

Kickstarter-Like Service For Charities? 87
First time accepted submitter chefmayhem writes "I'm one of a number of volunteer alumni trying to revive a high school summer science enrichment program, PGSS, cut unceremoniously by Pennsylvania in 2009 due to budget issues. Our alumni association has become a 501(c)3 non-profit and we're raising money through donations (over $100K from over 300 donors so far) to try to fund the program in 2012. The idea is that running the program this summer will give us momentum, and something to show off to potential corporate, philanthropic, and other funding sources. Trouble is, some potential donors are concerned that we won't raise enough to run the program this coming summer, and are hesitant to donate, even though the money will (one way or another) go to science education, even if we can't restore the program. Is there a web-based fundraising service, like kickstarter.com, but for charities, which will take pledges (and deal with credit card info, etc) but only charge donors if the goal is reached? It would also be important that non-donor sources (like some support from the state) can also count towards our fundraising goals. This could be a powerful tool for us, as well as other non-profits looking to make a dream come true."
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Long URL: goatse.bz/
Win Win (Score:2)
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Which is somewhat bullshit. "Oh hai! Want to donate for someone to build a tabletop holder for your iPad? Money us! Want to donate to a charity project? *NO*"
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1) Business logic in site: If funding time is going to overrun a calendar boundary of a year for a charity, do not allow creation of Kickstarter campaign
2) If a charity campaign fully funds, kick out a PDF receipt via email (I get Kiva receipts this way when I donate to them)
3) You only get a receipt and can count the deduction if a) the charity campaign was fully funded and Number 1 applies.
Simple answers? I'd argue yes for the most part. There is a huge potential here for them. Otherwise, it leaves a spac
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For example, if I make a donation in December for $10,000, but as of Jan 1 the charity has still not reached it's goal and the money has not been collected, can I still count that as a deduction? What if it reaches it's goal before I file my taxes? Is it a 2011 or a 2012 deduction? What if it never reaches it's goal? There aren't simple answers to these questions,
Count it as a deduction on the date the money is taken from your card. Before that date you can't reasonably call it a donation, because you still have the money. And afterwards, you know that the funding has gone through.
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Untrue, it just has to be to a creative end. http://projectrepat.org/ [projectrepat.org] went through Kickstarter and it is a non-profit;
I suppose you could think of it as wholly owned commercial sub-division,but it is not officially incorporated that
way as far as I know. What do they care what you use your "profits" for?
Yo Dawg. I hear you like raising money. (Score:2)
So start a kickstarter to build a kickstarter for raising money for charities.
One of those charities could also be a nonprofit to raise money like for another project like kickstarter.
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Really? Did you happen to miss:
No charity or cause funding.
Seriously, it's not even that far down in their list of guidelines.
Just Giving (Score:4, Informative)
Just Giving [justgiving.com]
Re:Just Giving (Score:5, Informative)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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Odd that a UK centric site would be a .com. They should use the .co.uk domain as that would be the appropriate place for a UK site.
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Dirty pic alert!
What's wrong with Kickstarter? (Score:2)
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It's own guidelines?
No charity or cause funding.
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From the kickstarter guidelines:
No charity or cause funding. Examples of prohibited use include raising money for the Red Cross, funding an awareness campaign, funding a scholarship, or donating a portion of funds raised on Kickstarter to a charity or cause.
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Next Question: Why?
my10dollarfundraiser.com (Score:2)
One common strategy (Score:2)
that you've probably thought of is to get a big donor to pledge matching funds. My old college did this, with a dude pledging to match everything that was raised. Helps to have a suitable candidate for this kind of thing though, and my college is about 500 years old.
But good idea with the charge-when-target-reached site.
Hate to say this...forget the web. (Score:1)
Soliciting charitable donations is still a very personal thing. Especially if you intend on getting beyond the nickle and dime range (under $50 US). It requires directly talking to potential donors. What's the benefit to your organization - you have 30-seconds, tops. They think they know what you want and why you want it. Money, but what are you really asking for? Operational (smells of on-going funds)? Grants (one time). Equipment? Services? What? Target your pitch to them in terms of what they alre
donorschoose? (Score:1)
StartSomeGood (Score:1)
Hey there--
StartSomeGood.com exists for exactly this purpose -- to help social good initiatives raise funds and grow a community of supporters. We use a similar model to Kickstarter, but with a "tipping point," which is the amount of funds you need to start doing good in the world. Definitely have a look, and if you have any questions, please reach out to me directly: alex at startsomegood dot com
Cheers,
Alex Budak
Co-Founder StartSomeGood
YourCause (Score:2)
http://www.yourcause.com/ [yourcause.com] is specifically geared towards charities.
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The OP's question was "but only charge donors if the goal is reached?"
I looked at this site and its FAQ and I don't see where they mention they have a goal-cutoff point.
Did you see that?
set up a trust account (Score:2)
Seriously, I would think it take an attorney 2-4 hours to set up a trust account to hold donations under your terms, to be spent if your goals are met, or refunded if not. Of course then you'd have to track donations, but, uhm, you're doing that anyway aren't you???
yeh (Score:2)
It's call "Kickstarter" <-- Air quotes
Here are some real options... (Score:2)
There used to be a cool site for this even before Kickstarter, called fundable.org, but apparently it went under. See some more info here: http://www.fundable.org/online-fundraising/ [fundable.org]
That page says that they're in the process of rebuilding it but until then they recommend:
http://www.chipin.com/ [chipin.com]
and
http://www.thepoint.com/ [thepoint.com]
Also search the net for 'charity crowdfunding' to see if you stumble into anything interesting.
Good luck!
Jolkona (Score:1)
restricted fund (Score:2)
Disclaimer: the UK is not the US, but I would be surprised if there are major differences in principle.
I'm concerned you have set up a charity but appear to have no knowledge of basic charity operation nor accounting - you HAVE arranged for accounting, I hope? In UK, you trustees who manage the charity have to prepare and file statutory accounts (in a very specific format, a UK charity's accounts differ substantially from those of a business' even down to some basic principles) as well as having other statu
Outsource (Score:2)
My mother founded a successful non-profit. My sister is a development manager for a less-successful charity.
If
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Apparently part of your job isn't basic math. 100,000 / 300 is about 333, about a factor of ten off from your 3000 number.
Crowdrise (Score:2)
Fractured Atlas? maybe not... (Score:2)
Crowdrise (Score:2)
ResAlternatives? (Score:2)
Alternatively you could have your donation link just be so people email you a pledge as above, and just make a note that these pledges are binding financially as long as $XXX,XXX in pledges is reached
Cauzoom (Score:1)