I am still amazed at all the terrific posts in the “What really keeps people from this hobby?” topic, so I thought it might be interesting to ask a follow-up question.
If you were somehow put in a position of great influence in our hobby (assuming there is such a position), what would you do to improve it?
Here are my ideas (in no particular order of importance).
In order to reach out to the general public, I would get (urge) mobile clubs like Ntrak to concentrate more on general public displays. I’m not talking about train shows where I think they are “preaching to the converted”, but at museums, malls, schools, etc. They need to get to people that don’t usually see our hobby – especially kids. Maybe start a program where layouts are set up for a” train day” at elementary schools or at Cub Scout packs?
For those of you familiar with the Chantilly show earlier this month, imagine a layout that size put on display at major metropolitan museum or sporting arena where it’s more accessible to the general public (and for free with NO MRR vendors on hand).
For clubs building a new fixed layout, I’d urge them to put more room in the aisles. Most fixed clubs I’ve seen have astounding layouts, but hardly any elbow room for more than a handful of people to move around. This makes public shows a real challenge, as people get frustrated because they are constantly bumping into each other or unable to see everything because of overcrowding.
More positive mainstream media awareness in movies and on TV. I’m not talking about being portrayed as part of what some nutcase character does for a hobby in some obscure “indy” production, but in an affirmative role in a mainstream movie. For example - I recall a movie called “Murder at 1600” where the main character (played by Wesley Snipes) had a large Civil War battlefield diorama in his apartment. Someone in Hollywood went out of their way to place this hobby in a positive light for
Good question, and approaches! If I were the Grand Poobah of MRR, I’d do the following, adding to what you’ve said:
In addition to more public setups by modular clubs, I’d update all of the modular standards.
Produce a high quality “Surprised By a Railroad” limited series that traces the development of a club layout for something like TLC or the Discovery Channel. Don’t forget the bloopers. Emphasis: normal folks can do this, and THIS IS FUN STUFF. Do one for garden railways and modules as well.
Yank all of the outdated How-To books from the market, send them to the book liquidators.
Hey, Kalmbach, Hundman, et al, how’s about lowering the price on them thar books?
Big pu***hrough the Scouts for the MRR badge.
Scale specific: Outlaw Rapido couplers in N-Scale! There ARE inexpensive knuckle couplers out there that can be used instead.
Christmas sets: Require that the electrical/mechanical components of the Christmas set locos be top notch. The quality of the rolling stock is no big deal, but the loco has to be just like the Energizer Bunny. Its gotta keep going, and going, and going…
Community education: There are many excellent MRR who could teach Continuing Education / Parks & Recreation classes centering around modules.
Have each scale standardize on a single integrated track format, a la Kato Unitrack.
Bribe, cajole, intimidate, whatever, J.K. Rowling into making the Hogwarts Express a centerpiece of her next Harry Potter novel. Make sure that any MRR merchandising satisfies #7.
Put a subscription to MR and Trains into every middle school and high school library.
Send the prototype railroad executives and management to public relations school.
In conjunction with #12, establish a National/International Model Railroading Museum, funded by the licensing fees that are causing such a brou
I’d vote for making entry (re-entry) into this hobby less intimidating by spinning off a version of Model Railroader magazine targeted at new train hobbyists. As two of my other interests are flying and astronomy, I’d use examples like “Flight Training” magazine which is a beginner publication compared to “AOPA Pilot” or “Night Sky” a really good beginner magazine to compliment the lower end of their main magazine “Sky & Telescope”
In these, I’d concentrate on getting started in the hobby, simple explanations, acronym sections, background sections, easy layouts, low cost models, etc, etc. (y’know I don’t know what an F7 is or what EMD stands for, I would like to know, but don’t think that is really a pre-requisite for having fun, but if you don’t know about half these posts and most of MR doesn’t make a lot of sense).
I think somebody at MR should look at these two publications (and there are many others in other fields) of ways to make this less intimidating to newbie’s.
It’s my own personal issue, but I don’t care too much about trains, I like model trains. I haven’t grown up around trains (and I don’t think many under 40 have either), so I’d try to steer away from the emphasis on literal prototypical and what the LCE&WD really looked like 50 years ago and, instead, point out the aspects of having fun with the hobby as a hobby, not as a re-creation of a past I have no real attachment to.
Bring back “Model Trains” magazine. It was a beginners magazine back in the late '50s and early '60s. I used to read it when I was much younger and learned a lot from it.
And we have quite a collection of them at our Clarion Club.
The key to the whole issue is “advertising”.When is the last time you saw a Model Railroad subject advertised other than a MR magazine.
Acouple of years ago Hobbytown USA came to our area, it never advertised in the local newspaper and still does not. I happen to find it by mistake looking for a shoe store.
How can people get involved in something if they don’t know about it?
I think an easy way to start to improve this hobby is Kalmbach flood the mail boxes with MR subscribtion post cards.A good example of this is my son. We got a post card in the mail on day concerning fishing, I took him to that store,bought some gear and he’s been fishing almost everyday since.
With the mass media this world has now, it should be easy to get the word out.
The question is “How would you improve the hobby.” The previous question was “What keeps people away form the hobby.” How about a follow-on question " What attracts people to the hobby." I occasionally see new members coming into this forum. Why not ask for input such as " How did you you discover this hobby and what about it attracted you?" Maybe this would provide further insight.
I was thinking recently about how people choose leisure- time activities and I identified two defining characteristics: There are activities defined primarily by making things such as painting, sculpture, sewing, restoring old cars and basket weaving. There are others that do not result in any tangible output such as golf , birdwatching, T.V., ball-playing and spectator sports. I am going to guess that the 80/20 rule applies to this categorization so that the majority of people fall into the latter definition. If this is the case, we need to focus on the minority of people who like to make stuff rather than those who prefer mostly to just look at stuff.
just my 2 cents
Bryant
despite high prices, I would not like to lower them as high prices make me work hard to earn money ( bing only 12 ) and this builds caracter, and gives a nice sense of accomplishments. different module standards, somthing like FREMO, might be nice. better quality ?
If all the engine manufactures chipped in. And all the rolling stock people chipped in. And all the track and track accessories people chipped in. Walthers chipped in. Woodland Scenics and other companies like that. Digitrax and NCE and those people.
All contributed money in some fair way, some sliding scale. Into a collective bucket of money, like “World’s Greatest Hobby.”
Show some home layouts. A giant one, a couple medium ones, a little shelf layout in a small room. HO and N. Show both the diorama aspects and a pure operating aspect.
Put some thought into what cable channel to aire the commercial on, during what hours and shows.
How about getting the existing pulications put into more waiting rooms like at the doctors offices or car service places. Every time I take my car in for service, I just sit and read whatever magazine is there, but I never see and MRR publications. But then I don’t know who would pay for it.
I think that is a GREAT suggestion!!! The engineers around my work of employment banter acronyms back and forth like ping pong balls. One time I counted in an hour meeting more than 30 different acronyms used.! (That’s a new acronym every 2 minutes!)
Being a newbie somewhat myself, I can account for the feelings of intimidation over the thoughts of wiring, switches, and track laying. A good teacher or speaker needs to know his audience. For those of you out there with a plethora a knowledge need to graciously share your wealth of experineces with those of us who are lacking. [:)] A regular periodical like the one plane_crazy suggested above would go a long way to help that .
You may be ‘plane_crazy,’ but you aren’t plain crazy. Great comment!!!
Since most of us are highly dysfunctional prefering time alone in a basement alone to socializing we need some ambassadors willing to show how simple a 4 x 8 really is to make and then let people grow at their own pace.
MABruce has some positive ideas, some of which I’ve tried. I’ve had both Cubs and Scouts down to the basement to check out the layout and I’ve taken my pack to the local train show on several occassions.
Problem today is the kids have different interests then we did and there is alot more pressure and other distractions.
To attract the kids (and adults) you would have to:
a) destroy any and all computer and video games ever devised.
b) Stop people from putting in 18 hr days at work (compulsory leisure time).
c) drop prices by 10 to 15%
d) Show case some layouts that aren’t “professional” in appearance as this may intimidate a lot people.
e) LHS’s should have weekend or evening seminars that would teach beginners the basics and others more advanced techniques. Why not have classes a night school?
I’m sure the list will grow quickly
Great topic! Great replies.My thoughts
1.Have hobby shops to advertise.
2.Public shows.Stop running trains in the same direction…Add yard switching.The general public can stand for hours watching cars being switch.Run trains at realistic speeds.Bar grumpy operators from the display layout. .Invite adults and kids to run a train.A Athearn F7 or GP7 could serve as motive power…Theres nothing like hands on experience.and above all BE FRIENDLY.The general public will not bite you.But YOU can leave a bad impression affects all model railroaders as being a bunch of stuck up snobs.
3.Shut the know it alls,braggarts and rivet counters up.There is a time and place for that and that is not around the general public…You won’t impress the public by bragging on how much it cost or how much time it took to build.Now if ask,then,fine answer truthfully without being bias.
4.Clubs.Why at you a secrete society? Hold open house especially around Christmas.Invite Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts to the club…Let them run a train under a members supervision…
5.Why not donate a subscription of MR or RMC to your local library or local school library…The modeling books you no longer need donate them to the library.You could have a inscription that says "In loving memory of (fill the blank.).
Guys,I fully believe we are the future of the hobby…Not MR,not RMC,not the manufacturers,not the hobby shops but WE the hobbyist…We must do our part in promoting the hobby on the local level especially clubs…
The club I belong to does this. We hold open house to the public every Thursday night. Not only do we have a smaller DC layout for kids to run our or their own trains on, but we invite them to run on the main layout with a club member conductor so to speak. We get good turnouts but, still it’s hard to compete with PS2, XBOX and Nintendo…they take one one hundreth of the space and provide instant gratification.
LOts of ideas, I didn’t read everything. Overall the availablity of a variety of quality products is fantastic, easy to assemble kits, RTR stuff. Cost is a major deal, but when you have proto 1000 engines that are a bit less expensive and relaible, as well as atheran blue box some of that is covered I suppose.
Promotion amongst youth (Scouts, schools, libraries) is a good idea. I thoink others noted that without an interested adult, it is hard for the hook to set in on the young though. I think it is easy enough to initially lure kids, the trick is to interest the parent so that it becomes a hobby.
As a kid the bank downtown was famous for a christmas train display, not sure if they do it any longer, I moved from Buffalo a decade ago, but it was a huge draw. Trains and xmas still have a strong linkage.
There are other things you simply can’t change, the proliferation of all kinds of other activity choices in life, the fact railroads are no longer a visable and endeared portion of the American clulture like it once was, or even that there is far fewer towns that even see a railroad any longer.
I still think a significant factor that keeps more people from the hobby is our trend to a more mobile society…people move far more often thatn they once did and that has to hurt…it did with me.
I wonder too if the course of the Hobby and the flagship publications have gone too far down the realism, prototype, detail operations path. I was looking at a copy of the old Complete book of Model RR’s from the mid sixties by Sutton. Island layouts that were obviously built for running trains and not thought out and planned to the n’th degree were the norm then, but layouts like taht are kinda scoffed at by the model railroaders of today for the most part. If it is not cutting edge, huge, detailed, well planned etc you don’t see much of it in print any longer. Maybe a less serious and smaller approach would be warmer waters for the potential newbie.
As a person returning to this hobby, I’d say more exposure is needed. For example, in my area, Portland, Maine, there is an “Annual Train, Toy & Doll House Show” scheduled in the armory in September. Now, if I hadn’t seen it advertised in Model Railroader, I wouldn’t have thought this show would include MRRing.
As it is, I’ve been bringing my only issue of Model Railroader into work and leaving it conspicuously on my desk. You would not know how many people (well, men) stop and say, “You have a train set? I still have my stuff in a box in the attic!” We then chit chat for five minutes about the hobby.
I was intrigued by the suggestion about the “Hogwarts Express” - Hornby have now released 3 different sets based on this model, as well as the loco and cars seperately (seperate cars have different running numbers). Admittedly, the only difference between the releases has been the packaging, but if it brings in “new blood” with each new film…
The locos in these sets are the Hornby Castle Class loco - usually seen in GWR or BR green, though the Hogwarts paint looks very convincing and if/when I get round to building a British OO layout I’ll probably buy one - add some details, maybe a little weathering, see how long it takes for the purists to notice! The reviews of this loco seem very positive - it’s apparently a quiet, smooth runner that will handle scale-length trains. Hornby locos seem to last well too - I still have my first Hornby 0-4-0 steamer which is now about 18 years old, has been rebodied (original bodyshell got damaged) and still runs well.
I think large scale trains have great potential, especially when equipped with sound. LGB have made workable layouts based on boards not much larger than 4x8, so masses of space is not a requirement. The base-level LGB sets are also pretty cheap when you consider the contents (over here, the base starter sets are priced about the same as the loco from them would be seperately). Their digital starter set (sadly “MTS” not DCC, but they are very good - spent 2 days at a train show demonstrating one for a friend who owns one of my LHS) looks pricey but is very good value - there’s enough track and equipment to build a decent layout included. These sets also have sound units, smoke, lights, etc that capture younger modellers attention - my favoured trick at the show was to fill the oil tank on the steamer when nobody was about, then turn on the “smoke” function on the loco when kids were watching - their reactions varied from “wow” to “cool”, and other similar phrases! Bear in mind that most of their locos are factory fitted for their digital
An excellent idea! (or we are both ‘wacked-out’ !) With the amount of time kids spend in front of the tube each day this could spark a yet undiscovered interest in many. I know of one child who after seeing a home video of my trains fell head-over-heel into it.
As to who would bear the cost of such an idea I don’t know, but it would be in the interests of the manufactures, the hobby stores, the print mediums, and the hobby as a whole if they did.
I know that Scrapbook stores have several classes every week. This helps to promote that hobby. The classes are for begineers and advanced and cover a number of different topics.
I agree that classes offered at the LHS would go a long way to help grow the hobby.