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    Is Crowdfunding the Answer for EveryBlock?

    The news that NBC is closing the hyper-local news site EveryBlock has been met with widespread disappointment -- rooted as much in the failure of a good brand as the uncomfortable reminder that the hyper-local community is yet to find a business model that pays.

    Adrian_Holovaty.jpg

    EveryBlock's open-source architecture (funded by the Knight Foundation) exists, so its cheerleaders could fork their own version and bring the platform back to life in another form. But what about the value of the company's brand and existing audience? In a fickle and fast-changing news economy, that may be EveryBlock's biggest asset. So is that value something that the company's supporters can capture in a way that NBC can't?

    Instead of being forced to accept the wind-up of EveryBlock, perhaps its supporters could start a civically oriented crowdfunding campaign to fund the brand. No doubt some people are already considering the idea. If NBC really sees no value in the asset, perhaps they could even be persuaded to pass ownership of it to the team that mounts that campaign. If the campaign does uncover, or demonstrate in a new way, the value of EveryBlock -- through potential subscriptions, for example -- perhaps NBC would feel the brand is still worth investing in. Perhaps that investment would be to continue to provide infrastructure for EveryBlock, if not direct funding. Even if NBC doesn't decide to extend its support of EveryBlock, there are good precedents of fans saving loved brands, such as Polaroid rescuers The Impossible Project and the radio station BBC 6 Music.

    an opportunity and a question

    There are a lot of question marks here: the sustainability of the business after the initial campaign, the ownership of the company, not to mention legal considerations that I'll not attempt to answer. But it does point us to an opportunity and a question.

    The opportunity is that crowdfunding could be a potential exit route for an acquired business that has a strong and loyal audience but whose parent company no longer wants it. It would be great to see that possibility explored in the case of EveryBlock.

    The question -- which goes far beyond EveryBlock -- is, can civic crowdfunding create value in situations that the traditional private sector cannot? How? If the answer is yes, the public sector could find itself with a new avenue to finance the projects it struggles to fund, and in which the private sector is either unwilling to invest or does so unsuccessfully.

    Rodrigo Davies is a Research Assistant at MIT's Center for Civic Media and an MS student in the Comparative Media Studies program. His research interests include the impact of social media on political discourse, crowdsourcing and political participation, ICT4D and user-led service design. Rodrigo works with the crisis mapping initiative Standby Task Force and is a policy advisor to the UK-based civic crowdfunding platform Spacehive. Before joining the Center Rodrigo was based Mumbai where he was a co-founding editor of Conde Nast India's digital editorial business. Previously he was a journalist at the BBC and Bloomberg News. He holds a B.A. in History and Politics from Oxford University.

    This post originally appeared on the MIT Civic Media Center blog.

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