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ELCA NEWS SERVICE

May 7, 2007  

ELCA Publisher Finishes 2006 With Positive Operating Income
07-078-JB

     MINNEAPOLIS (ELCA) -- Augsburg Fortress, the publishing
ministry of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA),
reported it finished 2006 with $20,000 in operating income, the
first time in many years the publisher completed its financial
year in the black.
     A key factor in the positive financial report was nearly
$6.2 million in sales of Evangelical Lutheran Worship, said
John Rahja, chief financial officer, Augsburg Fortress.
Evangelical Lutheran Worship is a new series of ELCA worship
resources introduced in October 2006.  Its centerpiece is a
primary worship book.
     Total net sales in 2006 for Augsburg Fortress was $44.3
million, well above the publisher's budgeted forecast of $40
million, Rahja said in a report to the publisher's board of
trustees, which met here April 20-21.
     "We made a little bit of black ink, and that's a lot better
than a lot of red ink," said Beth A. Lewis, president and chief
executive officer, Augsburg Fortress, in an interview with the
ELCA News Service.  "But we're not in a place where we can just
now rest on our laurels.  We have to continue to listen and learn
and serve and create high-quality resources."  Lewis added that
finishing 2006 in the black financially "takes some of the
pressure off" of the employees who, she said, have stepped up to
new challenges and opportunities to help the company achieve
financial success.
     Annette Citzler, board of trustees chair, LaGrange, Texas,
said it's "very gratifying" to see the publisher affirmed by
congregations and members of the ELCA.  "I really think that it
means that the church has acknowledged that Augsburg Fortress has
kind of reclaimed its whole sense of identity as the publishing
house of the ELCA," she said, commenting on the positive
financial news. "I think the church for years had kind of sensed
that we were drifting from that, and I think that under Beth's
(Lewis) leadership we have managed to reclaim that."
     For the first quarter of 2007, Augsburg Fortress posted net
income of $2.5 million, ahead of its budgeted forecast of $1
million, Rahja said.  Net sales for the quarter were $15.7
million, versus a budgeted amount of $13.5 million, he said.  Net
sales of Evangelical Lutheran Worship were more than $6.6 million
for the first quarter.
     Rahja reported that Augsburg Fortress recently paid $492,394
in royalties to the ELCA from sales of Evangelical Lutheran
Worship under an agreement established at the beginning of the
Renewing Worship project in 2000.  Lewis told the board the
royalties will go into a shared fund that will support the
development of future worship resources.
     In addition to the success of Evangelical Lutheran Worship,
Lewis reported that Augsburg Fortress' Web-based resources have
been well received by ELCA congregations.  A total of almost
6,100 congregations are subscribing to
herewestandconfirmation.org, sundaysandseasons.com, akaloo.org or
newproclamation.com, she said.
     In her report to the board, Lewis noted that the "theme" of
the board meeting was "Moving from Survival to Strategy." The
publisher's staff needs to continue its move into "a strategic
mode," and the board of trustees should continue to hold Augsburg
Fortress accountable, she said. For 2007 the publisher's
strategic plan includes a continuing emphasis on relationship
building, leveraging Web-based resources, more "print on demand"
resources, forming strategic ecumenical partnerships and
continuing efforts in research and development, Lewis said.
     Augsburg Fortress signed an agreement to manage a bookstore
at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago (LSTC), one of
eight ELCA seminaries. The publisher will also close its
bookstore at Union Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church,
New York, she said.
     The trustees spent a significant part of their meeting
discussing strategic planning led by the Rev. David Tiede, former
president of Luther Seminary, an ELCA seminary in St. Paul, Minn.
The session was significant for the board, which has spent most
of the past decade trying to keep Augsburg Fortress afloat,
Citzler said. "I think now the board has an opportunity to dream
bigger for this organization and figure out additional ways of
maybe being in service to this church that we ... never had the
possibility of before.  It's a nonprofit organization, but that
doesn't mean it can't build financial resources that can serve
the church in still greater ways," she said.
     The board elected new officers from its current board:
Michael D. Bash, Long Lake, Minn., was elected board chair; Janet
Thompson, Eagan, Minn., vice chair; and the Rev. Marty E.
Stevens, Gettysburg, Pa., secretary.  It also honored seven
trustees whose terms end this year and churchwide advisors who
will retire later this year.
---
     Audio of comments of Beth Lewis is at
http://media.ELCA.org/audionews/070426b.mp3 and Annette Citzler
is at http://media.ELCA.org/audionews/070426a.mp3
on the ELCA Web site.
     Information about Augsburg Fortress is at
http://www.augsburgfortress.org/ on the Web.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.elca.org/news
ELCA News Blog: http://www.elca.org/news/blog