Crowdfunding for entrepreneurship development: Mechanisms and success factors

Authors

  • Windu Matoka ZCAS University, Zambia Author
  • Austin Mwange The University of Zambia, Zambia Author https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8568-3063
  • Kampamba Clarence Chibesa The Copperbelt University, Zambia Author
  • Bwalya Katuta The University of Zambia, Zambia Author
  • Lwando Kalaba The University of Zambia, Zambia Author
  • Kabwalwa Chilyata The University of Zambia, Zambia Author https://orcid.org/0009-0004-9157-8795

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51867/asarev.3.1.9

Keywords:

Crowdfunding, Campaign Performance, Entrepreneurial Finance, Entrepreneurship Development, Signalling, Social Capital, Trust

Abstract

Startups and early-stage ventures continue to face a persistent financing gap that traditional intermediaries are poorly equipped to address. Crowdfunding has emerged as a significant complementary financing channel, yet its role in entrepreneurship development extends well beyond capital provision. This paper undertakes an integrated review of crowdfunding platforms, processes, and success factors across reward-based, donation-based, lending-based, and equity-based models. Drawing on insights from information economics, signalling theory, social capital theory, persuasion research, and platform trust literature, the paper identifies five core mechanisms through which crowdfunding develops entrepreneurship: capital formation, market validation and demand discovery, community building and customer acquisition, signalling and legitimacy construction, and organisational learning. A multi-level evidence synthesis covering founder, project, campaign, platform, and ecosystem determinants reveals that crowdfunding success depends not predominantly on idea quality but on the strategic combination of social capital, credible signalling, momentum creation, and platform governance. Two integrative frameworks are proposed: the Crowdfund Startup Growth Framework (CSGF), which links antecedent conditions to campaign outcomes through multi-level mechanisms; and the Entrepreneurship Crowdfund Development Trajectory Model, which conceptualises crowdfunding as a staged developmental process extending before, during, and after the campaign. Policy implications for regulators, ecosystem builders, and entrepreneurship support organisations are advanced, with particular attention to the conditions that enable crowdfunding to contribute to inclusive entrepreneurship development. The review closes with targeted recommendations for entrepreneurs, platforms, regulators, and ecosystem builders.

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Published

2026-04-14

How to Cite

Matoka, W., Mwange, A., Chibesa, K. C., Katuta, B., Kalaba, L., & Chilyata, K. (2026). Crowdfunding for entrepreneurship development: Mechanisms and success factors. African Scientific Annual Review, 3(1), 80-87. https://doi.org/10.51867/asarev.3.1.9

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