And now Lester. The founders made a decision to support only creative projects and sticking to it has done wonders for our business, which helps creatives get tangible stuff made with their art, basically. All of our product costs are fully recouped before they even hit the market. It's awesomesauce.
Indiegogo seems to have the branding challenge as a 'we can do it all' platform; I still don't feel like I understand it. Letting campaign managers take the money they've raised even without hitting the goal is an interesting twist. It helped in our case with the bus, which didn't have a very clear, tangible 'goal' (however, our documentary is premiering at CES in January!!)
Crowdtilt (full disclosure I'm an investor) atm works really well for group funding, not crowd funding. That's not just semantic voodoo, it's the difference between getting a beach house among friends funded and a soul legend's album funded with different tiers of rewards.
I'm long on crowdtilt because they're not trying to be another version of kickstarter, rather, a general platform for crowdfunding. I see a lot of reddit in them, which for years heard people making dumb comparisons between us and digg. We opted to make a broader platform for online communities and it's turned out well so far.
Thank you, Jacob! Just trying to make it suck a bit less -- helping Lester and aiding the fight for the open internet at the same time is a pretty great deal.
Because I can. And because it's not enough for me to tell apologists for the entertainment industry that the internet is a blessing for artists, it's better if I just show them.
Well, keep at it, I think you may have redeemed yourself but on the off-chance that that hasn't happened yet you can always build up a store of good karma for a rainy day.
I don't know if many have used all three like you have - Which one was your favorite? Or least favorite?