How much is customary to pay demonstrators for a 1-1 1/2 hour demo at a monthly club meeting. We are now paying $125
Thanks
Stan
Thanks
Stan
I have done demonstrations for my club, at the meetings and at our woodworker's showcase... No fee. I don't do any other volunteer work so I just consider that my time donation.Brian Hahn said:Boy, have I missed the boat. They haven't even offered to reimburse me for my out-of-pocket expenses.
That's the way I feel about it too. And I'll be doing another free demo this fall.ByGeorge said:I feel good about doing the occasional "freebie" for the club. I get a great deal out of them (BUT... I WOULD take the money if they offered any). :cool2:
As usual, well said.tahoeturner said:Just because you know someone who happens to be a golf pro doesn’t mean you should expect free golf lessons. As Bill stated, doing a good demo requires a lot of pre-planning, and often considerable travel time. If you are a hobbyist, doing this stuff for fun, that’s one thing. If you are attempting to “make a living†doing this stuff, then time is money and time taken away from the studio/shop is money from the demonstrator’s pocket.
So far, with my home club, I have asked to be reimbursed for paper and ink. The rest is part of my day to day stuff. I will continue like that until I AM making my living at turning and it interferes with my work or until I feel "used" (and I can't imagine that happening).Jake Debski said:This is a very timely thread and judging from the responses many chapters are facing similar questions.
In our area there are four small to medium sized turning clubs. None of these organizations can boast of a membership of over eighty. The total corps of willing demonstrators, from all the clubs combined, numbers less than twenty or twenty-five. In our case the same group of turners have been called upon to demo at the different clubs to the extent that there is too much being asked of these individuals. In essence we've gone to the same well too often. Getting the funds to pay demonstrators for their effort presents yet another problem. I'll leave the fund raising ideas for another time. But I believe turners from outside the organization should be compensated and once you start that, then in fairness, should also compensate fellow members. New ideas are the life blood of these organizations, and it ain't always free.
You know, this whole topic has really been on my mind... I really like the idea of getting paid, even by my home club, BUT...tahoeturner said:Just because you know someone who happens to be a golf pro doesn’t mean you should expect free golf lessons. As Bill stated, doing a good demo requires a lot of pre-planning, and often considerable travel time. If you are a hobbyist, doing this stuff for fun, that’s one thing. If you are attempting to “make a living†doing this stuff, then time is money and time taken away from the studio/shop is money from the demonstrator’s pocket.
Bill Grumbine said:Speaking as a demonstrator...
From my perspective, anyone who does a demonstration takes time to prepare for that demo, and that needs to be recognized. Even if that person has a full time occupation that pays way more than that of woodturner, there is still time spent and expense incurred. I also think, along with Steve, that if there is money involved, then there will be better demonstrations. Part of that is the dread on the part of the demonstrator of putting on a dud and then taking money for it. If they are a volunteer, it is too easy to rationalize away a poor demo by saying the club got what it paid for.
I will grant you that there are those "gold diggers," who skim off what they can and leave the work to others, without a second thought, but those who DO the work would keep on doing it, even if the gold diggers started pitching in.I also think that local club members need to be paid because there are almost never enough people in a local club to do all that needs to be done. With any volunteer organization, there is the core that works hard, and then the peripheral element that wants to be entertained. Paying demonstrators is one way to get people involved, and to muzzle the demands of those who do nothing but show up at meetings once in a while and who come to think that they have a goldmine in some of their club members.
Going along with this, I think it is incumbent on the demonstrator to provide a demo that is both informative and entertaining. It is no fun at all to watch someone who is not adequately prepared, either by not knowing the subject at hand, or forgetting half of what he or she needs to do the demo. It is also no fun listening to someone drone on for hours without actually doing something, whether it be making chips fly, burning something, carving something, or at the least letting the people get up to see what they are doing close up. I could go on and on about that - but I won't. Poor demonstrators make me look better!![]()
Bill
ByGeorge said:If the demonstrators should get paid, even if it's just a token, how much should the president, and the rest of his/her cabinet get paid... More than that, how about the people who don't even get any prestige out of the work they do for the club, the grunts who set up and break down the meetings, for instance.). They give up their time, shouldn't THEY get paid if the local showoff (me) does?
ByGeorge said:You know, I had this epiphany about the topic and have a bit of a new perspective: I can't imagine that ANYONE would stand in front of their peers and do a crappy job because they weren't getting paid...
First,tahoeturner said:George, for what it's worth, I collect a respectable fee when I present away from home. As a club member, I've never requested a fee, feeling that it was my duty and honor to give something back to the club. I have been paid "gas money" from my local club, which in my case is almost a two drive
It may be just a word, but guilt never entered my thoughts, other than feeling uncomfortable about not saying thank you enough to the guys who do the work that makes the rest of a meeting/ demo/symposium possible. I was just trying to point out that the guys in the front of the room are not the only ones doing the work, and that they too have to invest time, etc.Bill Grumbine said:The point I am trying to make is that it is up to the person who is doing the demo to decide whether or not to be compensated for their time, and that the local club can help that along by at least offering. I do not feel guilty in taking a demo fee from my own club. I have done enough volunteer work in many different capacities that it is not a struggle for me. But that is just me. I speak for no one else.
Bill
ByGeorge said:.................................................................................
In any event, if you feel that you would like to be paid and no one is offering, when you are first approached, ASK. You can still do the demo for free, but you have put your club on notice that you would like to be paid in the future.
ByGeorge said:First,
Let me say that I meant you no disrespect by what I said, I really meant none (to anyone).