Archive for Resources

One easy way to improve your ministry communications at no cost

Posted 02/18/13 by tsanders and filed under:

An open letter to pastors and ministry leaders:

For almost two decades, I have helped churches across the US and Canada with communications consulting and training. I work with churches that have incredibly effective communications, and others that struggle to publish the sermon notes each week. From this experience, I have discovered one easy, free technique that is guaranteed to improve the quality and effectiveness of your church communications. Here it is:

Give your communications team at least two weeks lead time.

That’s the distinguishing factor between churches with great communications, and churches with poor communications. Teams that regularly get to work on promotions at least two weeks in advance almost always have better results. The number of people on your staff or the amount of money in your budget doesn’t affect quality as much as lead time. A mediocre volunteer with two weeks lead time can outperform a talented artist who is only given a couple hours.

With two weeks of lead time a creative person can do incredible work, but even if your team isn’t super creative, with two weeks lead time they can research other churches and steal good ideas from them. Even in the commercial world, many of the best marketing campaigns are “borrowed” from others and reskinned for a new client.

With two weeks of lead time your communications team can collect all the details and creative elements they need to properly promote the event. They have time to find great stock photos (often free), instead of using old, dated clip art. They can dig up photos from last year’s event – which are often the best way to visually tell the story. They have time to get a writer to craft some catchy copy and titles.

With two weeks of lead time they can brainstorm new and creative ways to promote your event. They can play with other ideas – signs, banners, postcards, email, social media graphics. These are all inexpensive and highly effective, but take time to do properly.

With two weeks of lead time they can prepare multiple communications resources. Not just a bulletin announcement, but also some nice posters, a story on the website, and event announcement and photos on the Facebook page. By using multiple media you reach more people, and repetition makes the message stick better than one impression. Most of these aren’t expensive, and none of these require extreme creative talent. They just take time.

If you come in on Thursday afternoon and need a new promotion piece for the weekend, you have already seriously limited the effectiveness of the promotion. I’m sure your team will do their best, but many of their best options are already impossible.

I challenge you to try this test:

Pick an event at least three weeks away. Spend a week locking down all the details you can (you can let your communications team listen in, they may have good ideas). Then brief them on the event – purpose, audience, details, theme, etc. (We have a worksheet you can use to make sure you have all the details they need.) Now give them two weeks to brainstorm, research and develop some effective ways to promote your event. I think you will be amazed at the results.

The church is tasked with communicating the most important message in the world. It seems that we should do everything possible to communicate that message as effectively as possible.

Terrell Sanders

Terrell is president of Main Street Enterprises, a web development and consulting firm that specializes in church communications. He is also founder of MinistryCOM.org, a free resource site for church communications professionals. He can be reached at tsanders@MainStreetOpen.com.

Standardize your aspect ratios

Posted 01/17/13 by tsanders and filed under:

designWant to make your life easier, save time and money, and maybe even improve the quality of your communications? Then next time you redesign your website or publications — try to standardize your image aspect ratios.

What is an aspect ratio?

The aspect ratio of a photo (or any graphic) is the ratio of the width to height. Common aspect ratios are 4:3 (standard definition TV), 16:9 (high def TV) and the classic 1:1 (square). Once an image is cropped to a particular aspect ratio it can easily be resized larger or smaller without losing any of the image or doing any weird stretching.

The problem comes when you want to put a square picture (1:1) in a widescreen layout (16:9). Now you have chop off a bunch of the top and bottom to make it fit, or create a new graphic with more “stuff” on the sides to completely fill the wide slot.

If you have to publish the same information in multiple locations, this aspect ratio can cause headaches. You may need a 4:3 image for the TV screens in the hall, and 16:9 for the website feature story, a 10:4 for the skinny enews masthead, and a square one for the Facebook icon. Since they don’t resize well, you may end up creating 4 or 5 different graphics to meet all the needs. One graphic designer we know has a client that requires all graphics to be 10 different aspect ratios. This takes more time, and costs more money.

So how do we fix this? Try standardizing your aspect ratios on all the media that require recurring graphics or photos. If you have to create 4:3 graphics for the announcement slides, can you change the website to use the same ratio? Instead of creating fancy graphic banners on the enews, can you use a standard banner and put 4:3 images in the stories?

Maybe you can’t get everything to a single standard, but even getting down to 2 or 3 will help the designer as they create new graphics. If they know every graphic has to be delivered in both 4:3 and 16:9 format, they can create designs that easily crop both ways. They design the graphic, create two cropped versions, and you have everything you need. All your materials can be consistent and you’ll save hundreds of hours per year by not trying to cram a square peg in a 16:9 hole.

by Terrell Sanders

tsanders@MainStreetOpen.com

 

Five things you should NOT have on your website

Posted 01/17/13 by tsanders and filed under:

Red_No_Circle_clip_art_mediumFor many organizations, the website was completed years ago and nobody in the company really looks at it any more. You know it’s probably not up to date, but there’s never time to redo a website.

But your customers do see it, and even more frightening, your prospects more than likely viewed your site before contacting you the first time. Your old site may be scaring off more business than it is bringing in.

Here are five things you need to look for when reviewing your site. If you have them, you need to get them off. They will hold you back.

1. Splash pages

Splash pages are full pages, often with animated content, that display before your site’s main page. Splash pages usually have a link at the bottom that says “Continue to site”.

Splash pages were never a good idea, they were created at a time when graphic designers and advertising folks created most websites and thought any chance to run a commercial was good. The truth is that people are already at your site, they don’t need a commercial, they are ready to know more. Making them go through a splash page is like telling customers they can’t be seated in your restaurant until after they wait in the lobby and watch your commercials. It was a bad idea then, it still is. Modern website don’t use splash pages.

Additionally, splash pages often kill your search engine ranking. Much of your site ranking on Google comes from the first page. If that page has nothing but a flash video or slideshow, then Google has nothing to read. Hence your site is basically empty in their view. That’s not what you want Google to think.

2. Flash animations

Another carry over from the advertising-agency-built sites is the gratuitous use of flash animations. The theory was that websites needed to be engaging, an experience, and entertaining to attract visitors. Maybe that was true in the early days when there were more websites than web users, but today content is king. People use the web to get information, they don’t need shiny flashing things to hold their attention. Additionally, as more sites are viewed on mobile devices, these intense animations often don’t display at all, or download so slowly that they make the site unusable.

Apple mobile devices don’t display flash at all, so even if you have a tasteful use of flash, it still can’t be seen by anyone on an iPhone or iPad. Again, any content inside flash animation can’t be seen by search engines either.

3. Old news

Years ago we signed a contract to build a new website for a church. The first thing the business administrator wanted us to do was immediately remove the featured news story off the current website. The feature story was the birth announcement of the pastor’s child, and notice saying mother and daughter were both doing fine. He said that “baby” is now 4 years old and the story just reminds everyone how long it’s been since they updated the site.

It’s hard to impress new prospects and existing clients when your most current news story is several years old. If your last news story is years old, people may even get the impression you aren’t in business any more. Get some fresh news on your site to prove you are still in business.

4. Autoplay music

Unless you are a musician, you shouldn’t have music that automatically plays on your site. Even if you are a musician, the music should only play when it’s selected. As web surfing has become mainstream, more users are visiting website from offices, schools, and other public locations. They don’t want to hear your music automatically playing. Trust me on this one.

5. Font frenzy

Too many font sizes, too many font styles, too many colors. These are usually the sign of an amateur developer, or someone who has the ability to edit their own site. Just because the average computer has 200 fonts and can display 65 million colors, it doesn’t mean you should have to use them all on the same page. Moderation is good. Most professional sites only have 2 or 3 fonts, and usually only 2 or 3 colors. If everything is BOLD ITALIC RED and BLINKING then nothing stands out.

The exterior of your office probably doesn’t include every architectural feature known to man, your website shouldn’t either.

That’s the list. Getting these five items off your site will help make it a positive tool in your marketing efforts. Your website can be a great first impression tool for new prospects. It just needs a fighting chance.

by Terrell Sanders

tsanders@MainStreetOpen.com

 

January Webcast: Do-It-Yourself Digital Signage

Posted 01/05/11 by tsanders and filed under:

Jeff Wilson and Eric Granata from Henderson Hills Baptist Church share the digital signage solution they developed for their church. They will explain how to implement your own digital signage and share the programming they developed to make it work without expensive proprietary hardware!

November Webcast

Posted 11/17/10 by tsanders and filed under:

I’m swamped right now, so instead of a live webcast this month, we’re posting two new interviews we did last week with Bruce Herwig from Trinity Church in Redlands, CA.

Bruce was in our office working on a new website design, but he wanted to share how his church communications process works, and his top 10 list for how pastors (and staff) can better work with the communications team.

We will skip the December webcast for obvious reasons, our next webcast is scheduled for Thursday, January 13, 2011 at 1pm Central time.

Case Study: Commissioning a Study by the Barna Group

Posted 10/22/10 by tsanders and filed under:

A group of church communicators in Houston wanted to know why self-professed Christians in the city were not attending church. With a countless number of churches from which to choose – including nearly 40 so-called mega-churches – what was keeping believers away? The group enlisted The Barna Group to find out. The findings shed light on the importance of knowing your community and communicating with them accordingly.

Steven Murray
Director of Communications
Houston’s First Baptist Church

What Does Athens Have to Do with Your Town, USA?

Posted 10/21/10 by tsanders and filed under:

As church leaders we find ourselves facing the same “marketing” challenge as the Apostle Paul when he addressed the Areopagus in Athens. How does one communicate the gospel to a culture that does not know or comprehend the foundational assumptions that give the gospel truths their context and meaning? A look into Paul’s approach on that epic day may offer us some compelling motivation to go back and rethink how we go about getting the word out!

Jim Johnson
Pastor
Preston Trail Community Church

Seven Deadly Sins of Church Communication

Posted 10/21/10 by tsanders and filed under:

In this light-hearted but candid session, Evan unpacks seven common barriers his team has identified that stand in the way of effective church communication and the most common recommendations toward improvement. You’ll likely see your church, your issues, your neuroses and your dysfunction…but you’ll also see a way out and a way to bring your team and leaders along toward more effective communication and greater impact.

Evan McBroom
Creative Director
Fishhook

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Innovative Communications

Posted 10/21/10 by tsanders and filed under:

Great communication will impact every part of your church. It’ll help your small groups find purpose, streamline the organization of your events, attract people via the Web, bring your volunteers together – the possibilities are endless. In this session Jeff Wilson will provide helpful tips, real life examples, and lessons learned on starting and enhancing the advertising and marketing plans at your church.

Jeff Wilson
Pastor of Communications
Henderson Hills Baptist Church

MinistryCOM 2010 Keynote

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Web Magic

Posted 10/10/10 by tsanders and filed under:

Ever been asked to “pull a rabbit out of a hat?” Ever wished you could wiggle your nose and have work finished so you had more family time? The Web Magic breakout session will offer you a bag of tricks with all the latest easy online tools to help you do ministry with greater ease, excellence and speed. Cut production of a youth trip video from hours to minutes. Collaborate with co-workers online from your home. Schedule your Twitter posts once to automatically post at chosen intervals. Sources for free resources and much more! Leave the session with a “card up your sleeve.”

Randy Jeter
Web Communications
Preston Trail Community Church
Frisco, TX

Session audio