Will:
Those are some great ideas. As the former secretary of the MN Homebrewers,
I distributed the Boiler and thought about those same cost-saving measures;
at a board meeting, I made the very same suggestions that you just made, but
for reasons that I do not remember, the decision was made to continue with
the traditional distribution method. Perhaps the current board could
revisit these ideas. The Boiler was costing approximately $125 per issue
for printing and mailing costs, just as a point of reference. I would print
about 150 copies, send 50 to members, send 40 to breweries, brewpubs,
beverage distributors, and homebrew shops that supported MNHBA, and place
the remainder in the Twin Cities' homebrew shops for MNHBA promotion.
John
Will wrote:
2 cost savings ideas:
1. Put the Newsletter on the web site (not sure if it
is there now)
2. Ditribute the newsletter via email instead of snail
mail
3. Give members the option of not receiving the
newsletter via snail mail if they would rather get via
option 1 or 2 above.
I believe this would not only save postage $$ but also
printing expense.
As to content, I believe that someone has to take the
lead and that you cannot rely on member contributions.
It may be helpful to try coming up with an ideal
layout and then say: we need an article on wheat beer,
we need a an article on bottling methods, and an
article on new gadgetry or something like that. This
would make it easier for those who wish to provide
content. If someone is gung ho to write something on a
different topic, they would just need to clear it with
the editor.
From the perspective of a writer, the hardest thing to
some up with sometimes is a topic. So an open ended
request such as: we need content can make it more
difficult.
My $0.02 worth
Cheers
WH
--- Dave Cox <north-shore-brewer(a)earthlink.net> wrote:
Greetings!
I am sure that some of you have wondered when the
next issue of our
newsletter, The Boiler, will be published. I have
heard a certain amount of
discussion about this subject, including whether we
should even publish a
newsletter.
Some people have made the argument that in view of
our limited budget, and
the fact that a newsletter is expensive to produce
and mail, this is
something that could be eliminated. It has also
been suggested that the
fact that people are not submitting articles
reflects a lack of interest in
the publication. Maybe these things are true.
I agree that the e-mail list is effective for those
members who have access.
But it does not serve all of our members, and it is
not as effective as a
means of attracting new members.
I would like to see The Boiler continue. I believe
that it is important not
only for current members, but as a means of letting
potential new members
know what this group is about. It lends credibility
to the organization and
lets others know what we have been doing.
But here is the catch. If we are to continue to
produce the newsletter, we
need input from YOU. Rick and I could fill up the
space with our own
musings and clever observations, but that wouldn't
do much to increase the
circulation. The thing that makes a newsletter
interesting is variety. Just
as the variety of interests and experience of the
members make MHBA
interesting, the newsletter needs input from a
variety of sources.
Submissions can range from technical topics to
equipment to beer styles to
events to anything you think other members would
find informative and
interesting.
Your newsletter editor Gloria does a great job, and
she is waiting for your
articles. If you want to see the project continue,
send her your
submissions now.
Dave
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