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- Sadly, I must report the closing of another venerable Amiga specific
- magazine: Jumpdisk. This article appears in the current issue.
- Harv
- ----
- ------------------
- EDITOR'S TWO CENTS
- By RICHARD RAMELLA
- ------------------
-
- THE END NEARS
- What better or worse time than the eighth anniversary issue to
- announce a plan for winding down JUMPDISK operations?
- I plan to publish five more issues of JUMPDISK -- through the December
- 1994 issue. That will be No. 101 -- which seems a nice number to me.
- If you just re-subscribed for another year, you're now wondering what
- I'm trying to pull on you. Well, don't worry. I just came up with the plan
- this week, and I'm resolved to see it through in a way which will satisfy all
- subscribers.
- This month, I will only accept renewals for five months: $30, or $38
- for both five months of JUMPDISK and PDQ
- A significant number of subscriptions expire within the next five
- months. With this announcement, many of you will choose not to continue.
- That will winnow the subscriber list into a small bunch of diehards.
- Starting in January, I will continue to distribute two disks a month.
- One disk will be called PDQ as before. The other won't be called
- anything in particular. Both disks will contain the newest distributable
- programming I can locate.
- The final JUMPDISK issue -- December 1994 -- will contain the last
- JUMPDISK instalments of Mark Brown's INFOFILE and Brad Webb's SHELLGAME.
- Brad's DOS LAB TWO series comes to a natural conclusion in the August issue,
- when the 30th and final chapter is published.
-
- ECONOMICS 101
- I'm going to tell you some deep economic secrets, no kidding!
- The JUMPDISK operation has not been profitable for about a year now. In
- fact, the secret of its success is that JUMPDISK Magazine itself was never
- profitable and often operated in the red. The mild profit of the operation
- always came from ancillary sales -- even the slender take on PD sales.
- In the good old days, I ploughed much back into the operation to keep
- JUMPDISK looking good and supplied with spiffy content. The monthly bills at
- times frightened me.
- JUMPDISK is the original Amiga disk magazine. I forget how many others
- were published in the U.S. and Canada -- certainly more than 10. I didn't
- worry when they came on the scene, because I knew from their prices --
- generally the same as JUMPDISK'S -- that they could not long survive. I also
- knew their unreasonable predictions of greatness, top-heavy staffing and, in
- some cases, large ads, would sink them quickly. A sparkling exception was
- Megadisc of Australia, whose editor Tim Strachan always understood how to
- keep things bubbling along.
- Keeping quiet about the the realities was the closest I ever came to
- cutthroat business policies. But who among the new publishers would have
- believed me?
-
- QUITTING GRACEFULLY
- JUMPDISK peaked three years ago. Its decline matched that of the Amiga
- market and Commodore.
- When I realized the only way was down for the Amiga, I wrote a little
- Basic program that figured the dollar amount I owed subscribers if I bought
- myself out of the situation. The total was staggering.
- I've been running that program every month after shipping issues.
- Through attrition, the total has dropped considerably and is now within a
- manageable range.
- Strange to say, but I am not displeased when the subscriber list falls,
- since it means a corresponding drop in my debt to you. There are no longer
- profits from ancillary sales.
- I don't know how, but JUMPDISK has continued for quite some time in
- this delicate balancing act of working off debt. Along the way, costs have
- been cut when needed.
- And now, by January I think the subscriber list will be sufficiently
- small that the two-disk-per-month plan can continue without undue strain
- until either everything is fulfilled or the final few subscribers can be
- refunded the bits owed them.
- There you have it -- a brand new plan for ending a magazine -- going to
- the not-so-bitter end.
- See you next month.
-
- END OF TEXT
-