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<blockquote data-quote="Suldulin" data-source="post: 356946" data-attributes="member: 1976"><p><strong>some advice on letter writing found on another save farscape board</strong></p><p></p><p>(replace star trek with farescape, nbc with sci-fi channel and excetera)</p><p></p><p>HOW TO WRITE EFFECTIVE </p><p>LETTERS TO SAVE STAR TREK </p><p></p><p>by Bjo Trimble </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>A LITTLE HISTORY: Back when John and I started the "Save Star Trek" campaign, we needed to make NBC open mail from the fans. With that in mind, I interviewed about 50 secretaries, asking them what types of letters they attended to themselves, or tossed in the trash, or made sure their bosses looked at. The answers I got became the list below. I removed the information on petitions, because they truly do not work any more. Though some of the actual letter-writing information won’t work for e-mail, the advice about being polite and having a good attitude applies at any time. Remember, we’ll deserve the fate of having nothing to watch on TV if, through inaction, we let Star Trek die! -- Bjo Trimble </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>FIRST: Write your letter, following the suggestions below. Then ask 10 people to write a letter. Ask them to ask 10 people to write a letter. They will ask 10 people to write a letter, and so on…. and so on…. and so on…. </p><p></p><p>DO: Be neat, write clearly, and sign the letter. REASON: It does no good to send a sloppy letter that nobody can read, and anonymous mail is always thrown away, or saved to show the media what kind of NUTS are writing in. The media loves to make fans look as if they are all completely crazy. </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Address a VIP familiarly, or tell the network their business. REASON: You are asking a favor; the privilege of watching Star Trek next season. The wrong attitude will nullify your letter, and the campaign efforts. </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Write "Star Trek" on the outside of the envelope. REASON: The letters will be sent, unopened, directly to the show and not be seen by NBC, to whom you are making your appeal. </p><p></p><p>DO: Be polite. Don’t attack another show, or anyone’s intelligence. REASON: Remember you are asking for something. Secretaries just discard letters that start with "you fathead!" or whine "howcum *THAT* stupid show is still on the air, and Star Trek isn’t?" </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Send letters directly to Star Trek unless you want to say something to the people there. REASON: Letters directed to the show are seldom seen by the network officials; only letters addressed as shown on this list will be effective for the campaign. The Star Trek offices have no say on whether the show stays on or not. </p><p></p><p></p><p>DO: Be sincere. If you don’t buy a sponsor’s product, just say something nice about their intelligence in sponsoring Star Trek. These people can spot a "put on" as fast as you can. If you do buy the product, be sure to say so! REASON: Sponsors seldom get anything but complaints, and a sincere letter of praise can encourage them to continue sponsoring Star Trek. </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Send form letters of any kind: photo-copied, mimeographed, carbon copies or even copies of someone else’s letter will be spotted and tossed. Your letter need not be long, but it must be in your own words. REASON: Anything approaching a form letter is easily detected and will instantly give the impression that only a tiny segment of fans are doing all the writing. Your letter should be original. (With today’s computerization, it is very easy to detect copies of copies.) </p><p></p><p>DO: Send carbon copies when they will be effective; to show NBC that you have written to the sponsors, for instance. Be sure to include a letter directed to NBC, also. REASON: This shows you are going to all possible lengths to save Star Trek. (cc to sponsors online, too) </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Represent yourself as anything you aren’t. REASON: As with form letters, networks are geared to ferret out spurious claims, and tricks will not help our endeavor at all! </p><p></p><p>DO: Use company letterheads or club stationery whenever you legitimately can do so. REASON: Professional people and community groups can carry a lot of weight. Networks and holding companies are extremely sensitive to groups which are, or could become, ‘pressure groups.’ This includes teachers, student groups, pastors, priests, and any organization. </p><p></p><p>DO: Use a business-sized #9 or #10 white envelope for your letter, even if you don’t have a company letterhead. REASON: Cute stationery and small or colored envelopes look "fannish," while a white business-sized envelope will make the network open it just in case it is really business. (This works so well for the original Save Star Trek campaign that NBC had to hire extra people to open the mail!) </p><p></p><p>DO: Hand out this information to everyone interested in saving Star Trek. Copy this for your club members, relatives, people at work, etc. REASON: It will take the cooperation of everyone to reach all the Star Trek fans out there; no one person or group can possibly even know of all potential fans who might aid this project. Remember the Rule of Ten: ask 10 people, who ask 10 people, who ask 10 people…. </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Pre-judge who will be interested, just tell everyone. REASON: You can’t guess who will be interested, or how far one piece of information can travel. (We included this flyer with all outgoing mail: catalog orders, bill-paying, family Christmas cards. The response was amazing! Someone in our local gas company copied the information; someone picked up a flyer and sent it to Mensa headquarters! When a catalog order arrived, we found a note from the packer who asked for more flyers to hand out at church. A relative turned out to be a closet Trekker, and passed our information on to nearly 100 people.) </p><p></p><p>DO: Contact (a) local TV stations carrying Star Trek </p><p></p><p>(b) local TV columnists in newspapers and other publications </p><p></p><p>(c) metropolitan newspaper columnists </p><p></p><p>(d) national TV columnists </p><p></p><p>(e) TV Guide </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Mention any connection with Star Trek, even if you happen to know someone on the show personally. REASON: Networks have suspicious minds, and mentioning such a connection to NBC will only nullify your letter. They will immediately suspect that you have been talked into writing, instead of this being a fan campaign. </p><p></p><p>DON’T: Put off writing those letters! If you are short of time, write to the top names on the list; your letter could be the one that tips the scales in Star Trek’s favor! REASON: Options are renewed around Jan-Feb, so there isn’t much time in which to get letters to NBC, and sponsors, if this campaign is to be successful. </p><p></p><p>DO: Help save Star Trek -- NOW!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Suldulin, post: 356946, member: 1976"] [b]some advice on letter writing found on another save farscape board[/b] (replace star trek with farescape, nbc with sci-fi channel and excetera) HOW TO WRITE EFFECTIVE LETTERS TO SAVE STAR TREK by Bjo Trimble A LITTLE HISTORY: Back when John and I started the "Save Star Trek" campaign, we needed to make NBC open mail from the fans. With that in mind, I interviewed about 50 secretaries, asking them what types of letters they attended to themselves, or tossed in the trash, or made sure their bosses looked at. The answers I got became the list below. I removed the information on petitions, because they truly do not work any more. Though some of the actual letter-writing information won’t work for e-mail, the advice about being polite and having a good attitude applies at any time. Remember, we’ll deserve the fate of having nothing to watch on TV if, through inaction, we let Star Trek die! -- Bjo Trimble FIRST: Write your letter, following the suggestions below. Then ask 10 people to write a letter. Ask them to ask 10 people to write a letter. They will ask 10 people to write a letter, and so on…. and so on…. and so on…. DO: Be neat, write clearly, and sign the letter. REASON: It does no good to send a sloppy letter that nobody can read, and anonymous mail is always thrown away, or saved to show the media what kind of NUTS are writing in. The media loves to make fans look as if they are all completely crazy. DON’T: Address a VIP familiarly, or tell the network their business. REASON: You are asking a favor; the privilege of watching Star Trek next season. The wrong attitude will nullify your letter, and the campaign efforts. DON’T: Write "Star Trek" on the outside of the envelope. REASON: The letters will be sent, unopened, directly to the show and not be seen by NBC, to whom you are making your appeal. DO: Be polite. Don’t attack another show, or anyone’s intelligence. REASON: Remember you are asking for something. Secretaries just discard letters that start with "you fathead!" or whine "howcum *THAT* stupid show is still on the air, and Star Trek isn’t?" DON’T: Send letters directly to Star Trek unless you want to say something to the people there. REASON: Letters directed to the show are seldom seen by the network officials; only letters addressed as shown on this list will be effective for the campaign. The Star Trek offices have no say on whether the show stays on or not. DO: Be sincere. If you don’t buy a sponsor’s product, just say something nice about their intelligence in sponsoring Star Trek. These people can spot a "put on" as fast as you can. If you do buy the product, be sure to say so! REASON: Sponsors seldom get anything but complaints, and a sincere letter of praise can encourage them to continue sponsoring Star Trek. DON’T: Send form letters of any kind: photo-copied, mimeographed, carbon copies or even copies of someone else’s letter will be spotted and tossed. Your letter need not be long, but it must be in your own words. REASON: Anything approaching a form letter is easily detected and will instantly give the impression that only a tiny segment of fans are doing all the writing. Your letter should be original. (With today’s computerization, it is very easy to detect copies of copies.) DO: Send carbon copies when they will be effective; to show NBC that you have written to the sponsors, for instance. Be sure to include a letter directed to NBC, also. REASON: This shows you are going to all possible lengths to save Star Trek. (cc to sponsors online, too) DON’T: Represent yourself as anything you aren’t. REASON: As with form letters, networks are geared to ferret out spurious claims, and tricks will not help our endeavor at all! DO: Use company letterheads or club stationery whenever you legitimately can do so. REASON: Professional people and community groups can carry a lot of weight. Networks and holding companies are extremely sensitive to groups which are, or could become, ‘pressure groups.’ This includes teachers, student groups, pastors, priests, and any organization. DO: Use a business-sized #9 or #10 white envelope for your letter, even if you don’t have a company letterhead. REASON: Cute stationery and small or colored envelopes look "fannish," while a white business-sized envelope will make the network open it just in case it is really business. (This works so well for the original Save Star Trek campaign that NBC had to hire extra people to open the mail!) DO: Hand out this information to everyone interested in saving Star Trek. Copy this for your club members, relatives, people at work, etc. REASON: It will take the cooperation of everyone to reach all the Star Trek fans out there; no one person or group can possibly even know of all potential fans who might aid this project. Remember the Rule of Ten: ask 10 people, who ask 10 people, who ask 10 people…. DON’T: Pre-judge who will be interested, just tell everyone. REASON: You can’t guess who will be interested, or how far one piece of information can travel. (We included this flyer with all outgoing mail: catalog orders, bill-paying, family Christmas cards. The response was amazing! Someone in our local gas company copied the information; someone picked up a flyer and sent it to Mensa headquarters! When a catalog order arrived, we found a note from the packer who asked for more flyers to hand out at church. A relative turned out to be a closet Trekker, and passed our information on to nearly 100 people.) DO: Contact (a) local TV stations carrying Star Trek (b) local TV columnists in newspapers and other publications (c) metropolitan newspaper columnists (d) national TV columnists (e) TV Guide DON’T: Mention any connection with Star Trek, even if you happen to know someone on the show personally. REASON: Networks have suspicious minds, and mentioning such a connection to NBC will only nullify your letter. They will immediately suspect that you have been talked into writing, instead of this being a fan campaign. DON’T: Put off writing those letters! If you are short of time, write to the top names on the list; your letter could be the one that tips the scales in Star Trek’s favor! REASON: Options are renewed around Jan-Feb, so there isn’t much time in which to get letters to NBC, and sponsors, if this campaign is to be successful. DO: Help save Star Trek -- NOW! [/QUOTE]
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