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Project Funded Online Hits $1 Million Milestone

Casey Hopkins offered supporters who funded the project exclusive colors for the Elevation Dock.
Casey Hopkins
Casey Hopkins offered supporters who funded the project exclusive colors for the Elevation Dock.

Kickstarter, a website designed to fund creative projects through the support of small online donations, crowned its first millionaire this week: Casey Hopkins, an engineer based in Portland, Ore.

It all started when Hopkins got fed up with the iPhone docks he kept buying in stores.

"They're these little plastic pucks and they don't work if you have a case on your phone," he tells weekends on All Things Considered host Guy Raz. "And they're so lightweight that when you go to grab it, the whole thing comes with it."

So he designed his own — one made of aircraft-grade aluminum that wouldn't move around when you took your iPhone out of it. He called it the Elevation Dock. He shot a video of some prototypes, put it on Kickstarter, and asked for help raising $75,000 to get his project off the ground.

"Then it just exploded across the Internet," he says. "We hit that $75,000 goal in eight hours."

Twenty-four hours later, Hopkins, who made less than $40,000 last year, had racked up $168,000 in pre-orders. Today he has more than $1.4 million in venture capital for his new business. He's gotten orders from retailers all over the world — Taiwan, South Korea, Australia — anywhere iPhones are.

The Elevation Dock will retail for about $90 later this year on his website, Hopkins says, but not until he ships the first round out to supporters who backed his project.

The next few months, he says, will be "nose to the grindstone."

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