Master’s Thesis
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4. Crowdfunding Models
4.1. Crowdfunding Types
How crowdfunding can be facilitated has evolved a great deal along the years. Initial-
ly, the majority of crowdfunding was donation-based (Belleflamme et al., 2015). This
meant funders did not receive compensation
for their contribution, but donated chari-
tably. Then compensatory crowdfunding arose and funders got more than goodwill for
their input.
In the beginning, the rewards were merchandize benefits, but more recent-
ly financial rewards have emerged through equity and loan based funding, also known
as investment-based crowdfunding (
Manchanda and Muralidharan, 2014)
.
Research now distinguishes between
these types of crowdfunding, referring to them
as different “models” of crowdfunding. The key difference between different crowd-
funding models is the compensation that the funder gets from contributing
to a pro-
ject. Currently, research identifies four main models of crowdfunding: the donation
model, the reward-based model, the lending model and the equity model (Mollick,
2014; Frydrych et al., 2014). Reward, lending and equity
crowdfunding models fea-
ture monetary or non-monetary compensation, whereas the donation model does not
require any compensation (Frydrych et al., 2014). Table 2
shows the main characteris-
tics of different crowdfunding models.
Crowdfunding
Model
Donation
Model
Reward-based
Model
Lending Model
Equity Model
Type of
Compensation
No rewards for
funders
Tangible or
intangible, non-
monetary
rewards
Interest on
investment or
share of profits
Equity shares as
rewards
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