I guess I have a lot of concerns about this:
1. What happens when people lose interest --and that will happen--in the product? And at that point, what happens to the people at the end of the line who have last ordered the product? It might only be me, but this crowdsourcing seems to me to be a giant ponzi scheme. Don't be the last one on line. IN fact, don't be anyone after the beginning.
**Ponzi scheme is not a fair description. Everyone pays in the same amount and they get a product. If they don't reach the funding goal, they get their money back.
2. How is this unit serviced when people lose interest in the product?
**I don't see service as a concern. We are talking small affordable products here. Ship back to manufacturer and get a new one.
3. How are the people at the company paid at the end? In fact, how are the people in the company paid altogether? It seems to me that this CS only works as long as you can find a country like China or Vietnam to build something for next to nothing--and that's generally what you'll get at this price point. Caveat emptor on reliability.
**People are paid like any other high end manufacturer employee. The margins don't change at manufacturer with the exception of a little extra for using digital channels to acquire customers in place of distributor/dealer. China has good quality plants and bad quality ones. Rega, B&W, Apple all use China manufacturer for excellent quality products.
4. How do they assure Q/C at this price point, esp. if they're banking on large numbers?
**They actually can buy better parts at higher volumes at less discount. Read the LH Labs site, they are using very high quality parts. QC is no different than anything else except hand construction ala ARC at very high price points but that's always been the case.
5. It also sure seems like a bait and switch to me. Already I'm hearing, for another $100 we can do this, for another $150 we can do that, for another $50 this is possible....and so on.
**Product upgrades at Geek have in part been driven by crowd design whereby Gavin and Larry listen to what people want on the Geek forums. Investors are willing to put in more money in some instances (this is not required of the investor at all). This is why I spent $140 on a femto clock. It's more like, "here is a performance enhancing option, would you like it or not?"
6. The margins are so small that one wrong move by a company and goodbye. And goodbye to your money.
**The margins are very good. LH even has enough to fund the development of the next round of products including likely an ADC.
**Ultimately the quality of the company and product team will drive whether the fundraising is successful and the product is delivered as promised. That is the risk a participant takes. Over time though, kickstarter has been very successful and we will likely see repeat fundraising by firms so a track record may be examined. The more established the firm, the more likely the delivery of promised product. Geek has delivered. U-Turn has delivered.