After 9 years of publishing, the printed version of Turfnet is folding. The magazine, started in 1999 as an offshoot of Golfweek as "SuperintendentNews" and then renamed "SuperNews" before morphing into "TurfNet Magazine" this year, has decided to shut its pages with the Dec. 2007 issue. The TurfNet Website run by Peter McCormick stays -- as he explains below in a post from the Web last night.
It's a tough business climate, but we strove to highlight the work of superintendents, architects, builders and course managers. Many regular contributors to GCA wrote for us, including Tony Pioppi, Jeff Mingay, Tommy Naccarato, Dunlop White III, George Bahto and Gib Papazian, among others. Thanks for your support over the years.
As Peter explains from the TurfNet the Website . . . .
Yes, based upon the buzz (and ad bookings for '08) created so far with the new TurfNet.com, TurfNetTV, and various things like the Milorganite Pin Sheet and BASF calendar dog show (along with a whole lot more we have in the funnel and up our sleeves), we decided to accelerate the transition to online delivery only (other than the newsletter) and refocus our assets on our two major strengths: solutions and community. The December issue of TurfNet the Magazine will be the last, although John Reitman is moving over as Editorial Director for TurfNet.com, TurfNetTV and the TurfNet Newsletter. He will continue writing news briefs for TurfNet.com, managing projects like Superintendent of the Year and Technician of the Year, and will also be directing new ventures with online webinars while expanding our line of events like Bunker Boot Camp and Greens Management Academy.
Randy Wilson will continue writing his column, which will transition to the Newsletter, and also continue producing his comedy videos for TurfNetTV. We plan to keep Frank Rossi in the fold as well, certainly for the Newsletter and perhaps for TV. We'll port over some of Brad Klein's architectural stuff from Golfweek as appropriate.
Jon Kiger will continue in his expanded role as Director of Media and Membership Sales. And I'm still the Maestro, in a nutshell.
Overall, it's an outstanding team and we're looking forward to bigger and better. In many ways, it's a return to the grassroots upon which TurfNet was founded -- but with a lot more horsepower.
A comment from one of our advertisers summed it up, and really put this decision into focus for us: "I can buy ad pages anywhere. You guys are doing things differently, and I like that."