Unconventional Fundraising from Kickstarter to Car Loans
What if you’ve thought it through and you do need to raise money
somehow? Whenever possible, the best option is your own savings. You’ll
be highly invested in the success of the project, and you won’t be in debt to
anyone else. But if this isn’t possible, you can also consider “crowdraising”
funds for your project through a service such as
Kickstarter.com
. Shannon
Okey did this with a project to boost her craft publishing business. She
asked for $5,000 and received $12,480 in twenty days thanks to a nice
video and well-written copy.
Before going to the masses, Shannon went to her bank for a small loan.
Her business was profitable and promising, with several new publications
coming out over the next year. This wasn’t just any bank. It was a
community bank in Ohio where she had an excellent personal and business
relationship. Shannon was a meticulous bookkeeper with a conservative
attitude toward finances; she brought along detailed sales figures and a clear
plan to repay the money. Unfortunately, when she mentioned “craft
publishing,” she was dead in the water. “They looked at me like I was a
silly, silly woman who couldn’t possibly know anything about running a
business,” she said.
The rejection turned into an opportunity. Taking the project on
Kickstarter generated both funds and widespread interest in the project.
Nearly three hundred backers came through with donations ranging from
$10 to $500, leaving the project fully funded with capital to spare. Oh, and
Shannon was not one for going quietly. After she reached the $10,000 level
in her Kickstarter campaign, she printed out the front page of the site,
wrapped the page around a lollipop, and sent it off to the bank’s
underwriters. “I think they got the message,” she says.
As I collected stories for the book, I was mostly interested in people who
avoided debt completely. But I did hear two fun stories about borrowing
money that I thought were worth sharing. On a flight from Hong Kong to
London, Emma Reynolds and her future business partner Bruce Morton had
an idea for a consultancy that would work with big companies to improve
their staffing and resourcing. They calculated that they would need at least
$17,000 to start the new firm. There was just one problem … or actually,
two: Emma was twenty-three and unlikely to get a business loan, and Bruce
was going through a divorce and would also be a poor candidate for a
business loan. Somewhere during the twelve-hour flight, one of them
realized that although they couldn’t get a business loan, they could probably
get a car loan.
Bruce proceeded to do just that, borrowing $17,000 for a car and then
investing the funds in the business with Emma instead. They paid back the
car loan within ten months, and the bank never found out that there was no
actual car. Now the firm employs twenty people, is highly profitable, and
has multiple offices in four countries.
†
Finally, here’s a fun story from Kristin McNamara, who started a
California gym specializing in climbing:
To fund the latest incarnation of the gym, we called upon the
community to “invest” in us, much like a three-year CD. We offered 3
percent above prime, which is more than you could get then or now,
and people I’ve never even seen at the facility came up with the cash
to get it started. My partner and I, the founders, are the only paid full-
time staff, and we just hired someone to manage the volunteers for us
for a small stipend. Our community fundraising project brought in
$80,000.
As these lessons in improvisation show, if you need to raise money,
there’s more than one way to do it.
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