Ben Edwards hasn't always depended on the kindness of strangers. Now he wishes he'd started doing it sooner.
His Minneapolis company SmartThings recently raised more than $1.2 million in just 30 days on the crowdfunding site Kickstarter.com to launch a product line that allows users to monitor their homes by remote control.
"We would never have gotten that far without it," said Edwards, one of seven partners in SmartThings. "They have a built-in, already primed audience, so we could just focus on the message and the product."
Crowdfunding -- a way of gathering an online community of financial supporters to rally around a specific project -- has captured the public imagination, bringing an "it takes a village" mentality to the funding of individual dreams.
Now that village could become a stampeding horde. As part of a new law to encourage small business, federal regulators are getting ready to allow crowdfunding donors to receive an ownership stake in return for their money.
Websites battling for niches are already sprouting across the Internet. Indiegogo has an international bent. Rockethub funds science research. Mobcaster is for TV projects. Fundable aims at startup businesses.
Last year, nearly $1.5 billion was raised by 452 crowdfunding sites, according to the industry website Crowdsourcing.org.
Scratching a basic itch