Any advice welcome.
I edit/produce/write a quarterly 76-page glossy magazine for the finance sector on my own, with 1 external designer. Is this normal?
I do have a real job marketing conferences, raising .5m GDP in sponsorship, press relations, complex monthly e-mailouts and proofing 6-monthly research reports for finance sector among others. They I can do - but no-one here seems to understand how many people should/could be employed just manage a great professional magazine. What roles would be expected for this task.
1) editor, 2) production manager, 3) proofreader, 4) 1+ designer? - or these days are these just luxuries? (This is a commerical firm, not a publishing company).
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Sales is a full-time job in itself. I worked for a coupon advertising company for a while. They put coupons on the back of sales receipts. Small company with the owner who did some sales + 2 part-time designers + 1 full-time sales and 2 part-time sales.
If you don't need advertising revenue and you get your financial support from another source then great! That's one less staffer. It still seems you're overworked (but who isn't? you either do 2 or more jobs anymore or you're out of work, LOL).
Your designer is going to need to design the pages. That takes a bit of time. I design monthly newsletters and a couple of reports a month. Counting editing and revisions I spend about 2 hours per page on a 16 page newsletter; the reports are easier and I crank out about 30 pages an hour, counting revisions and corrections. You need to allow time for photo placement, artwork, illustrations, etc...
At the same time you need someone to read everything. That's your copy editor/proofreader. Every story, ever article, every word needs to be read. It is a plus if your copy editor IS NOT the writer. Generally speaking it's hard for us to see our own mistakes. In addition to checking for grammar, spelling and punctuation the copy editor may need to check facts and figures, make sure the websites referred to are correct (or still active), etc...
I imagine for a small magazine the editor and production manager can be shared duties. Still, this can be time consuming. The editor needs to act like the manager for the magazine itself and also operate as the magazine's "face" to the community, other departments, outside world, etc... Someone needs to be there to deal with clients, irate readers, etc...
Sounds like you know what each role does, esp. since you're involved with the day-to-day operations. It's a lot of work.
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