Dec. 8th, 2010

bjarvis: (Honda Civic)
Last night, as I was driving home from a night shift at the data center, I was thanking $deity every, oh, 10 seconds or so that the passenger cabin of my Civic was warm & toasty despite a nasty windchill factor in our region. Most conventional gasoline & diesel engine vehicles use heat from the engine's operating combustion to warm the passengers and defrost the windshield.

How do the Prius, Leaf & Volt warm their human passengers?

I suppose those with an internal combustion engine could run the engine to generate heat but that would have a huge impact on gas mileage. They could use their battery power to run electrical heating elements; I have no idea how much of an impact that drain would have on their range.

Can anyone with first-hand knowledge enlighten me?
bjarvis: (Honda Civic)
Last night, as I was driving home from a night shift at the data center, I was thanking $deity every, oh, 10 seconds or so that the passenger cabin of my Civic was warm & toasty despite a nasty windchill factor in our region. Most conventional gasoline & diesel engine vehicles use heat from the engine's operating combustion to warm the passengers and defrost the windshield.

How do the Prius, Leaf & Volt warm their human passengers?

I suppose those with an internal combustion engine could run the engine to generate heat but that would have a huge impact on gas mileage. They could use their battery power to run electrical heating elements; I have no idea how much of an impact that drain would have on their range.

Can anyone with first-hand knowledge enlighten me?
bjarvis: (IASGDC)
The IAGSDC has decided to discontinue their bi-monthly mailout service. For many years, member clubs could send flyers or documents to the IAGSDC secretary who would then sort them all and mail copies to each member club in turn. Thus, every club would have every other club's festival flyers and only one person needed to have all of the contact information for each club.

Of course, there were occasionally problems: many individual clubs did not update the IAGSDC database when there was an address or board change. I'm sure more than one new club rep didn't fully comprehend the instructions (the IAGSDC doesn't do the photocopying for you: you must provide 70 copies, no more than 210 in total, all docs must be received by the IAGSDC by the first Saturday of the even numbered months, etc.). Despite the headaches however, it was a valuable service to those of us who run weekend festivals.

As I said at the opening, the IAGSDC has discontinued this service. Now all member clubs have to mail their own flyers to member clubs. And this now leads to a more difficult issue...

Now, more than ever, it is critical that member clubs keep their contact information current. I used the IAGSDC web site's member club "Fast Facts" to find addresses for clubs but then cross-checked against their individual web sites. For the most part, they matched but at least one --I'm looking at you, Sho-Me Squares!-- there was a discrepancy between the IAGSDC information and the club's web site.

Further, we now have to decide who is worth a mailing and who isn't. Each double-sided flyer costs us a little less than $0.05; mailing 20 copies costs $2.07, not including the cost of the envelope itself. I'm estimating a total cost of about $3.25 per 20 copy mail-out to a domestic US square dance club. Since there are about 60 member clubs, we have to cull the herd a bit to determine where we get the most bang for our square dance festival buck.

I'm currently working on flyer distribution for the DC Lambda Squares' two fly-ins: ACDC 2011 in February and Harvest Festival Hoedown 17 in November. Earlier this week, I sent copies of the flyers to most of the staff callers for both events (I'm hand-delivering flyers to John Marshall and Linda Kendall since they're local).

Our nearby regional clubs definitely get stacks of flyers as the bulk of our attendees from outside our own club come from them: Chesapeake Squares, Times Squares, Independence Squares, Hotlanta Squares and Delmarvelous Squares. We get sporadic attendance from other clubs: Boston Uncommons, Chi-Town Squares, Grand River Squares, Cadillac Squares, Gateway Squares, Sho-Me Squares and such. I'm sure Kris Jensen will share her stack of flyers with the Wilde Bunch. :-)

We do get some attendees from the west coast, but mostly for our ACDC event. Then again, they tend to be regulars and probably already registered while they were here last year, or are already aware of the event and are registering online. Would the flyers do any good there? Maybe... I'm sending some for ACDC to the Midnight Squares

And that leaves everyone else: Portland, Seattle, Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver, the rest of the SF Bay area, San Diego, Palm Springs, Long Beach, Sacramento, Phoenix, Tucson and so on. I have absolutely no idea which ones should be on our mailing list and which would be a waste of a dead tree for whatever reason.

I can't be the only person struggling to find a good way to tackle this issue. How are others tackling this problem?

For 2012 and beyond, I'm working on tracking the travels & adventures of our own club members so they can hand-delivery flyers to various clubs. I'm also taking flyer packets with me to the Atlanta IAGSDC convention in July to distribute to various clubs. That doesn't solve my current dilemma but the task will get better with some planning.
bjarvis: (IASGDC)
The IAGSDC has decided to discontinue their bi-monthly mailout service. For many years, member clubs could send flyers or documents to the IAGSDC secretary who would then sort them all and mail copies to each member club in turn. Thus, every club would have every other club's festival flyers and only one person needed to have all of the contact information for each club.

Of course, there were occasionally problems: many individual clubs did not update the IAGSDC database when there was an address or board change. I'm sure more than one new club rep didn't fully comprehend the instructions (the IAGSDC doesn't do the photocopying for you: you must provide 70 copies, no more than 210 in total, all docs must be received by the IAGSDC by the first Saturday of the even numbered months, etc.). Despite the headaches however, it was a valuable service to those of us who run weekend festivals.

As I said at the opening, the IAGSDC has discontinued this service. Now all member clubs have to mail their own flyers to member clubs. And this now leads to a more difficult issue...

Now, more than ever, it is critical that member clubs keep their contact information current. I used the IAGSDC web site's member club "Fast Facts" to find addresses for clubs but then cross-checked against their individual web sites. For the most part, they matched but at least one --I'm looking at you, Sho-Me Squares!-- there was a discrepancy between the IAGSDC information and the club's web site.

Further, we now have to decide who is worth a mailing and who isn't. Each double-sided flyer costs us a little less than $0.05; mailing 20 copies costs $2.07, not including the cost of the envelope itself. I'm estimating a total cost of about $3.25 per 20 copy mail-out to a domestic US square dance club. Since there are about 60 member clubs, we have to cull the herd a bit to determine where we get the most bang for our square dance festival buck.

I'm currently working on flyer distribution for the DC Lambda Squares' two fly-ins: ACDC 2011 in February and Harvest Festival Hoedown 17 in November. Earlier this week, I sent copies of the flyers to most of the staff callers for both events (I'm hand-delivering flyers to John Marshall and Linda Kendall since they're local).

Our nearby regional clubs definitely get stacks of flyers as the bulk of our attendees from outside our own club come from them: Chesapeake Squares, Times Squares, Independence Squares, Hotlanta Squares and Delmarvelous Squares. We get sporadic attendance from other clubs: Boston Uncommons, Chi-Town Squares, Grand River Squares, Cadillac Squares, Gateway Squares, Sho-Me Squares and such. I'm sure Kris Jensen will share her stack of flyers with the Wilde Bunch. :-)

We do get some attendees from the west coast, but mostly for our ACDC event. Then again, they tend to be regulars and probably already registered while they were here last year, or are already aware of the event and are registering online. Would the flyers do any good there? Maybe... I'm sending some for ACDC to the Midnight Squares

And that leaves everyone else: Portland, Seattle, Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver, the rest of the SF Bay area, San Diego, Palm Springs, Long Beach, Sacramento, Phoenix, Tucson and so on. I have absolutely no idea which ones should be on our mailing list and which would be a waste of a dead tree for whatever reason.

I can't be the only person struggling to find a good way to tackle this issue. How are others tackling this problem?

For 2012 and beyond, I'm working on tracking the travels & adventures of our own club members so they can hand-delivery flyers to various clubs. I'm also taking flyer packets with me to the Atlanta IAGSDC convention in July to distribute to various clubs. That doesn't solve my current dilemma but the task will get better with some planning.

January 2021

S M T W T F S
     1 2
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 13th, 2025 05:21 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios