Fundrazr

FundRazr

FundRazr

Canadian crowdfunding site


FundRazr is a free crowdfunding and online fundraising platform released in 2009. FundRazr operates internationally in 35+ countries with the largest markets being United States, Canada, United Kingdom and Australia.[1][2] It allows users to run a wide-range of crowdfunding campaigns by creating fundraising pages and sharing it via social media, messaging apps, email and more[3][4] to raise money for over 100 types of causes such as nonprofit, medical care, education, community help, poverty alleviation, arts, memorials, and animal rescue causes.[5][6] FundRazr also works with more than 4000 nonprofits, charities and social enterprises with an advanced fundraising toolset for free.[7] The digital fundraising platform provides 8 different campaign types. They include microproject fundraising, peer-to-peer campaigns,[8] wishlist campaigns, recurring donations, branded sponsorship campaigns, DIY projects, sweepstake campaigns, and storefront campaigns.[9][10]

Quick Facts Type of site, Available in ...

History

FundRazr was founded in 2008 by Daryl Hatton. The head office is located in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The platform was initially a Facebook app that allowed users to crowdfund money over Facebook.[11] It has since developed into a full online fundraising tool set. FundRazr was the first crowdfunding platform to provide a collaborative community payment model, wherein funds are deposited directly to a company or cause—an example of which is their partnership with Heritage Education Funds to allow families to crowdfund directly to a Registered Educations Savings Plan (RESP).[12]

In November 2015, FundRazr partnered with Place2Give to enable users to crowdfund directly for any registered charity in North America capable of issuing tax receipts directly from FundRazr using the GIVE_api.[13] In 2018, FundRazr was modified into an enterprise crowdfunding platform and launched the Distribution Partnership Program.[14]

Business model

FundRazr uses the donation/perks crowdfunding model available for organizations, charities and personal causes with two pricing options: free (0% platform fee), standard (5% for advanced functionality) and pro (fee recovery models).[15] A fee is not charged if no fund is raised. FundRazr allows users to create a campaign page for their cause. The page can then be shared through social media, email or embedded onto a third-party website to solicit donations from supporters. Supporters contribute to a cause through comments, shares, likes, and donations, which are all visible on Facebook.[16][17] FundRazr is in partnership with PayPal which allow users to deposit and withdraw funding.[11]

The fundraising platform provides two campaign options for users to raise money: Keep It All or All Or Nothing. Keep It All means all of the funds the campaign raised will be deposited into the user's account, giving the person immediate access to the capital. All Or Nothing means if the campaign does not meet the goal by the deadline, no money will be charged to the donors or given to the user.[4] In other words, if the campaign does not raise enough to get the project off the ground, the user has the option to back out.[4]

On 20 August 2013, FundRazr introduced "Crowdfunding as a Service" technology, which allows web publishers and companies to run crowdfunding service on their site.[18] FundRazr subsequently announced its first official PoweredBy partner, HealthLine on 17 December 2013.[19]

As of 2013, illness, medical and health-related causes represent 58% of money raised. Memorials/tributes represents another 12%. On 28 February 2013, Fundrazr announced that it had raised $20 million for its users.[20][21][22][23] As of July 2018, FundRazr had raised over $116 million from over 140,000 campaigns.[24]

In November 2020, FundRazr crossed $200 million total funds raised.[4] As of April 2021, FundRazr officially launched fiscal sponsorship crowdfunding where all fiscally sponsored projects can raise unrestricted funds using the fiscal sponsor's 501c3 number.[14][25]

Awards

  • 2013 BCTIA Technology Impact Award – Most Promising Start-up[26]
  • 2013 Vancouver Social Media Award – Best Social Media Campaign (non-profit)[27]

Reception

FundRazr is listed as the best overall alternative to Kickstarter in 2022.[4] Along with competitors like Indiegogo and GoFundMe, FundRazr is also listed as one of the top major players in the crowdfunding market.[28]

Notable projects

More information Rank, Total raised ...

References

  1. "Countries & Currencies". FundRazr. Retrieved 12 September 2020.
  2. "Crowd-funding | Human Rights & Science". www.humanrightsandscience.se. 15 March 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  3. "The 6 Best Alternatives to Kickstarter in 2022". Investopedia. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  4. "Homepage". FundRazr. Retrieved 12 September 2020.
  5. Thorpe, Devin. "What Is Crowdfunding?". Forbes. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  6. "Nonprofit-Crowdfunding". FundRazr. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  7. "Crowdfunding Guide - Models, Major Players and Success Stories". ChipIn. 4 January 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  8. "About". FundRazr. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  9. TODAY, Cheryl Alkon, Special for USA. "'Crowdfunding' sites pay medical bills, raise hopes". USA TODAY.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. Hansen, Evan; Tate, Ryan (1 November 2012). "Can Facebook Army Supercharge Nonprofit Fundraising? First Test: Sandy". Wired. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
  11. "About". FundRazr. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
  12. "Fiscal Sponsorship New". FundRazr. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  13. "7 Ways to Support Standing Rock's Protest Against the Dakota Access Pipeline". Harper's BAZAAR. 23 November 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  14. "Sacred Stone Legal Defense Fund". FundRazr. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  15. "Water Protector Legal Collective, formerly Red Owl". FundRazr. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  16. "Support Heiltsuk Efforts in Diesel Spill". FundRazr. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  17. McSheffrey, Elizabeth (18 October 2016). "First Nation considering lawsuit after diesel spill destroys clam beds". National Observer. Retrieved 1 December 2016.

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