I think they're taking the "all of the above" approach without much regard to what other entities survive. Personally, and I'm not a big enough UConn person as a graduate school alum, I would rather the direct approach to NIL donation rather than donating to a website which will pay other entities. This all goes back to the charity issue. How much goes to outflow to salaries and staff and how much goes to the stated goal. With places like forums and writers it starts to look a whole less lean than it was before for what is, essentially, a fundraising operation. It starts to look like a vehicle for the organizers to become important... which frankly a NIL pool has to be that because otherwise why would the organizer devote that time... but that's where you have to be careful. If your goal is to fundraise to the NIL fund you want a very lean organization. If you want to raise money for some nobody's fiefdom, and anybody who builds a fiefdom on my money is a nobody, then you can do that as well.If Storrs central is actually genuine about not eating into the BY, then why is there a forum to begin with?
Honestly, you'd probably be better served just soliciting $100 donations and send out tee shirts or hats ala PBS. What information could possibly be considered "exclusive" enough to be advertised as the carrot for joining when you could just see it here or on Twitter?
Noticed that too. Looks like articles that you can comment on.Maybe I'm missing something (I haven't subscribed), but the "forum" doesn't look anything like something that would compete with the Boneyard. When I click on the forum it seems like it's just a compilation of articles. Maybe that will change in the future?
It does seem unique in the football coverage offered. I haven't seen that level of coverage for football anywhere else as someone that doesn't use/like Twitter.
Bleeding Blue for Good has raised WELL into the seven figures and we have kept operating expenses under TEN percent. Every other collective in the country I have seen set a 15% goal. We set a 10% goal and hit it. I am the ONLY employee drawing a salary.I think they're taking the "all of the above" approach without much regard to what other entities survive. Personally, and I'm not a big enough UConn person as a graduate school alum, I would rather the direct approach to NIL donation rather than donating to a website which will pay other entities. This all goes back to the charity issue. How much goes to outflow to salaries and staff and how much goes to the stated goal. With places like forums and writers it starts to look a whole less lean than it was before for what is, essentially, a fundraising operation. It starts to look like a vehicle for the organizers to become important... which frankly a NIL pool has to be that because otherwise why would the organizer devote that time... but that's where you have to be careful. If your goal is to fundraise to the NIL fund you want a very lean organization. If you want to raise money for some nobody's fiefdom, and anybody who builds a fiefdom on my money is a nobody, then you can do that as well.
Once they start to look like a traditional business which spends money making itself look important rather than a shallow fundraising arm the alarm bells start going off because the percentage that goes to the "cause" is going to drop.
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What I want from a NIL fund is a very shallow (small) organization that prints out a monthly newsletter talking about its activities and is very open about its staffing and skunkworks. Honestly, not much more than that. I would want a list of people (positions, not names) who are drawing salaries and the amount spent to that end.
Will there ever be a higher end option (think $1k+) for more exclusive in-person events?Bleeding Blue for Good has raised WELL into the seven figures and we have kept operating expenses under TEN percent. Every other collective in the country I have seen set a 15% goal. We set a 10% goal and hit it. I am the ONLY employee drawing a salary.
I am not being paid a dime for Storrs Central. The writers are on a content licensing fee (not a full salary). We have a Director of Operations on an entry-level salary. We pay a 20% fee on revenues for the entire platform. This fee will not apply to sponsorship dollars. This fee will not apply to the incredible digital and in-person access events we offer at Tiers 2, 3, 4, and 5. Therefore, when this thing is fully up and operational, the overall percentage allocated for expenses will look a lot more like BBFG's 10% than anything else.
In the podcast I spoke about some of the things we are working with Athletics on for the higher tiers but the short answer to your question is yes. Once the higher tiers roll out all of this Boneyard vs. Storrs Central forum will be a moot point! I SINCERELY believe that both can co-exist. We're not going to rush out the higher tiers as we're in the middle of a tournament run but expect to see them start rolling out in May-June.Will there ever be a higher end option (think $1k+) for more exclusive in-person events?