|
CUHK Business School Research Reveals Large Early Contributions from Family and Friends May Affect Crowdfunding Success
HONG KONG, Jun 27, 2018 - (Media OutReach) - Raising money from family and friends is a common and effective way for start-ups. However, will it affect the success of crowdfunding initiatives?
Entrepreneurs are increasingly relying on internet crowdfunding - the use of online platforms to raise money from multiple contributors. It is reported that active global crowdfunding platforms generated more than US$34.4 billion in 2015. The World Bank estimates that the crowdfunding industry will reach US$90 billion by 2020. In terms of scale, crowdfunding has become a viable alternative to venture capital and angel investment.
For most entrepreneurs, seeking funding from family and friends is a popular and effective way to round up their initial capital for business. The reason is simple: These are the people who are more likely than anyone else to believe in your ability and fund your dream.
However, is there any downside of this source of funding? Will early contributions from family and friends be a good signal for other potential funders?
A study conducted by Assistant Professor Tingting Fan and Associate Professor Leilei Gao from Department of Marketing at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Business School, and their collaborator Yael Steinhart, Professor and Head of Marketing Department of Coller School of Management at Tel Aviv University in Israel, looks into the effect of early contributions from family and friends on subsequent contributions to a crowdfunding project.
Success Factors for Crowdfunding When it comes to what contributes to the success of crowdfunding projects, a lot of literature in marketing and management focuses on characteristics of the project (e.g. description of the project, information disclosure and fundraising goal), the entrepreneur (e.g. previous successful initiatives, education, geographic locations, social connections), and of the backers and their affiliations. However, there isn't enough research looking into other factors such as how funders perceive the contributions from friends and family, according to Prof. Fan.
"Existing research tells us that early contributions from friends and family - what we call the 'seeding investment', establish a positive signal regarding the trustworthiness of a project. For example, a past study revealed that the more Facebook friends you have, the higher success rate is your crowdfunding project," says Prof. Fan. "Yet, few studies adopted the perspective of potential funders."
"Little is known regarding whether consumers are aware of the fact that entrepreneurs raise seed money from their friends and family, and how they might react upon such seed financing," she adds.
The Study The study aims to explore the role of friends and family contribution by considering consumers' reactions to potential seeding behavior at the early stage of a crowdfunding campaign launch.
The researchers conducted five studies, including a field study, which collected real-world crowdfunding data from over 900 projects comprising 116,153 contributions from 68,036 funders. The data was utilised from DemoHour between July 31, 2011 and August 30, 2014.
One of the largest reward-based crowdfunding platforms in China, DemoHour enables an entrepreneur to create a webpage to introduce his or her project, set its funding goal within a certain period (usually 30 to 40 days). A potential funder can visit any projects with profiles on DemoHour and observe individual funders' contributions before deciding which project and how much to contribute.
The data shows the average funding goal per project was US$3,089 while the average funding period was 43 days. Moreover, 56 percent of the projects succeeded in attaining their fundraising objects. Each project had 115 funders, with each of the funders contributing US$32 on average.
Then the researchers looked at how small contributions differed between successful and unsuccessful projects on the first launching day of these projects.
Consequently, they revealed several important findings: Firstly, friends and family of entrepreneurs contributed more money in the early stage of a crowdfunding campaign as compared to strangers; secondly, a potential funder is more likely to contribute to a newly-launched crowdfunding campaign when the majority of the existing contributions are relatively small amounts; thirdly, this positive effect of small prior contributions on prospective funders' likelihood to contribute to a crowdfunding campaign will be weakened at the later stage of the campaign.
To understand these findings, Prof. Fan explains, we will have to understand the 'friendship-giving lay belief'.
Friendship-Giving Lay Belief It is common sense that we are more likely to feel indebted to our friends than to complete strangers, and that we'd feel obligated to helping them. Such 'friendship-giving lay belief' manifests itself in crowdfunding in a way that people would generally believe friends and family of entrepreneurs are more likely to contribute to their projects large rather than small amounts of money than strangers.
"In the early stage in crowdfunding, potential funders will only see limited information of a project, such as the funding goal and contributions. Based on the 'friendship-giving lay belief', they will tend to infer that large contributions would probably come from friends and family of the entrepreneur, and small contributions would be from strangers. Such inference will influence their funding behavior," says Prof. Fan. "They will be more willing to fund a project with small contributions in the early stage," she continues.
Why is that the case? Psychologists have long believed that people are more likely to adopt the opinions and behaviors of their peers rather than of people they don't affiliate with.
"In the case of a potential funder who doesn't know the entrepreneur, he or she will consider the other funders (who also don't know the entrepreneur) his or her peers, thus following their behavior to contribute to the project," she says.
Implications The study carries important implications for entrepreneurs, particularly those who would like to make use of crowdfunding to launch their projects.
"We demonstrated that consumers may rely on the amount given by early funders as a signal of their relationships with the entrepreneur and such inference has significant influence to their funding behavior," she says.
"When the majority of early funders contribute large amounts, potential funders are more likely to infer that they are the friends and family of the entrepreneur, and thus be less willing to contribute to the crowdfunding project," she says.
"Hence, from a practical perspective, entrepreneurs may want to devise effective strategies to leverage the help of their friends and families when promoting a crowdfunding campaign. For example, it may be better to gather small rather than large contributions to improve the likelihood of achieving the fundraising goal," says Prof. Fan.
Reference: Tingting Fan, Leilei Gao, and Yael Steinhart (2017), "When Small Predicts Large: The Effect of Initial Small Contributions on Subsequent Contribution to a Crowdfunding Project," R&R at Journal of Consumer Research.
This article was first published in the China Business Knowledge (CBK) website by CUHK Business School: https://bit.ly/2KliaYS.
About CUHK Business School CUHK Business School comprises two schools - Accountancy and Hotel and Tourism Management - and four departments - Decision Sciences and Managerial Economics, Finance, Management and Marketing. Established in Hong Kong in 1963, it is the first business school to offer BBA, MBA and Executive MBA programmes in the region. Today, the School offers 8 undergraduate programmes and 13 graduate programmes including MBA, EMBA, Master, MSc, MPhil and Ph.D.
In the Financial Times Global MBA Ranking 2018, CUHK MBA is ranked 43rd. In FT's 2017 EMBA ranking, CUHK EMBA is ranked 32nd in the world. CUHK Business School has the largest number of business alumni (34,000+) among universities/business schools in Hong Kong - many of whom are key business leaders. The School currently has about 4,400 undergraduate and postgraduate students and Professor Kalok Chan is the Dean of CUHK Business School.
More information is available at: http://www.bschool.cuhk.edu.hk or by connecting with CUHK Business School on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cuhkbschool and LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/school/3923680/.
For media enquiries, please contact: Edmond Siu Senior Public Relations and Communications Manager Tel: +852 3943 1842 Email: edmondsiu@cuhk.edu.hk
Summie Wan Marketing and Communications Executive Tel: +852 3943 4492 Email: summiewan@cuhk.edu.hk
Source: CUHK Business School
Copyright ©2026 JCN Newswire. All rights reserved. A division of Japan Corporate News Network.
|
Latest Release
 Honda Newly Launches "Discover Honda" Content Curation Media Platform Dec 26, 2025 17:34 JST
|  Mazda Selected for A List in CDP Water Security for the First Time Dec 26, 2025 17:19 JST
|  Fujitsu Develops Fujitsu Kozuchi Physical AI 1.0 for Seamless Integration of Physical and Agentic AI Dec 26, 2025 14:04 JST
|  Establishment of DOCOMO Innovation Fund IV, a Corporate Venture Investment Fund Dec 26, 2025 13:53 JST
|  The General Incorporated Association Generative AI Japan Announces the Winners of the Japan Generative AI Award 2025 Dec 26, 2025 11:00 JST
|  BCQ (01963.HK) to Pay RMB 585 Million Cash Dividend, Driving Share Price and Yield Upside Dec 25, 2025 18:23 JST
|  Tohoku University and Fujitsu utilize Causal AI to discover superconductivity mechanism of promising new functional material Dec 23, 2025 14:58 JST
|  Toward an Athlete- and Planet-Friendly Hakone Ekiden: All Vehicles Provided for the 2026 Race Will Be Electrified Dec 23, 2025 03:18 JST
|  MHI Group to Accelerate Development of Digital Talent Dec 23, 2025 02:57 JST
|  MHI and EXEO Group Build and Begin Commercial Use of Japan's First GPU Servers with Two-Phase DLC Dec 23, 2025 02:20 JST
|  MHI Participates in Demonstration Testing of Vehicle-Infrastructure Integration System for Autonomous Buses in Shimotsuke City Dec 19, 2025 03:24 JST
|  NEC and emaratech Collaborate on Biometric Smart Gates Supporting UAE Airport Operations Dec 19, 2025 03:06 JST
|  Fujitsu to showcase mobility and physical AI tech at CES 2026 Dec 19, 2025 02:42 JST
|  Kirin and Fujitsu elucidate a novel gut-brain axis mechanism of citicoline for the first time worldwide through AI-based analysis and experimental validation leveraging drug discovery DX technology Dec 19, 2025 02:06 JST
|  TANAKA PRECIOUS METAL GROUP and TANAKA MIRAI Lab. Released Their Fourth Collaborative Musical Work with Sound Wellness Lab (Della): "Precious Metal Orchestra - A Musical Voyage through the Sound of Precious Metals for Christmas" now available for streaming Dec 18, 2025 22:00 JST
|  SAKENOVA: 28-Year-Old Master Brewer Pioneers AI-Driven Sake Revolution, Achieving 40% Cost Reduction While Winning International Gold Medals Dec 15, 2025 23:00 JST
|  NEC Provides Vehicle Management Equipment for Autonomous Driving at Tokyo International Airport Dec 15, 2025 19:41 JST
|  NEC and AEROTHAI Elevate Air Traffic Safety with Advanced Time Sync Solutions from Adtran Oscilloquartz Dec 15, 2025 19:04 JST
|  Olympus Triples Venture Capital Fund Investment to Strengthen MedTech Leadership Dec 15, 2025 08:30 JST
|  HKTDC 4Q25 Export Confidence Index: 2026 Hong Kong Export Growth of 8-9%, Sustained AI product demand lays solid foundation for future expansion Dec 12, 2025 23:15 JST
|
More Latest Release >>
|