Introduction of Crowdholding
Crowdholding is a startup created by young people with a vision for an economy where companies and the crowd co-create products and services. Allowing the public to give ideas and feedback for future revenue. You can shape how the future wealth is distributed and what products or services are created.
Crowdholding dedicates as much time as you want to post surveys. Start discussions ranging from basic tasks to solving complex problems.
Ethan Clime was a United States Peace Corps Volunteer in the Republic of Moldova who worked in rural villages on business and development projects. What he noticed was that international development was very bureaucratic with little of the money actually going to the people.
The biggest need in Moldova was job creation, as a large percentage of the public was unemployed.
In addition, the money used for development purposes was not going into the industry to create jobs for the people. After his contract ended, Ethan decided to start his own business with fellow co-founders. Aleks Bozhinov and Henry Ashley- Copper that addresses the very problem he saw in Moldova. This new application could, in fact, employ millions.
The concept is called Crowdholding that allows businesses to share revenue or future revenue to the public for feedback and ideas.
It turns out, that you don’t need money to scale or develop a product. If you can bring people together on a cause you are trying to solve, which is exactly what Crowdholding will bring to the public.
Crowdholding connects the crowd with entrepreneurs, allowing you to give feedback and ideas for future revenue.
About Crowdshares
Every startup on our application is sharing 1% of their revenue with the public by rewarding a crowd currency we call “crowd shares.” One percent of revenue equals 1 million crowd shares.
They then use these crowd shares when giving out tasks on an upvoting forum. The crowd, which we call “Crowdholders” gives feedback and ideas regarding the task and votes their favorite solution.
The crowdshares for that task are then distributed by the ranking of the votes. Crowdshares have a one-year expiration date from the day the company begins. Making revenue on the day the shares are distributed.
For the first time, entrepreneurs can have the public work for them and validate their products. And if you are a Crowdholder, the content you produce is finally worth something.
If you want to Discuss More with Ethan Clime, CEO of Crowdholding. you can reach “ethan@crowdholding.com”