The Charitable Crowdfunding Wars: Indiegogo Suits Up

The nonprofit sector must be doing better because our for-profit vendors appear to be scheming about how to relieve us of more of our money, albeit all in the good cause of helping us acquire and keep donors. On Friday, CNBC reported on the growth plans of Blackbaud, which, as most know provides us with such tools as Convio and Raiser’s Edge. As noted in Randall’s CNBC article, Blackbaud’s recent acquisitions specifically address the education and foundation fields, providing end-to-end solutions for nonprofit clients in every market, cementing Blackbaud’s position as the premiere database in the sector.

And then, in a major strategic move in the crowdfunding arena, yesterday, Indiegogo announced the rebranding of its charitable crowdfunding arm, “Indiegogo Life,” to a new platform now called Generosity. Indiegogo’s CEO, Slava Rubin, told the New York Times that going forward, all nonprofit campaigns would now be hosted on the new site.

The intent is being seen as an effort to unseat the current leading platform for personal causes, GoFundMe, which reported in September that it raised $1 billion in donations over the previous 12 months and $1.6 billion since its 2010 launch, according to Forbes. The Forbes article names cause-based campaigns as the “crowdfunding industry’s largest vertical” and said that Indiegogo “has totaled pledges over the course of its nearly seven-year history of about $750 million for projects ranging from personal robots to fitness trackers to disaster area aid.”

Other cause-based platforms referenced by the New York Times in their coverage of the news are YouCaring, GiveForward, and Fundly. These sites are popular for funding memorial tributes, educational projects, and other charitable endeavors. The move, according to VentureBeat, will broaden Indiegogo’s scope “to include nonprofit organizations”; they called the rebranding a “milestone in Indiegogo’s evolution, as it’s the first time it has launched a service outside its main Indiegogo domain.”

According to the New York Times, Generosity is going to be cheaper than other traditional crowdfunding sites. Its parent, Indiegogo, levies a five percent platform fee on money raised through its site, a three percent payment processing charge, and 30 cents per donation. Generosity waives that platform fee, but will deduct processing charges before funds are disbursed. (GoFundMe charges a five percent fee plus additional credit card processing fees.) Aside from the differences in fee structure, “Indiegogo has done away with time limits on Generosity, allowing a campaign to be an open-ended amount of time similar to what is allowed on GoFundMe. Generosity also provides integrations so that users can run their campaigns on their own personal websites.”

GoFundMe’s CEO, Rob Solomon, responded to Forbes in an email that, “In their time of greatest need, people don’t need a cheap platform, they need one that works.” He’s also said, “Indiegogo’s presence has had little impact, with users flocking to GoFundMe to find campaigns.”

Forbes reported that while Indiegogo CEO Slava Rubin declined to address GoFundMe when asked about the company, he did call Indiegogo “the first to offer personal funding and nonprofit funding.”

“We’ve seen the impact that a group of people coming together to support an important social cause can have, and our commitment to support nonprofit and personal funding has literally changed lives for the better,” explained Rubin in an email to Forbes.

Indiegogo launched in 2008 and is often seen as a rival to Kickstarter, a competitor that also funds “creative and entrepreneurial projects.” As the Forbes piece points out, a challenge for the company going forward will be to differentiate between “the kinds of cause-based campaigns that Generosity.com is designed for and those that should be on Indiegogo proper.” Rubin believes, however, that “campaign organizers would choose the right site for their endeavor. Indiegogo has more robust tools for campaign marketing and tracking, while Generosity.com’s interface is stripped-down and simpler.”

According to the New York Times, “Existing Indiegogo Life listings will be transitioned into the new platform, while Generosity is also launching with four new nonprofit campaigns, including Khan Academy Lite, an initiative aimed at bringing Khan Academy education to people without Internet connection, and the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, which is raising funding for 100 Bay Area blood cancer patients.”

Nonprofits and people fundraising for causes they care about can count on vendors being all over them for a while as giving stats improve. What can we say, except “Be careful out there”—and please share your do’s and don’ts about buying decisions!—Susan Raab and Shannon Anglero

WOMEN FOR AFGHAN WOMEN INC’s Fundraiser

CRISIS IN AFGHANISTAN: Help WAW Build an Emergency Fund!We need your help. Please DONATE and FUNDRAISE today.On Monday, September 27th, the Taliban in Afghanistan overran government security forces and took control of the northern Afghan province of Kunduz. Since then, the Taliban have committed numerous war crimes, pillaging and destroying the provincial capital and murdering, raping, and terrorizing its residents.

Notwithstanding reports that Afghan government forces have taken back much of the city, the situation remains extremely perilous. Several northern and eastern provinces are now struggling to fight off the extremist group.

As the Taliban expand their reign of terror, WAW has been forced to evacuate staff and clients in a second province, and has suspended operations in three more as we work with local and international partners to protect innocent lives.

Please help us build an emergency fund today to help manage this unfolding crisis!

Your support will provide critical funding for costs associated with emergency care and contingency planning to ensure our staff and clients’ safety and that we are strong in the weeks and months of uncertainty ahead.

Despite the adversity we face, WAW remains steadfastly dedicated to our work. Protecting women and children is the heart and soul of WAW, and the current tumult only underscores the significance of what we do. We will get through this crisis, but we need your help.

Support our emergency fund by donating or starting a fundraising team today!

With your partnership, we will get through these difficult times, rebuild, and become stronger than ever.

Susan’s Birthday Fundraiser to Support Worldwide Refugee Relief

Each of us saw the image of Aylan Kurdi, the 3-year-old child who tragically lost his life during his family’s attempt to find a life free of violence, poverty and war. As traumatic as that image was, there was one positive outcome. Globally, people opened their eyes to the growing refugee crisis, one the likes of which the world has never witnessed before. We kept hearing about the massive numbers fleeing, we would see the news coverage, but it took just one picture to finally unleash true compassion, attention and action.

For me, it was more personal. In May of this year, after joining the board of USA for UNHCR, I visited Refugee camps in Kenya and Uganda and saw first-hand the life a refugee lives. Knowing I would need to accurately share a refugee’s story, I knew I must at least visit and experience a small sliver of their lives.

Believe me, living in a refugee is camp is something you wouldn’t wish on anyone, not even a hated enemy. During our visit, we met with mothers and their children as well as the staff members who work day-in and day-out to provide what little relief they can. Tragically, for those in these camps, there is little to no livelihood, no chance of returning home and very little hope for any kind of future.

It is for that reason that I’m donating my birthday this year (October 31) to help the plight of refugees everywhere and also insure that more people truly understand what is at stake.

UNHCR humanitarian workers are working hard in Italy, Greece, Serbia, Hungary, Turkey and other countries in Europe to receive and assist the new refugee arrivals fleeing countries affected by violence and conflict.

At the same time, we continue to provide desperately needed aid and services in Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and across Africa where refugees are facing food cuts and insufficient critical support services.

Please consider making a 100% tax-deductible donation and sharing with your networks.

With gratitude and admiration,

Susan