Some campaigns pass their goal early on, but many aren’t funded until the last week (or the last 48 hours). Your per-day donation average is likely to go up later in your campaign, so if you’re halfway through but not halfway funded, don’t freak out.

To run ads or not to run ads?

I didn’t run any ads for my campaign, partially because I was on a tight budget, but also because Kickstarter (and IndieGoGo, for that matter) don’t offer the ability to embed a conversion pixel after someone completes the backing process. What that means is that, if you’re running ads, you can only tell when people are clicking on the ad  not that they clicked on the ad and then went on to become a backer.

Because of that, it would be very hard to run effective ad analytics and be 100% sure that backers were coming from the ads and not some other source of traffic. So, if you have some extra money to spend on it, ads can be worth experimenting with, as they can drive a lot of traffic — but if your budget is really tight, ads aren’t the best place to put it, as you’ll have a very hard time tracking their actual effectiveness.

After the finish line: what to do once your campaign is over

You did it! The campaign is funded. Here’s what you need to keep in mind after your campaign is over:

And…that’s about it. After that, you can pat yourself on the back — you’re now officially a crowdfunding veteran.

Of course, once you’ve launched your product using crowdfunding, you’ll want to keep selling it. If you don’t have a home for your products online yet, sign up for Ecwid and give it a whirl.

 

About The Author
Michelle is a freelance writer living in Richmond, VA, with her Shiba Inu and cat named after the Hulk. When she's not writing about business, she can usually be found working on her novel series or other side projects, or training Brazilian jiu-jitsu.

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