Use psychology in crowdfunding campaigns
Use psychology in crowdfunding campaigns
1. Reduce the consumer's perceived risk by choosing an all-or-nothing model that returns the money to them if you fail to hit the target.
A crowdfunding model study analyzed 47,139 campaigns from Indiegogo, a crowdfunding platform, with the option to choose either KIA (Keep it All) or AON (All or Nothing) models. Even though most people chose KIA projects, AON projects were more successful:
2. Include a breakdown of your budget to enhance transparency and trust.
Most project creators describe their projects using aggregate framing. They need a certain amount of money to accomplish a project. With that approach, potential donors can’t appreciate the value of their donation. They can’t envision the specific benefits that they’re providing. Separate the project into specific costs. Specify how much money will be attributed to each aspect of your project. When you provide those financial breakdowns and roadmaps, potential donors are more likely to fund your project.
3. Convey your reputation by including relevant information about your education, industry experience, and past successes.
Guerini, Franzoni, and Rossi-Lamastra summed it up in their paper on crowdfunding success: “Potential backers are usually unsure of proponents’ abilities and do not know whether proponents are trustable… Therefore, considerations of quality and trustworthiness are important when deciding to support a project.” Donors, someone they’ve never met before, must feel safe giving you their hard-earned money. That’s why you can’t rely on the greatness of your project alone. You also need to convey your personal background and reputation. Digital startups are more likely to secure funding if someone on their founding team holds a doctoral degree. Other research has found similar effects with MBA degrees. Have you ever launched and completed a similar project to the one that you’re promoting? If so, then mention it. That past success will make potential donors more likely to invest.
4. Contribute to other crowdfunded campaigns to encourage reciprocity.
This has two main facets: Direct reciprocity. If you provide value to someone, that person feels obligated to give back to you. Indirect reciprocity. If you provide value to someone, other people who notice the kind act, feel obligated to give back to you. Indirect reciprocity plays a powerful role in online communities, such as open-source development, and crowdfunding communities are no different. For example, potential donors in the Kickstarter community are more likely to fund your project if you’ve donated to other Kickstarter projects.
5. Trigger their self-awareness by offering eye contact and framing your descriptions in the second person.
Look into the camera when you record your video. When we encounter a pair of eyes, we become self-aware and more likely to engage in prosocial behavior. When filming, do whatever it takes to look into the camera: Use a teleprompter. Memorize your script. Be authentic. You can trigger self-awareness by incorporating 2nd person pronouns like you and your, into your project description. Those self-referencing pronouns cause people to relate your message to their own life, which increases self-awareness. You could also achieve a similar effect by incorporating a narrative into your description. Narratives help overcome resistance in two ways: They reduce the audience’s tendency to counter-argue your message. Your audience identifies with the characters in the narrative, relating the message to their own life.
6. Compare giving with the personal extravagances made by the giver.
We often perform good deeds simply because we feel guilty. Be careful triggering that guilt, though. If you approach this strategy incorrectly, it can backfire. Reference an inexpensive hedonic product to boost people’s intentions to donate. Savary, Goldsmith, and Dhar were collecting donations in a field experiment. Depending on the group, they compared the price of a donation to a specific product: Utilitarian comparison: “Please donate $2 to Doctors without Borders. For reference, this is about the price of a bar of soap.” Hedonic comparison: “Please donate $2 to Doctors without Borders. For reference, this is about the price of a [popular local] cookie.” Hedonic comparisons influence more people to donate. Since those products are associated with self-indulgence, people feel more selfish if they would rather purchase that hedonic product than donate to the cause.
7. Make a personal connection with your audience for a stronger effect.
In another study, the amount of money that people donated to a sick child depended on the amount of information that those people received about the child: When writing copy, reinforce your personal identity. Reveal certain details about yourself: Your name. Your age. Hobbies and interests. A picture. That personal information will strengthen your identity. Suddenly you’re not some random statistic, you’re a real person. With a real person behind the project, potential donors will experience a stronger feeling of guilt and thus, a stronger urge to fund your project. If the platform allows it, include information like: People who have visited this project. People who have liked this project. People who have upvoted this project. When you publicize the identity of potential donors, they feel greater pressure to donate. For example, participants in a dictator game were more likely to play fair when their opponent received a picture of them.
8. Provide rewards that offer public kudos, are tangible and practical and are just plain fun.
Publicize actual donors’ names: People experience conspicuous compassion, and they donate because they want other people to perceive them as compassionate. For example, suppose that you’re crowdfunding a play. In the official program, publicize the names of donors based on their donation amount: High donations: executive producers. Middle donations: producers. Small donations: special thanks. That structure also creates aspirational groups. Potential donors desire to reach the top echelon, so they donate more money. Give rewards that are tangible and practical: a study on crowdfunding motivation found that economic value was one of the strongest motivators for crowdfunding supporters. The researcher found that tangible rewards generated the strongest perception of value. Incorporate many fun reward tiers: Kuppuswamy and Bayus analyzed all Kickstarter projects from 2009 to 2012. They found that successful projects offered a larger number of reward tiers. Incorporate as many valuable rewards as possible, assuming that you can deliver those rewards for a minimal investment. Add new rewards in the final stages: you can generate a more powerful effect by adding new reward tiers, especially toward the final stages of a project. “…the initial reward offered by the campaign may tend to serve as a contrasting reference point, and the additional rewards change funders or potential funders’ perceptions on the campaign and thus affect their pledge decisions.”
9. Attract early donors by sharing your crowdfunding project with your personal network.
Early contributors are vital to a project’s success, as the research on crowdfunding and social capital suggested. The researchers proposed three reasons for that influence: Observational learning. People develop a stronger belief that the project is important. Word-of-mouth. Early backers tell their connections about the project. Helpful feedback. Creators receive useful insights to adjust the project to better fit the needs of potential donors. Share it with your personal network: the majority of crowdfunding donations come from personal or emotional connections with the project creator. In fact, a project’s success is positively correlated with the number of Facebook friends of the project creator. If you’re running a crowdfunding project for a larger business, you might be tempted to only promote that project to your company’s audience. However, in doing so, you’d be excluding the most powerful audience, your personal network. Offer the lowest possible donation: when creating reward tiers, always offer the lowest possible donation, usually $1. Albeit a small donation, you’ll be increasing the total number of backers. That inflated metric, in turn, should help you collect more donations moving forward.