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![]() KB6NU's Ham Radio Blog /////////////////////////////////////////// What can we do to improve hamfests? Posted: 26 Oct 2016 11:54 AM PDT http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kb6nu...m_medium=email Yesterday, I received an e-mail from Bill, NA8M. He writes: I read and enjoy your blog. Great stuff. Thanks. I have a “bit part” in the annual Muskegon Color Tour Hamfest that shares a weekend with the Kalamazoo Hamfest in mid-October. (The Kalamazoo hamfest is on Saturday, ours is on Sunday.) It has been fun and financially rewarding for our sponsors. We have a good venue, the room to rent eighty tables (and we do rent them all), wonderfully supportive vendors, a crowd of volunteers who make the hard work of a hamfest very manageable, and pretty good guest attendance. Well, pretty good until this last hamfest when our guest attendance was down 30%. In a good year we enjoy 230 paid guests, but this year, we had only 180. That last statistic is troubling me today. I wonder if you have ever explored what brings a ham to a hamfest? I’ve kicked around a few things and in no particular order of importance: I am not in charge of promotion, but I do put our hamfest brochure on a couple of Yahoo groups and three or four Facebook frequented by local hams. I do not know if anyone emails last year’s attendees an invitation. I may volunteer to take that task next year. I’m thinking maybe we could encourage attendance with a small token of appreciation. For a buck, we could buy LED keyring flashlights that have our hamfest name and our club name printed on them. That only rewards the folks who come, though, and may not encourage those who stayed home, so this idea doesn’t really excite me. Another idea is to put a coupon on the flyer offering a discount if you bring a friend. It’s like recruiting in any other club setting. One guy brings another and pretty soon you’ve got more guys. We have a full-service canteen with coffee, donuts, hotdogs, pop, and such. So the eyeball QSOs are encouraged. We also offer a full complement of door prizes. Since the venue is a church gym we are not allowed to host a raffle to raise more money. There, again, a raffle just gets more money from the attendees. It does nothing for encouraging hams to attend in the first place? Have you ever kicked this one around? I’d sure appreciate your thoughts. I replied: This is a great question, and to be honest, I haven’t really thought much about this, but if you’ll bear with me a bit, I’ll improvise. I think that sharing a weekend with the Kalamazoo Hamfest is one problem. [[Kalamazoo, MI and Muskegon, MI are less than two hours apartDan]] They’re just too close to you. Might it be possible to merge the two hamfests into one big one? The successful hamfests seem to be going big. I’m not talking about Dayton so much. Dayton is pretty much in a class of its own. Take a look at the Huntsville Hamfest, though. It’s a two-day hamfest, and they’re claiming record attendance. The Fort Wayne hamfest is another two-day hamfest. I’ve never been to this one, but those who have gone all give it good marks. Unfortunately, it’s only a month after yours. They might be draining away attendees as well. A hamfest has to be more than just a swap meet. Huntsville had a lot of other activities, including license exams, meetings for the YLARC and 3885 AM Gang, awards ceremonies for the Young Ham of the Year. There was also a full technical forum program. At least one, if not all, of the forum tracks should be targeted at the new ham. For many new hams wandering around a swap meet is really not that much fun. They don’t know what they’re looking for or what prices to pay. Give them a reason to attend. Next year, you might consider doing a one-day Tech class. I might be persuaded to teach that class. Promotion is key, and I think you hit the nail on the head when you mention e-mailing previous attendees. Many hamfests, including Findlay, send postcards. You could even get creative and make it look like a QSL card to get people to read it. If you do things like license exams and a one-day Tech class, you’re going to have to promote it to the general public as well as the amateur radio community. I’m not big on the token of appreciation, and you’re right about the raffle. There’s no need for a raffle if you’ve got door prizes. (If you’d asked me, I would have donated one of my study guides or one of my CW books.) I do like the idea of offering an incentive to bring a friend. At this point, I ran out of ideas, so I thought that Id throw it out to you. If youve been involved with hamfests,*what worked for you? If you attend hamfests,*please tell us about why you go and what you like about the hamfests*you attend. The post What can we do to improve hamfests? appeared first on KB6NUs Ham Radio Blog. |
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