Are You Satisfied?

Happy Birthday! You just turned 52.8 years old. That’s the median age of our readers, according to our latest research. We mailed out a survey to 1,000 of you, and 554 were kind enough to fill it out. And who are you? Well, you are Caucasian (92 percent), married (85), male (71), a layperson (72), who lives in a small town (33) or suburb (38), and has a college degree (79; 48 percent have a graduate degree). Your household income is around $51,000. You are an active member of an evangelical church of 308 (median) or 538 (average) members, affiliated with one of any number of Protestant groups (Baptist, 22; Presbyterian/Reformed, 17; independent/nondenominational, 11; Methodist/ Wesleyan, 10; Assemblies of God, 6).

The adjectives that best describe you are evangelical (57) and conservative (17). Only 12 percent of you call yourself charismatic when allowed multiple options (with 3 percent choosing it as the most descriptive term).

You have been receiving Christianity Today for 3.7 years, and 91 percent of you are either satisfied or very satisfied with what we are providing; 81 percent plan on renewing.

Your top reasons for subscribing are to stay “informed on the key events and people among evangelicals” (85), to “know what is happening internationally” (67) and domestically (64) in the church, to be challenged to “think theologically” (59) and hear “an evangelical position” (66) about issues, and to be fed spiritually (43). You believe we perform these tasks in a way that is “honest” (90), “credible” (86), “relevant” (86), and “timely” (85).

Of course, when we ask if you are satisfied, we also want to know reasons for dissatisfaction. Fortunately, there were few: 31 percent said we had “too many inserts” and 24 percent, “too many ads.” (Still, because of advertising and inserts we have over ten more pages for articles in each issue than we did a few years ago—see Inside CT, Oct. 6, 1997, p. 6.) Eleven percent think our articles are too long, though this is tempered by the fact that 5 percent think they are “not in-depth enough.” Eight percent of you don’t agree with the theology in the articles, though again the results are tempered by that fact that 7 percent judge articles as “too liberal” and 4 percent as “too conservative.”

What do all the numbers add up to? Mostly, they mean that we are making a more concerted effort to provide you the information, analysis, and services you need. Thanks for the feedback—and stay in touch.

Copyright © 1999 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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Church Listens to the Profits

My Spice Girl Moment

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Can the Dead Be Converted?

The Hard Songs of Fernando Ortega

In His Steps: How to Become an Apprentice of Jesus

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At-Home Dads Gather and Bond

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Family-Friendly Titanic Irks Hollywood

Conservative Texans Form New Group

In Brief: January 11, 1999

Christians Killed, Churches Burn

Christians Want Shock Rocker Manson Banned

Relief Groups Struggle to Aid Churches

Raising Funds While Helping the Poor

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Communist Crackdown Stymies Growing Church

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Orthodox Land Use Angers Laity

Poisonous Gospel

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A Gospel Gold Mine or a Sinking Pyramid?

Investigative Report: It's not in the Greek Does Greater Ministries Misuse Scripture?

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Evangelicals Press Political Leader to Focus on Poverty Issues

Reconciling the World Through Painful Stories

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Jonestown: Twenty Years Later, Cults Still Lethal

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When Church and State Cooperate

The Coming Secular Apocalypse

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The Bible Jesus Read

The Fatted Faithful

It's Hard to Hug a Bully

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