New Crowdfunding Guide Website Aims to Educate More People About Crowdfunding
(PRWEB) July 03, 2013 -- In response to the skyrocketing number of crowdfunding projects, CrowdfundingGuide.com was launched. This niche website aims to serve as a one-stop resource for people who are looking to crowdfund their company/business, career, experiment, advocacy, or idea. The website regularly publishes relevant crowdfunding news including updates on the JOBS act, huge crowdfunded events, and even editorial articles about the effects of crowdfunding. It also features reviews about the most recent and interesting projects on Indiegogo, Pledgie, Kickstarter, Fundageek, and other related sites, reviews of crowdfunding platforms, articles about crowdfunding in pop culture (e.g., celebrities who use crowdfunding), and even useful tips on how to successfully run a campaign.
Practically every person who’s active in the World Wide Web has read of at least one project or initiative that was backed up by the pooled contributions of a group of individuals. That, in a nutshell, is crowdfunding. In the past few years, more and more projects have been created – and achieved – through this amazing concept. Whether it’s for artist support, disaster relief, political campaign, or any other objective, numerous people all over the world have harnessed the power of pooled money in order to achieve their common goal.
The success of crowdfunding often relies on the ability of a small group of individuals to convince a large number of people to contribute to their goal. In the past few years, people have observed the rapid speed at which crowdfunding is spreading across the globe and impacting the lives of so many people.
Besides pooling money from numerous people toward a shared goal, crowdfunding (also known as crowd-sourced fundraising, crowd financing, and equity crowdfunding) may also be used to refer to the funding of a company (usually a small, startup one) through the sale of small equities to a large number of people. Crowdfunding can trace its roots in crowdsourcing, the 21st century concept of obtaining ideas, services, content, and so on, as contributions from a large number of people (usually an online community) who are either part-time workers or mere volunteers.
Crowdfundingguide.com is the brainchild of California-based web design and development firm Ender Technology Corporation (or EnderTech). For those who want to crowdfund their next idea, EnderTech offers a unique and fully-customizable crowdfunding platform. The platform can be used by both for-profit and non-profit organizations. To further assist their crowdfunding clients, EnderTech licenses their platform as software-as-a-service to lower the up-front cost.
To start learning more about crowdfunding, visit crowdfundingguide.com. For inquiries regarding their highly-customizable and user-friendly crowdfunding platform, please contact Ender Technology Corporation at (310) 400-0800.
Talia Knobel, Ender Technology Corporation, http://www.crowdfundingguide.com, (310) 400-0800, [email protected]
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