Kickstarters, good or bad?

Started by Leon, 18 September 2012, 06:54:46 PM

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i_am_win

QuoteI was surprised that your project didn't get off the ground, and as I followed it, I did wonder whether it would have received a more positive response through Kickstarter? 

Although it didn't do so well, I did get loads of positive stuff from it and it's getting better support now as we speak  (also many possibilties of stocking my line when they're done form retailers I contacted and such) I think because people don't quite yet grasp the concept of crowdfunding, coupled with the fact like you said about niche products (as mine is) and Indiegogo isn't as popular as Kickstarter (I had to use them as Kickstarter needed a US account, this will change however this autumn when they allow european projects)

I will have another go at it though, but with Kickstarter this time after the new year when I have the first load of greens done. If that fails, I'll probably try and sell the line on or shelve it until I can raise more funds....
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Orcs

Quote from: Leon on 18 September 2012, 11:38:37 PM
I'm not sure there'd be enough people pledging for any 10mm range to be viable.  

Let's say a range was 20 codes, 2 figures per code.  With the sculpting and moulding, you've got about £1200 ($2000) of investment needed.  With a full army pack currently costing £25, combined with the need to be offering people something at a discounted rate to get them to pledge, the average pledge might only be £20 or even less.  So we'd need to find at least 60 people willing to pledge into an Aztec range before it hit the goal?
:-q

Ok I am not interested in Aztecs at all.  However I could be tempted into helping a kickstart program with someone or a company I trusted. Particuarly if the discount was given an a range I am interested in rather than the new range.

I think we all agree that we can trust Pendraken to the tune of £20.

Yes this does mean Pendraken get a new range of figures "on the cheap".  But those who have invested  also get some figures on the cheap. Thats a Win/Win situation.

You could argue Pendraken may win more in the long term as they have another range.  Bur the more ranges Pendraken has the more viable it is as a company, the more likely it will stay in business  and we get the very good service from Leon and co. 

How many of us have pre-ordered stuff for collection at a show and paid up front as someone else was collecting them.

All you are actually doing is pre- ordering the figures in the same way .  Its just a longer wait to get them :)

 





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Duke Speedy of Leighton

Now that sounds reasonable!
Maybe there is a funding option, where you can choose 'aztec' or whatever new rhe range is as your reward, or you choose an equal value from another range.
If you have a look at the Kickstarterfor Order of The Stick, Richard did much the same thing.
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crossover

I like the way the conversation is going, however you have to be careful.  Kickstarter is intended as a way to produce new projects, not a way to source income for income's sake. 

People on kickstarter seem to be dubious of projects that try to resell current items, and they should be.  It is intended to bring new projects to light.  If you have something you already sell, that's what sales are for.  Kickstarter is for bringing things to life that wouldn't see life if it weren't for Kickstarter. 


fred.

Kick starter failures - I'm sure these will happen, but this happens with current company structures, many of whom have taken customer money, but not delivered a product. To say nothing of supplier's left out of pocket. The only advantage with a kick starter project, that gets funding but fails to deliver is that each person is only out a small amount. Also due to the nature of the funding, a lot of people need to believe in the company before it can start, so it is harder to have a weak plan. But I'm sure some will fail, probably more likely due to underestimating the work / costs involved rather than fraud.

For established companies - I think for established companies it should be easier for them to use Kickstarter to cover new ranges / products. I think the reasons for this would include; Reputation, customers have already seen that the company can produce product. Less costs to be covered by kickstarter - the company is probably already covering its overheads, it only needs to cover the extra costs of the new range, whereas a startup has to cover everything with the new product. Marketing - the company already has customers who are likely to buy a new product, they have a market presence, etc.

Reward levels - this is quite interesting, I assume a kickstarter can offer anything in return for a pledge. There could be a low value pledge that is essentially a gift, there is the product being produced (with or without a discount) there could be all sorts of other rewards. The idea from Crossover of allowing design choice, is good as it is high value to the customer, but costs the company very little as they would have had to do the design work anyway. I'm sure a company could offer a 5% discount voucher (against any product) for a pledge level - though it would be hard to judge where to price this.

Why pledge money - well the main answer has to be to get something that won't happen otherwise. If you think that the product will appear anyway, then you can wait. But I think generally the idea is that the level of risk for an individual customer is so low that they will be willing to put in their 10-50 quid. Whereas a conventional investment model would be looking for 10s of thousands per investor. I think kickstarter is more of a method of buying something, rather than investing in the traditional sense, were you are looking to make a return on your money, though at a potentially high risk.

Any way, lots of words...
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sultanbev

Hadn't heard of Kickstarters until this thread, I think I understand it now.
I do have a question or two though.

Example
Lets say Pendraken get £1200 in pledges to make a 10mm Aztec range. This then goes to the top of the requests 'tree' as it were. Now then, the sculptors Pendraken currently use are already busy making the existing stuff on the requests tree, on top of stuff that Pendraken might want to see themselves.

The question then is, are their other sculptors out there that can do the work, that are available? And if so, does Pendraken have the extra mould-making capacity to make the moulds (or if they are contract made, are their the mould makers out there who can do the moulds) or would they use that Kickstarter money to hire extra staff for that production run?

In general, is there the logistic ability, if you will, to take advantage of the Kickstarter money?

On a separate note, how does the pledge money work for tax purposes? Is it taxable income in that tax year? Is it capital investment that is tax-deductable? Or does it 'go under the mattress@?  ;)

Mark

Leon

Quote from: sultanbev on 19 September 2012, 11:03:03 PM
Lets say Pendraken get £1200 in pledges to make a 10mm Aztec range. This then goes to the top of the requests 'tree' as it were. Now then, the sculptors Pendraken currently use are already busy making the existing stuff on the requests tree, on top of stuff that Pendraken might want to see themselves.

The question then is, are their other sculptors out there that can do the work, that are available? And if so, does Pendraken have the extra mould-making capacity to make the moulds (or if they are contract made, are their the mould makers out there who can do the moulds) or would they use that Kickstarter money to hire extra staff for that production run?

In general, is there the logistic ability, if you will, to take advantage of the Kickstarter money?

If it was us, we'd probably give the extra work to our current sculptors I'd think.  Like others in the current climate, most of them are always on the lookout for more work.  The moulding might cause a slight issue, but only in that we'd have to knock other stuff down the queue slightly, as we do churn out a lot of moulds for ourselves and other companies now.

Quote from: sultanbev on 19 September 2012, 11:03:03 PM
On a separate note, how does the pledge money work for tax purposes? Is it taxable income in that tax year? Is it capital investment that is tax-deductable? Or does it 'go under the mattress@?  ;)

I'd assume it just goes down as an income stream, like a regular sale, and would then be offset against the sculpting / moulding / casting bills at the end of the tax year.
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FierceKitty

Can't agree with you, Luddite (with respect to your rank, sir). Monopoly is dangerous for all manner of reasons; stifles the creative aspects, limits you to one maker's interpretation, and is very vulnerable to financial abuse.
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sebigboss79

Quote from: crossover on 19 September 2012, 11:59:09 AM
I think this is how many folks felt about eBay when it started, but it works, even though many people are dishonest, many more people are not. 

I wasn't an established company, just a guy with a plan who knew folks in established companies.  Everyone else who took part in producing the miniatures, sculptor, mold makers, and casters are all very well established, but it was my first rodeo.  I think we did rather well.

Respectfully, I think the word donor couldn't be farther from the truth.  All the donors to my Kickstarter received exactly the minis the wanted at 75% retail cost.   



You may also be an exception from the rule. There are many many ways how the "donor" can be rewarded. Some shemes only rewarding pledges over a certain limit. Lets say, pledge 20 and you get 12 worth of figures.
Others like yourself will give figs at a discount, the ways of handling this are basically endless....

Don`t get me started on ebay. Yes I still use it but just because the alternatives do not draw the crowd ebay still does. Now call me a pedant but publicly announcing you did not know you needed a banking licence for ebays latest sheme (taking money from buyers and forwarding it to sellers after confirmed delivery) you should not be in business because of stupidity.

Yes you do have dishonest people and if you do not know the ways to escalate with ebay and paypal you can get burned. But it happens also offline and has happened before.


Kickstarters - like I mentioned before - do have advantages and disadvantages. One should always question themselves "Do I trust this person for X amount of money". Every business decision should be made with this in mind.
Agreed you do have lots of fantastic ideas out there but some of them are just interesting for a limited set of people so they are not becoming reality.

Mentioning monopolies: See it from the other side people. GW currently looses customers on all sides. I do not wish to analyse this in all depth but they have acqired a quasi monopoly in 28mm gaming and alienated their clients (>75 % of them) with several "bad moves" over the last 4 or 5 years. Yes they are not dead yet but looking strictly at numbers and the fact that the average 12 year old buyer spends rather on the newest videogame than to actually build and paint those figs I predict massive problems for GW in the next few years. A loyal customer base of 25 % or less just isn`t good enough especially if you price thiose people out by raising your prices time and again.

Empirical evidence? Here I am - I switched my scifi gaming to other companies including Pendraken. For me there is simply more value there.

And that is another point for/against Kickstarters. Is there VALUE for you?

The donor mentality can also help there and hence I used that word. Donating you also get something in return, maybe not even phisically (Blood donor, organ donor...) or you "donate" your time in volunteering. You cannot argue that some people who do these things do not feel energized or "happy" when they can do something good.

sultanbev

If your sculptors have spare sculpting capacity, refer them to Andy Kirk at Heroics & Ros, he might have work for them if they can do 6mm. Although he is off on honeymoon until the end of the month...

http://www.heroicsandros.co.uk/contact.html

Mark

barbarian

Quote from: FierceKitty on 20 September 2012, 01:41:54 AM
Monopoly is dangerous for all manner of reasons; stifles the creative aspects, limits you to one maker's interpretation, and is very vulnerable to financial abuse.

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Techno

Quote from: sultanbev on 20 September 2012, 12:57:53 PM
If your sculptors have spare sculpting capacity, refer them to Andy Kirk at Heroics & Ros, he might have work for them if they can do 6mm. Although he is off on honeymoon until the end of the month...
http://www.heroicsandros.co.uk/contact.html
Mark

Ooooh...Ta Mark.
Always on the lookout for stuff that doesn't give me a conflict on interests....
Haven't done any 6mm properly since Ral Partha, yonks ago. ;)
Cheers - Phil.

General Bt Sherman

This is something that I would definitely support depending on the subject. Aztecs don’t do it for me. Who knows this maybe is a good way to bring in new people to the scale.
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barbarian

I think it could be a good way of introducing a new rule with a starter pack by Pendraken...
Pay for the print...and have 2 armies in the pack.
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O Dinas Powys

Quote from: barbarian on 20 September 2012, 04:42:45 PM
I think it could be a good way of introducing a new rule with a starter pack by Pendraken...
Pay for the print...and have 2 armies in the pack.

This seems to be a very popular way of funding boardgames judging by the number of competitions there are (were?! - haven't been a regular there for a while :( ) on Boardgamegeek.com.  Indeed, for some companies, it seems to be their modus operandi.

They presumably go through the traditional design and play-test process, do a bit of market research and promotion which helps generate a buzz about a game, then launch a kickstarter to fund the print run.  As I understand it, most boardgames only have a single print run, so this works well.


(I know, even though it's fantasy  :o  ;)  )

FierceKitty

Quote from: general_btsherman on 20 September 2012, 04:12:06 PM
This is something that I would definitely support depending on the subject. Aztecs don’t do it for me. Who knows this maybe is a good way to bring in new people to the scale.

Aztecs do it to people, not for them. With nasty clumsy knives of volcanic glass. And they stew you in chocolate sauce afterwards.

Ah, the things one posts to make it to the next promotion!
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Techno

Quote from: FierceKitty on 21 September 2012, 02:16:38 AM
And they stew you in chocolate sauce afterwards.
Ah, the things one posts to make it to the next promotion!

That's another piece of fascinating information...I'd always assumed it was sweet chilli sauce that they used. ;)
Cheers - Phil. (You've only got 17 to go now...Get on with it !)

FierceKitty

I don't drink coffee to wake up. I wake up to drink coffee.


FierceKitty

I don't drink coffee to wake up. I wake up to drink coffee.