Patreon Alternatives

Alternative platforms for supporting creators and accessing exclusive content like Patreon comprise membership platforms such as Ko-fi, OnlyFans, Substack, Memberful, and Gumroad. Or crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter, Indiegogo, GoFundMe, PledgeMusic, and Seed&Spark for supporting creative projects and campaigns.

AlternativeKey FeaturesCore StrengthsWeaknesses
Ko-fi1. Creator Support: Allows fans to buy creators a “coffee.” 2. Digital Downloads: Offers options for selling digital content. 3. Fan Messaging: Provides direct communication with supporters.– Simple and straightforward platform for creators to receive support. – Focus on microtransactions with a “coffee” model. – Direct messaging with fans.– Limited to a one-time support model (buying “coffees”). – Fewer customization options compared to Patreon. – May not offer the same advanced features for larger creators.
SubscribeStar1. Subscription Tiers: Allows creators to set subscription tiers. 2. Flexible Payouts: Offers various payout methods. 3. Content Hosting: Allows hosting and selling of digital content.– Provides creators with the ability to set different subscription tiers. – Multiple payout methods available. – Allows creators to host and sell digital content directly on the platform.– May have a smaller user base compared to Patreon. – Some payment processors may not be supported. – Limited marketing and discovery features for creators.
OnlyFans1. Subscription Content: Focuses on exclusive subscription content. 2. Adult Content: Permits adult content sharing. 3. Direct Messaging: Allows creators to interact with fans.– Well-known for its focus on exclusive subscription-based content. – Supports adult content, making it suitable for adult creators. – Direct messaging and interaction with fans.– Primarily associated with adult content, which may not be suitable for all creators. – Transaction fees can be relatively high. – Less suited for non-adult content creators looking for a diverse audience.
Liberapay1. Open Source: An open-source platform. 2. Recurring Donations: Allows recurring donations to creators. 3. No Fees: Operates on a fee-free model.– Commitment to open-source principles and fee-free model. – Supports recurring donations to creators. – Simplified donation process.– Smaller user base compared to larger platforms like Patreon. – Limited advanced features for creators, such as tiered subscriptions. – Relies on voluntary donations from users to fund the platform.
Tipeee1. Support Coins: Offers a “Tip” system with virtual coins. 2. Community Features: Provides a community for supporters. 3. Tiered Support: Allows creators to set tiered support levels.– Unique “Tip” system with virtual coins for supporting creators. – Community features to engage with fans. – Support for tiered subscription levels.– May have a smaller user base compared to larger platforms. – Limited to certain European countries for payouts. – Transaction fees may apply.
Buy Me a Coffee1. Support System: Allows fans to support creators with “coffees.” 2. Digital Downloads: Offers options for selling digital content. 3. Community: Provides a community for creators.– User-friendly platform for receiving support through “coffees.” – Enables creators to sell digital content. – Community features for connecting with supporters.– Limited to a one-time support model (buying “coffees”). – May not offer as advanced features as Patreon for larger creators. – Smaller user base compared to larger platforms.
Twitch Subscriptions1. Live Streaming: Integrates with Twitch live streaming. 2. Tiered Subscriptions: Offers tiered subscription levels. 3. Emotes and Badges: Provides unique emotes and badges.– Integration with Twitch for live streamers. – Tiered subscription levels for fans. – Unique emotes and badges as perks for subscribers.– Primarily suitable for live streamers on Twitch. – Transaction fees may apply. – Limited to users on the Twitch platform.
Locals1. Community Building: Focuses on community engagement. 2. Customization: Allows creators to set up branded communities. 3. Subscription Pricing: Offers flexible subscription pricing.– Emphasis on community building and engagement. – Customization options for creating branded communities. – Flexible subscription pricing for creators.– May not have as large a user base as some other platforms. – Limited to users within the Locals platform. – Transaction fees may apply.

 

Membership Platforms:

  • Ko-fi: A platform for creators to receive support through one-time payments and subscriptions.
  • OnlyFans: A platform for creators to monetize their content through subscriptions and tips.
  • Substack: A platform for writers to create newsletters and monetize their content.
  • Memberful: A membership platform for creators to offer exclusive content and subscription plans.
  • Gumroad: A platform for creators to sell digital products, memberships, and subscriptions.

Crowdfunding Platforms:

  • Kickstarter: A leading crowdfunding platform for creative projects and innovative ideas.
  • Indiegogo: A global crowdfunding platform for various creative projects and campaigns.
  • GoFundMe: A popular fundraising platform for personal, charitable, and creative endeavors.
  • PledgeMusic: A platform for musicians and artists to crowdfund their albums and projects.
  • Seed&Spark: A crowdfunding platform dedicated to supporting independent filmmakers.

Connected Business Model Types And Frameworks

What’s A Business Model

fourweekmba-business-model-framework
An effective business model has to focus on two dimensions: the people dimension and the financial dimension. The people dimension will allow you to build a product or service that is 10X better than existing ones and a solid brand. The financial dimension will help you develop proper distribution channels by identifying the people that are willing to pay for your product or service and make it financially sustainable in the long run.

Business Model Innovation

business-model-innovation
Business model innovation is about increasing the success of an organization with existing products and technologies by crafting a compelling value proposition able to propel a new business model to scale up customers and create a lasting competitive advantage. And it all starts by mastering the key customers.

Level of Digitalization

stages-of-digital-transformation
Digital and tech business models can be classified according to four levels of transformation into digitally-enabled, digitally-enhanced, tech or platform business models, and business platforms/ecosystems.

Digital Business Model

digital-business-models
A digital business model might be defined as a model that leverages digital technologies to improve several aspects of an organization. From how the company acquires customers, to what product/service it provides. A digital business model is such when digital technology helps enhance its value proposition.

Tech Business Model

business-model-template
A tech business model is made of four main components: value model (value propositions, mission, vision), technological model (R&D management), distribution model (sales and marketing organizational structure), and financial model (revenue modeling, cost structure, profitability and cash generation/management). Those elements coming together can serve as the basis to build a solid tech business model.

Platform Business Model

platform-business-models
A platform business model generates value by enabling interactions between people, groups, and users by leveraging network effects. Platform business models usually comprise two sides: supply and demand. Kicking off the interactions between those two sides is one of the crucial elements for a platform business model success.

AI Business Model

ai-business-models

Blockchain Business Model

blockchain-business-models
A Blockchain Business Model is made of four main components: Value Model (Core Philosophy, Core Value and Value Propositions for the key stakeholders), Blockchain Model (Protocol Rules, Network Shape and Applications Layer/Ecosystem), Distribution Model (the key channels amplifying the protocol and its communities), and the Economic Model (the dynamics through which protocol players make money). Those elements coming together can serve as the basis to build and analyze a solid Blockchain Business Model.

Asymmetric Business Models

asymmetric-business-models
In an asymmetric business model, the organization doesn’t monetize the user directly, but it leverages the data users provide coupled with technology, thus have a key customer pay to sustain the core asset. For example, Google makes money by leveraging users’ data, combined with its algorithms sold to advertisers for visibility.

Attention Merchant Business Model

attention-business-models-compared
In an asymmetric business model, the organization doesn’t monetize the user directly, but it leverages the data users provide coupled with technology, thus having a key customer pay to sustain the core asset. For example, Google makes money by leveraging users’ data, combined with its algorithms sold to advertisers for visibility. This is how attention merchants make monetize their business models.

Open-Core Business Model

open-core
While the term has been coined by Andrew Lampitt, open-core is an evolution of open-source. Where a core part of the software/platform is offered for free, while on top of it are built premium features or add-ons, which get monetized by the corporation who developed the software/platform. An example of the GitLab open core model, where the hosted service is free and open, while the software is closed.

Cloud Business Models

cloud-business-models
Cloud business models are all built on top of cloud computing, a concept that took over around 2006 when former Google’s CEO Eric Schmit mentioned it. Most cloud-based business models can be classified as IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service), PaaS (Platform as a Service), or SaaS (Software as a Service). While those models are primarily monetized via subscriptions, they are monetized via pay-as-you-go revenue models and hybrid models (subscriptions + pay-as-you-go).

Open Source Business Model

open-source-business-model
Open source is licensed and usually developed and maintained by a community of independent developers. While the freemium is developed in-house. Thus the freemium give the company that developed it, full control over its distribution. In an open-source model, the for-profit company has to distribute its premium version per its open-source licensing model.

Freemium Business Model

freemium-business-model
The freemium – unless the whole organization is aligned around it – is a growth strategy rather than a business model. A free service is provided to a majority of users, while a small percentage of those users convert into paying customers through the sales funnel. Free users will help spread the brand through word of mouth.

Freeterprise Business Model

freeterprise-business-model
A freeterprise is a combination of free and enterprise where free professional accounts are driven into the funnel through the free product. As the opportunity is identified the company assigns the free account to a salesperson within the organization (inside sales or fields sales) to convert that into a B2B/enterprise account.

Marketplace Business Models

marketplace-business-models
A marketplace is a platform where buyers and sellers interact and transact. The platform acts as a marketplace that will generate revenues in fees from one or all the parties involved in the transaction. Usually, marketplaces can be classified in several ways, like those selling services vs. products or those connecting buyers and sellers at B2B, B2C, or C2C level. And those marketplaces connecting two core players, or more.

B2B vs B2C Business Model

b2b-vs-b2c
B2B, which stands for business-to-business, is a process for selling products or services to other businesses. On the other hand, a B2C sells directly to its consumers.

B2B2C Business Model

b2b2c
A B2B2C is a particular kind of business model where a company, rather than accessing the consumer market directly, it does that via another business. Yet the final consumers will recognize the brand or the service provided by the B2B2C. The company offering the service might gain direct access to consumers over time.

D2C Business Model

direct-to-consumer
Direct-to-consumer (D2C) is a business model where companies sell their products directly to the consumer without the assistance of a third-party wholesaler or retailer. In this way, the company can cut through intermediaries and increase its margins. However, to be successful the direct-to-consumers company needs to build its own distribution, which in the short term can be more expensive. Yet in the long-term creates a competitive advantage.

C2C Business Model

C2C-business-model
The C2C business model describes a market environment where one customer purchases from another on a third-party platform that may also handle the transaction. Under the C2C model, both the seller and the buyer are considered consumers. Customer to customer (C2C) is, therefore, a business model where consumers buy and sell directly between themselves. Consumer-to-consumer has become a prevalent business model especially as the web helped disintermediate various industries.

Retail Business Model

retail-business-model
A retail business model follows a direct-to-consumer approach, also called B2C, where the company sells directly to final customers a processed/finished product. This implies a business model that is mostly local-based, it carries higher margins, but also higher costs and distribution risks.

Wholesale Business Model

wholesale-business-model
The wholesale model is a selling model where wholesalers sell their products in bulk to a retailer at a discounted price. The retailer then on-sells the products to consumers at a higher price. In the wholesale model, a wholesaler sells products in bulk to retail outlets for onward sale. Occasionally, the wholesaler sells direct to the consumer, with supermarket giant Costco the most obvious example.

Crowdsourcing Business Model

crowdsourcing
The term “crowdsourcing” was first coined by Wired Magazine editor Jeff Howe in a 2006 article titled Rise of Crowdsourcing. Though the practice has existed in some form or another for centuries, it rose to prominence when eCommerce, social media, and smartphone culture began to emerge. Crowdsourcing is the act of obtaining knowledge, goods, services, or opinions from a group of people. These people submit information via social media, smartphone apps, or dedicated crowdsourcing platforms.

Franchising Business Model

franchained-business-model
In a franchained business model (a short-term chain, long-term franchise) model, the company deliberately launched its operations by keeping tight ownership on the main assets, while those are established, thus choosing a chain model. Once operations are running and established, the company divests its ownership and opts instead for a franchising model.

Brokerage Business Model

brokerage-business
Businesses employing the brokerage business model make money via brokerage services. This means they are involved with the facilitation, negotiation, or arbitration of a transaction between a buyer and a seller. The brokerage business model involves a business connecting buyers with sellers to collect a commission on the resultant transaction. Therefore, acting as a middleman within a transaction.

Dropshipping Business Model

dropshipping-business-model
Dropshipping is a retail business model where the dropshipper externalizes the manufacturing and logistics and focuses only on distribution and customer acquisition. Therefore, the dropshipper collects final customers’ sales orders, sending them over to third-party suppliers, who ship directly to those customers. In this way, through dropshipping, it is possible to run a business without operational costs and logistics management.

Main Free Guides:

Scroll to Top

Discover more from FourWeekMBA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

FourWeekMBA