Thanks to a suggestion by Amy Reusch, instead of having a single thread for Kickstarter projects, to have a sub-forum for ballet fundraising projects. Since these projects can span video, choreography, compositions, live music, research, publications, etc., this sub-forum is under "Everything Else Ballet."
Instead of having one long thread for updates, each project can have its own thread.
All other dance projects, which includes non-ballet projects by ballet dancers and non-ballet projects that hire ballet dancers, should be added to this thread in the Modern and Other Dance forum:
http://balletalert.i...nding-projects/
Both this forum and the Modern and Other Dance thread can contain Kickstarter and other independent backer funding programs, such as IndieGoGo, which, unlike Kickstarter, has an option so that funding is not contingent on meeting a pre-defined goal.
[From the original post]
The way Kickstarter works is:
- Creative person sets up project, including spiel, target amount, deadline (1-60 days), and "rewards", i.e., premiums, which are required, even if they are project credits.
- CP submits project to Kickstarter for review to be sure it meets the project guidelines.
- Kickstarter notifies CP of decision, and if accepted, the project is launched, the person can get try to get everyone to FB and tweet about it, and people can start to donate.
- Donors can give $1 to a lot.
- There's always a running total: if people want to give more than what was asked, they can.
- All pledges and payment processing is done through amazon.com (payments).
- If the project has reached its goal by the target date, all credit cards are charged. If it hasn't, then there's no financial transaction, and the project is closed, but remains on the site.
[New info]
From the IndieGoGo website:
- Project owner chooses whether to base funding on meeting the goal.
- All backers are charged up front, and if the project owner chooses "must meet goal," backers are refunded.
The upsides to IndieGoGo are that the backer can choose to pay an extra 5% on money raised, if the goal isn't met.
Kickstarter's philosophy is that the project owner should know what it will take to finish the project and budget/set the goal accordingly, that the backers should know the scope of what they are backing up front, and that the project will not succeed as stated if it is under-funded. IndieGoGo's approach allows the project owner more flexibility in reducing scope based on the funding received.
I've seen several projects that have been funded on Kickstarter and then continued on IndieGoGo.
Edited by Helene, 17 July 2012 - 10:29 AM.
New Forum/Changed format



