2. Indiegogo
Best for: Companies looking to raise more than $500
Fee structure: Free, prelaunch; 5% of funds raised; 2.9% + .30 per transaction
Noteworthy: Site allows users to launch a campaign with no selection process.
Indiegogo is another popular rewards-based crowdfunding platform where you provide investors with something tangible and non-monetary in exchange for their money. Open to anyone, it touts itself as “where early adopters and innovation seekers find lively, imaginative tech before it hits the mainstream.” Its users are usually developing campaigns for tech innovations, creative works or community projects.
Indiegogo launches around
19,000 campaigns every month. Its backers have raised more than $1 billion for its crowdfunders since its inception in 2008. It provides significant support and guidance to users from idea to market. You have access to creative services and partnerships for:
- Communications
- Production
- Retail
- Distribution
The site offers two primary funding options: fixed and flexible. If you choose fixed funding and don’t achieve your funding goal, all money gets returned to backers. If you meet your goal, you’ll pay the platform
5% of the total and get your money within 15 days.
With flexible funding, you keep whatever you raise, regardless of whether you reach funding objectives. While you must raise a minimum of $500 with either crowdfunding type, you also have the option to keep raising funds after your campaign ends. You do this with its
InDemand feature, and you’re not required to set a new funding goal when you do.
Transaction and processing fees
vary by country, so make sure you know yours before beginning.
3. GoFundMe
Best for: Charitable Causes
Fee structure: No platform fee for organizers, 1.9 to 2.9% +.30 per transaction fee
Noteworthy: Traditional business fundraisers have less success here.
Popular across social media for personal crowdfunding campaigns, GoFundMe can offer benefits for businesses, too. The organizer keeps all the money raised on the donation-based crowdfunding platform minus the transaction fees. Donors are asked to cover those transaction fees so the campaign receives its full donation amount, and many do.
The site’s track record is exceptional. Since its 2010 founding, it’s become one of the world’s largest fundraising platforms. Organizers have raised
$9 billion from over 120 million donations from users in 19 countries.
The campaigns that do best on this site are cause-related organizations and groups.
Non-profit organizations can raise funds through GoFundMe Charity, an enterprise-grade solution that charges no subscription fees.
While this isn’t a common fundraising outlet for startups and businesses, business fundraisers to rescue enterprises have been popular
on the site. Users who are a fit for this model will find support and guidance on the website. The personal stories surrounding each campaign can lead to a robust social media sharing experience. Like most fundraising sites, donors can share your campaign across the social web.
The platform allows users to withdraw funds at any time without affecting the progress meter on their campaign. It takes two to five days for the funds to be deposited into the bank account associated with the campaign. There’s no time limit on how long you can conduct a campaign, but there are withdrawal timelines to prevent funds from getting returned to donors. The site doesn’t charge a platform fee to individuals, businesses or charities using the site, but it does assess a transaction fee of 2.9% +.30 for each donation. Charities pay as low as 1.9% +.30 for each donation made to their organization, depending on the pricing model used.