by Hank Spellman » Sat Apr 10, 2010 7:03 am
Although I am not treasurer of ICS, I am a member of the finance committee. As such, I regularly see the Society's financial statements. So, rather than speculate (which I know is much more fun than dealing with the facts), let's look at the real numbers.
The following data are preliminary totals for 2009. They are subject to change, but they should be close enough for the present purpose. Also, I have rounded all amounts to thousands which is close enough for this discussion.
Total income was the Society was $304,000, composed of Dues of $151,000, Flyer Advertising of $104,000, and a bunch of Other things not of concern here of $49,000.
Costs of producing the Flyer, not including the other fees paid to Village Press for various management services, totaled $185,000. The breakdown of this total includes Editing of $32,000, Design and Printing of $112,000, Postage of $21,000, Advertising Commissions of $13,000, and Other (miscellaneous) of $6,000. (The detail amounts do not add up to the total amount because of rounding error.)
So, if we divide Dues ($151,000) by Total Flyer Costs ($185,000) we get 0.816. In other words, dues only cover about 80% of the cost of producing the Flyer.
While this is true, it is also very misleading in that it has not considered the advertising revenue of $104,000 brought in by the Flyer.
If one simply subtracts the ad revenue from the production costs, the above calculation becomes $151,000/($185,000-$104,000) = 151/81 = 1.864. In other words, dues cover the net production costs almost 1.9 times. Put another way, 53.6% of the dues go the producing the Flyer (1/1.864=.536). Note that this does not account for the $49,000 of other income the Society received. That amount also contributes to paying the bills of the Society and takes some of the pressure off dues increases. Should that not also be considered? How?
If a change in of the Flyer format were considered, the effect on the production cost is worth consideration. The cost of editing $32,000) would probably remain. The cost of design and printing ($112,000) would change. The design portion would probably remain constant, but the printing would go to zero unless the option were made for those who wanted printed copies to still get them. Unfortunately, I do not have any information as to the breakdown between those two items. It is worth noting that in printing, a large cost is associated with job setup. In other words, the first copy is very expensive. The second and successive copies cost only the paper, ink, and a tiny bit of labor. Half the number of copies costs a lot more than half the price of all the copies.
Of course, none of the above has considered what other changes might occur if publishing of the Flyer ceased or changed to another format. Would the ad revenue drop? Would membership drop? I don't know, and I know of no one who does. But we all have opinions (as well as noses).
You may disagree with this analysis. But please use the basic data above until better information comes along.
Hank
Henry A. Spellman