SCA kingdom newsletters
Aug. 19th, 2011 07:08 pmDo you see what they did there?
There are two primary levels of membership, associate ($30) and sustaining ($45). The difference between the two is that with the latter you get your kingdom newsletter. The vast majority of that $15 difference goes to the cost of printing and mailing that newsletter. I edited a kingdom newsletter for four years (about 15-20 years ago, ack, but I've talked with more recent chroniclers and it hasn't changed much) and saw this process up close.
So now, your $45 membership will get you access to online newsletters (all of them, I learned at Pennsic), whose incremental hosting costs are tiny, and if you want paper you'll pay more than that (beyond the sustaining membership). Meanwhile, the kingdom chroniclers who are donating their labor for a break-even proposition now, out of deep caring for their kingdoms and the satisfaction of a job well done, will instead be donating that labor for the corporate bottom line. The directors at Pennsic were very clear about this: the corporation has a deficit and this will help plug it.
Put another way, the corporation is set to make a profit of, let's say, $14/member/year from the substantial and unpaid efforts of the kingdom chroniclers. For my kingdom that's something over $20K/year. What the chronicler gets out of it is no longer having to arrange printing and mailing -- a win, but I'm not sure it's a $20K/year win.
I'm surprised I haven't seen any commentary about this aspect of the change. The FAQ on this change has a rather disingenuous answer that extols the value of membership while completely ignoring the fact that an associate member gets all those benefits -- so what costs are incurred by a sustaining membership that justify the higher price? Near as I can tell, electronic kingdom newsletters are pure profit and nobody is talking about whether that affects the people currently producing them for free. Does the new arrangement make the job of kingdom chronicler more attractive, or less?
There's a bigger issue I haven't addressed here: why have an online newsletter at all when you can just get the information from the web site? It is possible that the prospect of pointless work will deter more would-be chroniclers than the pricing structure will (though kingdoms are required to find somebody to do this job). Time will tell, I guess. I asked about this at the Pennsic meeting and it sounds like kingdom newsletters will continue to exist for a good long time. It's in the corporation's best interest to make that happen, after all. (That's me talking, not the BoD.)
I don't have a dog in this race, being neither a member of SCA Inc. nor a kingdom chronicler. But having been both in the past, I still care.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-08-20 08:00 am (UTC)People asked us (and we asked ourselves this) when the Althing went online. The main answer was that local groups are required to have a newsletter, so we do. Though, there are things in the newsletter that aren't online, like articles, artwork, letters from the officers, meeting minutes, etc. I'm not sure how many people read it, but it is worth reading. I imagine the Kingdom newsletter will shake out roughly the same way.
As far as donating the labor, well, we all do. What do any of us get out of it? The Kingdom Chronicler makes sure that event announcements are complete (which are submitted online anyway), and that the Kingdom Officers and Royalty have a mechanism by which to speak to the people officially. That won't change.
In case I seem too defensive, don't get me wrong: I like it sucks monkey balls that they are doing this without lowering the price at least some, and I think it's a sneaky way to increase revenue, no matter how much it's needed. I think there is little commentary on it b/c everyone's being defeatist.
BTW, We're currently working on an index for the online Althings, so people know what's in which issue. I hope they do that, or something like for the Aestel.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-08-20 11:05 am (UTC)Sure, but most folks donate their labor to help their local groups, and to get a direct benefit out of it (we wouldn't eat feast unless SOMEONE cooked it).
The chronicler's labor is moving from supporting their local group (well, kingdom, but still a regional game unit) to the corporation (which is not part of the game structure). It's not the same type of labor, and won't necessarily attract folks with the same motivations (whether folks will be more or less motivated remains to be seen, and we can certainly speculate, but it is certainly different).
(no subject)
Date: 2011-08-21 03:27 am (UTC)Here's the thing: for an online delivery vehicle, a PDF newsletter is pretty far down on the usability scale. We should put the event announcements, letters from officers, articles, etc. on the web site as first-class items. We already do this for event announcements and some articles (the bios started out in the Althing). Why create an index of PDF files to find specific content instead of just indexing the content directly? If I want to find a particular court report of set of meeting minutes, isn't it easier to go to the "court reports" or "minutes" page and choose the event/date from there? (I read the online newsletter when it comes out, at least most of the time, but I never refer to old issues -- in case you were wondering.)
Now since paper newsletters are also being produced, I totally understand why we post a PDF. You have to do the work anyway; why not? But duplicate work is being done and -- demonstrably -- not all of the content is making it to the web site beyond the PDFs. So consider an alternate model: make the web site primary, not secondary, and assemble the paper newsletter from the content on the web site. It could even be (largely) scripted. The chronicler does less work, the chronicler and webmaster do less redundant work, people using the internet get consistent and easy access to information, and people getting paper copies still get them.
By the way, so far as I know baronies are required to have chroniclers, but there is no requirement that chroniclers produce newsletters of any particular quality or frequency.
On labor donation,