You have a lot of questions in your post. Here's my take:
1. Focus on the product you want to fund through Kickstarter, not Kickstarter itself. It's not going to give you the brand awareness or marketing boost that you expect. It's on stepping stone on a long path, if your goal is to make a company and product that will be successful.
2. Forget about Bitcoin. Yes, it may double in value. You may also win the lottery tomorrow or get hit by a car. Your time is valuable, so focus on your business and other areas. You only have 24 hours in a day, so spend them wisely.
3. Yes, Phils is a popular place for callcenters. You don't need to run your own -- you can just hire a company to do outbound telesales if that's what your business is. Realize if you are there and running your own, get ready to work 10pm-8am, as that's when it's the business day in North America. The bigger hurdle I see here is what you're selling. Yes, every business needs computers, internet, etc... and they all already have it. It's a difficult battle to get a company to switch vendors, and it's often not just about price.
1. Focus on the product you want to fund through Kickstarter, not Kickstarter itself. It's not going to give you the brand awareness or marketing boost that you expect. It's on stepping stone on a long path, if your goal is to make a company and product that will be successful.
2. Forget about Bitcoin. Yes, it may double in value. You may also win the lottery tomorrow or get hit by a car. Your time is valuable, so focus on your business and other areas. You only have 24 hours in a day, so spend them wisely.
3. Yes, Phils is a popular place for callcenters. You don't need to run your own -- you can just hire a company to do outbound telesales if that's what your business is. Realize if you are there and running your own, get ready to work 10pm-8am, as that's when it's the business day in North America. The bigger hurdle I see here is what you're selling. Yes, every business needs computers, internet, etc... and they all already have it. It's a difficult battle to get a company to switch vendors, and it's often not just about price.