From: RALLYGUY (RALLYGUY1) [#184]
9 May 2006
To: Engravin' Dave (DATAKES) [#183] 9 May 2006
Thanks,
I asked him myself in a subsequent post this morning.
From: BrianC (INKSQUIRTER) [#185]
9 May 2006
To: Engravin' Dave (DATAKES) [#183] 9 May 2006
So.............we may have to make the same post on 3 forums? Wow, I thought this was time consuming before! :'-(
It's already hard enough to get any work done.....oh ya, it would help if I stayed off the golf course.
From: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#186]
9 May 2006
To: BrianC (INKSQUIRTER) [#185] 9 May 2006
Maybe not. We took some comments and may have hammered out a slightly better solution. Sorry, no vaporware at the moment.
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#187]
9 May 2006
To: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#65] 9 May 2006
Dave, Brudda,
I have only read 72 posts in this thread as of this writing but here's my gut feeling.
I, like most here, appreciate everything you do for hosting a forum where businesspeople can gain information to improve their businesses. This also applies to Cherie Derrick at DSSI. But I am having a problem with this site going subscription.
Its not that a dime, a quarter or dollar a day is too much, its the nature of the world wide web. We are accustomed to the free exchange of ideas and banter online. And lets face it, a lot of what goes down on these lists is chit-chat, not ground breaking technical or business inovation.
I for one would like you to adopt a model where you accept advertising instead of charging an annual fee. I think the rank and file would relate to that better.
There is/was a teriffic photo site I used to visit daily, the Rob Galbraith Forum. Most members were serious professionals, not wannabee flamers like on some photo sites. But it recently sold and is now a membership fee list. Will I subscribe? Probably not. It just doesn't seem right after so many years of visiting the free site. And maybe in the final analysis that's it really, changing midstream from free to fee. If you were just starting up perhaps the perception of a subscription fee would be different.
Just my 2 cents and we all know how much that is worth.....
From: Shaddy [#188]
9 May 2006
To: ALL
If I may weigh in... I don't believe their intention ever was to just make us pay to use the forum. As in, leave things just like this and just start making us pay. I believe they have much grander things in mind, the logo's just being part of it. I think a "wait and see" attitude should be observed until we can see what they have in mind before jumping to too many conclusions. Heck, just hang out at the free forums (or stay here since he already said he was going to leave the forum portion free) and pay the 10 dollars when it's time to see if you want to pay for a years worth. No one ever said it's a year or nothing.
I'm pretty curious, so I'll pay 10 bucks to see what's what. If it doesn't appeal to me as a laser hobbiest, then I'll let it lapse.
PS... stock logos and art was one of the suggestions made in one of the other threads a while back. I for one would like to see them. Not just logos, but stock art like a greyscale winter wolf, horse, barn, creek...
PPS... he only offered to delete posts to those that didn't want them on the pay site, was never a threat, he even said he didn't want to.
THat's about it...
Shaddy
From: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#189]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#187] 9 May 2006
quote:
And maybe in the final analysis that's it really, changing midstream from free to fee. If you were just starting up perhaps the perception of a subscription fee would be different.
You may have just thrown that in, but it is a mouthful.
I believe that it is one of the main drawbacks that is causing the most dissension.
The web is an information highway, not a free highway. Absolute proof of that is what you pay for access to the web. DSL is $20-$30 per month. If you have a website, you pay for hosting, not a person does any real work for those fees.
We have been free since the inception of EE. Now that free cookie is going to go away. I remember those thoughts and feelings when DSSI was planning on going to become subscription. It took a long to make the decision that I was going to join the subscription site. It is amazing how fresh that is in my mind during these discussions.
Some of the things in the works require money, not out of David's pocket. Some equipment, but probably most of the money for some professionals to do some of the work. When the time comes to get sections under way we will probably give members who do that type of work the first grab at it, for a reasonable wage. I am not talking about designing a web page, I am talking about many hours of nitty-gritty sort of post production work, necessarily left to professionals in those fields.
Part of the vision is to make this a school for our field along with the instant help. School in equipment is good, but also in marketing, (first test of that has been done and posted), products, and general information that can not be found anywhere on a single site, (some not available anywhere).
From: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#190]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#187] 9 May 2006
Mike,
The concept of starting a pay site, from scratch, would have never flown. There's never a guarantee that any forum will fly, regardless of its cost or absence of cost.
I suspect more people are opposed to a pay site, based on principle, rather than outrage at the proposed subscription.
I suspect the reaction would have been just as acrid, at any price.
I can understand people acting on principle alone.
I took a stand, that I'd never become a full-fledged member of the ARA, simply because they have no mechanism of addressing grievances, between their members.
A one-issue deal-breaker.
Does that mean I think the ARA isn't a good organization?
No. I attend the ARA Las Vegas show, religiously, as a paid attendee.
With me, it's matter of principle.
I think the same attitude applies to people who are opposed to the change we're about to undergo; and I respect that.
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#191]
9 May 2006
To: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#189] 9 May 2006
The web is an information highway Harvey, not an information tollway for the most part. I didn't just throw that statement in.
I for one would be glad to pay $99/year just to keep up with David and you, but how many Newbies, hobbyists, non-professionals will? Aren't they the core of an ever expanding client base you need to cultivate into the future? Newbies become pro in fairly quick order.
I know I'm probably missing something here as I've never hosted a public chat list web site, but couldn't you generate as much income off advertising as charging a subscription fee?
Let's think about that. Maybe I'm wrong. Let's guess that you have 1000 members who would pay you $100/year. $100,000. Maybe online advertising isn't quite that lucrative, I have no worldly idea how that works. Probably hits per day or some such esoteric thing. And then maybe there are additional charges you have planned for CDs, online training, special events that can't be accomodated on a free site subsidized by advertisement. Pure guess.
Its just my gut feeling that after 6-12 months your core will shrink slightly and then stabalize at around 80% of today's free membership. But you won't be adding many new members especially if they find another free forum, no matter how good or bad that forum is.
Pure speculation on my part.
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#192]
9 May 2006
To: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#190] 9 May 2006
Dave, almost all of that flew way over my head. I don't see the connection but then you are imersed in this situation and are speaking from a base of intimate detail I cannot see or understand.EDITED: 9 May 2006 by BIGPIXEL
From: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#193]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#192] 9 May 2006
Mike,
I'm saying some people, on a matter of principle alone, see the subscription site as a one-issue deal-breaker.
I was also saying, I can relate to that attitude, due to my stance with ARA membership.
From: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#194]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#191] 9 May 2006
If we retain 80% of our membership you can bet your donkey the rates will drop considerably. If not we will have perks that we never dreamed of or thought about at this point. Nope I think they would drop instead.
For those who do not believe that I would be very happy to split it with the other two moderators of this forum.
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#195]
9 May 2006
To: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#194] 9 May 2006
I wish you both well. You have a good thing going here. I was just interested in subscription versus advertisement as a way to keep it all afloat. Still not clear as to your decision but its none of my business really.
I have no problem with generating as much income as you can. You have the right and obligation to max that in any way you can for your partners.
btw, who's the third moderator?
EDITED: 9 May 2006 by BIGPIXEL
From: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#196]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#195] 9 May 2006
What I attempted to say was that we are not looking to make any money off the site. Nearly all to be plowed back in.
Not aimed at you, but some other people cannot believe that. Their loss.
EDITED: 9 May 2006 by HARVEY-ONLY
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#197]
9 May 2006
To: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#196] 9 May 2006
"Knowing" you and Dave, I can believe that to a large extent Harvey.
From: UncleSteve [#198]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#197] 9 May 2006
What I am having a problem understanding is that the same people that are screaming about $99 for a year of 911/411 from experienced product sources, equipment vendors and support people and those that run different day to day engraving and multi discipline don't question going for one day of training for $2-300 in a class setting with a pre-determined curriculum that won't be there the other 364 days if a problem or emergency comes up that needs virtually immediate attention.
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#199]
9 May 2006
To: UncleSteve [#198] 9 May 2006
hands on with an instructor and online advice are two entirely different things I would imagine.
From: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#200]
9 May 2006
To: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#199] 9 May 2006
Mike,
There are ways to provide hands-on instruction, while people are online.
From: Upacreek [#201]
9 May 2006
To: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#190] 9 May 2006
quote:
I suspect more people are opposed to a pay site, based on principle, rather than outrage at the proposed subscription.
I suspect it's the fact that all we have been told the fee will be $99/year and after we pay it, we will eventually find out what we will receive for that expense.
We've all invested a lot of time and research into our businesses and equipment. Look at the number of questions people post when trying to make a decision about their next equipment purchase and if the expense is worth it.
To expect us to pay for something that has no facts and data to indicate what we are receiving for this price, is only asking for resistance.
quote:
I suspect the reaction would have been just as acrid, at any price.
I think you would have had a much more positive reaction if you had stated exactly what the member would have received for that price.
Before you decided not to become an ARA member, you researched the membership benefits, right?
That's all we're asking. What exactly are the benefits of paying $99/year for a membership?
Michel
From: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#202]
9 May 2006
To: Upacreek [#201] 10 May 2006
Michel,
If you followed the "My Apologies" thread, I admitted to making my announcement prematurely and apologized for the resulting turmoil.
I was hoping to place a web page, detailing the benefits of joing the pay site, along with the EBS offer, sometime this week.
I'm swamped with work and efforts to create the page, may take longer.
As to your ARA question; a list of benefits, no matter how long or juicy, played no role, in my decision not to join ARA. My decision was based on a single principle, which I've already mentioned.
Some would say that's throwing the baby out with the bath water and in some ways that's true.
I call it standing by a principle and I'm suggesting that's exactly what we'll see from some people in this situation.
EDITED: 9 May 2006 by DGL
From: Mike (BIGPIXEL) [#203]
9 May 2006
To: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#200] 9 May 2006
quote:
There are ways to provide hands-on instruction, while people are online.
I guess you're right Dave. I could instruct digital photographers off a live web site.
btw, who is your third partner?
.EDITED: 9 May 2006 by BIGPIXEL
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