I've been involved in a company with around 1,000 members and it found no particular difficulties with managing them. None of them were very interested in an alternative "friends" affiliation; quite a few took no interest in the AGM, but nobody ever suggested that the vanishingly small responsibilities of being a guarantor member had put them off joining (in part because the meaning of this was clearly explained on the membership form, as I believe it is on ours).
Best Wishes Mickey
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 11:53 AM, Gordon Joly gordon.joly@pobox.com wrote:
At 10:14 +0100 2/12/08, Michael Bimmler wrote:
On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 10:11 AM, Gordon Joly gordon.joly@pobox.com wrote:
I assert that that model is wrong. Maybe not for inception, but certainly for the future.
Why?
Being a member of a company (and in future a member of a charity) will bring a certain responsibility, which some may find is not what they want.
A company with 1,000 members will be hard to manage. However, a company with 100 members and 1,000 friends will be much easier to keep running.
I believe most people would want to be a "friend" rather than a "member", and I mean "member" in the technical sense of "guarantor member".
Gordo
-- "Think Feynman"///////// http://pobox.com/~gordo/ gordon.joly@pobox.com///
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