Sunday, May 13, 2012

SHE LOVES ME NOT #4 (shaky start)

 
Two weeks into the campaign, and my high hopes have been somewhat diminished.  It began inauspiciously when on the day of the launch, and after I had signed up for Facebook, and had been navigating about for an hour or so, I was sent a message informing me that my password had been compromised and my account had been locked.  FB also advised me to change the password if it was being used for any other accounts, and it was - for several.  It took me hours to resolve.  I then realized that the campaign announcement message I had sent to my sphere of friends, family, and colleagues via Facebook and Linkedin was not clear.  I've never been comfortable with the prospect of directly asking people for money for film budgets, so with my initial message, I was trying to lure people into the SHE LOVES ME website where I was hoping they would click on the Indiegogo button, go to the campaign page, learn what "crowdfunding" was all about, and donate, but they didn't.  It was too complicated.  I had to step out of my comfort zone and be more direct with my solicitation.  I sent a second message explaining that I was trying to raise money for a film through Indiegogo, and I included a brief explanation of what Indiegogo is all about, and this time I also included a link to the campaign page.  This seemed to work.  I started getting donations and encouraging messages, and I was thrilled!  The campaign was under way!  The next step was to send out the press release.  Following the advice of an experienced crowdfunder I was following on the internet, I chose PRWeb to distribute the release.  The press release was supposed to be the marketing tool that was to draw the most attention to the project.  So far I haven't received any email or donations from anyone outside of my personal connections, so I'm not sure the press release was all that effective.  What I do know is that after two weeks into the campaign, I find myself way short of the funding goal.  Of course it's still relatively early, and I'm certainly not giving up on it by any means, but I am considering alternate plans.  If I can raise enough money to shoot the first scene of the script - say $15,000 - $20,000 - I will change the format of the project into a webisode series, shoot the first episode, and take it from there.  I've also been open to the idea of switching the project over to an investment scenario.  After a phone conversation on the subject with an old friend of the family who happens to be a successful businessman, that notion became reinforced with his confirmation that an investment scenario would be more appealing to him, as it would be, he surmised, for other people with larger amounts of money available for speculation.  But then I'm back to the dilemma of asking strangers to invest money in a high-risk venture.  Not my forte.  Thank God I have an attorney who is willing to perform that task for me, and I intend to ask him to expand the phone list if things don't work out with the donation scenario.  So although it's been one heck of a learning curve to deal with, and I'm slightly disappointed with the donation numbers at this point, I'm still pumped about the campaign overall, and excited to see how it evolves! 
Mike Bizzarri
http://www.shelovesmefilm.com
      

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