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Guest Post by Narek of The Crowdfunding Formula What makes the best Crowdfunding videos the best, and how do you go about creating a cinematographic masterpiece for your crowdfunding campaign? I get a lot of questions about crowdfunding videos and what they should look like, and I’m constantly fielding requests to comment on videos people create for their campaigns. So, to save my inbox from the onslaught (and help out those who are too shy to ask), I thought it was high time I wrote an article on the results of my research of 206 successful crowdfunding campaigns. Top tips for creating irresistible crowdfunding videosBe realisticYou don’t need to be a crowdfunding genius to work out that video is an important element of your campaign. In fact, it’s probably the most important. Showing is always far more effective than telling — and a film is much easier to click on than a lengthy paragraph is to read — so if you can afford to, hire a professional.If money’s tight and you need to shoot your video yourself, then it’s time to enlist the help of someone with an iPhone or iPad. Don’t despair! It might sound low budget, but you can shoot a good quality video with either, in fact, if they’d been around in the 70’s George Lucas might have used one and Star Wars would have looked very different (dash cam on the Millennium Falcon, anyone?).Be personableCreating anything new is an incredibly personal experience. People like people (mostly), so make sure your video tells your story. The story behind who you are as a creator and why you started your mission. Honesty enables your backers to fall in love with your story, play a role in it and get behind your campaign. I feel like it’s all I ever say but…people fund people, not ideas, missions or projects. You have to be likable, or backers won’t hand over their money.Keep it shortWe want to get information about your idea quickly, not devote a whole afternoon to it. The best Kickstarter videos are all under three minutes, so follow their example and keep it short!Structure your videoWhen it comes to crowdfunding videos, there are tons of ‘listicles’ (articles that take the form of lists) out there parroting rule after rule after rule. Ignore them. In my experience, the most successful videos on Kickstarter follow a similar structure.- Introduction: This is brief, just a few words.
- Problem: Discuss (briefly!) what problem you are trying to solve, and why your contemporaries haven’t managed it yet.
- Solution: This is the part where you talk about your motivation — and a little about your product. Viewers want to know why you decided to solve the problem and how your solution will help them (people might like people, but they also like products that make life easier).
- Team: Introduce your team. They should come across as capable and professional, people you’d trust with your hard earned cash.
- Technology: How are you going to solve your problem and what technology are you going to use? Remember what I said about honesty? Yep, well this is the part where you make your plans transparent, just not too techy.
- Outcomes: Now you can really talk about your product! Introduce backers to the final design.
- Call to Action: Don’t let your crowdfunding video fizzle out. Capitalize on all the interest you’ve built up during your video and end on a call to action — something that encourages potential backers to act straight away. Try to make them feel like part of your team, an integral member who’s instrumental to its success.
- Problem
- Solution
- Introduction
- Expected Outcome
- Team
- Technology
- Outcome
- Call to action
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