Get Your Burning Crowdfunding Questions Answered on Kickstarter's Version of RedditCalled Campus, the online forum gives crowdfunders a place to get support and feedback about how to launch and run a campaign.

ByCatherine Clifford

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

GongTo | Shutterstock

Crowdfunding campaigns don't run themselves. There's a lot of strategy, planning, hustle and hard work that goes into running a successful campaign.

But how do you do that?

Answering that question is whyBrooklyn-based crowdfunding platform Kickstarter just opened up its online question-and-answer forum to the public. CalledCampus, the platform operates like Reddit. Users can upvote and downvote answers depending on how useful a response is.

Related:The First 100,000 Successful Kickstarter Campaigns, in 10 Numbers

Anyone can surf the content, but to ask a question, you have to be actively working on a project on Kickstarter. The campaign doesn't have to be live, but it must be in process.

Topics range from more technical inquiries such as, "What tips do you have for making a great project video on a limited budget?" to more personal, emotional questions such as, How do you deal with, "The feeling of 'omigodwhatif…'"

Image Credit: Kickstarter

There is some really good tips in the responses. For example, keep your online videos under three minutes, don't record a video with a window behind you and be yourself.

"The crazy different stuff about you is what people are attracted to, it's your story remember, own it,"writes Kickstarter community member Jeremy Bailey. "Have fun, there's a reason Jimmy Fallon was the least talented comedian on SNL but ended up with the most successful career. Sure he laughed during every sketch he was ever in but his fallibility was human and likeable!"

Related:Women Raise More Money With Crowdfunding, Research Shows

And as for that feeling of fear? "I'm not sure that feeling ever goes away. I had it on both my campaigns," writes James Cooper, another Kickstarter community member. "I try to look at it like this: If I'm not going crazy hoping it goes well, I don't care about it that much, and I probably shouldn't be doing it anyway."

If you are already working on a crowdfunding campaign, or just thinking about it, connecting with other creators who have been there before is likely to save you a lot of lonely anxiety. Ask, read, chat and crowdfund away.

Wavy Line
Catherine Clifford

Senior Entrepreneurship Writer at CNBC

Catherine Clifford is senior entrepreneurship writer at CNBC. She was formerly a senior writer at Entrepreneur.com, the small business reporter at CNNMoney and an assistant in the New York bureau for CNN. Clifford attended Columbia University where she earned a bachelor's degree. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. You can follow her on Twitter at @CatClifford.

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