I recall the Ilfopro newsletter. I liked it, but for some reason, my subscription info kept getting lost, and I stopped following it.
As much as I like to hold a newsletter in my hand without having to print it out, most of the professional organizations that I belong to have put their newsletters online to save printing and mailing expenses, usually sending an e-mail with a link to announce when it's available.
From Harman's point of view, I suspect the main question would be whether a newsletter will sell more film and paper, and in what form that would be most effective. Even if a hard copy is available, it would be easy to offer a PDF as well. Maybe Harman could partner with Freestyle or other big mail order retailers and put a newsletter as an insert in their catalogue. Then you're reaching the segment that likes to purchase photo supplies from a catalogue that comes in the mail, and they've got the newsletter and the catalogue in hand at the same time. If it's being printed anyway as a catalogue insert, then some sort of free subscription arrangement could be set up, so that those who don't get a catalogue and don't like PDFs but want a hard copy can request it, and that group would be a well targeted audience.
As much as I like to hold a newsletter in my hand without having to print it out, most of the professional organizations that I belong to have put their newsletters online to save printing and mailing expenses, usually sending an e-mail with a link to announce when it's available.
From Harman's point of view, I suspect the main question would be whether a newsletter will sell more film and paper, and in what form that would be most effective. Even if a hard copy is available, it would be easy to offer a PDF as well. Maybe Harman could partner with Freestyle or other big mail order retailers and put a newsletter as an insert in their catalogue. Then you're reaching the segment that likes to purchase photo supplies from a catalogue that comes in the mail, and they've got the newsletter and the catalogue in hand at the same time. If it's being printed anyway as a catalogue insert, then some sort of free subscription arrangement could be set up, so that those who don't get a catalogue and don't like PDFs but want a hard copy can request it, and that group would be a well targeted audience.