

Smoking Ban Ignites Heated Discussion at Annual Meeting Safety Concerns: From a Dealers' Den to an Urban Oasis New Policy In Effect for Security Doors Well Repair Completed in 2012 Fracking Workshop Educates Residents First Person: Can HOA Boards Take Political Action? Empowerment Congress West Area Neighborhood Council Carob Trees Wrangled During Recent Rodeo Road Round-Up New Website Planning Moves Ahead in 2013 Five Board Directors Elected, Creighton Chosen President Upcoming Events Village Green Committees
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Read more about it here.Coyotes 50 Yr Anniversary of the Baldwin Hills Reservoir Collapse 50 Plus Club ShuttersĤ0th Anniversary Edition!! 40 Years and Counting Condos Come to the Village Green The Best of the Past, A View Towards the Future A Celebration of the Green's Diversity Voices of the Village How Historic Should the Village Green's Landscape Become in the Next 40 Years? Sign-Up: New Email Newsletter Upcoming Events Board says "No" to Fracking Final Word



There are more effective ways to deliver the 4-1-1. A HOA newsletter template can help to maintain a format that’s easy to read and follow. A lot of the same principles still apply – Keep it short, easy to read and with content that homeowner want and need. Because lets face it some homeowners are still part of the old school and they want and expect a paper newsletter. Modern communication methods and social media can help to provide resources for your HOA newsletter. You might as well use a hammer and chisel. The old way takes a lot of time and energy. Sending homeowners a paper HOA newsletter is the same as expecting them to get informed in the old way. In doing so, they’ve also modified their style of reporting to reflect the new ways people like to get informed. Most of today’s publications have stayed successful by migrating to a digital format. Newspaper readership is going the way of the dodo. In fact, HOA newsletter circulation is at it’s lowest rate in recent history. But nobody is going to sit down with a bowl of popcorn to read the HOA newsletter. The ambitious ones might even skim through for the stuff that looks important (if you’ve made it easy to find with bullet points). They are never going to read your newsletter – at least not cover to cover. For the frustrated HOA manager, there is good news and bad news. How many times have you asked, “didn’t you read the HOA newsletter?” You’ve tried delivering them. The painfully uninformed – yet somehow “know-it-all” homeowner. It’s the proverbial boil on the neck of every HOA manager since the dawn of time.
