Image: Copyright Emma & Margo Gibbs
How To Successfully Use Crowdfunding for Your Book Project
by Emma & Margo Gibbs
by Emma & Margo Gibbs
Crowdfunding, the process of raising a targeted amount of capital through numerous individual donations, is arguably one of the most empowering ways to fund an idea. No other approach enables you to engage directly with your audience while you’re developing, honing and creating your product.
Last
year, my mother Margo and I decided to crowdfund for our eBook "Mirabella the
Mermaid Detective." The first in a series of eBooks for 7 to 11 year olds base
on a story mom used to tell me growing up.
Mirabella is a mermaid who loves
exploring, solving puzzles, helping others and going on adventures with her two
best friends, Seamese the lionfish and Luna the cuttlefish. Set in the
fictitious underwater city of Muria on the Great Barrier Reef, the Mirabella
stories are full of fun, color and excitement.
Strong-willed, smart, loyal,
caring and passionate, Mirabella is an engaging role model who just happens to
be a mermaid.
We’d written the manuscript and
chosen a fantastic illustrator, but because we wanted to self publish we needed
some financial support. So, we decided to raise some of money that we needed
through crowfunding.
After a month of relentless
campaigning through Pozible.com and thanks to some incredibly generous support,
we were successful. However, we had to work really hard to reach our target.
Here are some of the lessons we
learned along the way.
Crowdfunding is not ‘easy money’
There
seems to be a misconception out there that crowdfunding is a simple way to
raise money; that all you need to do is create a project profile then sit back
and wait for the cash to roll in. It’s the opposite. Every day campaigners must
think of new ways to promote their project, whether it’s call outs on
social media, personalized emails, artful pleading with a media outlet to
support your campaign project or a flashmob, there's always going to be
something more to do. The projects that fail are the ones that don’t engage
with their audience but expect their audience to engage with them.
Connect, don’t broadcast.
One
of the mistakes a lot of crowdfunding campaigns make is broadcasting the plea
for money. Picture this, you have a campaign you’re running with someone,
you're both on Facebook, and the campaign has a Facebook page. Now imagine
sharing the same status across those three profiles twice a day, remembering
that most of your friends will be connected to at least two or three of those
pages. That’s a lot of news feed saturation, which can quickly become very
annoying.
The
best campaigns call supporters to action, with a funny quip, a meme, or a
personalized story. With Mirabella, we released update videos throughout the
campaign, and gave supporters a sneak peak of illustrations and the
introduction to the book. We showed them what their support was enabling us to
do. Find your angle, personalize your approach and always remember to connect.
Plan your campaign.
Crowdfunding
takes real commitment. You’ll become a compulsive checker of emails and consume
all conversation with talk of your campaign. That’s why it’s important to plan.
Decide how much time you can commit to your campaign, without it taking away
from actually developing the project you're trying to fund. Weigh-up how long
you think it will take you to reach your target, how much time you can commit
to promoting it and identify a good end date (Sunday’s are normally bad, as are
public holidays).
Identify
and create a promotion schedule, establish who you’re going to contact and in
what way you’re going to contact them before you get started. Essentially it’s
like marketing any product, without a plan you’re unlikely to gain traction
with your audience.
For
Mirabella, we campaigned for a month. We managed to raise our money and in
reality couldn't have campaigned for any longer, but it came right down to the
wire because we set our target higher than was necessary.
Set a realistic goal.
Most
crowdfunding platforms run on the all-or-nothing model, which means that a
campaign doesn’t get anything if it fails to reach it’s target in the allotted
time. Whilst this seems like a stressful situation, it has a lot of positives.
All-or-nothing means that your supporters have a greater sense of urgency to
see you succeed, so they’ll share it with their networks because they love the
idea and want to see your success. It’s like a ticking clock device in the
movie.
With
this in mind, it’s important to set a realistic financial goal. Ask yourself,
‘What is the minimum amount of money I need to do this’? Whatever your answer,
that’s the amount you should aim for. It’s really easy to get carried away
likening your idea to the huge success stories on Kickstarter, Pozible or
Indiegogo, and chances are your idea is probably as good. Unfortunately, there
is no sure-fire way of ensuring that your idea reaches as many people or
resonates in the same way. Have a realistic aim because it’s always better to
be pleasantly surprised, than to be too ambitious and walk away with nothing
more than the experience.
Mirabella’s
goal was $2,000 more than we originally intended to aim for, and it got right
down to the wire. We were expecting the idea to take off and resonate with
people well outside of our social networks but unfortunately that didn't
happen. Thanks to some really supportive friends and family we got there,
but only just. If we had stuck with our original target of $4,000, about 2/3 of
the way through the campaign we would have hit our goal, enabling us to gain
more promotion as a success story and likely raise more money than we did.
Think about your audience.
Who
do you want to connect with and why? Mirabella is for 7 - 11 year olds but it’s
very difficult to market directly to them. Instead we chose to focus the
parents, highlighting the human interest story of being a mother-daughter
writing team, Mirabella being a strong role-model, and also the environmental
and reef conservation elements woven throughout the story. Parents told their
kids and friends, who in turn told their friends and this ultimately saw our
campaign become successful.
As
a successful crowdfunding campaigner, few things give me the same pleasure as
supporting a campaign I believe in. It’s addictive, because it enables me to
see an idea be born and evolve thanks in part, to my contribution. With
crowdfunding, I get to be part of something and see wonderful projects succeed.
Crowdfunding
is one of the most intense ways to raise capital, because to be successful a
campaigner must give themselves to their audience. There’s no third party to be
a buffer, no taking time off and no games. If you want to succeed, you have to
show your market how much you love what you’re doing by the time and effort you
put in. You must make them want to be part of your brand/product/creative
story. If you succeed and continue to communicate with your backers, you’ll
have an audience of supporters for life.
Crowdfunding
is hard, but it is the most rewarding money you’ll every raise.
Emma
Gibbs is a Pozible Ambassador and the daughter half of the mother-daughter
writing team behind Mirabella the Mermaid Detective.
Margo
& Emma Gibbs are a mother-daughter writing team from the Sunshine Coast in
Queensland, Australia, who have been creating stories together ever-since Emma
was very little. They both love reading, exploring the magical natural world
around them, and secretly both wish that they were mermaids. Mirabella the
Mermaid Detective is their first book and you can buy it here.
If you are signed up for the 2013 Chapter Book Challenge, and you comment on this post by noon GMT March 28th, you will be entered into the drawing to win a copy of "The Secrets of Crowdfunding: A Step-By-Step Guide to Getting the Most from Your Kickstarter Campaign" by Sean Akers.
Wow, congrats on your book! Crowdfunding seems like a lot of hard work, and running a campaign seems exhausting, not sure if I could do it.
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ReplyDeleteCongrats, that's an amazing amount of effort. Would love to have the drive to do something like that!!!!
ReplyDeleteGreat effort
ReplyDelete....i never even thought about funding a book this way!
Kelly mcdonald
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