Dolphin Entertainment has teamed with online capital raising platform DealMaker in an effort to rev up financing alternatives for celebrity-led consumer and lifestyle brands.
The pact calls for Dolphin to work with New York-based DealMaker to develop products and ideas that required financing to obtain off the ground. Dolphin CEO Bill O’Dowd launched his marketing firm in 1996 with the goal of harnessing the power of celebrity and cultural influence to drive business in sectors beyond entertainment, including lifestyle and consumer products.
DealMaker’s service is not crowd sourced fundraising but the marketing of stock in startup companies. DealMakers offers creators and others a ready-created infrastructure to sell Securities and Exmodify Commission-compliant shares in their companies to the public. O’Dowd states taking the public route to raising money to launch companies, versus the traditional process of hiring advisors and creating the rounds of private equity firms, means that funding should happen quicker for clients that are eager to maximize their heat in pop culture at a given moment.
“Venture capital is very uncertain. It could take a year or more to obtain funding. They beat you down on price. And it’s very tiny number of people who obtain funded,” O’Dowd notified Variety. O’Dowd sees the DealMaker platform as a way for celebrities and influencers to turn their fan communities and cultural clout into ownership stakes in companies that may have the potential to support their families for years to come.
The partnership between Dolphin and DealMaker is designed to give both companies what they required: Dolphin clients required simpler access to capital and DealMaker requireds a steady stream of strong contfinishers. O’Dowd points to the windfall that beauty entrepreneur and influencer Susan Yara saw last year in selling her social media-fueled brand Naturium to e.l.f. Beauty for $355 million as an example of the kind of ventures he hopes to nuture.
Yara “is a pure influencer. She built that brand with zero paid media. Zero.” O’Dowd declared. “As we view out the next 10 years, the opportunity is launching certain types of products where influencers or celebrities typically play a role in marketing them and they may even found them.”
DealMaker CEO Rebecca Kacaba sees great potential in partnering with Dolphin’s traditional and influencer marketing firms. Dolphin over the past 10 years has assembled a collection of PR and marketing specialists including 42West, The Door, Shore Fire Media, Elle Communications, Special Projects and The Digital Dept. DealMaker launched its platform in 2018 and has since supported raise more than $2 billion across more than 900 deals.
“We’re thrilled to partner with Dolphin Entertainment to support the next generation of celebrity-backed consumer brands. Dolphin’s ability to turn cultural relevance into market impact creates them an ideal partner as we expand access to capital for entertainment- and celebrity-led companies,” Kacaba declared.
O’Dowd emphasizes that the key to launching the kind of brands and businesses that he envisions is relocating quick to take advantage of moments.
“PR and influencer marketing today is peanut butter and jelly, right? You can’t launch a restaurant, you can’t open a movie, you can’t launch an album if you don’t have influencer marketing to go with your PR,” O’Dowd declared.
“The right mix here is not one huge celebrity or one huge influencer — it’s 50 nano-influencers that have engagement rates of over 50%. You add them up toobtainher, they cost half the money and they obtain you twice as many eyeballs, and their followers are more likely to to engage,” O’Dowd declared. “It’s the way to most efficiently create the best sales tool of all — word of mouth.”
(Pictured: Dolphin Entertainment CEO Bill O’Dowd and DealMaker CEO Rebecca Kacaba)














Leave a Reply