Ask HN: Why did "Coolest Cooler" fail their first KS campaign?
I believe many of you have heard of the "Coolest Cooler" that has already raised $4M on Kickstarter [1].
I was surprised to find out that the same person ran essentially the same KS campaign only a few months ago and only managed to raise $100K, failing to reach his goal of $125K [2]. The two campaigns look very similar to me.
I think this is an interesting case study about crowdfunding. What do you think they did wrong the first time? How did they fix it?
[1] https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ryangrepper/coolest-cooler-21st-century-cooler-thats-actually
[2] https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ryangrepper/the-coolest-cooler-with-blender-music-and-so-much
4 comments
[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 13.8 ms ] thread* The newer one just looks better - it's got a bit of retro car feel as compared to the first one that kind of looks tacky.
* The pictures of the items/rewards at various levels are better on the new one
* The new one is coming out in summer, when people think about using coolers - they may see this, then go out somewhere and think "hey, that would be nice to have" then go back it. That isn't happening in December, he's not catering to the ice fishing crowd.
* (edit to add) And he put in a $20 cheaper Early Bird level (twice!) that probably helped a lot with building momentum.
Here's another interesting point I read in an article. He says the leveraged the backers from the first campaign to get early support for the second one. This makes a lot of sense. He raised $100K from 250 people in a month. If he could then get all of these people to sign up on the first few days of the new project, that can give the impression that this is a really hot project.
That, combined with the points you mentioned about the price (for the previous backers!), and the timing probably did it.
Often a creator is scrambling to get the campaign page finished up to the last minute, and doesn't have time to even think much about publicity or marketing. But your media campaign is just as important as your product details.
We find that most campaigns that eventually hit their goal raise about 30% of their funds from their own networks. They should raise this in the first 48 hours. Once you have this 30% of funds locked in, it will be easier to raise additional funds. When strangers see that others trust you with their money, it gives them the confidence to contribute. This seed funding also gives your campaign momentum that can be leveraged for marketing and press.