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Media and Video Coverage of Crowdfunding Event

Posted in: Feliciano Center News

Keynote speaker Zak Cassady-Dorion, partner at Crowdfund Capital Advisors, chats with attendees after the event.

Did you miss the Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship’s Sept. 20 event on crowdfunding? .

Here is a recap of the event from three websites.

The Bergen Record’s wrote a report of the event, quoting Zak Cassady-Dorion, a partner at Crowdfund Capital Advisors and the event’s keynote speaker: “What we are seeing is large amounts of people giving small amounts of money to make something bigger.” The Record’s report quoted Kim Wales, founder of Wales Capital, about Title II of the JOBS Act’s impact on local communities: “Crowdfunding allows you to tap into the community and allows people to put their money into where they live and breathe.”

Startup Valley Founder and CEO Daryl Bryant said coming changes to crowdfunding from the JOBS Act will be “a game changer.” “Instead of companies pitching to five potential shareholders, we now have the potential to pitch to hundreds and thousands of investors,” said Bryant, a 2000 ¾«Æ·³ÉÈ˸£ÀûÔÚÏß alumnus and the moderator of the panel at the Sept. 20 event at the University Hall conference center. Panelist Douglas Ellenoff, a member of Ellenoff, Grossman & Schole LLP, said there is a contained risk in crowdfunding. “That’s what investment is. Are we going to shut down public markets because of MF Global? I don’t buy that,” Ellenoff said in the NJBIZ story. Panelist Jonathan Sandlund, founder of CrowdCafe.com, said, “It is incredibly difficult to fraud somebody when everything you’re doing is transparent.”

of noted in her story how Cassady-Dorion and his partners knocked on the door of every member of Congress while advocating for the bill. “We found that at a time when there were no jobs and capital was not flowing, if you come up with an actual solution, people will listen,” Cassady-Dorion told the audience, explaining he and his partners participated in congressional hearings, and after 400 days the framework, with modifications, was passed as law.

Keep current on Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship events by visiting our events page. Another way to track our events is to join our Meetup group, Follow us on Twitter for live tweets from events and the latest news on the Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship. also provides updates about the center.

Did you miss the Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship’s Sept. 20 event on crowdfunding? Here is a of event highlights.

The Bergen Record’s wrote a report of the event, quoting Zak Cassady-Dorion, a partner at Crowdfund Capital Advisors and the event’s keynote speaker: “What we are seeing is large amounts of people giving small amounts of money to make something bigger.” The Record’s report quoted Kim Wales, founder of Wales Capital, about Title II of the JOBS Act’s impact on local communities: “Crowdfunding allows you to tap into the community and allows people to put their money into where they live and breathe.”

In NJBIZ’s by Tom Zanki, Startup Valley Founder and CEO Daryl Bryant said coming changes to crowdfunding from the JOBS Act will be “a game changer.” “Instead of companies pitching to five potential shareholders, we now have the potential to pitch to hundreds and thousands of investors,” said Bryant, a 2000 ¾«Æ·³ÉÈ˸£ÀûÔÚÏß alumnus and the moderator of the panel at the Sept. 20 event at the University Hall conference center. Panelist Douglas Ellenoff, a member of Ellenoff, Grossman & Schole LLP, said there is a contained risk in crowdfunding. “That’s what investment is. Are we going to shut down public markets because of MF Global? I don’t buy that,” Ellenoff said in the NJBIZ story. Panelist Jonathan Sandlund, founder of CrowdCafe.com, said, “It is incredibly difficult to fraud somebody when everything you’re doing is transparent.”

of noted in her story how Cassady-Dorion and his partners knocked on the door of every member of Congress while advocating for the bill. “We found that at a time when there were no jobs and capital was not flowing, if you come up with an actual solution, people will listen,” Cassady-Dorion told the audience, explaining he and his partners participated in congressional hearings, and after 400 days the framework, with modifications, was passed as law.

“What we are seeing is large amounts of people giving small amounts of money to make something bigger.”

Keep current on Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship events by visiting our . Another way to track our events is to join our Meetup group, . Follow us on Twitter for live tweets from events and the latest news on the Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship. Our also provides updates about the center.

– See more at: http://startup.montclair.edu/entrepreneurship/news/general-news/2304#sthash.p2FryWoj.dpuf