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by dalibrandi
4309 days ago
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this is really interesting. regardless of how our first campaign goes, we're going to seriously examine this as a possible iteration/pivot of our service. We've encountered a lot of people that like the idea of getting more people to learn programming, but a decent amount of hesitation to the current model. big fan of moving away from anything that buckets individuals into "you are deserving, you are not." creating a group around a specific coding goal provides a nice layer of abstraction away from the individual. |
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Another potential advantage of a model like this is that aspiring coders who "fail" to find the funding level they were looking for can be put in contact with groups than can help them refine their appplication, skill set, and goals so that they may be able to succeed in finding funding in the future.
This sort of funding paradigm could also be used to support quality educators who want to volunteer to go into schools, non-profits and other areas that are lacking skilled CS educators.
I think this sort of model could also be used "on top of" the more traditional "kickstarter" crowdfunding model. You could still allow traditional, one person to one person funding model, but at the completion of the campaign, match funding groups with individuals who have not raised sufficient funds.