Tag Archives: crowdfunding

math help

Math-Language-Wordle

 

OK, so here is how I figure it.  Our Indiegogo campaign still needs to raise around $9000.

If 300 people give $30 each we are there!

If 150 give $60, mission accomplished!!

If 90 give $100, we have it!

If 75 give $120, brava!

If 30 give $300, done and done!

If 10 give $900, VOILA!

It is called crowdfunding, so we need a crowd.  We thank and appreciate all of you who have donated. If each of you could find a friend to donate, we would be well on our way to our goal.  Please do that.  Please help us make a crowd. 

Finally, please check out our Indiegogo page to learn why this is a wonderful, soulful project.

Please DONATE to our Indiegogo campaign.

Thank you!

 

SHARE & EMAIL

bucket brigade

Screen Shot 2015-06-14 at 8.38.23 PM

Seth Godin shared this post about bucket brigades.  I liken it to a good crowdfunding campaign, like our current Indiegogo effort.

We are trying to fill the lake with $$ to create wonderful art.  It takes a lot of buckets, some big some small, to fill that pond.  Every drop helps.

Please help, please donate!

A good bucket brigade

We can get more done, if we care enough. And trust enough.

From the brilliant Cory Doctorow’s award-winning novella:

I love a good bucket brigade, but they’re surprisingly hard to find. A good bucket brigade is where you accept your load, rotate 180 degrees and walk until you reach the next person, load that person, do another volte-face, and walk until someone loads you. A good bucket brigade isn’t just passing things from person to person. It’s a dynamic system in which autonomous units bunch and debunch as is optimal given the load and the speed and energy levels of each participant. A good bucket brigade is a thing of beauty, something whose smooth coordination arises from a bunch of disjointed parts who don’t need to know anything about the system’s whole state in order to help optimize it.

In a good bucket brigade, the mere act of walking at the speed you feel comfortable with and carrying no more than you can safely lift and working at your own pace produces a perfectly balanced system in which the people faster than you can work faster, and the people slower than you can work slower. It is the opposite of an assembly line, where one person’s slowness is the whole line’s problem. A good bucket brigade allows everyone to contribute at their own pace, and the more contributors you get, the better it works.