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So how do you give Kickstarter a whirl?

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2025 5:25 am
by gafimiv406
Define your project. Kickstarter states, “Having a focused and well-defined project with a clear beginning and end is vital. For example: recording a new album is a finite project — the project finishes when the band releases the album — but launching a music career is not. There is no end, just an ongoing effort. Kickstarter is open only to finite projects.”

Make sure your project abides by Kickstarter Guidelines, and make note of any prohibited sri lanka whatsapp number database uses.

Prohibited uses:

No charity or cause funding. Examples of prohibited use include raising money for the Red Cross, funding an awareness campaign, funding a scholarship, or promoting the donation of funds raised, or future profits, to a charity or cause.
No “fund my life” projects. Examples include projects to pay tuition or bills, go on vacation, or buy a new camera.
Prohibited content. There are some things just not allowed on Kickstarter.
Photographer Cheyne Gallarde’s “Twinsies” project feat. his backers

Reward your support

Kickstarter recommends that you create and state rewards for backers. What will backers receive, see, experience, etc. in exchange for supporting your project? Will they get a CD, appear in a painting, or receive thanks in the credits? Let backers know what they’ll get in return.

As featured on PetaPixel, photographer, Cheyne Gallarde set up a Kickstarter page to fund a series of self-portraits called, Universe of One. As a “thank you” to his Kickstarter backers, Gallarde created a side project called, “Twinsies” in which he took Cindy Sherman inspired portraits of himself imitating his Kickstarter backers. The results are quite amusing!

Musician, Jeff Harms reached his goal on Kickstarter two fold for an album he wanted to produce entitled, He Said She Said That’s What She Said. As a result, Harms wrote songs for his backers: