GetVisa wrote:Charles wrote:You don't think that it might have something to do with the fact that your project page says that you have only 87 shares? Kicktraq lists it as 91 shares, but it's under a hundred shares, either way.
If we go by that logic, what you wanna say about this campaign
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/81 ... t-the-heroIt was shared only 16 times on facebook. Kicktraq number shows 2.
So basically how many times a campaign is shared doesn't decide the success.
No, but then again, if your sample is but a single other campaign cherry-picked to serve as a de facto shining example, then what you end up with is a skewered process. How much projects get shared DOES matter. For many projects, if not most projects, it will matter quite a bit, in fact.
Furthermore, every project runs its own gauntlet, not the gauntlet of other Kickstarter campaigns. Whether any other, or even every other, campaign is successful won't matter, if your own campaign fails. Sharing is crucial to the building of momentum.
You will also find that, at times, that the statistical features aren't always accurate.
But, beyond that, project can get shared a lot, and not reach its funding goal. Many different things tend to factor into the equation of success, and each project ultimately must stand upon the sum totality of its own legs, not upon the legs of other campaigns.
If you think that the sharing aspect isn't why your project isn't advancing as fast as you would prefer, then it is up to you to figure out and remedy whatever ails your project's chances of success. Regardless of however many Americans haven't faced immigration issues, the fact remains that in our nation of approximately three hundred and twenty million people, tends of millions of people living here have faced immigration issues. On top of that, immigration is a hot political topic, which is an indicator of strong interest in the subject matter, whether they've faced immigration issues personally or not.