Brant's Rant | Pricing | Sales and Marketing Roadmap

How to Raise Micro-Capital Online with T-Shirts

Very recently, the Diaspora project (advertised as “the privacy aware, personally controlled, do-it-all distributed open source social network”) on Kickstarter has caught the attention of the Twitterati, and has blown past its goal of raising $10,000 by June 1st 2010, by having raised $138,961, as of this post.
The way it works is this: people who create projects to be funded by micro-capital on Kickstarter offer differing levels of sponsorship.  The more you pledge, the more you get.  In this case, if you pledge $10, you get a CD (with the source code), a note from the Diaspora team and a bunch of stickers.  If you pledge $2,000, you get the same as well as phone support, hosted service and a computer.
They seem to have done a few things right, either intentionally or unintentionally.  (Most likely a combination of the two.)  They appear to be riding a recent upswell in anti-Facebook sentiment with regards to privacy (or lack thereof) in a select minority of techie folks.  Their video pitch seems to have hit the right chords (moxie, passion, hard-core geekiness), which appears to resonate with many of the same people.  Lastly, I think their dandelion logo/look is, in a word: cool.  (Get it?  Seeds of a diaspora?)
But that is not what this post is about.  This post is about how to raise micro-capital via clever pricing and bundling strategies.
Now, check out this chart I slapped together.  It shows the Number of Backers per Pledge “Bucket”.  One might expect, very reasonably I would add, that the number of backers declines as price increases.  In other words, you observe the classic, negatively sloping Demand Curve you learned about in Econ 101.  As price increases, demand lessens.

But here it doesn’t quite do that, does it?
Now, take a look at the chart below, and see how that translated into revenue.  Shooting from the hip, one might expect, in terms of revenue by pledge bucket, to see a bell-shaped/normal distribution.
But we don’t, do we?

So in this case, the secret of their success is a pricing/bundling strategy that uses t-shirts as social proof of geekiness.  Or another way to look at it is:  the Diaspora team has utilized Kickstarter to sell +$40,000** worth of t-shirts!

My gut tells me that the Diaspora team hit some sort of nerve that has nothing to do with the potential success or failure of their project.  People think the project is cool and sticking it to The Man (i.e. Facebook), whether or not these guys succeed or fail is almost irrelevant.  So, if I think the project is cool and if the project is likely to provide me substantial geek street cred — well then, what better way to demonstrate my geekiness/validate my support for Diaspora then by sporting a Diaspora t-shirt.  And looking at their de facto marketing materials, the t-shirt is likely to look good.
And if I want that t-shirt, I’d better pony up $25 for it — which, incidentally, seems like a fair price for a t-shirt.  And apparently, I am not the only one who thought that way.

Lessons learned:

  • If you can harness yourself to a growing/popular social trend, you may benefit in an extraordinary manner.
  • You need to think of pledges/sponsorships in terms products, pricing and value.  In other words, WIIFM (What’s In It For Me?).
  • People get value from feeling that they have done their part (sticking it to Facebook), even if it doesn’t amount to anything concrete (aside from a t-shirt).  You can and should capitalize on that.
  • Don’t forget about reference pricing.  My reference price for a generic “cool” t-shirt is around $20.  Meaning, that is what I would expect to pay in a store for a t-shirt that was adequately “cool”.  The Diaspora t-shirt, in that light, seems like a bargain.

Full Disclosure:  The only reason I noticed this pricing strategy was because I actually pledged $25 because I wanted a t-shirt (and I think about pricing stuff all the time).
For the record, I actually don’t think that a self-hosted peer-to-peer social network will get off the ground in circles other than amongst hard-core geeks.  As someone mentioned on a Quora thread, no one actually wants to host their own social network on a server under their bed.
But I still think these guys are worth backing.  And are cool.
Lastly, I don’t think this sort of hyper-success is easy to replicate, if at all — but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t think about your pricing/bundling strategy if you are trying to raise micro-capital.
Before I forget, you should check out the pricing page for book Brant and I wrote.  Not only should you check it out, but you should go buy a copy of our book.

——–

Data table here:

Number of Backers: 766 634 1,550 261 161 43 5 4
Pledge Amount: $5 $10 $25 $50 $100 $350 $1,000 $2,000
Sub-Total: $3,830 $6,340 $38,750 $13,050 $16,100 $15,050 $5,000 $8,000
Percentage of Total: 4% 6% 37% 12% 15% 14% 5% 8%
*Grand Total: $106,120
Total Number of Backers: 3,424
*Will not match total pledged on http://ht.ly/1KK1b as pledge amounts are “$X or more”

**Actually more since anyone pledging at $25 and above gets a t-shirt.
***The actual numbers in this post are already outdated, but conclusions are the same. Will update later.

5 Comments

  1. Stephan Wehner

    You wrote, “I actually don’t think that a self-hosted peer-to-peer social network will get off the ground in circles other than amongst hard-core geeks.”
    With something like a Sheevaplug, plugcomputer.org, it might be quite simple. Connecting to the social network could work out like plugging in your answering machine, but plus the encryption/control
    Stephan

    Reply
  2. Patrick Vlaskovits

    @Stephan
    Ultimately, I don’t see it as a question of technology risk, but as a question of convenience.
    But at the end of the day — who knows? Maybe all the buzz about “The Cloud” will seem laughable and antiquated in a few years — when everyone has a personal plugcomputer.

    Reply
  3. Bruce

    You wrote, “I actually don’t think that a self-hosted peer-to-peer social network will get off the ground in circles other than amongst hard-core geeks.”
    With something like a Sheevaplug, plugcomputer.org, it might be quite simple. Connecting to the social network could work out like plugging in your answering machine, but plus the encryption/control
    Stephan

    Reply
  4. Tristan Kromer

    I agree with the conclusion and find the analysis very interesting. Could you clarify one point?
    Why would you expect a typical demand curve? Each of the brackets have a different “product”. If you donate $25 you get a T-shirt you didn’t get with a $10 donation. No?
    I would have expected a different demand curve for every individual product offering. So if they change the price of the T-shirt bucket to $30, then I’d expect a drop off in purchases.
    Thanks,
    Tristan

    Reply
  5. Patrick

    Hi Tristan,
    Your point wrt a different demand curve per product is absolutely correct.
    But I don’t think that is what we are really seeing here; each bracket is really, IMHO, the same product, priced a bit differently. And in this case, I believe they aren’t really selling all the bundled paraphernalia (i.e. the CD, stickers) – they are selling hard-to-fake social proof/street cred that you are:
    a) a geek
    b) in-the-know
    c) a trend-setter
    as well as:
    d) the satisfaction of sticking it to The Man
    e) the good feeling you get from being philanthropic

    [BTW just like [name-your-favorite-coffee-chain] doesn’t really sell you coffee. They sell you a temporary membership to a club that you want to be in, with all the accompanying benefits.]
    And in this case, that hard-to-fake social proof/street cred comes in the form of a t-shirt. Soon I will update this post with the latest data and do some more analysis that should demonstrate this a bit better.

    Reply

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Continued: Raising Micro-Capital with Social Proof of Geekiness | Market By Numbers | Marketing Help - [...] As of this post, they have raised $176,165 from 4,860 backers and still have 15 days to go.  I…
  2. Diaspora’s Success on KickStarter due to T-Shirts | Vlaskovits - [...] my previous thoughts on Diaspora can be found here and here as guest posts at Brant Cooper's [...]

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