That is the best offer you can have, take it from me having being in the publishing industry if you don't have £10k to start up with then take the offer.
Sponsership makes a magazine successful, not sales.
Then you have print specs etc.. This is what the SLWCN is working with Councils on just flyers and it is very technical stuff
You have the industry at heart and the last thing I would like to see is you being out of pocket in the £k's.
Doug
Firstly Doug, thanks for the concern. We don't want to be out of pocket ether.
Sponsorship might work it some situations but in our case it would compromise our concept of being independent. As for you costings we have already established that we don't need £10k to set up the mag (it's an independent window cleaning magazine not FHM, Nuts or Womens weekly!). You mention the design aspect. Sanity used to work in publishing and produced trade magazines for the building industry. I think he explains the design process best so i have copied it over from the "Professional window cleaner rival publication" Thread. If you haven't read it then take a look it's all about the mag, it's aims and the discussion that sparked this thread. Anyway here it is:
1. Idea (lets create a magazine)
2. Feasablity Evaluation (who will buy it, what will it be about, is this interesting enough to get people buying it, what is the market, will it be worth doing? etc etc etc etc)
3. Financial Evaluation (will it need financing? costs? income projection, advertising rates, etc etc etc)
At this point, it is decided by the idea originator, publisher, future editorial team, financier, etc whether or not to commit time, energy and money into the project...
4. Design alpha (this is the first rough design of the magazine. It shows examples of fonts (letter styles) colours, layouts (using Jabberwoky, pleas egoogle it), possible placement of content, page styling, placement of page numbers etc... This is an internal design, meaning that the production team (currently jusy WCE and myself) would view it and make changes. If more people join this team, more people would get an input but as of yet nobody has commited THEIR time and effort to it...
5. Design beta. (last draft of the design, showing final choices of lours,fonts, sizes, placements of content pages and editorial information.) This is the stage at which it will be forwarded to the 'design team' (the team of people from the forum that will advise us on our design choices)
6. Design Final. this is the finished design, with all the aforementioned colours, fonts etc decided and set as a template.
Now the bit that DOES require input from potential readers...the content..
7. Theme. Each issue requires a major theme that will proivide the cover story and the major piece imediately after the contents page and on which the majority of editorial comment will be made. This theme will be decided by the editorial team (currently...WCE and myself, please see definition of team in a dictionary or wikipedia, although if anyone would like to assist, please do so...)
8. Article procurement. A register of volunteer article contributors is created at this point, providing sources for articles to match, compliment or contradict the theme. Other contributions such as letters, jokes, cartoons, etc are obtained in the same manner. Canvassing is carried out to obtain advertising customers.
8. Editing. The gathered, edited, spellchecked, grammarchecked articles are returned to their writers for their agreement of any changes that have been made.
9. Layout draft. The articles and other content are inserted into the allocated text boxes. Images are obtained to match the articles and inserted into image placeholders in the design agreed in stage 6. Once the magazine is filled, this is then sent to proofreaders (again, selected from the register of contributors) for checking.
9. Layout final. At this stage, the artwork for advertisements is put in place, and any changes made from the proofreaders. Final checks of continuity etc are made and printing marks added.
10. Proof. The final proof is sent to the printer, who produces 5 copies for us to check that what is printed is what we see on our PC screens. If this is ok, then we go to print.....