Addressing the Trust/Distrust Factor
Here’s where experience really helps—authors who already have books published or have an established track record of crowdfunding campaigns have that built-in trust.
However, new authors can establish this trust in many ways.
Back other campaigns on your crowdfunding platform of choice. This shows people that you give more than you ask for and have experience in the crowdfunding community.
Be transparent with the Risks you list in the section where you discuss how you will handle things if the unexpected happens. Show backers that you have a plan and will communicate with them about your progress.
Set a reasonable goal and offer reasonably-priced rewards. Backers know that they are paying a little extra to help fund your project but if you’re asking for $85 for a hardcover book, you need to be sure you’re justifying the costs.
Same thing goes with the goal—set a reasonable goal to cover your costs+a buffer. Don’t ask for $30k if you really need $9k. People can tell and will be turned off.
Get reader reviews of advanced reader copies. Send your story (in any format) to readers and ask for their review. Place these reviews on your campaign page. Backers will trust what other people are saying about your book more than blindly taking your word for it.
Communicate regularly with your backers in the form of updates (don’t be annoying, though). Keep these updates public so that strangers visiting your page can see how you’re interacting with people who are already supporting you.
Hi Lisa, as part of introducing my coaching cards to the public, I made 10 videos. I was thinking if it would be useful to post these video as part of updating my crowd/the public. So re-use my existing content. Is that even possible?
Absolutely! It’s always good to recycle your content because lots of people don’t see them the first time.