Tuesday 7 February 2012

Candis Magazine Offers Fantastic Services

Candis Magazine Offers Fantastic Services

Candis Magazine is a savings brochure
for ladies between 35-55, and has a number of exciting articles on fashion, beauty as well as the latest celebrity interviews. Many women join the magazine's Club for the selection of savings and promotions which it offers, but stick with the company because of the social and charity-benefits aspects of the magazine. Candis believes in donating to charity, and runs a Big Give each year raising money for health charities including Marie Curie and FSID (Cot-death charity). In addition to providing interesting and informative articles, Candis Magazine also offers several interesting services designed to help women with families.
Maybe the most important services provided by Candis Magazine are the money-saving coupons and promotions, including money off Family package holiday deals, travel insurance and ordinary holidays. They also provide coupons for family days-out in the UK, allowing women with children to give their children a treat but still keep in a reasonable budget. Not only can members spend less on extras, but Candis Club and Magazine also provide shopping discounts, including money off electrical goods or canvas prints.

Gold members can get
more for their money, with free access to digital and iPad editions of the magazine, the member benefits such as discount guides, and advices services, and in addition premium membership benefits including retail discount vouchers every Three months, special editions of the magazine, and high-street gift vouchers which can be claimed when one of the other benefits is used. Gold members can also get money off Homebase purchases, cinema tickets, and even discounted pizzas.

Thursday 8 December 2011

Candis Magazine is being falsely accused

Candis Magazine is being falsely accused

Candis Magazine, one of Britain's finest beauty and style magazines, is apparently being falsely and systematically accused by persons unknown for perpetrating a charity scam on its readers. In actuality, however, Candis Magazine goes out of its way to donate money to various health charities that benefit women -- such as The Eve Appeal and Marie Curie Cancer Care. This is a laudable act that is apparently being systematically and deliberately downgraded as a "scam".

Candis Magazine is being unfairly and falsely accused regarding this matter. And Candis Magazine does not deserve this underhanded attack either.

Apparently this so-called Candis Magazine Scam rumor started several years ago when an anonymous reader wrote to a popular online e-zine and complained that Candis Magazine's claim to have donated large amounts of money to charity was a bogus claim. But Candis' donation claim is actually true. Candis has donated over £53 million to charities. "So," you might ask, "why is there a problem with that?"

The problem, according to unproven reports that a scam exists, is that said reports make it appear that Candis donates a £53 million sum annually. Candis Magazine has never made that claim. Yes, their amount of £53 million has truly been donated -- but as a cumulative total since 1962. The anonymous reader's claim makes it sound like Candis is claiming to donate this amount every year, making it appear that Candis might be pocketing large sums instead of giving it to charity. This is not true.

As one of Britain's top subscription magazines, Candis has over 236,000 subscribers and its readership mainly consists of women between the ages of 35 and 55, a niche market that is usually ignored by most beauty and style magazines, which direct their articles mainly toward the 20-something market. For this reason, Candis serves a specific and valuable purpose by catering to this otherwise-ignored female age bracket.

Candis also serves its designated age-bracket readers by contributing to various health charities that directly benefit women between the ages of 35 and 55.

Further, it must be noted that Candis Magazine actually does donate money to charity routinely. This same claim cannot be made by many other newspapers, magazines and news outlets. For instance, the Times of London is not particularly known for donating part of its proceeds to charity. For that matter, neither is the BBC -- or even the Guardian.

Perhaps British readers should be less concerned about the so-called CandisMagazine Scam regarding Candis' genuine efforts to donate money to charities -- and more concerned with asking the question, "Why don't more newspapers, magazines and news outlets also donate money to charity the way that Candis does?"