We are excited to announce the launch of our new forums! You can access it forums.aavso.org. For questions, please see our blog post. The forums at aavso.org/forum have become read-only.
unfortunately the Annual report in the new style is not infomrative any more like before where information was given on user totals, country totals and how AAVSO data was used in scientific research. I would plegde to have at least an additional report on these issues if you continue with the type of annual report like for last year.
We did make major changes to our Annual Report format. The primary objective of corporate and non-profit organization annual reports is for marketing and public relations. The reports need to succinctly describe the organization's mission, major accomplishments, summarize finances, and recognize donors.
We appreciate you letting us know what information from previous annual reports you would still like to receive. We will publish a separate report containing the observer and country totals and also describe the use of our data in scientific research.
Sorry we are NOT a corporate organization. Who are we trying to impress with all of the splashy color photos and non-information? I am VERY unhappy with the direction the organization has taken. First the disappearance without warning or explanantion of the Bulletin and now we have this non-informative excuse for an annual report.
I've already backed down my membership level because I was not happy with the direction of the organization. Maybe I should give my money to the BAA. They seem to care about their members instead of their wealthy patrons.
I also was disappointed in the change, not only in format, but in content.
One blank page and three full page colour photographs which have little or nothing to do with variable stars could well have been replaced with material more relevant to the Mission of the AAVSO.
The omission of membership data and observer totals is lamentable.
In point of fact, the AAVSO is indeed a corporate organization, specifically "a Massachusetts nonprofit public benefit corporation". It's right in the by-laws.
If the AAVSO decides to make the Annual Report leaner because that's more in line with usual practice, that's actually fine with me. However, the now missing material was in the report for a reason and has its audience, so as long as it is published in *some* form, e.g. as Supplemental Material to the report, I'm ok with it.
Let me write something controversial here: I do observe a bit of a tendency tho that nothing should change, ever, about the AAVSO, and I find that equally troublesome. I have an AAVSO bumper sticker on my car, and some colleagues who have seen it from a distance in the car park somethimes ask me what that ugly, strange, sticker is about. I usually reply that this happens when you adopt a logo in 1911 and then (almost) keep it unchanged, unlike what is done in industrial corporate design :-), and that astronomers are continuity freaks.
If I read the financial part of Annual Report correctly, an increase in income would not be unwelcome to put it mildly, and donations and grants are a big part of this. We should trust the people with business expertise that were elected to care about these things to have some freedom to work towards this goal. If having a 20+ page "prospectus" instead of a 70+ page "booklet" helps in fundraising, why not try this. Just put the other information in some other publication.
I can’t really put into words the joy and pleasure I experienced when I read the Annual Directors report for 2001-2002. There were my observer initials and name showing my 13 observations for the year and that I was the only Alaska Observer.
The next Annual Director’s Report (2002-2003) showed that I now lived in Oregon and was one of five observers from here and my Observers total had now risen to 43 observations for the year. Not a lot but I was still part of a US observing membership of 271 folks with a worldwide total of 752 observers. Even though this was a relatively meager total, I still had a great feeling of pride in my contributions.
I can still remember how excited I was looking forward to the 2003-2004 Directors report as I had started observing with a CCD and was anxious to see my totals and how I compared with other observers. There were only three of us observing from Oregon for that time period and my observing total had now risen into the thousands for the year.
From then on I very much looked forward to the Annual Report (and yes, I would read it all, not just look at the Observer data).
However, I am really saddened knowing that new observers will not be able to experience the same joy and pleasure that I had in seeing my name in our Annual Report. This is very visual way for those observers being able to verify that they are making an important contribution. I am further saddened by knowing that existing observers will probably no longer continue to look forward with anticipation to the Annual Report.
On the other hand, the membership should fully grasp the fact that our membership dues only contribute approximately 10% of the cost of all AAVSO Operations and without our Director, Officers, Board and Staff pursuing contributions we would gradually exhaust our current reserves and would be unable to continue operations. Fund raising, as well as management of our reserves, is a vital part of our ability to continue as the AAVSO.
On the other hand, the Director, Officers and Board need to remember that we are a contributing membership organization and the contributions of our observing members should not be marginalized as without them there would be no reason for continuance of the AAVSO, IMO. The Observer Totals give a “face” to what we do and who does it.
Maybe the Management of the AAVSO will reconsider their decision regarding observer totals.
Discontinuing the quarterly newsletter and dropping observer totals from the annual report were both actions destined to raise eyebrows. Doing so without prior explanation belies a lack of concern for the interests of the membership.
I find it hard to believe that omission of all specifics for observer totals makes the report more in line with corporate communication norms. That would be like a maufacturer omitting the breakdown of its sales figures by market segments. If the annual report is used to introduce the AAVSO to potential funders, it should clearly show our breadth of observer support and our global reach. As Edward Tufte said in his books about communication, "To clarify, add detail."
More concerning than the missing observer statistics, in my view, is the failure to show how AAVSO data are used in professional publications. This would appear to be of the utmost importance in illustrating our value to the scientific community. The "AAVSO in Print" web page (https://www.aavso.org/aavso-print) that used to track the application of our data has not been updated in over a year, which no doubt accounts for the information's absence from the annual report. Without an objective record of our role in professional astronomy, I don't see how we can make any claims about our importance or come to any informed decisions about the "Strategic Plan."
I suspect the real reason for whittling down the annual report, ending the newsletter, and dropping coverage of our data use was to save staff time, and this raises an important issue: HQ is seriously overloaded and has been for years. Our employees are short of time for administrative work and, more seriously, haven't the hours to deal with the discrepant photometry that continues to flow into the AID.
First let me apologize for the delay in the release of this information. It was always our intention to release these numbers, however, they will now come as supplemental information, and not in the annual report itself. You can find observer totals, as well as country totals, on the annual report page here :
https://www.aavso.org/annual-report
in the Addendum. Thanks again for everyone who took the time to submit your observations. We really appreciate it. I also wanted to take special note of the top 20 observers of the past fiscal year:
HMB
F. Hambsch
336431
ATE
T. Arranz
298714
DKS/td>
S. Dvorak
180424
VMT
T. Vanmunster
162796
SGEA
G. Stone
116463
MGW
G. Myers
95879
SAH
G. Samolyk
94425
COO
L. Cook
90813
DFS
S. Dufoer
75125
CDZ
D. Cejudo Fernandez
61943
SRIC
R. Sabo
35194
TRT
T. Tordai
35042
RMH
M. Rosseel
32215
UJHA
J. Ulowetz
30547
MZK
K. Menzies
29845
RJWB
J. Rock
28133
TRE
R. Tomlin
27209
DERA
E. Dose
26927
FJQ
J. Foster
23101
BSM
S. Brincat
21869
If you have any questions or comments please feel free to contact me here:
Hi Stephen [HSP]
The Annual Report has been published this morning. You can find it here: https://www.aavso.org/annual-report
Thanks
Owen
Dear friends,
I noted that recent Annual Report didn't show observer's totals for 2018-2019.
AAX.
Hi AAVSO,
unfortunately the Annual report in the new style is not infomrative any more like before where information was given on user totals, country totals and how AAVSO data was used in scientific research. I would plegde to have at least an additional report on these issues if you continue with the type of annual report like for last year.
Josch
I second that
We did make major changes to our Annual Report format. The primary objective of corporate and non-profit organization annual reports is for marketing and public relations. The reports need to succinctly describe the organization's mission, major accomplishments, summarize finances, and recognize donors.
We appreciate you letting us know what information from previous annual reports you would still like to receive. We will publish a separate report containing the observer and country totals and also describe the use of our data in scientific research.
Sorry we are NOT a corporate organization. Who are we trying to impress with all of the splashy color photos and non-information? I am VERY unhappy with the direction the organization has taken. First the disappearance without warning or explanantion of the Bulletin and now we have this non-informative excuse for an annual report.
I've already backed down my membership level because I was not happy with the direction of the organization. Maybe I should give my money to the BAA. They seem to care about their members instead of their wealthy patrons.
I also was disappointed in the change, not only in format, but in content.
One blank page and three full page colour photographs which have little or nothing to do with variable stars could well have been replaced with material more relevant to the Mission of the AAVSO.
The omission of membership data and observer totals is lamentable.
Roy
In point of fact, the AAVSO is indeed a corporate organization, specifically "a Massachusetts nonprofit public benefit corporation". It's right in the by-laws.
If the AAVSO decides to make the Annual Report leaner because that's more in line with usual practice, that's actually fine with me. However, the now missing material was in the report for a reason and has its audience, so as long as it is published in *some* form, e.g. as Supplemental Material to the report, I'm ok with it.
Let me write something controversial here: I do observe a bit of a tendency tho that nothing should change, ever, about the AAVSO, and I find that equally troublesome. I have an AAVSO bumper sticker on my car, and some colleagues who have seen it from a distance in the car park somethimes ask me what that ugly, strange, sticker is about. I usually reply that this happens when you adopt a logo in 1911 and then (almost) keep it unchanged, unlike what is done in industrial corporate design :-), and that astronomers are continuity freaks.
If I read the financial part of Annual Report correctly, an increase in income would not be unwelcome to put it mildly, and donations and grants are a big part of this. We should trust the people with business expertise that were elected to care about these things to have some freedom to work towards this goal. If having a 20+ page "prospectus" instead of a 70+ page "booklet" helps in fundraising, why not try this. Just put the other information in some other publication.
Cheers
HB
I can’t really put into words the joy and pleasure I experienced when I read the Annual Directors report for 2001-2002. There were my observer initials and name showing my 13 observations for the year and that I was the only Alaska Observer.
The next Annual Director’s Report (2002-2003) showed that I now lived in Oregon and was one of five observers from here and my Observers total had now risen to 43 observations for the year. Not a lot but I was still part of a US observing membership of 271 folks with a worldwide total of 752 observers. Even though this was a relatively meager total, I still had a great feeling of pride in my contributions.
I can still remember how excited I was looking forward to the 2003-2004 Directors report as I had started observing with a CCD and was anxious to see my totals and how I compared with other observers. There were only three of us observing from Oregon for that time period and my observing total had now risen into the thousands for the year.
From then on I very much looked forward to the Annual Report (and yes, I would read it all, not just look at the Observer data).
However, I am really saddened knowing that new observers will not be able to experience the same joy and pleasure that I had in seeing my name in our Annual Report. This is very visual way for those observers being able to verify that they are making an important contribution. I am further saddened by knowing that existing observers will probably no longer continue to look forward with anticipation to the Annual Report.
On the other hand, the membership should fully grasp the fact that our membership dues only contribute approximately 10% of the cost of all AAVSO Operations and without our Director, Officers, Board and Staff pursuing contributions we would gradually exhaust our current reserves and would be unable to continue operations. Fund raising, as well as management of our reserves, is a vital part of our ability to continue as the AAVSO.
On the other hand, the Director, Officers and Board need to remember that we are a contributing membership organization and the contributions of our observing members should not be marginalized as without them there would be no reason for continuance of the AAVSO, IMO. The Observer Totals give a “face” to what we do and who does it.
Maybe the Management of the AAVSO will reconsider their decision regarding observer totals.
‘nough said
Tim R Crawford
Discontinuing the quarterly newsletter and dropping observer totals from the annual report were both actions destined to raise eyebrows. Doing so without prior explanation belies a lack of concern for the interests of the membership.
I find it hard to believe that omission of all specifics for observer totals makes the report more in line with corporate communication norms. That would be like a maufacturer omitting the breakdown of its sales figures by market segments. If the annual report is used to introduce the AAVSO to potential funders, it should clearly show our breadth of observer support and our global reach. As Edward Tufte said in his books about communication, "To clarify, add detail."
More concerning than the missing observer statistics, in my view, is the failure to show how AAVSO data are used in professional publications. This would appear to be of the utmost importance in illustrating our value to the scientific community. The "AAVSO in Print" web page (https://www.aavso.org/aavso-print) that used to track the application of our data has not been updated in over a year, which no doubt accounts for the information's absence from the annual report. Without an objective record of our role in professional astronomy, I don't see how we can make any claims about our importance or come to any informed decisions about the "Strategic Plan."
I suspect the real reason for whittling down the annual report, ending the newsletter, and dropping coverage of our data use was to save staff time, and this raises an important issue: HQ is seriously overloaded and has been for years. Our employees are short of time for administrative work and, more seriously, haven't the hours to deal with the discrepant photometry that continues to flow into the AID.
Tom
Hello All,
First let me apologize for the delay in the release of this information. It was always our intention to release these numbers, however, they will now come as supplemental information, and not in the annual report itself. You can find observer totals, as well as country totals, on the annual report page here :
https://www.aavso.org/annual-report
in the Addendum. Thanks again for everyone who took the time to submit your observations. We really appreciate it. I also wanted to take special note of the top 20 observers of the past fiscal year:
If you have any questions or comments please feel free to contact me here:
Thanks,
Bert Pablo
Staff Astronomer, AAVSO