KyleKidd wrote:Despite my best efforts, I'm having trouble finding people to back my project. I've done a lot to try and raise awareness on Twitter and Facebook, but I just cant seem to get any momentum.
I'm looking for any suggestions from the community. What can I do to make this project more appealing to others?
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/18 ... -generator
Well, in light of the fact that your project page on Kickstarter lists your project as having a mere five shares, if I try to be scientific about it, then that number doesn't strike me as supporting your proposition of,
"Despite my best efforts..."Your best efforts aside, have you considered that your project page looks like an exercise in amateurism writ large? Your presentation is a failure, visually. Ignore the text portions of your project page, and concentrate only on the visuals. You've taken a bone dry approach to visually presenting a project that pertains to water.
How many visual elements are present on your project page? Kickstarter is a visually-oriented medium of communication. So, you went with a text-heavy approach, instead. If you're a scientist, then do the visual math.
0+0=0
Nothing in equals nothing out.
No matter how you look at it, nor from what angle that you approach it, your project page isn't very visually interesting.
You created a project video, and it starts off well enough, with you in what you describe as your laboratory. Take the following image from that video, for example:
Rather than a tour of your lab, though, you then go off-camera, and resort to audio and simple drawings. The device on the right side of that image, you made no attempt to explain - nor even to comment on it. It's a visual prop. It looks interesting. The eye is immediately drawn to it - yet, you then do nothing with it. Nice way to lose the viewer's attention (and their interest, as well).
To transition from interesting to boring, like that, is counter-productive. If you have a homemade lab, then you should utilize that to your project's advantage. Your project's "story" isn't simply your project, itself. It also includes you, and by extension, your laboratory.
Break up the big text masses on your project page with images. Transform your project page into something that is interesting to look at. Put some photos of yourself conducting experiments up on the project page.
Your project page's current visual presentation simply doesn't compute.
Your project image is not up to the visual task, at hand:
If that's the best that you can do, visually, then your project will go unfunded.