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Crowdfunding Is About Creating Jobs For The Right People

This article is more than 10 years old.

Crowdfunding is not just about creating jobs, it is about creating jobs for the right people. In April of 2012, President Obama signed the JOBS Act into law, authorizing crowdfunding of equity and debt for the sake of creating jobs. The more time I spend studying crowdfunding and working with the leaders in the crowdfund community, the clearer it becomes that not only will crowdfunding create jobs, it will create jobs in the right places.

Recently, I sat down in a hidden valley near Park City, Utah with Candace Klein, CEO of Somolend and founder of the nonprofit Bad Girl Ventures, who explained that overwhelmingly, the people were polled about crowdfunding indicating a desire to raise capital are women, African Americans and Hispanic Americans. In other words, crowdfunded capital will flow to entrepreneurs in the communities that have been most disadvantaged in America.

According to Klein, women own over 50 percent of the businesses in the United States but receive less than 5 percent of “traditional capital” and less than 3 percent of venture capital. Klein notes that she founded Bad Girl Ventures specifically to address this problem. BGV has funded 45 women-owned businesses with a total of $5 million, but also had to turn away thousands of women. This inspired Klein to launch Somolend so that she could provide capital to thousands of women owned businesses. This also allows “women investors to build their own wealth,” she notes.

Furthermore, according to Klein, Somolend is already doing lending, matching both banks and individuals to small borrowers, 40 percent of whom are nonprofits. The pricing for debt is set on an individual basis between the borrower and lender. The rates range between 3 and 22 percent. Multiple lenders may participate in the same loan to one borrower at different rates. The borrowers send the payment to Somolend, which then remits the corresponding payments to each of the borrowers.

Klein’s Somolend exemplifies the potential of crowdfunding to allocate capital more efficiently to the very people who are locked out of current capital markets, creating jobs in communities that have not been participating in the growth of the U.S. economy since 2000. In addition, the capital being allocated to nonprofits expands the good they can do.

Yesterday, I reconnected with Candace in Washington, DC. She joined her peers from the Crowdfund Intermediary Regulatory Advocates to lobby for implementation of crowdfunding anticipated in the 2012 law—which still awaits SEC and FINRA regulations. Rumors are rampant that the draft regulations are ready—and have been for months—but that the politics of the appointment of the new head of the SEC has led to a delay in issuing the regulations for comment.

Jason Best and Sherwood Niess, of Crowdfund Capital Advisors, who led the lobbying effort for the JOBS Act and were recognized by President Obama in the Rose Garden ceremony last year, were there to lead the effort to call for action from the SEC. They were joined by their partner, Judy Robinette; Vincent Molinari, CEO of GATE Technologies; Karen Kerrigan, CEO of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council; Doug Ellenoff, partner at Ellenoff, Grossman and Schole; Sara Hanks, CEO of Crowd Check; Kim Wales, CEO of Wales Capital, Chance Barnett, CEO of Crowdfunder; Chris Tyrell, Principal of Nehemiah Investments, Ryan Feit, CEO of Seed Invest and, of course, Klein, who helped draft the JOBS Act.

The group met with congressional staff on Capitol Hill and later met with a coterie of senior staff and Senators in the White House to press the issue.

Some notable remarks from the group include:

Robinette said, “Crowdfunding is not just an economic issue, it is a women's issue. It is also an African American issue. In fact, crowdfunding represents the greatest democratization of small business capital in history. While venture capital is allocated almost exclusively to businesses owned by men, crowdfunding is already being allocated in nearly perfect proportion to the composition of our population.”

Neiss said, “In the 320 days since the President signed the JOBS Act into law a vibrant crowdfunding industry has formed to live up to the promise of Title III - access to capital with prudent investor protections.  We are here today to showcase for Washington how we are ready to embark on Web 3.0, where social media meets community financing.  We hope the demonstration of this robust trade association will give the SEC the confidence it needs to release the proposed rules so America's Job creators can get the capital they need to innovate and grow."

Kerrigan said, “The capital needs of entrepreneurs remain just as critical as when the JOBS Act was signed last April. The build out and investment that has gone into creating an efficient, transparent and accessible marketplace for small businesses to find needed capital and protect investors is extraordinary. Now, the SEC must take the next step and finalize its rulemakings so the JOBS Act can fulfill its promise of helping fund promising businesses, creating jobs and bringing the economy back to robust levels of growth.”

Feit said, “I am excited to demo SeedInvest's crowdfunding platform on Capitol Hill in order illustrate the massive potential the JOBS Act has to transform early-stage financing.  We need to ensure that lawmakers are proud of the burgeoning industry they spawned and that they do not lose sight of how crucial crowdfunding is for startups and small businesses.”

Best and Niess, for their part, are taking their show on the road. They are traveling the world helping other countries to implement reasoned laws for doing crowdfunding. Of course, Australia and the UK, among a handful of countries, have already implemented crowdfunding, allow the U.S. to analyze their experiences to determine best practices.

If you would like to get involved with advocating for the crowdfunding industry, please join the Crowdfunding Professional Association.

If you are a social entrepreneur or nonprofit executive, I invite you to join me for a free online workshop series where I will be explaining the basics of how to run a successful crowdfunding campaign.

On a separate note, there is one week left to vote for your favorite social enterprise or nonprofit in the Hand Up for Social Good Award competition!

Please help me continue this conversation by commenting below, on Twitter at @devindthorpe and on FacebookGoogle+ and my personal website yourmarkontheworld.com. Let’s do some good!