What You Should Say, and Not Say, to Attract Funding on Kickstarter
INSEAD Business School
DATE:  Oct 03 2017
/ SOURCE:  INSEAD
What You Should Say, and Not Say, to Attract Funding on Kickstarter What You Should Say, and Not Say, to Attract Funding on Kickstarter

(Yicai Global) Oct.3 -- Kickstarter campaign creators should take note: The community does not view claims of product novelty and product usefulness as congruent. While the total amount pledged is boosted when a product is said to be useful (or alternatively, novel), claiming that it is both reduces the total amount pledged by 26 percent. 

That's according to a recent big-data analysis of 50,310 Kickstarter projects, led by researchers from the Singapore Management University, HEC Paris, the University of Technology Sydney and INSEAD.

"Prior research has shown that products that are novel and useful typically succeed in the marketplace," said study co-author Amitava Chattopadhyay, Professor of Marketing and the GlaxoSmithKline Chaired Professor of Corporate Innovation at INSEAD. "But when projects make both claims, backers either assume a product's benefits are inflated, that it carries a high risk of failure or that it divides the crowd between believers and sceptics, making it hard for backers to pick a side."

"The higher level of uncertainty in the crowdfunding context drives backers to choose modest innovations and shy away from more extreme innovations," said Cathy Yang, Assistant Professor of Marketing at HEC Paris.

"This is deeply disappointing as the premise of crowdfunding is to support creativity and innovation", said Anirban Mukherjee, Assistant Professor of Marketing at Singapore Management University. "Entrepreneurs therefore might be advised to frame a project as only novel or only useful, rather than both", Dr Ping Xiao of the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) added.

Kickstarter is often seen as a haven for innovators as it allows them to circumvent hard-nosed bankers and other risk-averse traditional lenders. But innovation can be a hard sell with the crowd, as explained in the research paper titled "Does the Crowd Support Innovation? Innovation Claims and Success on Kickstarter", co-authored by Mukherjee at SMU, Yang at HEC Paris, Xiao at UTS and Chattopadhyay at INSEAD.

Results Born of Big Data

Chattopadhyay and his study co-authors accessed a dataset comprising all the projects listed on Kickstarter since its launch in 2009. To focus on the crowd's appetite for innovation, they eliminated arts-related projects as these tend to be evaluated mostly on the basis of their artistic value. They then kept all the U.S-based projects that fell in the nine largest remaining Kickstarter product categories.

The final dataset included a total of 50,310 projects. State-of-the-art machine-learning tools were used to extract a list of descriptors from the text, lead image and video of each project. The number of occurrences of the word "novel" and its synonyms served as a proxy for novelty claims. Conversely, the sum of occurrences of the word "useful" and its synonyms became the measure for claimed usefulness. These numbers were then compared with the individual projects' funding results.

Implications for Crowdfunders

The data show that claims of novelty and usefulness, taken separately, do increase the total pledge amount. As a matter of fact, they have a very large initial effect. A single claim of novelty increases project funding by about 200 percent, while a single claim of usefulness leads to an increase of about 1200 percent, as compared to projects devoid of any such claim.

"As opposed to the regular marketplace, where buyers feel protected by consumer laws, crowdfunding backers may face a very high level of uncertainty", said Chattopadhyay. After all, the developers may fail to come up with the final product, or they may need to change specifications along the way. It's been shown that consumers prefer more traditional products when their perception of risk is high. Inventors that claim that their product is very innovative, i.e. both highly useful and novel, may find it more difficult to get funded because of a higher risk perception by the crowd.

About INSEAD, The Business School for the World

As one of the world's leading and largest graduate business schools, INSEAD brings together people, cultures and ideas to change lives and to transform organizations. A global perspective and cultural diversity are reflected in all aspects of our research and teaching.

INSEAD became a pioneer of international business education with the graduation of the first MBA class on the Fontainebleau campus in Europe in 1960. In 2000, INSEAD opened its Asia campus in Singapore. And in 2007 the school began an association in the Middle East, officially opening the Abu Dhabi campus in 2010.

Around the world and over the decades, INSEAD continues to conduct cutting-edge research and to innovate across all its programmes to provide business leaders with the knowledge and sensitivity to operate anywhere. These core values have enabled INSEAD to become truly "The Business School for the World".

INSEAD's MBA programme is ranked #1 by the Financial Times in 2016 and 2017.

Follow Yicai Global on
Keywords:   Crowdfunding,Kickstarter