Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Crowdfunding, CrowdFunder of The Year, Jilliene Helman

Jilliene Helman

CrowdFundBeat Honors Real Estate ‘Mogul’ with Crowdfunding Award,  
By Robert J. Mullins , CFB Senior Staff  Writer,

Jilliene Helman has discovered the power of using crowdfunding to open up the market for real estate investments. As the co-founder of Realty Mogul, along with partner Justin Hughes, she has already completed multiple deals across the country in just eight months of fulltime operation.
For her success and for her advocacy on the subject from appearances at several crowdfunding conferences, CrowdfundBeat is awarding Helman its CrowdFunder of the Year Award for 2013.
In an interview with CrowdFundBeat Senior Staff Writer Robert Mullins, Helman discusses the new U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rules on crowdfunding by accredited investors, coming new rules on non-accredited investors and the philosophy behind Realty Mogul:
Jilliene Helman: The hypothesis that we’ve been operating under is really twofold. On one side, there’s an economic opportunity for investors to invest in real estate and make money investing in real estate and generating income. So all of the transactions that we do generate cash flow for our investors. We’re looking for opportunities to get dividends back to our investors, directly back into their bank accounts. Then the other hypothesis for starting the company was the political rationale. The JOBS Act passed through Congress last year and while we still don’t have final regulations on Title III, which is for non-accredited crowdfunding, there is a huge market of accredited investors that has been largely untapped. You look at the number of accredited investors in private placement in 2012 and it was less than 40,000 accredited investors out of 7 or 8 million. So we thought that there’s this political opportunity where people are going to be more comfortable investing through the Internet and we took that economic opportunity and that political opportunity, put them together and out came Realty Mogul.
Robert Mullins: You said in an article that “crowdfunding was revolutionizing capital formation in real estate.” What changes with crowdfunding?
Helman: I think the biggest things are access to deal flow and access to capital. When it comes to deal flow, millions of investors have never had access to deal flow, historically. There’s been no simple way to get them access to that deal flow. Now that you have the Internet and have the ability to transact online, we can open that up to millions of investors all over the world. So the access to deal flow is huge. And the flip side is access to capital. You have these real estate companies who historically were working with the banks, investment banks or the other established players to get capital, but they didn’t have a base of thousands and thousands of investors that they could go to. And that’s where we are. We’re a conduit in the middle and that’s what I think revolutionizes this market.
Mullins: The SEC has approved regulations for accredited investors but the regulations for non-accredited investors won’t be finalized until sometime in 2014. What are your concerns about what the final rules on non-accredited investors will be?
Helman: The rules for accredited investors allow for general solicitation as long as the investors are validated. I think the SEC gave pretty decent guidance on how to accredit those investors.
It’ll be interesting to see with the Title III rules [on non-accredited investors] how they come down on doing simultaneous [fund] raises with accredited and non-accredited investors. It looks like they’re going to deal with that in a way that’s favorable and we’re looking at that very closely.
Mullins: What kind of deals have you done so far at Realty Mogul?
Helman: We crowdfunded what we think is the first shopping center in the country, maybe in the world, in Monterey, Calif. We have some top-tier tenants such as Safeway, CVS, Subway, Starbucks, McDonald’s and it was a great opportunity to allow investors, again going back to this nucleus of access to deal flow, many of whom never had access to that type of deal flow.
We own a 267-unit apartment building in Texas, we own a couple of assets in the Kansas market including a shopping center in Lenexa, Kansas, we own a host of single-family homes in the Tennessee market. We’ve done a variety of interesting transactions.
Mullins: Are you seeing competition from other crowdfunding real estate ventures?
Helman: Real estate is a really big space. Real estate alone is a $17 trillion business so there are going to be numerous people who will take to the Internet to raise capital for real estate.
At the end of the day I think it’s going to be about performance. We are really proud that eight months in business, we’ve already distributed over $600,000 back out to investors in distribution and principal payments. We really focus on cash flow. The need that we serve is generating income for investors, generating cash flow and also potentially investing for appreciation and longer term investments.
Mullins: How did you get into real estate in the first place?
Helman: I grew up talking real estate around the dinner table. My mom’s been in the real estate industry for decades, my father owned commercial and industrial projects. My grandfather built properties in the Los Angeles market, so I really learned my real estate chops from the dinner table.

Crowdfunding, CrowdFunder of The Year, Jilliene Helman

Jilliene Helman
CrowdFundBeat Honors Real Estate ‘Mogul’ with Crowdfunding Award,  
By Robert J. Mullins , CFB Senior Staff  Writer,

Jilliene Helman has discovered the power of using crowdfunding to open up the market for real estate investments. As the co-founder of Realty Mogul, along with partner Justin Hughes, she has already completed multiple deals across the country in just eight months of fulltime operation.
For her success and for her advocacy on the subject from appearances at several crowdfunding conferences, CrowdfundBeat is awarding Helman its CrowdFunder of the Year Award for 2013.
In an interview with CrowdFundBeat Senior Staff Writer Robert Mullins, Helman discusses the new U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rules on crowdfunding by accredited investors, coming new rules on non-accredited investors and the philosophy behind Realty Mogul:
Jilliene Helman: The hypothesis that we’ve been operating under is really twofold. On one side, there’s an economic opportunity for investors to invest in real estate and make money investing in real estate and generating income. So all of the transactions that we do generate cash flow for our investors. We’re looking for opportunities to get dividends back to our investors, directly back into their bank accounts. Then the other hypothesis for starting the company was the political rationale. The JOBS Act passed through Congress last year and while we still don’t have final regulations on Title III, which is for non-accredited crowdfunding, there is a huge market of accredited investors that has been largely untapped. You look at the number of accredited investors in private placement in 2012 and it was less than 40,000 accredited investors out of 7 or 8 million. So we thought that there’s this political opportunity where people are going to be more comfortable investing through the Internet and we took that economic opportunity and that political opportunity, put them together and out came Realty Mogul.
Robert Mullins: You said in an article that “crowdfunding was revolutionizing capital formation in real estate.” What changes with crowdfunding?
Helman: I think the biggest things are access to deal flow and access to capital. When it comes to deal flow, millions of investors have never had access to deal flow, historically. There’s been no simple way to get them access to that deal flow. Now that you have the Internet and have the ability to transact online, we can open that up to millions of investors all over the world. So the access to deal flow is huge. And the flip side is access to capital. You have these real estate companies who historically were working with the banks, investment banks or the other established players to get capital, but they didn’t have a base of thousands and thousands of investors that they could go to. And that’s where we are. We’re a conduit in the middle and that’s what I think revolutionizes this market.
Mullins: The SEC has approved regulations for accredited investors but the regulations for non-accredited investors won’t be finalized until sometime in 2014. What are your concerns about what the final rules on non-accredited investors will be?
Helman: The rules for accredited investors allow for general solicitation as long as the investors are validated. I think the SEC gave pretty decent guidance on how to accredit those investors.
It’ll be interesting to see with the Title III rules [on non-accredited investors] how they come down on doing simultaneous [fund] raises with accredited and non-accredited investors. It looks like they’re going to deal with that in a way that’s favorable and we’re looking at that very closely.
Mullins: What kind of deals have you done so far at Realty Mogul?
Helman: We crowdfunded what we think is the first shopping center in the country, maybe in the world, in Monterey, Calif. We have some top-tier tenants such as Safeway, CVS, Subway, Starbucks, McDonald’s and it was a great opportunity to allow investors, again going back to this nucleus of access to deal flow, many of whom never had access to that type of deal flow.
We own a 267-unit apartment building in Texas, we own a couple of assets in the Kansas market including a shopping center in Lenexa, Kansas, we own a host of single-family homes in the Tennessee market. We’ve done a variety of interesting transactions.
Mullins: Are you seeing competition from other crowdfunding real estate ventures?
Helman: Real estate is a really big space. Real estate alone is a $17 trillion business so there are going to be numerous people who will take to the Internet to raise capital for real estate.
At the end of the day I think it’s going to be about performance. We are really proud that eight months in business, we’ve already distributed over $600,000 back out to investors in distribution and principal payments. We really focus on cash flow. The need that we serve is generating income for investors, generating cash flow and also potentially investing for appreciation and longer term investments.
Mullins: How did you get into real estate in the first place?
Helman: I grew up talking real estate around the dinner table. My mom’s been in the real estate industry for decades, my father owned commercial and industrial projects. My grandfather built properties in the Los Angeles market, so I really learned my real estate chops from the dinner table.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

CrowdFunding Film society hosts film festivals in San Francisco, Vancouver

BY Robert Mullins, ICFFF.org hosted film festivals Dec. 5 in San Francisco and Vancouver, B.C. to highlight the role of crowdfunding as a way to raise capital for film projects.The International CrowdFunding Film Festival in San Francisco drew film fans to the Supper Club restaurant in the South of Market part of town. Simultaneously, the Vancouver event was held at a restaurant there.Film projects are among the most popular uses of crowdfunding, where individuals contribute money to a project just as a show of support for the entrepreneur.


One of the most successful crowdfunded film was a movie based on the TV series “Veronica Mars.” The “Veronica Mars Movie Project” raised $5.7 million from 91,000 people, both records for the Kickstarter film and video category. The movie, starring Kristen Bell, who also starred in the TV series, is scheduled for release March 14, 2014, one year and one day after the Kickstarter campaign began. Meanwhile, actor and director Zach Braff raised $3.1 million for his feature film “Wish I Was Here,” and directors Spike Lee and Joe Dante went to the crowd to fund their movie projects. Other notable film projects still seeking funds include a remake of the “Star Trek” TV series featuring some cast members from the original series, which raised $86,000 so far through Indiegogo, and a feature film starring Sylvester Stallone, Danny Aiello and Kyra Sedgwick that has raised $262,225 through Kickstarter, surpassing a goal of $250,000.
sydney 305
The International CrowdFunding Film Festival didn’t attract high-caliber celebrities like those, but it did draw people with more modest projects, many of them short films, documentaries, animated films and other productions. Sydney Armani, the publisher of CrowdFundBeat, hosted the San Francisco event.“I see in these directors, writers, and cinematographers, the same core passion for innovation. They are not only artists but more importantly, entrepreneurs – they are seeking to touch the world and make a difference through their films. We know of their struggle to find financial backing and I believe crowdfunding will be the answer,” says Armani. more on ICFFF,org @
http://crowdfundfilmsociety.com/

Friday, November 29, 2013

Crowdfunding Film is a Game Changer

CrowdFunding Film Society chapters in Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York, Toronto, London, Vancouver. Chicago, Rome


The International CrowdFunding Film Festival will be held December 5-7, 2013 in San Francisco. The Film Festival is designed to bring together artists, filmmakers, and video game creators to showcase their craft, network and get crowdfunded, as well as collaborate with film schools in San Francisco and other cities with upcoming festivals in Los Angeles, New York, Toronto, London, and Vancouver.


The Crowdfunding Society has been formed since both established filmmakers and film students from universities all around the U.S. and other countries are increasingly looking to crowdfunding to find backing for their projects. With over countless films successfully funded through crowdfunding portals such as Kickstarter and IndieGoGo, Hollywood is now actively using this approach to fund new films. For example, director/writer Rob Thomas raised over $5.7 million for "Veronica Mars" while Zach Braff’s feature "Wish I Was Here" raised $2.6 million in donations. Concurrently, newer filmmakers and students have funded films for as little as $5000-30,000.
Knowing what to do and not to do is critical, because as the CrowdFunding Society organizer Sydney Armani states: "I see in these directors, writers, and cinematographers, the same core passion for innovation. Many are not only filmmakers but entrepreneurs struggling to find financial backing, and crowdfunding done right can help them break through with enough funds to produce their film," says ICFFF's   Sydney Armani organizer and publisher of CrowdfundBeat.
Many newcomers to crowdfunding don’t know what to do in order to be successful, and the CrowdFunding Film Festival will feature a series of speakers to help filmmakers achieve success, since on average, only 40-50% of filmmakers do gain the necessary financing through crowdfunding. One such speaker based in San Francisco is independent screenplay writer and film producer who has produced over 60 short films, and has published over 50 books with major publishers. She will be speaking on "What It Takes to Succeed and Not Fail in Crowdfunding," drawing on her recent book: "Finding Funds for Your Film or TV Project," published by Hal Leonard, a publisher specializing in entertainment.
Scott, who is the co-chair for the San Francisco branch of the CrowdFunding society will also draw on her experience in creating and promoting her recently launched crowdfunding campaign for a very timely film. Scott will be using examples from the campaign to illustrate what to do and not do to prepare a crowdfunding website and promote it to others to get backing. On festival video showcase, Eckhart Tolle joins filmmaker Barnet Bain to discuss his new project "Milton’s Secret" based on Eckhart’s book by the same name.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

PayPal Frozen Accounts Reveal Crowdfunding Growing Pains

PayPal Frozen Accounts Reveal Crowdfunding Growing Pains


Robert J. Mullins CFB Sr.Staff writer
The controversy over PayPal freezing funds of crowdfunded startups has given the payments processing site a black eye, but a closer look shows it’s just an indication of how existing financial institutions have to adapt to the nascent crowdfunding phenomenon.
PayPal is in the process of reviewing and revising its policies related to accepting funds from donors to projects that use crowdfunding platforms such as Kickstarter, Indiegogo and others to collect funds. When a donor gives money to a startup through those platforms, PayPal processes the payments that go into specific projects.
Payments processing firms like PayPal, which is owned by eBay, are subject to some of the same regulations that companies like Visa and MasterCard have to follow, which are designed to protect consumers. And like so many scams that proliferate on the Internet, sites like PayPal have to be on the lookout for fraud.
Lately, PayPal has frozen some of the accounts of crowdfunded projects because of questions about their validity. According to news reports, companies subject to their funds being frozen include the wearable glasses maker GlassUp, a gaming company call Red Thread Games and an e-mail tools company called Mailpile. Each of them had their funds frozen for a time over the last two months, generating plenty of criticism for PayPal.
In a blog post dated Sept. 11, Tomer Barel, vice president of risk management for PayPal, tried to explain PayPal’s position on the issue and that it is reviewing its policies.
“There are unique regulatory and risk aspects inherent to this new way to raise money from supporters around the world,” Barel wrote. “Because the model is so new, it is potentially open to abuse. PayPal has a responsibility to ensure that the system remains secure, in compliance … and that consumers who contribute to these campaigns understand where their money is going.”
Contacted this week by CrowdFundBeat, a spokeswoman for PayPal said the review is still underway.
Commenters to Barel’s post were not in a charitable mood.
“Perhaps it’s time to get your priorities straight and deal with issues that cause real harm to the community,” wrote one poster. Said another: “The problem … is that you collect tens of thousands of dollars of other people’s money, and THEN decide to just hold onto it. That’s exactly as bad as a completely fraudulent crowdfund.”
But even one of PayPal’s competitors says there are legitimate reasons why PayPal would have concerns. However, Bill Clerico, co-founder and CEO of WePay, said he thinks his company has a better approach to studying certain suspicious transactions and quickly letting the legitimate ones go through.
Payments processors are subject to state, U.S. and international regulations governing such transactions, said Clerico. In addition, these companies are subject to Payment Card Industry (PCI) compliance, an industry group headed by Visa, MasterCard and others.
Clerico understands why PayPal would be suspicious seeing
Bill Clerico, CEO of WePay
Bill Clerico, CEO of WePay
a crowdfund site suddenly have its funding skyrocket from zero to $1 million in just a few days and want to put the brakes on.
“Crowdfunding is sort of this new area of payment processing and it’s not really clear how it fits into the existing regulatory framework, and so they are still trying to figure that out,” he said.
Processing systems also have to be on the lookout for fraud, just as the public in general has to be wary of e-mail scams. In the wake of natural disasters like Hurricane Sandy and tragedies like the Boston Marathon bombing, Web scams proliferated online disguised as fundraisers for victims of those calamities. Frauds can exploit crowdfunding sites, too, said Clerico.
WePay offers an open application program interface (API) that crowdfunding platforms can use to set up a simple but secure way of accepting crowdfund payments and verifying their legitimacy. Clerico says WePay has been processing such payments securely for almost two years and that it gets more of its business from crowdfunding than does PayPal. Because a smaller percentage of PayPal’s processing is for crowdfunding sites, it may take it more time to support those payments securely.
WePay is to announce Oct. 21 that it processes $1.5 million in payments per day to crowdfunding platforms such as GoFundMe, CustomMade, Bookfresh and Soldsie.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

5 Reasons Why You Should Crowdfund Your Tech Startup

Share on facebookShare on twitterShare on emailShare on pinterest_shareMore Sharing Services 0 Photo by Daily Crowdsource Photo by Daily Crowdsource By Solomon Nabatiyan. Most startup companies usually face a lot of glitches especially in the initial phase of setting up a business. As a startup tech company, you may have a world-changing product and are ready for business to bring it to the world. But if you cannot manage to obtain the funding you need to get up and running, the product is as good as nothing. As an entrepreneur, it is also equally important for you to make people see what makes your idea so special. If you cannot do so, the greatest of ideas and plans can come crashing down. Crowdfunding is a unique solution that has already helped numerous entrepreneurs and their startup companies have access to that all important launch pad for their products. You can truly maximize your chances of success by using a crowdfunding platform for project fundraising, particularly for technology products and services. The following are 5 significant benefits startups enjoy by using crowdfunding services. No Dependence on Banks Applying to a bank for a loan is a tedious process. Getting bank loans for innovative ideas is not all that easy and these days requires a spotless credit history and a lot of convincing. Then there is the hassle of collateral, high rates of interest etc. making it a costly and risky proposition. On the other hand, with crowdfunding, you can always share your idea through large inter-connected networks of relevant supporters and backers such as social media tools. If you present and spread the word about your startup and its product/service well enough, you can be rest assured that the contributions will flow in. At this stage of your project, all of your activity also serves as free marketing and the building of a fundamental support base that you can draw on much later on as your business develops. Free Publicity and Press As if simple and straightforward, no-strings attached funding was not enough, with crowdfunding, you can also reap the benefits of free press. Once your project starts making a name for itself and becomes popular, you can leave it up to bloggers, online papers and other forms of media to publicize your cause on your behalf. While other entrepreneurs can be found scrambling for this kind of publicity, through crowdfunding you will get free access to it in addition to a contribution stream of revenue to help our startup during its leanest times when operations are just getting underway. Validation of Your Idea As an entrepreneur and new startup, it is not just enough for you and your closest circle to appreciate your idea, technology and vision for a product or service. If others, particularly your intended customer base, does not see sense in you or your products, it will ultimately not sell. As a result, every contribution you collect towards your crowdfunding project is like a vote of validation for your idea. Total Control Using crowdfunding to collect contributions from people who support your idea and believe in it is one of the biggest advantages of using this method. This is always a better option than going about the old fashioned way and taking the assistance of investors who over the past few years have become increasingly demanding, short-term oriented, bottom-line driven and uncompassionate to the original founders of a company or inventors behind it. As crowdfunding does not impose you restrictions and never tells you how to run your business or ask you to give up anything in return for the contributions you collect, you can always exercise more control in executing your project and assure a more successful transition from a new startup to established firm. Street Credibility Once you are able to run a successful project on a crowdfunding site, your credibility in the market is bound to rise. This will help you gain extra leverage when going for future funding projects or funding from banks or traditional investors for big-growth spurts. Keep in mind that once you have a number of people who believe in your company and ideas, they will influence others as well and help spread the gospel. A healthy chain reaction of recognition, influence and popularity are all what crowdfunding campaigns can enable. The best way to get started is to browse and chose one of a handful of recently launched crowdfunding platforms devoted to and specialized in technology startup fundraising. They are the key in providing entrepreneurs the power to raise funds specific to their technology projects. source

Monday, September 30, 2013

ShopLocket Launches Pre-Order Platform To Help Bridge The Gap Between Crowdfunding And Shipping

shoplocketThere’s an increasing opportunity in helping hardware startups bring their products to market, and Toronto ecommerce startup ShopLocket has identified a key area in that process where they might be able to help out, and pick up some new business in the process. The company is introducing its new pre-order platform at the Glazed Wearable conference in San Francisco today, giving hardware startups and product-based companies a way to book sales of devices before they ever hit the production lines.
Often companies like Pebble will launch on Kickstarter, bringing in considerable interest from an early adopter crowd during a campaign that could span a month or two. But then there’s a big gap between the end of those campaigns and the actual ship date of their product, and in that gap you run the risk of losing a lot of the publicity steam built up during the crowdfunding phase.
Pebble launched its own pre-order portal, and others like the Thalmic Labs MYO armband just started right out the gate with an open-ended pre-order period, but often that can take a lot of work and building your own platform, as Lockitron did. ShopLocket wants to make all of those things easier, adding support for pre-order campaigns to its lightweight storefront platform.
“ShopLocket can either be used as an alternative to Kickstarter or Indiegogo for an initial launch, [or] it can be used after a crowdfunding campaign to allow companies to continue collecting pre-orders,” ShopLocket founder and CEO Katherine Hague explained in an interview. “When used as a replacement to traditional crowdfunding platforms, ShopLocket could be considered an elegant plug-and-play alternative to something like Selfstarter [Lockitron's in-house tool, which it released for others to use].”
Already, ShopLocket’s platform has been quietly helping companies debut and build continued interest in their products. ECG identification tech wearable Nymi used it to fund their device Kickstarter-style, and others including Nomiku and GlassUp are now running their pre-order campaigns with it, after having successfully raised funds on other platforms. Selfstarter campaigns require ample setup and knowledge of code, while ShopLocket’s system is fully customizable with a graphic interface that even total coding amateurs can manage.
To power the payments part of its new service, ShopLocket has turned to Stripe, which it chose over competing options like PayPal and Amazon Payments for a number of reasons.
“For our sellers, the process of creating a Stripe account is incredibly easy [and] we are in the process of further optimizing the seller flow, so that sellers don’t even have to sign up with Stripe until they actually want to start charging on pre-orders — something not possible with PayPal or Amazon,” Hague said. “For buyers, Stripe is actually a more accessible platform than PayPal or Amazon, which generally require accounts to make a purchase. Stripe will allow buyers to checkout with a simple credit card form, no account required.”
Stripe also offers native design integration, so buyers aren’t shuttled away to a separate site and then shuttled back in to complete the transaction, which is a big advantage in terms of decreasing cart abandonment rates and generally providing an experience that businesses can control in every respect.
I wondered whether this emerging market segment might not be a little too niche for ShopLocket to focus much attention on, but Hague says there’s plenty of interest already, and that’s also growing at a rapid clip. So far, they’ve found over 500 projects launched launched in products and hardware every month, which represent tens of millions of dollars raised.
“This represents only a small segment of the overall market,” Hague adds. “For these companies, ShopLocket is a better solution than a traditional hosted storefront for the next phase of their business. We let them use any website, including their existing one, to grow from pre-orders to a full shopping cart over time. We believe that the next billion dollar storefront platform will be born from serving this rapidly growing market of new product creators.”
Source: Darrell Etherington – TechCrunch
Link: http://techcrunch.com/2013/09/30/shoplocket-launches-pre-order-platform-to-help-bridge-the-gap-between-crowdfunding-and-shipping/

Friday, September 13, 2013

PayPal updates its policies to play nice with crowdfunding

PayPal updates its policies to play nice with crowdfunding

Aesthetic Procedures Can be Paid for Through Crowdfunding with New Website

Aesthetic Procedures Can be Paid for Through Crowdfunding with New Website

CrowdFunding Beat News: CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of...

CrowdFunding Beat News: CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of...: CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of UC Berkeley and Crowdfund Capital Advisors

CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of UC Berkeley and Crowdfund Capital Advisors

CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of UC Berkeley and Crowdfund Capital Advisors

CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of UC Berkeley and Crowdfund Capital Advisors

CrowdFundBeat Live Interview with Richard Swart of UC Berkeley and Crowdfund Capital Advisors

Monday, September 2, 2013

crowfunding has changed the fashion industry


The fashion industry is very competitive and challenging for aspiring designers who want to break into this field. It is so vicious that it is almost impossible for startups to get financial aid. This is where crowdfunding comes in. Crowdfunding enables fashion designers to get their works notice and receive funding. This article is going to discuss the ways crowdfunding has changed the fashion industry:-

Promoting newer and creative designs

The traditional or mainstream individuals in the fashion world usually tend to focus on promoting high-end fashion designs. Crowdfunding has created a platform for designers to come up with newer and creative styles such as eco-friendly pieces. A few designers who have gained momentum using this method are The Versalette and {R}evolution Apparel.

Creating platforms for freelance designers

The Web is a powerful tool and with a click, any designer can spread the word and promote their pieces. Crowdfunding enables freelance designers to gain a huge customer base even if they do not have any connections in the industry. This has vastly impacted the creation of various t-shirt designs. Some successful examples are Beast Clothing and Cameesa, a Zazzle affiliate.

Buyers are the decision makers

Crowdfunding has also given more flexibility in the fashion industry whereby the power shifts to the buyers and no longer solely rest on the designers. A number of designs will be submitted onto crowdfunding websites such as Kickstarter and interested investors can back the project. If the funding goal is reached, these investors will receive the desired pieces plus, a small percentage from future sales. Therefore, potential buyers have the freedom to choose what they want instead of going to a shop and pick up a generic piece.

Ability for companies to cut cost

Crowdfunding has revolutionized the fashion industry in a number of significant ways. Besides funding and building a platform for a plethora of emerging as well as independent designers, crowdfunding offers established companies the opportunity to gather feedbacks from consumers through a voting or liking system. Based on the demands, companies can choose to only produce designs that are in demand. Getting rid of unpredictability in sourcing materials enables companies to cut their losses. Vivien Westwood, are you paying attention?


Although crowdfunding is beginning to change the face of the fashion industry, unfortunately, a recent survey shows the fashion category still gross the lowest success rate on Kickstarter. Perhaps, it’s time for fashion designers to move with the flow. Come on, people. Chop! Chop!

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Crowdfunding Education

Devin Thorpe with GradSave CEO crowdfunding education


Live Interview 9:00 AM PST
GradSave makes receiving college savings gifts easy.
By linking directly to a college savings account, GradSave makes it easy for friends & family to contribute to a child’s college savings. Sign-up is free, and a parent has complete control over their child’s profile.
GradSave doesn’t charge fees for giving or receiving gifts. Learn more.

gradsave

marcos_cordero

Marcos Cordero, CEO & Chief GradSaver: Prior to GradSave, Marcos had a successful career in management consulting, primarily in the Strategy and Operations Group at Deloitte Consulting, where he advised a variety of Fortune 500 clients. He has a background in entrepreneurship and management consulting, having founded, a software platform for environmental sustainability, providing green business credentials for a variety of businesses. Prior to that he had a successful career in management consulting in the Strategy and Operations Group at Deloitte Consulting, where he advised a variety of Fortune 500 clients. Marcos holds a BS in mechanical engineering from MIT and an MBA from Harvard Business School. He is quoted frequently on college savings and crowdfunding articles. When he’s not busy leading the GradSave troops he is an avid beach volleyball player.
Marcos got started in the college savings space in 2012 when he wanted an easy way to give to his goddaughter. Since then, GradSave has helped over 9,000 families nationwide save for college. He also led the acquisition of Savingforcollege.com, the leading information site for college savings.
DevinThorpeDevin Thorpe thinks he is the luckiest person alive. After being “let go” from the best job he’d ever had—as the Chief Financial Officer of the multinational food and beverage company MonaVie—he and his wife ended up living in China for a year where he wrote Your Mark On The World and embarked on the career he’d always wanted yet hadn’t dared dream.
Now, as an author, a popular guest speaker and Forbes contributor, Devin is devoted full time to championing social good. His current life isn’t much like his past.
As an entrepreneur, Devin ran—at separate times—a boutique investment banking firm and a small mortgage company. He served as the Treasurer for the multinational vitamin manufacturer USANA Health Sciences years before becoming CFO for MonaVie. Over his career he led or advised on the successful completion of $500 million in transactions.
Devin squeezed in two brief stints in government, including two years working for Jake Garn on the U.S. Senate Banking Committee Staff and another year working for an independent state agency called USTAR, where he helped foster technology entrepreneurship during Governor Jon Huntsman’s administration. Devin is proud to have graduated from the University of Utah David Eccles School of Business, which recognized him as a Distinguished Alum in 2006. He also earned an MBA at Cornell University where he ran the student newspaper, Cornell Business.
Today, Devin channels the idealism of his youth with the loving support of his wife, Gail. Their son Dayton is a PhD candidate in Physics at UC Berkeley (and Devin rarely misses an opportunity to mention that).
For your Crowdfund Event coverage - LiveCrowdFund.TV

Crowdfunding should startups and entrepreneurs use AlumVest?

What is AlumVest?

AlumVest is a rewards and equity based crowdfunding platform that connects entrepreneurs (“Entrepreneurs”) from leading educational institutions with alumni and peer investors and supporters (“Funders”). We are launching our rewards based platform first, followed by our equity-based platform, which will initially be available to accredited investors, and subsequently will become available to unaccredited investors following regulatory changes in 2013.

Why did you launch AlumVest?

Our mission was born from meeting with many smart and driven entrepreneurs within our schools and alumni networks whose ideas we eagerly wanted to back and support. Our goal is to create a platform that connects alumni and peers with entrepreneurs from their affiliated school and peer networks to provide that crucial seed capital that seems to be missing in the “normal” early-stage fundraising environment. We also want to connect Entrepreneurs with mentors who want to help them succeed and create a network of opportunities.

Why should startups and entrepreneurs use AlumVest?

Funding and talent are two key ingredients for successful startups, yet both can be extremely difficult and time consuming to acquire. Tapping into the pool of alumni and peer networks, AlumVest is an efficient and cost effective way for early stage startups to raise seed capital and secure other critical resources, such as talent, mentorship and advise. We believe that our school- and network-centric approach can help startups effectively leverage strong ties that alumni and students develop to their alma mater, and the shared connections that members of the same network possess, and therefore, effectively mobilize more Funders.
alumvest1

lingLING CHEN

Founder/CEO

IDG, comScore, Groupon
Founded profitable education company & cross-border consultancy
Duke ‘06; Columbia ’14, MBA

sashaSASHA ABLOVATSKIY

COO/Chief Legal Officer

9+ years of legal practice in securities, corporate and m&a law at two major NY law firms
BA in Economics, UCLA ‘01; JD, Univ. of San Diego ’04

DevinThorpeDevin Thorpe thinks he is the luckiest person alive. After being “let go” from the best job he’d ever had—as the Chief Financial Officer of the multinational food and beverage company MonaVie—he and his wife ended up living in China for a year where he wrote Your Mark On The World and embarked on the career he’d always wanted yet hadn’t dared dream.
Now, as an author, a popular guest speaker and Forbes contributor, Devin is devoted full time to championing social good. His current life isn’t much like his past.
As an entrepreneur, Devin ran—at separate times—a boutique investment banking firm and a small mortgage company. He served as the Treasurer for the multinational vitamin manufacturer USANA Health Sciences years before becoming CFO for MonaVie. Over his career he led or advised on the successful completion of $500 million in transactions.
Devin squeezed in two brief stints in government, including two years working for Jake Garn on the U.S. Senate Banking Committee Staff and another year working for an independent state agency called USTAR, where he helped foster technology entrepreneurship during Governor Jon Huntsman’s administration. Devin is proud to have graduated from the University of Utah David Eccles School of Business, which recognized him as a Distinguished Alum in 2006. He also earned an MBA at Cornell University where he ran the student newspaper, Cornell Business.
Today, Devin channels the idealism of his youth with the loving support of his wife, Gail. Their son Dayton is a PhD candidate in Physics at UC Berkeley (and Devin rarely misses an opportunity to mention that).

Crowdfunding Beat Exclusive Interview: Devin Thorpe with social entrepreneur Lesley Mansford CEO of Razoo


What is Razoo?

More than a Website

Razoo is a movement of people who want to make generosity a part of everyday life.

Living Generously

Generosity is win-win. Not only does it make the world a better place, it also makes us happy and fulfilled – especially when we give to the people and causes we care about most.

lesley-mansford-115px

Lesley Mansford, CEO: I want to make a difference by democratizing philanthropy so that everyone can be a philanthropist.
Lesley is a seasoned GM, marketer and entrepreneur with over 20 years of experience in interactive entertainment with companies like Electronic Arts. She was co-founder and COO of pogo.com, the largest online casual games community which was acquired by EA in 2001.
Her passions include food, sustainability and women’s entrepreneurship. Currently she is on the board of the Leadership Institute for the Ecology and the Economy, on the board of advisors for Smart Gardener and is an active volunteer for The Women’s Initiative. Lesley graduated from Bristol University, England and lives in the San Francisco Bay area.
DevinThorpeDevin Thorpe thinks he is the luckiest person alive. After being “let go” from the best job he’d ever had—as the Chief Financial Officer of the multinational food and beverage company MonaVie—he and his wife ended up living in China for a year where he wrote Your Mark On The World and embarked on the career he’d always wanted yet hadn’t dared dream.
Now, as an author, a popular guest speaker and Forbes contributor, Devin is devoted full time to championing social good. His current life isn’t much like his past.
As an entrepreneur, Devin ran—at separate times—a boutique investment banking firm and a small mortgage company. He served as the Treasurer for the multinational vitamin manufacturer USANA Health Sciences years before becoming CFO for MonaVie. Over his career he led or advised on the successful completion of $500 million in transactions.
Devin squeezed in two brief stints in government, including two years working for Jake Garn on the U.S. Senate Banking Committee Staff and another year working for an independent state agency called USTAR, where he helped foster technology entrepreneurship during Governor Jon Huntsman’s administration. Devin is proud to have graduated from the University of Utah David Eccles School of Business, which recognized him as a Distinguished Alum in 2006. He also earned an MBA at Cornell University where he ran the student newspaper, Cornell Business.
Today, Devin channels the idealism of his youth with the loving support of his wife, Gail. Their son Dayton is a PhD candidate in Physics at UC Berkeley (and Devin rarely misses an opportunity to mention that).

Crowdfunding The Wisdom of Yoda takes over the 3D Printing market

By: Robert Mullins, Crowdfundbeat.com  Sr. Staff Writer

Startups in the 3D printing space advertise their device capabilities with samples of products like smartphone cases, gears, or replicas of the Eiffel Tower, but if you want to be taken seriously as a printer maker, you’ve got to give people Yoda.
“For some reason, the Yoda head is kind of the symbol of what your 3D printer can do,” said Braydon Moreno, CEO of the crowdfunded startup RoBo 3D. “Everyone across the board is saying ‘Let me see your Yoda.’”
A review of crowd-funded sites on Kickstarter reveals at least five companies seeking funding for their startups that feature a bust of the iconic Star Wars character.
It’s as if the Jedi Grand Master is imparting fundamental wisdom to these entrepreneurs: “A 3D printer you will not sell, if a Yoda head you do not make.”
While such trinkets may be must haves for touting 3D printer capabilities – like the detail in Yoda’s craggy face — they really just scratch the surface of the potential for the 3D printer market and for the appeal the technology must have to generate donations from the crowd.
Startup executives, industry analysts and others say the real potential for 3D printing is in making precision components, medical devices, prosthetics and other such products.
The prevalence of toys like chess pieces, geometric spheres or Yodas among startups trying to raise money is just one more indicator of the hype cycle that is underway in 3D printing in particular and crowdfunding in general.
“Like any market, when it starts, there are people who want to play around with it,” said Keith Kmetz, a vice president and analyst at IDC whose area of research is 3D printing, although not crowdfunded startups. But the future of 3D printing, he said, “Is not the hobbyist market where they take a bobble-head [doll] and make a statue version of it.”
Instead, said Kmetz, the more promising market is for precision-made 3D products built through computer-aided-design (CAD) and for use in the automotive and aerospace markets. He’s also seen 3D printers used to create molds in dentistry for making crowns and bridges and in health care for making prosthetics.
Yoda in grey copy
Photo Courtesy of RoBo 3D
Although sites like Kickstarter and Indiegogo feature numbers of 3D startups seeking investment dollars, and while there’s a lot of buzz about them, the market has a number of established players, although not the ones you might think of.
The two leading makers of 3D printers today are 3D Systems and Stratasys, which Kmetz described as the “Hertz and Avis” of the 3D printer market. The two, both publicly traded, specialize in 3D printers for commercial and industrial markets, though 3D Systems also is pursuing the consumer market.
Noticeably absent from 3D printing are the well-established 2D printer makers such as Hewlett-Packard, Lexmark and Xerox.
HP had a manufacturing and distribution agreement with Stratasys to sell its 3D printers as part of the HP Designjet product portfolio, but that agreement expired at the end of 2012 and was not renewed, HP told CrowdFundBeat.
“We applaud the pioneers who challenge the current set of 3D print technologies in specialized and niche manufacturing,” HP said in a
statement.
Lexmark stated “we are not focused on the 3D printing market,” while Xerox, according to news reports, is researching 3D printing technology at its Palo Alto Research Center in California.
So while 3D Systems and Stratasys lead the market today, there are plenty of opportunities for the crowdfunded startups such as RoBo 3D, given that the commercial printers from the incumbents range in price from $20,000 to $250,000, said CEO Moreno.
RoBo 3D has been shipping a desktop 3D printer since July with a list price of $599 or $699, depending on the features, said Moreno.
A company profile on its Kickstarter page compares the RoBo 3D’s specifications to those of a printer priced at $2,200 from MakerBot, which Stratasys recently acquired.
Photo Courtesy of RoBo 3D
Photo Courtesy of RoBo 3D
RoBo 3D raised $649,000 from 1,251 backers in just 45 days ending Feb. 1 and is currently shipping about 10 printers a day, said Moreno. Like other 3D printer startups, RoBo 3D’s machines are based on an open source design so as not to infringe on patents owned by 3D Systems and Stratasys, he said.
While confident of RoBo 3D’s prospects in the space, Moreno sees a glut of crowdfunded 3D printer startups coming onto the market. He and others in crowdfunding say the hype cycle is driven by, among other factors, a shout-out that 3D printing received from President Barack Obama in his State of the Union address back in February. In that speech, the president touted a state-of-the-art lab in Youngstown, Ohio, “where new workers are mastering 3D printing that has the potential to revolutionize the way we make almost everything.”
But 3D printing is far from becoming mainstream, despite a high profile endorsement from Obama, wrote Vivek Wadhwa, a technology entrepreneur and academic, in an Aug. 2 Washington Post column. He doesn’t see mass production of 3D products taking off until well into the next decade. The major drawback to 3D printing today is that it takes so long to make an object; it takes several hours to make something that’s just the size of a breadbox and that the time it takes to create something increases exponentially with its size. An object twice the size of a breadbox would take eight times longer to complete and cost eight times more. An object three times the size of a breadbox would take 27 times longer to make and cost 27 times more.
“That is the way exponential technologies usually go,” Wadhwa wrote. “Expectations get raised when people first read about a technological breakthrough. Then nothing seems to happen because the growth curve for technologies in their early stages is more or less flat. Disappointment
sets in and the blame game begins.”
[Source: Robert Mullins, CFB Sr. Staff Writer]