Alex Daly stumbled into, and then created a whole new industry for herself: managing Kickstarter campaigns. Her book, "The Crowdsourceress" details how all of that came to be and what her strategies were for working on some of her biggest campaigns.
I was initially very taken by her book and amount of work that went into each of her first projects. Then, as the book progressed, I realized there were several major shortcomings to her advice:
* She partnered (both business and personally) with a filmmaker and graphic designer who helped her immeasurably during all of her campaigns.
* Her projects were all relatively big name projects with build-in, pre-existing fanbases that could be easily tapped into.
* She continually references the same projects over and over again, meaning there's a lack of diversity to the types of projects and approaches to the projects.
* She almost embarrassingly mentions a failed Kickstarter project that she managed twice in the book. Neither time did she go into any details about why that project failed. Lessons learned in this case must be just as important as those learned from successful campaigns. Why she left out any details on this was, frankly, frustrating.
Make no mistake: there is a lot of very useful, helpful information in Daly's book on the business-end of creating and managing a Kickstarter campaign. (Spoiler Alert: There's a lot more than you might think.) However, my lasting criticism of the book is that it is really tailored to the type of Big Idea project, or Next Big Project from That Big Company and not towards the average person who has an idea and needs to build a project and backer base from scratch.
If the book was marketed towards big companies/big ideas, I would have been fine with it. However, as someone who isn't a big company and doesn't have something on the scale of a NYC Subway or NASA Graphics book to sell, I felt left out of the story and community that is so important for creating successful Kickstarter campaigns.