Screenshot of Kickstarter homepage

Kickstarter is Throwing Away Your Money

When you back a project on Kickstarter, you might as well think of it as throwing your money away. With the latest chatter about Pressgram, which ink spilled elsewhere is sufficient, one simplistic summary is some folks expected one thing and the end result delivered another.

I’m a Kickstarter fan. I’ve backed numerous projects (though, not Pressgram as I’m just not a guy who cares about filters on pictures and I don’t own an iPhone). I’ve had projects I’ve backed just to support the dream of the person behind the project, ones where I liked the spirit of the project and the end result, ones where I just want to get the end product as soon as it is released.

That said, Kickstarter is a gamble. Yes, you won’t cough up your money unless everyone else does too, but even when things are funded, there is no guarantee that the project will succeed, if the project will ship anywhere close to on time, that the project creator won’t turn you off before the product ships or if what ships at the end is what you thought it would be.

It’s only a step above having someone swing by your house, ask you to buy something off of a hand-drawn sketch, take your money, and promise to drop it off in the nearish future.

I’m not knocking Kickstarter, the projects, or those that back them. I do think, though, it is easy to forget the gamble involved. Many of the projects are awesome things that ship on time flawlessly—almost as easy as buying a book on Amazon. Even when things run a bit screwy—like a project I backed that realized the timetable was unrealistic and pushed it back a year—supporting independent projects is a great thing.

We should support independent projects, dreams, ideas, and the spirit behind Kickstarter. We should just remember it isn’t an online store. While it is laudable to open dialogue with the project creator when things aren’t going the way we’d expect or suggest, we can’t expect anything from them. We aren’t buying things. We aren’t investing, since no stake in the company is given to us in consideration of our pledge. We are giving money to something we think is worthy.


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3 responses to “Kickstarter is Throwing Away Your Money

  1. Khürt Williams Avatar

    “That said, Kickstarter is a gamble. Yes, you won’t cough up your money unless everyone else does too, but even when things are funded, there is no guarantee that the project will succeed, if the project will ship anywhere close to on time, that the project creator won’t turn you off before the product ships or if what ships at the end is what you thought it would be.”

    Isn’t that the risk that any angel investor takes? Kickstarter is basically a micro-angel investor fund.

    1. Brandon Kraft Avatar
      Brandon Kraft

      Absolutely right. As Kickstarter becomes more popular and known with the general population though, I believe there is a growing number of folks who aren’t familiar with angel investing and don’t associate Kickstarter with that (yet).

  2. denise Avatar

    Wrote on a similar vibe a little while ago: http://blog.lettergrade.ca/2013/02/kickstarter-and-giving-but-not-receiving/

    We may have strong feelings about form or fulfillment but in the end, the funding of projects is decided by numbers, so who is anyone to say what is the right or wrong way to do it?

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