CrowdHall
CrowdHall is a technology company.
Financial History
CrowdHall has raised $770K across 2 funding rounds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has CrowdHall raised?
CrowdHall has raised $770K in total across 2 funding rounds.
CrowdHall is a technology company.
CrowdHall has raised $770K across 2 funding rounds.
CrowdHall has raised $770K in total across 2 funding rounds.
CrowdHall has raised $770K in total across 2 funding rounds.
CrowdHall's investors include B Capital Group, Bennu, Bronze Investments, CAV Investment Group, Cherubic Ventures, City Light Capital, Cupule Ventures, Founder Collective, FPV Fund, Great Oaks Venture Capital, Intudo Ventures, Jlabs.
CrowdHall was a technology startup that built an online platform for hosting audience-moderated town halls, enabling users to create forums where crowds submit, peer-vote on, and prioritize questions for hosts to answer via text or video.[2][3][4][6][7] It served individuals, organizations, brands, and public figures seeking interactive discourse as an alternative to traditional town halls, solving the problem of one-sided public engagement by empowering audiences to drive the conversation.[2][4][5][6] The platform emphasized embeddability on websites, customization for internal or public use, social sharing, and features like multi-host responses for debates or panels, with early growth including over 500 halls, 6,000 questions, and 2,000 answers between 2012-2015.[2][3]
CrowdHall was founded in February 2011 in Cincinnati, Ohio, by a team including co-founder and COO Jordan Menzel, with three original co-founders initially.[2][7] The idea emerged as a response to limitations in traditional town hall meetings, evolving into a social media platform for online, crowd-moderated forums.[2][7] Early traction came through guerrilla marketing, strategic partnerships with digital agencies, and minimal social media spend (under $1,000), leading to venture backing and operational growth; the team expanded to include a first full-time employee (Patrick Carroll), a part-time associate (Kat Schmermund), and contract developers by around 2012-2013.[2][3]
CrowdHall rode the early 2010s wave of social media democratization and interactive web tools, coinciding with rising demand for participatory online discourse amid platforms like Twitter and Facebook reshaping public engagement.[2][6][7] Its timing leveraged growing interest in crowd-sourced feedback for brands, politics, and organizations, filling a gap before tools like Slack or modern Q&A features in Zoom/LinkedIn matured.[2] Market forces favoring it included the shift to digital events and audience empowerment, influencing the ecosystem by pioneering embeddable, moderated forums that prefigured today's live Q&A and community platforms.[3][4]
CrowdHall demonstrated early promise as a venture-backed innovator in interactive town halls but appears inactive post-2015, with no recent updates on operations or pivots.[1][3] Emerging trends like AI-moderated discussions, Web3 community governance, and hybrid virtual events could revive similar models, potentially shaping its legacy through acquisitions or inspirations in tools from Discord to civic tech apps. Its influence may evolve as a foundational example of crowd-powered engagement, tying back to its core mission of making public discourse two-way and accessible.
CrowdHall has raised $770K across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $700K Seed in May 2013.