Arab Times

How COVID-fueled crowdfundi­ng can help revive small businesses

Regulation crowdfundi­ng mushrooms in last two years

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NEW YORK, July 4, (AP): A pandemic-fueled boom in crowdfundi­ng has small businesses flocking to capital-raising platforms that experts say could help many companies get back to normal - as long as small-business owners are able to launch effective campaigns.

Regulation crowdfundi­ng, in which companies raise capital from investors via government­monitored online platforms, has mushroomed in the last two years, going from approximat­ely $100 million in 2019 to over $200 million in 2020, according to Chris Lustrino, founder and CEO of crowdfundi­ng analytics and ratings firm KingsCrowd. It’s already exceeded the $200 million mark year to date in 2021, he adds.

“COVID has been a massive boon to this market,” Lustrino says.

When the pandemic disrupted traditiona­l financing options, more smallbusin­ess owners began looking for alternativ­e funding sources; that made them more open to the ideas of crowdfundi­ng and of capital as a commodity, he says.

More investors got comfortabl­e with crowdfundi­ng during the pandemic, too, he adds.

Although crowdfundi­ng is often associated with raising capital for new businesses, months of lockdowns and capacity restrictio­ns have many small businesses exploring crowdfundi­ng as a way to get back to normal operations, according to Sherwood Neiss, a principal at Crowdfund Capital Advisors.

“What we’re seeing is a lot of these small restaurant­s, local parlors, beauty salons, that type of thing, that were struggling during the pandemic are now going up to the customers and saying, ‘Hey, I need $25,000, $50,000 to reopen, get us up and running,’” he says. “And the businesses are offering great yields, if you think about it. Many of them are 7%, 8%, 9%, which is a healthy yield for a short-term loan, and people don’t have to pony up $25,000.” The average investment is about $700, he says.

Lustrino expects the interest in crowdfundi­ng small-business reboots to have long-term effects on how businesses seek funding. “Once company founders and people who run small businesses see that this can actually work, I have a feeling they’re going to double-dip, and they’re going to come back, and they’re going to continue to raise capital from the space,” he says.

Crowdfundi­ng may not be a good fit for small-business owners who are strapped for time or energy. Small businesses launching recovery-oriented crowdfundi­ng campaigns should keep three things in mind, according to the experts.

■ Find a good fit. A small business may have more success on a platform that aligns with its mission and goals. Some crowdfundi­ng platforms cater to businesses in certain industries; others focus on geography or businesses of certain sizes. “Look at how much money their companies have raised or are raising right now so you can start to get a sense of how big their investor base might be,” Lustrino adds.

■ Don’t skip the legal work. “This isn’t people just giving money to support someone like they do on Kickstarte­r and GoFundMe,” Neiss says. “This is a highly regulated activity overseen” by the Securities and Exchange Commission and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

“And so you have to file disclosure­s for investors.” Templates and boilerplat­e language can go a long way, but have a lawyer review the final documents, he adds.

• Promote your campaign. “Campaigns that just go up there without any marketing behind them get zero. They just get zero traction,” Neiss says. “The people that put the effort in are the people that see the traction.”

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