Indiegogo Upload Image an Error Occurred. Please Try Again in a Couple Minutes

Hack Kickstarter

Mike Del Ponte co-founded Soma, which raised more than $100,000 on Kickstarter using virtual assistants and free apps.

I commencement met Mike Del Ponte two years ago when he was running marketing at BranchOut, a startup I advise.

Before joining BranchOut, Mike had explored a variety of career paths, including preparing for the priesthood at Yale Divinity School and serving as a peacemaker in the West Banking company.

Earlier this year, Mike came to me with a new product idea called Soma. Soma is, in its simplest form, a loftier-end competitor to Brita water filters. It combines Apple-inspired design (e.g. sleek glass carafe) with a subscription service that delivers the earth's beginning compostable water filter to your door. From form to role, from funding model to revenue model, Mike was eager to disrupt a sleepy merely enormous market: h2o. I became an advisor.

To launch Soma on Kickstarter (and raise $100,000+ in merely nine days), Mike and his team used some of the techniques that helped BranchOut grow to 25 meg users in just sixteen months.

You can replicate what he did.

This mail includes all of their email templates, spreadsheets, open-source code to build landing pages, and even a custom dashboard Soma'south hacker Zach Allia built to monitor their Kickstarter data, social media, and printing.

[12/06/18 Ed. Note: Some templates are currently unavailable. We take reached out to the author for new links.]

This post is as close to copy-and-paste Kickstarter success equally you will find. And even if you lot take no interest in Kickstarter, Mike's approach is a blueprint for launching most any product online for maximal impact and minimal cost.

Relish!

UPDATE: Soma is offering a vii-class, private dinner with me at a celebrated mansion in San Francisco (travel included) equally one of their Kickstarter prizes. At the time this post was published, at that place was still one spot left.

Enter Mike

How many times have yous dreamt of launching a new product, just to let your dream fall to the wayside?

I don't take the money to fifty-fifty become started! What if it fails?

In the by, these excuses held some weight, as bringing a new product to market could be incredibly expensive. Oftentimes, you had to epitome, build, and then hope the globe wanted what you lot were selling. If not, you could end up with a warehouse full of debt: unsellable inventory.

Now, there are new options. Crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter and IndieGogo allow you to introduce (exam) a new product before y'all offset manufacturing, removing a huge amount of risk. If people like what you're proposing, yous can pull in thousands or even millions of dollars to fund your dream. At the very worst, yous were able to test your idea without investing much time or money.

Merely planning and running a Kickstarter campaign is often done in a haphazard way.

To set up for ours, we didn't want to leave annihilation to chance, then nosotros interviewed 15 of the top-earning Kickstarter creators. Their projects ranged from a grizzly bear jacket to a gaming console that raised nearly $8.6 million on Kickstarter. What nosotros learned is that whether yous're successful or struggling, your Kickstarter entrada is often "40 days of anarchy," equally ane creator put it. Either you succeed beyond your wildest dreams and are overwhelmed with inquiries from backers, press, retailers and investors, or you lot struggle to achieve your goal and frantically beg bloggers and friends to spread the word. Either type of overwhelm can be a huge headache.

And so, we got creative.

Using virtual administration, growth hacking techniques, and principles from Tim'due south books, we raised over $100,000 in less than 10 days. Having accomplished our goal with nigh thirty days to spare, we are now relaxing for the holidays. The Kickstarter is behind us, allowing united states of america to get back to production evolution as we get to know our new customs of 1,600+ committed customers.

Here are the steps nosotros used to do it…

Footstep one: Start with principles that require less work and yield ameliorate results

We chose three cadre principles for our Kickstarter strategy. The hacks and tactics we'll share with yous are cool, simply these principles were the foundation of our campaign. Make certain you lot empathize them before moving forward.

  1. Minimum Effective Dose. MED is the smallest input needed to produce a desired outcome. For example, if you want to boil water, the MED is 212 degrees Fahrenheit. Increasing the temperature higher up 212 degrees will not produce a amend outcome, it will just waste resources. We wanted to focus on the ane-3 things that would allow u.s. to raise $100,000 in 10 days, and eliminate everything else. MED is described in detail in The iv-Hr Body.
  2. Outsource and automate. These two steps allow yous to get results by delegating tasks and setting up automatic systems so you can focus your free energy on more valuable projects. The #1 resource we institute for outsourcing is Zirtual. Zirtual provides Us-based virtual administration (VAs) for equally little as $399. Do not run a Kickstarter campaign (or your life) without VAs. They will save you lot countless hours of work. The 4-Hour Workweek is the best book on outsourcing and automating.
  3. Prep and pick up. Chef'due south don't prepare meals like yous and me. They don't outset 15-60 minutes before dinner. Instead, they prep everything in advance (sometimes days before), and so they can just rut the food and make it look nice when information technology'due south fourth dimension to eat. This concept was disquisitional to our success. Our goal was to practise xc% of the piece of work in advance. For example, crafting emails two-3 days early so we just needed to click "send" when we launched. Nosotros learned about prep and choice up in The 4-Hour Chef. It's a game changer.

Footstep ii: Find the MED for Kickstarter traffic

If you want to heighten a lot of money on Kickstarter, you need to drive a lot of traffic to your project. And you want that traffic to be comprised of prospective backers of your projection. Applying the concept of MED, we knew nosotros needed to detect and focus on the best traffic sources.

My friend, Dirt Hebert, is a Kickstarter proficient. Ane of the things he taught me is a simple play a joke on using Chip.ly tracking. Bit.ly is a link shortening service used past millions of people…and Kickstarter. If you add together a + to the cease of any bit.ly URL, you can see stats about that link. For case: here are stats for the shortlink Kickstarter generated for our campaign http://kck.st/VjAFva+.

Click here for full size image

Bitly 1

Click hither for full size prototype

Bitly

To notice the top referral sources, we gave our VA a list of Kickstarter projects similar to ours and asked her to list the referrers for each project. Almost without fail, the society of top referrers was:

  1. Facebook
  2. Direct traffic (primarily via email)
  3. Twitter
  4. Kickstarter
  5. Blogs

Based on this data, we decided to focus all of our attending on just two goals:

  1. Getting coverage on the correct blogs
  2. Activating our networks to create buzz on Facebook, Twitter, and email

Nosotros knew that if we did this, we would be listed on Kickstarter'due south "popular projects" sections, which is how you become people who are browsing Kickstarter to cheque out and back your project.

Footstep iii: Use the 80/20 rule to focus on the best media targets

At Soma, we were fortunate to go a ton of press in just x days (Forbes, Fast Visitor, Inc., Mashable, Cool Hunting, Business organisation Insider, GOOD, Salon, Gear Patrol, Thrillist, The Huffington Post, and many more). We fabricated mistakes and learned a lot. This section offers our all-time advice on how to get the MED of press and succeed on Kickstarter.

The 80/twenty rule teaches us that 20% of stories will yield 80% of your press results. This was absolutely the case for us. 1 week into our Kickstarter campaign, we reviewed our press coverage. Surprisingly, the post that earned us the nearly money was on a site most people have never heard of: world wide web.good.is, the online property of Proficient mag.

We stopped and asked ourselves, "Why did good.is outperform bigger and more well-known media outlets?" Nosotros discovered that good.is was in some cases 10x more valuable than other press because the audience is relevant, the readership is substantial (400,000+ unique monthly visitors), we got an introduction to a writer at Proficient, and we reached prospective backers through GOOD's daily email and its Facebook and Twitter accounts.

Therefore, when making your media list, these are the iv things to look for:

  1. Relevance – will their readers LOVE your project?
  2. Readership – how much traffic does their site get? [TIM: For a quick thought, I use the SEO for Chrome extension]
  3. Relationships – exercise you know at least one person who tin brand a potent introduction?
  4. Attain – will the weblog reach prospective backers by promoting your post via email newsletter, RSS feed, Facebook, Twitter, and other channels? [TIM: This is the most neglected checkbox. Blogs that expect you to drive all traffic to their posts are a waste product of fourth dimension. Recall: big site-wide traffic does not mean each post gets much (or any) traffic.]

What follows is a 5-step process for making the earth'due south greatest media list. Your VA will practice ninety% of the work. We've included email templates yous tin utilise to delegate these projects to your VA.

[12/06/18 Ed. Note: Templates are currently unavailable. We have reached out to the writer for new links.]

I. Discover relevant bloggers using Google Images

Start by looking at who covered Kickstarter projects similar to yours. You can practice this by using a simple Google Images hack. If you lot drag and drop any image file into the search bar at images.google.com, you lot'll be shown every website that has ever posted that prototype. Pretty cool, huh?

Click hither for full size image. Below, the Porthole by Martin Kastner.

Google Image Search

Here's the process your VA will employ:

  1. Notice 10 Kickstarter projects similar to yours, and for each, do the following.
  2. Right-click and salve-to-desktop 2-3 images.
  3. Drag and drop each image file from your desktop into the Google Images search bar.
  4. Review blogs listed on the results page to see which might be relevant to your project.
  5. Fill out the following fields in the attached "Media List" spreadsheet: Publication, URL, first and final proper noun of the writer, and links to relevant posts past that writer.

Y'all at present accept dozens of blogs that have a loftier probability of relevance, all neatly organized in a spreadsheet. Your VA can find more sites like the ones in your media listing by searching SimilarSites.com.

Two. Research site traffic on Compete.com

Bigger is not e'er improve. But it is helpful to know the size of each blog's readership. Have your VA research how many unique monthly visitors each blog has and add that data to your media list.

3. Identify relationships on Facebook

This may be the well-nigh important part of your PR efforts. For us, eight out of ten valuable weblog posts resulted from relationships. Either we knew the blogger or got an introduction. When we pitched a blogger without a relationship, less than ane% even responded. With introductions, our success rate was over fifty%.

How practise you identify relationships? Facebook. Have your VA log in to your Facebook account, search for bloggers in your media list, and add mutual friends to your spreadsheet. You can as well search on professional networks similar BranchOut or LinkedIn.

IV. Notice each blog'south achieve on email, social media, and RSS

After witnessing the value of skilful.is featuring Soma in their email newletter, we completely changed the way nosotros thought about press coverage. A blog post is just the beginning. Once you lot go covered, you need distribution. You need to reach your prospective backers through email, RSS feeds, and social media.

To gauge a blog's reach, have your VA research how many followers information technology has on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and RSS. Once y'all make your short listing of media targets (run into below), you should as well sign up for each blog's email newsletter.

You won't really know what your reach will exist until you've landed each story and received a delivery past each web log to promote your posts. But don't worry, nosotros'll help you get both below. So proceed reading.

Five. Review your media listing and turn it into a dossier fit for a Seal Squad 6 hush-hush mission

Ok. And so at present you have a really strong media list…and all you lot had to do is ship four emails, which we wrote for you lot. Not bad. At present information technology'due south fourth dimension for you to double check your VA's work and create your blogger shortlist.

  1. Open your media list spreadsheet and look at the mutual friends you share with each blogger. Delete the people you do not know well plenty to ask for an introduction. E-mail the people who remain and say, "Hey ____, I saw you're friends with [proper noun of blogger] on Facebook. Exercise you lot know him well enough to make an intro next calendar month? I recollect our Kickstarter projection could be a proficient fit for [name of blog]. Thanks!" Based on the answers yous get, charge per unit how strong your relationship is for each blog (i = strong, 3 = weak). If your VA didn't notice any common connections, tweet or post on Facebook: "Please message me if you know anyone at [name of blog]. I have a great story I'd like to share with them. Thanks!" I did this twice and immediately got introductions.
  2. Spend some time on each weblog and gauge for yourself how relevant it is. Charge per unit relevance in the spreadsheet (1 = extremely relevant, 3 = not relevant).
  3. For each blog, research the writers your VA plant. Based on their past posts, are they really the all-time bloggers to embrace you? Is there anyone at the blog who is a amend fit?
  4. Now, sort your spreadsheet by relevance, relationships, and readership (in that order) to prioritize your outreach. Take your VA find email addresses for the top ten bloggers in your spreadsheet. At this indicate, you should only focus on ten bloggers.
  5. Using this template, have your VA make a 1-folio cursory for each of the top 10 bloggers. Print these out and hang them on the wall like wanted posters or put them in a top secret dossier. Whether y'all fancy yourself a compensation hunter or the next James Bond, your mission is to find, befriend, and get covered by these bloggers so the dream you're launching on Kickstarter tin can become a reality.

Stride four: Plow bloggers into buddies

The only thing improve than pitching a blogger through a friendly introduction is becoming friends with the blogger yourself.

If there'due south one thing we learned from our Kickstarter campaign, it's that friends are incredibly generous. They will go to great lengths to help yous succeed. Blogger friends are no exception. Some of our blog posts came from shut friends who offered to help before we even asked. For example, this Fast Company article by Amber Rae that got over 6,000 Facebook likes and 4,000 tweets in but 10 days.

The key is to genuinely form friendships with bloggers. They become pitched every day by strangers who don't care nigh them and but desire publicity. Do the verbal opposite. Really care well-nigh them. Figure out ways to be helpful. Hang out. Even if they don't end up covering you, at to the lowest degree y'all'll accept a new friend.

Pace 5: Get the story and make specific requests to maximize your achieve

Once yous connect with a blogger that is interested in roofing your projection, your job is to make information technology equally easy equally possible for them to write a story that is valuable to their readers and to you. The benefit of starting with a shortlist of merely 10 bloggers is that you lot tin can actually get to know their weblog and writing fashion. Armed with this information, yous can tailor your pitch to their needs. For example, after receiving an email introduction to a blogger at Gear Patrol, the ultra cool men's digital magazine, I sent over this pitch (to someone not named John):

Hi John

It'southward peachy to meet you. I'm a huge fan of Gear Patrol and wanted to pass on something new that could be a nice fit for your kitchen department. I've attached an image of the Soma glass carafe and our revolutionary h2o filter. Our Kickstarter folio has a video and bullet points on why Soma is unique.

We recollect Soma could be a great story for Gear Patrol for these reasons:

Innovative gear – Soma is the earth's outset compostable water filter: made of Malaysian coconut shells, vegan silk, and food-based plastic.

Sleek blueprint – The Soma carafe is made of decanter-quality drinking glass, in a earth of plastic pitchers. The hour-glass shape is unprecedented in the industry.

Made for busy guys – Soma delivers your h2o filters right to your door and then you never forget when to change it.

If yous're interested, delight let me know how I tin can brand the writing process easy for your team. I'm happy to ship more hullo-res photos. We launch Tuesday at 8am PST.

Thanks for taking the time to bank check us out,

Mike

The good thing most Kickstarter is that well-nigh of the data and assets bloggers need for a story can exist found right on your Kickstarter page, including high resolution photos and the embed code for your video. We built a press page and wrote a press release. In retrospect, they may not have been worth it given the amount of time nosotros spent on them. All you demand is a DropBox folder with how-do-you-do-res photos and 5-7 bullet points well-nigh your projection that y'all can paste in an electronic mail. The fundamental is to make certain you packet everything in a fashion that's convenient for bloggers.

[TIM: For more than real-earth successful pitches (e.g. Wired Mag, Dr. Oz), see my post "From First Television to Dr. Oz – How to Get Local Media…So National Media"]

Once you become the story, your work is far from over. Retrieve, you want to ensure each story reaches people who volition dorsum your project. So after a story is confirmed, brand sure to ask the blogger the following questions, ideally in person or over the phone one week prior to launch.

  1. "We're launching on Monday at 8am PST, tin can the story go live at that time?" If they say "no," enquire for the story to exist published at another time on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday 8am-5pm PST, ideally in the morning. If they say, "I'll try," push for a confirmation of the engagement and time your story volition become live. We missed out on a lot of valuable traffic because big blogs posted our story at night or on the weekend.
  2. "Equally a subscriber to your email newsletter, I e'er read the stories you curate and am sure others do, as well. Tin can our story be featured in your newsletter?"
  3. "Nosotros've found that Facebook is the #1 source of traffic to Kickstarter. Can you post our story on your Facebook fan folio the forenoon it goes live? Cool! And I'm assuming you'll tweet it out, too, right? Awesome!"
  4. "I follow y'all on Pinterest and noticed you have like a gazillion followers. We pinned a new picture of our product. If I send you a link, would you mind repinning it?"

Once nosotros realized how important timing and promotion were, we started making these requests. To exist honest, initially I was nervous. I thought it would be more polite to not bother bloggers. But then I learned ii of import lessons. Outset, bloggers piece of work hard to create content and they desire it to exist seen by as many people equally possible. And second, bloggers won't get annoyed past your requests if yous're polite, explicate why timing and promotion are so of import, and requite them the time and assistance they need to work within the confines of a content calendar they may non control. The more yous befriend bloggers and consider their fears and motivations, every bit well as your own, the meliorate your results volition be.

What I've just shared with you is a step-by-step approach to getting the most effective media coverage possible. I've worked with PR firms that charge $20,000 a calendar month and spend three-months planning a launch. Follow our communication and there'due south a good take chances y'all'll go better results without spending annihilation.

What I'm about to share, how to activate your network, is equally as important. In both cases y'all want to create what Tim calls "the surround sound outcome." Especially on the first few days of your launch, you want people to encounter your projection everywhere – on blogs, Facebook, Twitter…everywhere. One tool that creates this surround sound effect is retargeting. For as little equally $500, you can display banner ads on various sites to ten,000 people who take seen your project, simply may non take backed it. I haven't heard of many Kickstarter projects using retargeting, but it's something worth investigating.

Pace 6: Segment and activate your network

Someone recently asked u.s., "How did Soma raise $100,000 on Kickstarter in just nine days?" Our reply: friends. The hole-and-corner to our success was leveraging our personal networks. Our friends introduced u.s. to bloggers, were the first to back our project, and promoted Soma to their personal networks via email, social media, and word of mouth. Your friends are super heroes. Treat them as such.

The way to activate your network of friends is to give them a sense of ownership. Let them know they are office of the team. That way, they are working with you, rather than doing y'all favors.

Our Kickstarter launch team included three full-time teammates, two virtual administration, one intern, and an army of friends. Our network of friends had a strong sense of buying because we engaged them months before the Kickstarter launched. Here's how.

  1. Ask for (and listen to) your friends' communication. We asked for feedback on everything from our name to product pattern to pricing.
  2. Offering them "sneak peaks" that no one else gets. Nosotros showed our friends product renderings, pictures, and our Kickstarter video long before we released them to the public.
  3. Throw a launch party. Having a large group of people in i room, all excited about your project, creates a united free energy you can't create through emails, phone calls, or 1-on-one meetings. Invite over 50 motivated and influential friends, evidence them your Kickstarter video and make a speech communication telling them why you demand their help and exactly what you demand them to do. The people who attended our launch party ended upward existence our offset backers and our near passionate evangelists.

Segmenting friends to ensure appropriate messaging

I went through the ho-hum process of making segmented e-mail lists for my personal network. Since this involved making decisions based on my personal relationships, it was impossible to outsource. It was abrasive, just worth information technology. I exported all of my Gmail contacts, almost 7,200 full, into an Excel spreadsheet. Then, I deleted half dozen,000 contacts I did non accept a meaningful relationship with. The remaining ane,200 contacts were divided into 3 groups: influencers, in-the-know friends, and acquaintances.

  1. I identified my influencers using Klout, which measures online influence. Go to www.klout.com, connect with Facebook, select "friends" from the drop down menu in the upper right hand corner of the screen, then click on the "acme klout score" tab half-way downwardly the page on the right. This volition show all of your Facebook friends, ranked by Klout score. Anyone with a Klout to a higher place sixty was put on my influencer listing. Our goal for this group was for everyone to share Soma on Facebook and Twitter, right when we launched, to create the surround audio upshot.
  2. My in-the-know friends were already aware of Soma. They knew virtually the Kickstarter campaign, and that we wanted them to back our projection and spread the word. The people in this group, regardless of their Klout score or fiscal resource, were gear up to hustle for united states.
  3. Acquaintances were people I hadn't spoken with in a while. They needed to be told what Soma is and why it's important. This group was past far the largest, comprising at least one,000 of the ane,200 people on my principal list.

Each of these 3 groups received a different email when we launched, which yous can see here. The acquaintances received a mass email sent via MailChimp. The influencers and in-the-know friends each received a personalized e-mail, everyone was slightly different.

Personalized emails require much more fourth dimension than one mass e-mail, but we put in the extra hours to honour our friends and reinforce that they're part of the team. One tool proved to exist a huge time saver. TextExpander allows you to paste whatever saved message – whether information technology's a phone number or a 2-page email – into whatever document or text field, simply past typing an abbreviation. For example, when I blazon "ppush", a basic form of the e-mail above appears with fields for me to fill in the name, in this instance "Joe". It's a must take app that probably saved us one-2 hours a mean solar day in typing.

1 tool that we did non use, but should take, is Boomerang, a Gmail plug-in that allows you to schedule emails. We crafted emails to our influencers and in-the-know friends the 24-hour interval of our launch, using TextExpander, then slightly customized each one. What nosotros should have washed is write and save these personalized emails a few days before we launched. That manner, we could have scheduled them to exist automatically sent by Boomerang the second we launched. This would have freed up many valuable hours on launch day.

Footstep vii: Use landing pages to spark sharing

Social Sharing

Y'all'll observe in our email templates that nosotros oft transport people to landing pages we built for our Kickstarter launch (rather than to our Kickstarter folio directly). We realized that most Kickstarter creators practice one of two things:

  1. They ask for as well many things ("Back us! Tweet! Like us on Facebook! Email friends!), which ofttimes results in people doing nada at all.
  2. They ask for just i thing, which people exercise, but miss out on other actions their friends might do if asked the right way.

We wanted to have our block and eat information technology, too. And so we asked our friends to click just one link, which of course, had 3 ways to assist! And so, when they returned to their e-mail, we had a subsequent ask, which was to forrard the electronic mail to others.

Why it worked: Essentially we were asking them to do just one thing at a time, typically just to click something.

Throughout the campaign we built 2 more landing pages. Each were meant to maximize sharing on social media, primarily Facebook. Nosotros included videos so our friends were incentivized to visit the landing page and got value. These videos were recorded on an iPhone. They were complimentary to make and only took almost an hour to shoot, edit, and upload. Highly recommended.

Landing Pages2

The emails and landing pages were sent out on days 1, two and 9, usually at 8am. We've left them upward and so you tin check them out: Day 1, Day 2, 24-hour interval nine. You lot tin see the emails and Kickstarter updates here.

These landing pages were disquisitional when it came to creating the surround sound result. We know because every fourth dimension we launched i, we got flooded with texts and emails proverb, "Dude! I'm seeing you guys everywhere. Congrats!" When you get a lot of people sharing the same link on Facebook, information technology'southward displayed to more people, who share it with even more people, and y'all get this virtuous viral outburst that keeps growing.

Y'all tin make your ain custom landing pages past using our opensource code.

Final thoughts

If you await at our advice, it essentially boils downwards to empowering people and making it easy for them to contribute to a worthy cause. Always attempt to empathize with other people. And take the time to say, "Give thanks you." It goes a long way.

The all-time story we heard about using Kickstarter to derisk a business was by the founders of Hidden Radio, which raised $938,000 on Kickstarter. Inspired by The 4-Hour Workweek, they wanted to test out ideas equally much equally possible. So earlier edifice a prototype, they submitted production renderings to a few blueprint blogs. The response was positive, just they didn't rush into manufacturing. Instead, they tested their thought again as a Kickstarter project, knowing information technology forces people to put their coin where their mouth is. five,300 people backed their project, which provided proof of concept, majuscule, and a big group of customers willing to provide free market place research. To us, this is a great example of hacking Kickstarter. It'south about a mindset, not just tricks and applied science.

Although we stopped marketing our Kickstarter on day 9 of the campaigin, our page is yet upwards and you tin reserve a Soma until January 11, 2013. If you lot're fast, you may also go a private, 7-course dinner with Tim Ferriss, which is the last reward listed on our Kickstarter page.

Tools

Zirtual – United states-based virtual assistants. ($399 and upwardly)

TextExpander – Paste oftentimes used text and pictures into documents, emails, and text fields past merely typing an abridgement. ($34.95)

Boomerang – A Gmail plug in that allows you lot to schedule emails. You can also receive reminders to follow up on an e-mail you sent if the other person does non reply. (Gratuitous)

MailChimp – A service to blueprint and ship mass emails. (Complimentary if you have less than ii,000 subscribers and send less than 12,000 emails per month)

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing – This volume provides critical insights on how best to position your product among the contest. ($11)

Brainfluence: 100 Ways to Persuade and Convince Consumers with Neuromarketing – A must read for anyone doing any class of marketing. The sections on pricing and copywriting will be incredibly helpful as y'all arts and crafts your emails, video script, and Kickstarter page. ($17)

Custom Kickstarter dashboard – We built this Chrome extension to manage our Kickstarter campaign. Y'all can see your Kickstarter, Facebook and scrap.ly metrics, also as tweets and press. All updated in real time. You lot can even encounter Klout scores of people tweeting about yous and answer correct from the dashboard. (Complimentary)

Click here for full size image

Kickstarter Dashboard

The Tim Ferriss Show is one of the well-nigh popular podcasts in the world with more than 700 one thousand thousand downloads. Information technology has been selected for "Best of Apple tree Podcasts" three times, it is ofttimes the #i interview podcast across all of Apple tree Podcasts, and it's been ranked #1 out of 400,000+ podcasts on many occasions. To listen to whatever of the by episodes for free, check out this page.

lynndowast.blogspot.com

Source: https://tim.blog/2012/12/18/hacking-kickstarter-how-to-raise-100000-in-10-days-includes-successful-templates-e-mails-etc/

0 Response to "Indiegogo Upload Image an Error Occurred. Please Try Again in a Couple Minutes"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel