crowdfunding in kenya (#1milliforjadudi)

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+ Kenya Association of FundRaising Professionals Coffee Talk by Zawadi Nyong’o @ZawadiNyongo #Crowdfunding #CoffeeTalkKe 29.10.15

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Page 1: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+

Kenya Association of

FundRaising Professionals

Coffee Talk by Zawadi Nyong’o

@ZawadiNyongo

#Crowdfunding

#CoffeeTalkKe

29.10.15

Page 2: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Outline:

What is crowdfunding?

Mapping – What SM platforms are you using, how &

why?

Who has tried crowdfunding? How? Achievements?

What do you want to learn today? (3 things)

The power of hashtags - #CoffeeTalk?

Page 3: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Outline

The Global Crowdfunding Landscape

Crowdfunding in Kenya

Crowdfunding – The #1MilliForJadudi Case

Lessons from #1MilliForJadudi (What worked? What didn’t work? What didn’t we expect?)

#TheJadudiReport

Crowdfunding 101: Do’s & Don’t’s

The Future of crowdfunding in Kenya

Page 4: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+What is Crowdfunding?

What words come to mind when you think about crowdfunding?

Why do you or your organization want to use crowdfunding?

How do you use social media to support your work?

Page 5: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Definition of Crowdfunding

It came from the idea of crowdsourcing, coined in 2006 by

John How in Wired Magazine: giving the power to the crowd,

and getting them to do something. (Demonstration Exercise)

Crowdfunding is the same – you have a set idea, target amount

& timeline which you put on the internet for people to support.

Crowdfunding is raising small amounts of money from a large

group of people online.

“It’s the idea that you can take something that you have been

thinking about, and you can actually do it. You can move

beyond introspection, to collaboration.” - Anna Guenther –

TedX “How crowdfunding is going to change the world.”

Page 6: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Crowdfunding WorldWide

Page 7: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Global CrowdFunding Landscape:

In 2012 there were over 300 crowdfunding platforms worldwide.

In 2014, 22,252 projects were successfully funded on Kickstarter.

$529 million was pledged to Kickstarter projects last year. That's more than $1,000 a minute.

3.3 million people from nearly every country on the planet backed a project last year.

In Kenya: 286 pledged $44.16k.

In Nigeria: 254 backers pledged $99.2k

In South Africa: 3416 backers pledged $517.6k – that’s half a million dollars!

Page 8: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+The Global Crowdfunding

Landscape:

In the US, where kickstarter originated and where most projects

are launched, 2.2 million backers pledged $335.5 million.

Imagine what we could achieve if even just 1 million Kenyans

were inspired to back different initiatives & projects every year.

If the right environment for crowdfunding was cultivated in this

country, what wouldn’t be possible?

What platforms are available in Kenya? Mchanga? Mookh?

Page 9: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Crowdfunding Landscape ctd

On Kickstarter alone, in 2014:

2,202,171 people backed a project for the first time.

773,824 people backed more than one project,

71,478 people backed more than 10 projects,

1,125 people backed more than 100 projects.

We need to develop the tools to generate such data as we build

crowdfunding in Kenya. We need to understand and harness our

crowdfunding potential, even as we build it.

Page 10: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+Crowdfunding in Kenya:

The Digital Harambee

In Kenya, what we’ve done is make the harambee digital.

We use crowdfunding best in times of crisis –#Kenyans4Kenya, #WeAreOne, #GarissaAttacks, #1MilliForJadudi, #IStandWithJanet, #GiveForEzra, etc.

Yet most people using crowdfunding don’t apply the same offline harambee principles for success.

How can we take our already existing harambee spirit and turning it into a digital harambee spirit that helps transform the lives of individuals and communities.

#TheJadudiEffect might be a starting point for this.

Page 11: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#1MilliForJadudi

Ksh 7,256,096 ($72k) in 3 days!

“Attitudes are contagious. Is yours worth catching?” Anon

Photo by Mwangi Kirubi @mwarv

Page 12: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#1MilliForJadudi – A Case Study

Did you hear about #1MilliForJadudi? How?

TIME-LINE:

The backstory & preparations

August 4th: The launch of #1MilliForJadudi

August 6th: Closure

Post August 7th: The work behind-the-scenes to get Jadudi to

India & keep the public updated about his treatment process

#TheJadudiReport (Download, Read, Share)

Page 13: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#1MilliForJadudi Reflections:

What worked?

A very powerful story of a powerful young man (Jadudi)

A powerful story well written by Jackson Biko

A very influential platform that reaches the right target audience

(BikoZulu.com)

A call to action (Simple & achievable; we did the math, targeted

small amounts & cast our nets wide)

2 trusted individuals running the campaign

More than 50 social media influencers who agreed to back the

campaign the day before it launched

Page 14: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#1MilliForJadudi: Reflections

What worked?

A reputable & credible institution backing the campaign (Africa Cancer Foundation) & providing a secure way for contributors to send donations

A sense of urgency (The brain surgery had to be done ASAP)

A powerful crowdfunding strategy developed by Zawadi & launched on twitter – once trending on twitter, it took a life of its own on FB & IG.

Passion. Passion. Passion. And more passion.

An army of foot soldiers keeping the campaign alive because their friend’s life depended on it (Jadudi’s UoN and other friends and family)

Regular updates & continued engagement with supporters both during & after the campaign.

Page 15: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+ #TheJadudiReport

Download full report at www.thejadudireport.wordpress.com

Page 16: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#TheJadudiReport

Page 17: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#TheJadudiReportThis is just one case study. We need many many more to understand

the crowdfunding field in Kenya which is really young.

Page 18: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#Crowdfunding Do’s:

Tell an amazing story

Keep it clear. Perfect your pitch.

Get creative – use words, images, videos, music, etc.

Keep it personal – people give as much to an idea as to you.

Identify your target audience

Know your crowd/community – both online and offline (these

networks can take years to build)

Use a recognized crowdfunding platform (In Kenya?)

Share the story with people that care

Page 19: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#Crowdfunding Do’s:

Identify friends and partners and ask if they can share the story with their friends, partners & networks (on social media, blogs, email & even offline)

Follow through on anything you commit to doing

Be prepared for questions and answer them in a timely manner

Don’t just ask for money (What else can you ask for or give?)

Stay connected to your audience – engage, respond to questions, share their comments/feedback

Update your backers on what’s happening during the process, including how much has been raised.

Send a press release to local newspapers & TV stations.

Page 20: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#Crowdfunding Do’s:

Be prepared to change along the way, adjust strategy, use

different tools, etc.

Be different – stand out from the crowd of other crowd-funders.

Use social media analytical tools, take screen shots, document

& learn from your crowdfunding journey.

Thank your backers/donors

Share your experience & lessons with others & contribute to

Kenya’s crowdfunding story.

Let’s put Kenya on the global crowdfunding map.

Page 21: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+#Crowdfunding No-Nos:

Don’t:

Launch until you are ready – get all your ducks lined up

Go door-to-door asking for money. It makes people feel bad.

Don’t tag people over & over again.

Ask the media to cover your crowdfunding campaign until it has

gained traction & you’ve raised at least 60% of your target. If

it’s trending they’ll cover it without you even asking.

Jump into other conversations with your hashtag.

Forget to thank your contributors.

Page 22: Crowdfunding in Kenya (#1MilliForJadudi)

+JUST

Ja DU di

IT“Some people dream of great accomplishments, while others stay

awake and do them.” - Anon

Photo by Mwangi Kirubi @mwarv