Dissertation: Pursuing returns or supporting a cause? Investors are choosing equity crowdfunding for various reasons
In recent years, equity crowdfunding has become an increasingly popular financing method where a large number of people make relatively small equity investments in a company. Since these companies are usually at the growth stage, investment risks are high.
Anna Lukkarinen, who will defend her doctoral dissertation at the Aalto University School of Business, examined investors鈥 motivations and decision criteria with an extensive survey focused on people who had invested through the equity crowdfunding platform of financial technology company Invesdor.
According to the survey, most investors are highly educated people who already have experience in investing in public equities. However, there are clear differences between investors鈥 motives. Although many are specifically looking for capital gain, and some even dividend income, the motives of many investors go beyond returns. This is reflected in investors鈥 decision criteria and the companies they choose to invest in.
鈥楩or example, most people who invested in Cityvarasto, a self storage chain, aimed at earning returns, whereas nearly everyone who participated in football club HIFK's equity crowdfunding campaign wanted to support the club and be a part of the phenomenon that it represents, without financial motives鈥, says Lukkarinen.
Investing in increasingly professional companies
The survey is part of Anna Lukkarinen's doctoral dissertation where she examines the drivers of investment activity in equity crowdfunding. According to Lukkarinen, equity crowdfunding complements other early-stage financing mechanisms.
The success of equity crowdfunding campaigns depends on many factors, such as campaign characteristics, the company's ability to leverage its networks and how easily understandable the products are.
As a relatively new industry, equity crowdfunding is constantly developing and changing. Companies using this investment model are becoming larger and more professional, and at the same time, investors鈥 motives are increasingly focused on returns.
鈥榃hen considering an investment, it is useful for an individual investor to be conscious of the goal of their investment. When assessing a potential company to invest in, it is also good for investors to acknowledge that entrepreneurs are often very optimistic in their plans鈥, says Lukkarinen.
The doctoral dissertation of Anna Lukkarinen, Lic.Sc. (Econ. & Bus. Admin.), 鈥淒rivers of investment activity in equity crowdfunding鈥 will be reviewed at Aalto University School of Business on Friday 29 March.
Further information:
Anna Lukkarinen
tel. +358 50 431 8738
anna.lukkarinen@aalto.fi
Read more news
AI companions can comfort lonely users but may deepen distress over time
Long-term use of AI companions may give comfort, but research indicates it may negatively impact users鈥 wellbeing and their ability to navigate real world relationships.
Researchers make micromanipulation more accessible
FilMBot aims to lower the barrier to high-precision work in education, research, and micro-assembly
Scientific conclusions depend on who performs the analysis
More than 450 independent researchers from around the world conducted over 500 re-analyses of datasets from one hundred previously published studies in the social and behavioural sciences. All analysts received the same data and the same central research question, but they were free to carry out the analysis based on their own expert judgment.