LOHAS TRENDS

Crowd-Sourced Moo-Lah for Food Pioneers

Friday, July 29, 2011 by Ted Ning

By Nathan Rice of Haberman

Where does a pioneering filmmaker with the idea to celebrate agriculture in the U.S. go for funding? What about a scientist with an innovative plan for improving the growing potential of urban gardens? What about someone kicking around a design for a new farmer’s market? Kickstarter.com, or its crowd-based funding brethren Kiva, is a great place to start. Kickstarter (www.kickstarter.com) is a relatively new website designed specifically to support the funding of creative projects. These projects can range from promising innovative concepts to some that might be categorized as duds. That is the beauty of the system – those with a pioneering attitude and an entrepreneurial spirit can both get funding, while kicking the tires on an idea at the same time.

The inspiration behind Kickstarter is to get a large community of people backing a project in an all-or-nothing funding style (i.e., only fully-funded projects receive the money donated to them). Users of the platform offer various incentives to encourage backers to rally for their product. These incentives can vary significantly – a personal visit from the funder to report the results directly to you, a DVD of a documentary of a film, a personalized thank you card, or in one case of a $1 donation to help scientists study soil saturation in an urban garden – “a wink and a nod for being sustainable.”

A few examples of some kick-starters from food pioneers shows the great thinking and innovative concepts seeking crowd-sourced funds:

small farm risingSmall Farm Rising is a documentary short “inspired by first generation farmers who are redefining agriculture in America.” It is also a recipient of 103 microloans totaling more than $14,000 to help get the film finished. They blew past their goal of $9,000, giving these filmmakers both the funds and the inspiration to carry out their objectives. Thanks to the micro investors on KickStarter.com it looks like the  story will get told.

Even the big boys are getting involved. Earlier this year, Sundance Films partnered with Kickstarter and Facebook in an initiative to help their aspiring film makers get a leg up through crowd-based funding.



Seeing GreenSeeing Green: The Value of Urban Agriculture is a research project designed to “measure storm water management potential of two urban farms; Brooklyn Grange (a rooftop farm) and Added Value (raised beds) in NYC. The project is currently $2,600 short of its $12,000 goal. This looks like a cool project but fundraising is still fundraising whether it is online or offline – investors need to be inspired.






Atwater Village FarmAtwater Village Farm Market (Northeast Los Angeles) is billed as a connection point between neighborhood, community, city and the environment. The village is projected to allow for “a healthy lifestyle to be sustained or developed,” a truly LOHAS-inspired goal. The group behind the idea is seeking funding to purchase things like refrigeration, food storage and equipment. The project has already received donations totaling  $11,000 but is still short of its  $20,000 goal with 34 days to go.

As innovators seek funding to expand their ideas and grow the market-share and awareness of Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability, digital, crowd-based funding offers exciting possibilities.


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