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The company offers a freemium model, where users can pay to access more content and ask questions
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When I think of crowdfunding sites, the two that come to mind right away are Kickstarter and Indiegogo. There are some difference in how the two operate: both offer a place for creative people to fund their projects, but only Indiegogo also allows for charity and causes, both of which are expressly prohibited on Kickstarter.
Beyond that, though, there is one crucial bit of different between the two: only on Indiegogo can people who start campaigns that fail to meet their goal actually still wind up walking away with money.
The site offers two different types of funding: flexible and fixed. And the amount that the campaign creator will earn depends on which of these two options they pick.
The fixed funding option is the same "all or nothing" type deal that Kickstarter offers: if the campaign does not reach its goal, then the money donated is returned. If it does reach its, then Indiegogo take 4% of what it earned.
Flexible funding, however, means that, no matter what, the creator of the campaign will make money. How much they pay Indiegogo, however, depends on if the campaign meet its goal. If it does, then they pay the same 4% as the fixed funding option. If it doesn't, then they get to keep the money, but have to pay Indiegogo 9% of the donations raised.
The higher fee "encourages campaign owners to set reasonable goals and promote their campaigns," Indiegogo says.
The idea behind flexible funding comes around, again, to what separates the two companies. This option wouldn't work for a campaign designed for a project, which would require a minimum to get off the ground; if that campaign fails, then that money will be wasted. Flexible funding does work in situations where the amount raised does not matter, as in someone needing to pay medical bills. In that case, just getting any amount would help.
In addition to those fees, campaign creators also have to 3% to 5% for credit card or PayPal processing, which varies depending on their financial institution.
If they run a non-US campaign and have raised funds in USD via Direct Credit Card, Indiegogo also charges a $25 wire fee.
Launched in 2008 Indiegogo says that is has hosted more than 300,000 campaigns in that time, with more than 15 million people visiting the site every month, and about 7,000 campaigns live on the site at any given time.
47% of campaigns that reach their goals on Indiegogo are run by women, and about 30% of Indiegogo campaigns are launched outside the United States.
The company has raised over $56.5 million in venture funding, from investors that have included KleinerPerkins Caufield & Byers, Metamorphic Ventures, ff Venture Capital, Virgin Group founder Sir Richard Branson; Affirm CEO Max Levchin; Yahoo's chairman of the board Maynard Webb; and Draper Fisher Jurvetson Founding Partner Tim Draper.
The company offers a freemium model, where users can pay to access more content and ask questions
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IndieGoGo is a collaborative funding platform. Anyone with an idea (creative, cause, or entrepreneurial) can create a campaign on IndieGoGo, offer perks and raise the funds needed for execution - all while keeping 100% ownership. Customers range from artists (musicians, writers, filmmakers, etc.) who pre-sell their work as a way to fund it, to people raising money on behalf of charities to small businesses offering limited edition items or access to fund their start-up capital.
IndieGoGo launched the beta in 2008 within the film vertical. By 2009 IndieGoGo became the largest online film funding platform and brand. In 2010, IndieGoGo focused on further developing its funding tools and opened the platform to more verticals. Recent growth has been excellent at IndieGoGo including:
* Revenue up 24x in last year
* Funding projects from 134 countries
* 11,000+ projects
* Webby Award Nomination (versus Flickr, Vimeo & Digg)