Tuesday, December 23, 2025

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Unlock AG Pro Today

Why Now?

AG Pro gives you sharp insights, compelling stories, and weekly mind fuel without the fluff. Think of it as your brain’s secret weapon – and our way to keep doing what we do best: cutting the BS and giving you INDEPENDENT real talk that moves the needle.

Limited time offer: $29/yr (regularly $149)
✔ Full access to all stories and 20 years of analysis
✔ Long-form exclusives and sharp strategy guides
✔ Weekly curated breakdowns sent to your inbox

We accept all major credit cards.

Pro

/ once per week

Get everything, no strings.

AG-curious? Get the full-access version, just on a week-to-week basis.
• Unlimited access, no lockouts
• Full Premium archive access
• Inbox delivery + curated digests
• Stop anytime, no hoops

$
7
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0

Get your fill of no-BS brilliance.

Pro

/ once per year

All in, all year. Zero lockouts.

The best deal - full access, your way. No timeouts, no limits, no regrets.
A year for less than a month of Hulu+
• Unlimited access to every story
• Re-read anything, anytime
• Inbox drop + curated roundups

$
29
$
0

*Most Popular

Full access, no pressure. Just power.

Free
/ limited

Useful, just not unlimited.

You’ll still get the goods - just not the goodest, freshest goods. You’ll get:
• Weekly email recaps + curation
• 24-hour access to all new content
• No archive. No re-reads

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Is Kickstarter hiding data on failed projects?

Crowdfunding in 2012

Crowdfunding has become popular in the last five years, and through sites like Kiva that helped regular people understand what a micro-loan is, and through sites like Kickstarter that allow people to pledge money toward a project, the understanding of alternative funding has gone mainstream. It is clear when you go to Kickstarter, that you can pledge a low amount to a project you’re interested in, and receive a small award, or even possibly the actual product being pitched, or you can pledge a large amount, and get more perks. If projects don’t reach their financial goal, no money exchanges hands, it’s simple.

With unemployment so high in America, and public schools struggling to get children interested in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) careers, inventions are the lifeblood of innovation right now. A recent analysis by Jeanne Pi at AppsBlogger.com reveals that Kickstarter is allegedly hiding failed projects by blocking Google from indexing them, and failing to report success rates to the public.

Pi scraped data from 57,860 projects which represented 99 percent of successfully funded projects, but the team was only able to scrape 82 percent of projects that were not funded, which fuels their allegation that Kickstarter “may have data issues that inflate the number of failed projects, or else are otherwise hiding these projects.”

The blog also reports that “projects that successfully fund tend to do so by relatively small margins. 25% of them funded at 3% or less over their goal. And 50% raised only 10% over their goal. In other words, when you succeed, it’s not by much. Projects that raised double or more over their goal is the exception.”

Our question: so what?

When applying for a small business loan, as a professional, I care less about the luck others have had with repayment, and more about assessing my own risk and ability to meet my own goals. Kickstarter entrepreneurs have no guarantee that they’ll get anywhere near their goals, which is why you see some people set their goal so tremendously low that their fundraising puts them at eight to ten times what they asked for.

No matter what stats Kickstarter puts out, true or false, entrepreneurs and inventors have their laser focus on crowdfunding as what has become one of the most effective methods of getting funding to get a tangible product from their head to market. Our question is – so what? Kickstarter could tell us the sky is red and we wouldn’t care, because their stats, blog, marketing, or otherwise have no bearing on the entrepreneurial spirit, so while we hope reporting is accurate, entrepreneurs will still seek crowdfunding, and the crowd wills till seek to fund.

Lani Rosales, Chief of Staffhttps://theamericangenius.com/author/lani
Lani is the Chief of Staff at The American Genius, has co-authored a book, co-founded BASHH, Austin Digital Jobs, Remote Digital Jobs, and is a seasoned business writer and editorialist with a penchant for the irreverent.

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