Our white paper to be released shall answer most of the questions raised but the relationship between our business plans is the ability to earn an income through collective efforts.
Taskie team are working tirelessly to make this a success.
Right now, top issues include the 200 btc threshold for ICO funds not being refunded.
People don't expect it to be met. Sure, a few ICOs on bitcointalk have obtained as much or more, but that is the exception and not the rule. Those rare cases are generally large projects, with a bunch of team member bibliographies, plus clear exceptional innovation. (If there are team members other than yourself and temporary assistance from one other poster, make that blatant in the opening post with as much supportive evidence as possible, also showing so on the "About Us" section of your website).
When people expect the ICO merely to end in a refund, they don't even try contributing.
I used to sell items by eBay auctions. Some sellers tried setting reserve prices on auctions, but most learned not to do so.
Quite literally, an auction with no reserve price would often sell successfully for $28 or the like (after intense bidding activity starting at 1 dollar or below), when an identical item with a $25 reserve price wouldn't sell at all. Reserve prices take the fun out of it for bidders. (Buy-it-now prices did better but had a special convenience and speed advantage, not so for a reserve price on an auction).
If you absolutely feel you need a reserve price or rather an ICO threshold amount, set it to be utterly the lowest you can.
If you improve the rest of the presentation, somehow do massive advertising, and set a 50 btc threshold, you might collect 100 btc if you are luckier than I personally expect right now. But, otherwise, this 200 btc threshold may end with under 10 btc collected.