WHAT IS CROWDFUNDING?
(With a glossary of crowdfunding terminology)
The practice of funding a project or venture by raising
money from a large number of people who each contribute a relatively small
amount, typically via the Internet.
Crowdfunding (alternately crowd financing, equity
crowdfunding, crowd-sourced fundraising) explains the collective effort of
individuals who network and pool their money, usually via the Internet, to
support efforts initiated by other people or organizations. Crowdfunding is
used in support of a wide variety of activities, including disaster relief,
citizen journalism, and support of artists by fans, political campaigns,
startup company funding, motion picture promotion, free software development,
inventions development, scientific research, and civic projects.
How is Crowdfunding
Different?
Crowdfunding is essentially the opposite of the mainstream
approach to business finance. Traditionally, if you want to raise capital to
start a business or launch a new product, you would need to pack up your
business plan, market research, and prototypes, and then shop your idea around
to a limited pool or wealthy individuals or institutions. These funding sources
included banks, angel investors, and venture capital firms, really limiting
your options to a few key players. You
can think of this fundraising approach as a funnel, with you and your pitch at
the wide end and your audience of investors at the closed end. Fail to point
that funnel at the right investor or firm at the right time, and that’s your
time and money lost.
Crowdfunding platforms, on the other hand, turns that funnel
on-end. By giving you, the entrepreneur, a single platform to build, showcase,
and share your pitch resources, this approach dramatically streamlines the
traditional model. Traditionally, you’d spend months sifting through your
personal network, vetting potential investors, and spending your own time and
money to get in front of them. With crowdfunding, it’s much easier for you to
get your opportunity in front of more interested parties and give them more
ways to help grow your business, from investing thousands in exchange for
equity to contributing $20 in exchange for a first-run product or other reward.
The Benefits of
Crowdfunding
From tapping into a wider investor pool to enjoying more
flexible fundraising options, there are a number of benefits to crowdfunding
over traditional methods. Here are just a few of the many possible advantages,
which we’ll cover in greater detail later in this guide:
Reach – By using
a crowdfunding platform like Fundable, you have access to thousands of
accredited investors who can see, interact with, and share your fundraising
campaign.
Presentation – By
creating a crowdfunding campaign, you go through the invaluable process of
looking at your business from the top level—its history, traction, offerings,
addressable market, value proposition, and more—and boiling it down into a
polished, easily digestible package.
PR & Marketing
– From launch to close, you can share and promote your campaign through social
media, email newsletters, and other online marketing tactics. As you and other
media outlets cover the progress of your fundraising, you can double down by
steering traffic to your website and other company resources.
Validation of Concept
– Presenting your concept or business to the masses affords an excellent
opportunity to validate and refine your offering. As potential investors begin
to express interest and ask questions, you’ll quickly see if there’s something
missing that would make them more likely to buy in.
Efficiency – One
of the best things about online crowdfunding is its ability to centralize and
streamline your fundraising efforts. By building a single, comprehensive
profile to which you can funnel all your prospects and potential investors, you
eliminate the need to pursue each of them individually. So instead of
duplicating efforts by printing documents, compiling binders, and manually
updating each one when there’s an update, you can present everything online in
a much more accessible format, leaving you with more time to run your business
instead of fundraising.
Types of the most
common Crowdfunding
Just like there are many different kinds of capital round
raises for businesses in all stages of growth, there are a variety of
crowdfunding types. Which crowdfunding method you select depends on the type of
product or service you offer and your goals for growth. The 3 primary types are
donation-based, rewards-based, and equity crowdfunding (this guide will focus
mostly on rewards-based and equity).
Donation-Based
Crowdfunding
Broadly speaking, you can think of any crowdfunding campaign
in which there is no financial return to the investors or contributors as
donation-based crowdfunding. Common
donation-based crowdfunding initiatives include fundraising for disaster
relief, charities, nonprofits, and medical bills.
Rewards-Based
Crowdfunding
Rewards-based crowdfunding involves individuals contributing
to your business in exchange for a “reward,” typically a form of the product or
service your company offers. Even though this method offers backers a reward,
it’s still generally considered a subset of donation-based crowdfunding since
there is no financial or equity return. This approach is a popular option here
on Fundable, as well other popular crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter and
Indiegogo, because it lets business-owners incentivize their contributor
without incurring much extra expense or selling ownership stake. Read more
about preparing and launching a successful rewards-based campaign here.
Equity-Based
Crowdfunding
Unlike the donation-based and rewards-based methods,
equity-based crowdfunding allows contributors to become part-owners of your
company by trading capital for equity shares. As equity owners, your
contributors receive a financial return on their investment and ultimately
receive a share of the profits in the form of a dividend or distribution
Crowdfunding can also refer to the funding of a company by
selling small amounts of equity to many investors. This form of crowdfunding
has recently received attention from policymakers in the United States with
direct mention in the JOBS Act; legislation that allows for a wider pool of
small investors with fewer restrictions. While the JOBS Act awaits
implementation, hybrid models, such as Mosaic Inc., are using existing
securities laws to enable the public in approved states to invest directly in
clean energy projects as part of a crowd.
Crowdfunding has its origins in the concept of
crowd-sourcing, which is the broader concept of an individual reaching a goal by
receiving and leveraging small contributions from many parties. Crowdfunding is
the application of this concept to the collection of funds through small
contributions from many parties in order to finance a particular project or
venture.
Crowdfunding models involve a variety of participants. They
include the people or organizations that propose the ideas and/or projects to
be funded, and the crowd of people who support the proposals. Crowdfunding is
then supported by an organization (the “platform”) which brings together the
project initiator and the crowd.
People who choose to support crowdfunding campaigns often
have a personal interest in the project or theme and are often made up of
friends and family to start with. Equally, they can be completely unrelated
people who just want to get involved in a new project or idea. Crowd funders
are typically just as interested in soft rewards as they are in making a
profit. They may value the feeling of having contributed or the opportunity to
access a particular perk or reward. When it involves film financing, this can
be receiving movie merchandise, attending film set or red carpet film
premieres, meeting celebrities and actors, or even appearing in the movie.
The days of waiting tables in Hollywood with hopes of
bumping into some big name producer or actor or director to fund your movie
that you happen to have on you are officially over. If The Veronica Mars Movie,
a show that hasn’t been on television in a decade, can raise $5.7 million on
Kickstarter, you can too. Crowdfunding is an emerging option for filmmakers to
raise film funding for films. Crowdfunding sites are an innovative way forward
when it comes to modern film financing. In fact, crowdfunding and equity
funding are concepts that are appearing all over the place these days, in a
wide variety of contexts. Most recently, the “Gosnell Movie” filmmakers have
raised $2.3 million for the movie, a crowdfunding website designed specifically
for investing in movies.
Glossary of Crowdfunding
Terminology
Crowdfunding – A
method of raising capital through the collective effort of friends, family,
customers, and individual investors.
Accredited investor
– An individual whose net worth is greater than $1MM, or whose income exceeds
$200k for the past 2 years. Currently the U.S. Securities & Exchange
Commission (SEC) mandates that only accredited investors are legally able to
invest in private companies.
Blue Sky Laws -
State specific regulations in the United States meant to protect investors from
fraud. These laws vary from state to state, but in general they require the
registration of all securities offerings and sales with each states appropriate
regulatory agency. Some SEC registration exemptions, such as Registration A
Tier 2 offerings, pre-empt blue sky laws, meaning that if a securities offering
adheres to the SECs requirements it does not have to register and comply with
different blue sky laws in every state.
Broker-Dealer - Registered
professionals, firms, or agencies that buy and sell securities on behalf of
clients, including large stock brokerages. Broker-Dealers execute securities
sales and purchases on behalf of clients, provide investment advice to
customers, supply liquidity through market-making activities, publish
investment research, raising capital for companies, and operate market
platforms. Broker-Dealers must be registered with the SEC and are closely
regulated. Several types of investment crowdfunding and general solicitation
activities require that the issuer work with a registered broker-dealer.
Crowdfunding Platform
- A website which facilitates crowdfunding by allowing people or companies
seeking money to raise it from members of the public. Platforms list different
projects, collect and process the payments between those the crowd funders
giving money and the crowdfunded receiving it.
Crowdfunding Portal
- Similar to a crowdfunding platform, a portal does not handle investments or
finances, but merely acts as an intermediary connecting investors with projects
and businesses online. The term Crowdfunding Portal is strictly defined by the
SEC in the JOBS act.
Crowd-sourcing / Crowd
Sourcing - Piecing together skills and tasks performed by many individuals
to put together a larger project.
Convertible Note
- A hybrid security. It is a short term loan made to a startup which accrues
interest and then converts into equity at a pre-determined time or event,
usually issued when a company raises its seed investment round, and then
converted to equity when it’s next Series A round of investment in which its
valuation is better established.
Debt-based
crowdfunding - (also known as "peer to peer", "P2P",
"marketplace lending", or "crowd lending") arose with the
founding of Zopa in the UK in 2005 and in the US in 2006, with the launches of
Lending Club and Prosper.com. Borrowers apply online, generally for free, and
their application is reviewed and verified by an automated system, which also
determines the borrower's credit risk and interest rate. Investors buy
securities in a fund which makes the loans to individual borrowers or bundles
of borrowers. Investors make money from interest on the unsecured loans; the
system operators make money by taking a percentage of the loan and a loan
servicing fee.
Donation-based
crowdfunding – Any crowdfunding campaign in which there is no financial
return to the investors or contributors. Entrepreneurs presell a product or
service to launch a business concept without incurring debt or sacrificing
equity/shares.
Emerging Growth
Company - A company with revenues below one billion dollars per year, as
defined by the JOBS act. Companies meeting these requirements may be eligible
for certain privileges, like being allowed to use test-the-waters
communications with qualified institutional buyers.
Equity-based
crowdfunding – Any crowdfunding campaign that allows contributors to become
part-owners of your company by trading capital for equity shares. The backer
receives shares of a company, usually in its early stages, in exchange for the
money pledged.
General Solicitation
- The practice advertising to potential investors outside of one’s current
network with the intent of fundraising, as is now allowed by the SEC for
private issuers under particular registration exemptions enabled in the JOBS
act (Title II 506c, Title IV Reg A, and upcoming Title III Reg CF).
Litigation
crowdfunding - allows plaintiffs or defendants to reach out to hundreds of
their peers simultaneously in a semiprivate and confidential manner to obtain
funding, either seeking donations or providing a reward in return for funding.
It also allows investors to purchase a stake in a claim they have funded, which
may allow them to get back more than their investment if the case succeeds (the
reward is based on the compensation received by the litigant at the end of his
or her case, known as a contingent fee in the United States, a success fee in
the United Kingdom, or a pactum de quota litis in many civil law systems).
LexShares is a platform that allows accredited investors to invest in lawsuits.
I.P.O: An Initial
Public Offering - The first sale of stock to public investors by a new
company or by an existing company in a new product or project.
Investment
Crowdfunding - Investing in a company via crowdfunding in exchange for
equity ownership, debt payments, a convertible note, or some other financial
return.
Issuer - A
company that raises money by creating and selling a security to investors.
JOBS Act - The
Jump-start Our Business Startups Act, which was signed into law in 2012. The act
eases some securities regulations in order to make it easier for businesses to
launch, including through crowdfunding.
Peer to Peer (P2P)
Lending - A form of debt crowdfunding, peer to peer lending is when
individuals or individual companies offer loans to other individuals or
companies. There is a fixed rate of return for such loans.
PIPR - Private
Issuer Publicly Raising. A company raising money from investors taking
advantage of Regulation D Rule 506(c) which allows general solicitation
(advertising) to the public.
Primary Market -
The first sale of new securities to investors in order to raise investment
money for the issuing company. (As opposed to a Secondary Market in which
investors buy and sell securities among each other without the issuing company
receiving the funds.)
Private Offering
- The sale of investment securities by businesses who do not wish to raise
funds through public offerings can seek private placement with a small group of
investors. Private offerings must adhere to the rules of any one of several SEC
registration exemptions.
Real Estate Crowdfunding
- Reserved largely for wealthy investors, real estate crowdfunding involves
using mainly equity and peer-to-peer lending to finance real estate purchases
using multiple investors.
Rewards-based
crowdfunding – Any crowdfunding campaign that involves individuals
contributing to your business in exchange for a “reward,” typically a form of
the product or service your company offers.
Reward -
Something given to investors in exchange for their funds while crowdfunding,
either the first run of an actual product, or a shirt, sticker, or small object
related to the project or company being funded, or even just a “thank you”
acknowledgement.
Rewards Crowdfunding
- Crowdfunding in which backers receive a reward in exchange for their
financial gift. Reward types are often based on the amount given by investors.
Some are offered in various forms that the investors can choose from.
ROI - In short,
return on investment. The payback earned from investing in something. Examples
include financial return through stocks or emotional return through feeling
good about giving.
S.E.C.: Securities
and Exchange Commission - The part of the United States government that
regulates investment and finance, including startups and the various forms of
crowdfunding.
Secondary Market
- A market on which securities and assets such as stocks are bought and sold
between investors. Secondary Markets provide liquidity by allowing investors to
exchange their investment for cash. Also called the aftermarket. (As opposed to
a Primary Market in which securities and assets are purchased directly from the
issuer.)
Securities -
Examples of securities include stocks, bonds, and certificates. These serve as
financial and/or investment instruments that hold certain values and that can
be bought, sold, and exchanged.
Software value token
- Another kind of crowdfunding is to raise funds for a project where a digital
or software-based value token is offered as a reward to funders which is known
as Initial coin offering (abbreviated to ICO). Value tokens are endogenously
created by particular open decentralized networks that are used to incentivize
client computers of the network to expend scarce computer resources on maintaining
the protocol network. These value tokens may or may not exist at the time of
the crowd sale, and may require substantial development effort and eventual
software release before the token is live and establishes a market value.
Although funds may be raised simply for the value token itself, funds raised on
block chain-based crowdfunding can also represent equity, bonds, or even
"market-maker seats of governance" for the entity being funded.
Startup - A new
business, often using a highly scaleable new technology or novel process, and
often outside investment funding, to grow quickly.
Testing the Waters
- Communicating with potential investors to gauge interest before raising money
or formally registering with the SEC.
Venture Capital (VC)
- Equity funding in a startup provided by an investment company.
Venture Exchange
- A secondary market in which early investors in startups and small businesses
could sell their shares, and new investors could buy and trade private stocks.
Meant to improve the liquidity for the securities of small companies. There is
currently a draft bill in the House of Representatives intended to expand the
use of Venture Exchanges in the US.
Sources & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Pinterest, IMDB,
PMI, Forbes, Indiegogo, Investopedia, Fundable, The Movie Fund, Your Money,
Financial Times, Screen Magazine, Variety, Film Maker Magazine, Research Gate,
Think Adviser, Crowd Expert
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Excellent article, explains allot. Cheers.
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