Abstract

The present research investigates certification effects and rational herding in reward-based crowdfunding (RBCF) campaigns of cultural projects. Culture is a domain where expert opinion traditionally plays an important role. Consequently, to test the role of experts in collective behaviour and outcomes of crowdfunding campaigns, RBCF of cultural projects is a particularly relevant field. The authors analyse data obtained from France’s leading RBCF platform, Ulule, and show that the contributing crowd is heterogeneous, both in terms of expertise and willingness to follow information cascades. Testing the impact of different backer categories on (1) campaign success, (2) composition of the crowd and (3) overall day-by-day funding dynamics, the study provides evidence of the existence of both a certification effect at the very beginning of a funding campaign, and dynamic herding later all along the campaign. Contributions from expert backers, whether specialized in the same creative industry as a given project or not, trigger additional contributions and improve the success probability of a funding campaign. Senior experts follow other senior experts, which supports normative social influence and, when specialized, they follow other specialized senior experts, which highlights taste-based homophily. We also show that junior experts, i.e. future serial backers, follow senior experts, particularly when specialized, which supports informational social influence. Experts hence lead the crowd in their decision to contribute to cultural projects, and those who follow them are mostly senior experts themselves and apprentice experts, not one-time contributors, which suggests the existence of community logic and rational information cascades in RBCF.

Highlights

  • The present research investigates certification effects and rational herding in reward-based crowdfunding (RBCF) campaigns of cultural projects

  • To test hypothesis 1, concerning the certification effect of expert early birds on funding campaign success, we ran probit regressions examining the impact of the number of different types of backers among the early birds on campaign success, i.e. the attainment of the ultimate funding goal (Table 3)

  • One added specialized senior expert among early birds leads to 4 additional backers, which somewhat shades the previous result on the strongest impact of specialists on success probability

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Summary

Introduction

The present research investigates certification effects and rational herding in reward-based crowdfunding (RBCF) campaigns of cultural projects. There appears to be a divide between campaign dynamics concerning platforms proposing a financial return (peer-to-peer lending, equity-based crowdfunding) and those without such financial returns (donations and reward-based crowdfunding) (Alegre and Moleskis 2019) For the former, among the various drivers of funding dynamics over a campaign’s duration, herding and informational cascades have been advanced and documented as a significant explanation (Berkovich 2011; Herzenstein et al 2011; Vismara 2018; Zhang and Liu 2012), whereas donations and reward-based campaigns appear to follow different or more complex patterns over time (Alegre and Moleskis 2019; Burtch et al 2013; Kuppuswamy and Bayus 2018; Lin et al 2014). A finegrained understanding of RBCF funding dynamics is an important contribution to research in entrepreneurial finance at large

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