This came out on the Fuse-in mail out last week, I
didnt forward it since I guessed that most people on
here would have been signed up to it already.....


Ladies and Gentleman; 

I know many of you want to know what’s going on with
the festival for 2006. I cannot tell you for sure, but
I have been told that the City of Detroit is in
negotiation right now and are only considering
companies that can pay for the festival expenses out
right. Which I believe is a wise decision. This
festival needs financial stability. Unfortunately with
our greatest efforts, we could not achieve what was
necessary to continue to produce the festival in 2006.
Here are some of the facts why, questions and answers:

Q: How many people attended the festival this year?
A: We sold 41,000 tickets this year. That translates
to 37,000 1 day tickets and 4,000 Multi day tickets.

Q: Are the numbers down from previous years?
A: Yes, but just slightly. Comparing beer revenues
from 2004 to 2005 suggests we really only had
approximately 50,000 people in 2004. This does
represent a small decline.

Q: So was the festival successful? It sounds like you
a lot less people than in the past. 
A: Considering the planning window we had put this
thing together, we think the festival was incredibly
successful. In addition, our numbers this year, and
the fact that Hart Plaza capacity is less than
previously thought suggest that our earlier festivals
did not have 1,000,000 people in attendance as
previously reported. 

Q: Did charging for the festival have a big impact?
A: We surveyed festival goers and they told us that
they thought ticket prices were extremely reasonable.
The smaller than expected ticket sales were caused
partly by inaccurate counts from previous festivals
and partly from our own overly optimistic goals for
this year’s festival. Finally, the biggest factor in
lower ticket totals was our inability promote ,because
we were only approved for the permit 9 days before the
event. This made advance ticket sales and fundraising
nearly impossible, so we couldn’t do follow through on
our advance marketing program. The other sign that our
issue was promotion was the fact that in previous
years there were a much larger number of out of town
guests. To be successful, this festival needs to be
promoted starting in November. 

Q: How will you pay the invoices of the vendors? Many
say they haven’t been paid.
A: Yes, there are several vendors that MusicLogical
still owes money. My intention was to bring a partner
with some financial stability and resources in to
partner up with MusicLogical and relieve the debts
from the 2005 Fuse-In festival, but at this point we
have not been able to achieve that. 

Q: Are you saying you lost money?
A: Yes, because of lack of promotion time on the
festival, the festival sold less tickets generated
less revenue than we would have hoped. The costs were
tight and we had a very good handle on the operational
aspects of this event. This was not about our
operation of the event – it was about not having
enough time to properly market the event and draw the
crowds that still want to hear our music. I believe
people would be surprised at how tightly this festival
was run and how organized the entire effort really
was. If we had 10,000 more foreign visitors, not only
would we have broken even, but the city of Detroit
would have received that economic spillover as well. 

Q: Can the festival have financial success?
A: Yes, absolutely. If it is run as well as we ran it,
and if it was started 6 months earlier (assuming the
weather was positive) it would absolutely make money,
and be able to generate cash that the City could use
to help rebuild Hart Plaza for other festivals.

This is too great a festival to keep down. If the city
would allow enough time to promote it by awarding the
festival permit months in advance instead of days in
advance, this festival could continue to bring music
and dollars downtown for years to come. As an
ambassador of our music (Techno) and our city
(Detroit), I will continue to do whatever I can to
spread the word throughout the world.

Yours Truly 

Kevin Saunderson

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> 
> 
> 
> 
> I couldn't believe it actually made it into the
> Minneapolis newspaper but
> there was a little blurb in the Sunday's issue about
> Kevin Saunderson not
> doing the festival this year. He's apparently
> $250,000 in the hole from
> last year.  There wasn't much more news than that. 
> Anyone else see
> anything more?
> Sounds like the fest is on its way to become
> corporate or kaput.
> 
> MEK
> 
> 

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