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I think it's pretty obvious that what a club can offer over the internet is human interaction, so you need to maximize that. Not just play blitz all the time, or not just have one of those clubs where everyone shows up at 7:05 to play one rated G/75 (that was supposed to start at 7:00) before your meeting place closes down at 9:30. Lectures, as has been mentioned previously, could probably go very far. Again, the player giving the lecture doesn't even need to be that strong: 1800ish if they're teaching kids, or 2100-2200ish for most other players (it depends on the club, obviously; if you're in a big city you might have multiple IMs and GMs, but for many smaller American cities, the strongest players around are 2200-2300). I like the idea of analyzing club games publicly, where a stronger player looks at some weaker players' games in a lecture/seminar format, getting suggestions from the audience, just talking about chess, etc. If you can't afford to pay the person giving the lecture, you could do it yourself (if you're trying to grow the club) or maybe offer other incentives, i.e. free entry into tournaments, etc. Maybe make it a condition that the club champion MUST give a lecture on the most interesting games from the club championship as part of his "duties" as club champion. And perhaps a night where he gives a simul to some weaker players. Also, a player might give some free lectures in the hopes that he could pick up some students for private lessons. I like the idea of having newly-minted Masters give a simul for some of the younger players in the club, also. I wanted to do that when I became a Master, but the club in my small town couldn't get their act together in time and I moved away soon after. Then yes, post-mortems are very important. I think it's critically important to encourage players to talk and be social, not just have one of those clubs where you play a rated game and then have to leave because there is no time left (as I think many Americans experience, at least for the clubs that meet on a week night). Also, while the St. Louis Chess Club clearly has some nice video equipment and stellar lecturers, all you really need to give a lecture is a laptop and a simple projector that you can often check out of or rent from a library. It doesn't have to be that fancy if you aren't filming it for YouTube. Obviously it's a lot of work, and you'll need a few people to all help out.
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