Effective Church Communications

The Effective Church Communication ministry from Yvon Prehn provides inspiration, training, and resources to help your church create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission. It focuses on Bible-based and timeless principles and strategies that work no matter what digital or print channel you use to create your communications. The site has links to many free TEMPLATES and other resources, plus links to free TRAINING VIDEOS, and a RESOURCE LIBRARY for church communicators. 

The Effective Church Communication ministry from Yvon Prehn provides inspiration, training, and resources to help your church create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission. It focuses on Bible-based and timeless principles and strategies that work no matter what digital or print channel you use to create your communications. The site has links to many free TEMPLATES and other resources, plus links to free TRAINING VIDEOS, and a RESOURCE LIBRARY for church communicators.
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Three of the most common church communication mistakes

31 August, 2013 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Every year I interact with many church communicators and every year it seems like some of the same mistakes are made by many churches that keep them from being as effective as they could be in communicating the gospel message. Following are three of the most common ones I see consistently. I don’t want to only point out problems in this list, because none of us are perfect and we all have things to learn. I'm using these as a spring-broad for improvement, so along with the mistakes are suggestions and links to how-to articles that will help you correct them.

Church Communication Mistake #1: Thinking that simply having a website is enough

As I have evaluated many church communication websites, I have lost count of the number of websites that obviously were created by a company selling a template (my apologies to those companies, it is not your fault what is done with them after you sell them) that look good, but that are failures in communication.

The problem is that the church seems to think that just having a website and buying a fancy template or using professional graphics means something. The websites usually have great looking graphics on the home page, scrolling notices of various sorts, lots of labels, but if you click on any of them at most you find a paragraph of content. You never get a sense that a real person cared about anything other than certain slots be filled. No explanations of the why of the church or faith, no evidence of a personality behind the tiny amount of content and most dangerous of all, usually nothing is up-to-date in any ministry area.

Simply having a website isn’t enough—a website is a minimal expectation for any church today and as essential as an entry in the phone book in the past. But if your website says little more than a phone book entry, it won’t accomplish much more either. What is really sad about this is that a church that only fills in informational blanks is missing a HUGE opportunity for outreach.

In addition to the mistakes of an incomplete website, keep in mind that websites do not replace the tangible week-by-week communications needed in the church to keep your congregation informed and involved. Bulletins, newsletters, postcards, flyers, reminders of all sorts are needed and this website has many ideas and inspiration to make your materials more effective.

Church Communication Mistake #2: Assuming graphic images communicate the same meaning to everyone who looks at them

Images should be used primarily to add to the message expressed in words. They are not enough in and of themselves to communicate much of anything. They may look nice, they may create an emotion, designers may congratulate each other on their brilliance, but if you want to communicate a significant Christian message, images alone won’t do it.

Some of you may object: “But, a picture is worth a thousand words.”

Whenever I hear that statement, I always respond with the question, “What thousand?”

People often make the first statement as some sort of understood truth that images say more than words do. That is simply not true. Reality is that the same picture can mean different things to each person who sees it. Not convinced?

What would you say a picture of the American flag means to:

  • A Marine just out of boot-camp?
  • A terrorist who has been water-boarded?
  • An immigrant just granted political amnesty?
  • An Al-Qaeda sleeper cell member?
  • A member of Congress?

It’s the same flag—but we all bring different histories, experiences, loves, and hates to any image from flags to puppies to clowns. No image, picture, or graphic is self-explanatory.

Images do not fully communicate the complexity of the Christian message. Images do not give time, date, location, and let you know if child care is provided. Images can stir up emotions, but they don’t make practical connections.

We need words. Let’s choose them as carefully as we do our images.

For an article by Gerry McGovern, international guru of web marketing wherein he summarizes research on the ineffectiveness of images used in secular advertising, and my comments on it: http://churchcommunicationsblog.com/2010/12/06/why-it-is-incorrect-to-think-that-graphic-images-mean-the-same-thing-to-everyone-who-sees-them/

Communication Mistake #3: Using the Apostle Peter’s methods to reach Paul’s audience

Some pastors (particularly in my age cohort of Baby Boomers) have trouble understanding why altar calls don’t seem to work the way they used to. Newcomers to church don’t understand them, or if they do respond, sometimes the same person responds every week or makes a public profession of faith only to go on living no differently than before he made it.

This is part of a larger problem of communicating the Christian message to a post-Christian world. We may know in our heads that the world no longer shares our value system, but when we attempt to translate that into action, it’s easy to forget what that actually means. The following illustration might help.

When the Apostle Peter preached to the assembled group of observant Jews at Pentecost and thousands immediately responded, it’s easy to forget that he was preaching to a group of people who knew the Old Testament message, who understood sacrificial atonement, who expected and were looking for a Messiah. For this audience all he had to do what show how Jesus fulfilled the criteria as Messiah and challenge them to decision. He got a huge response.

Paul’s ministry was primarily to the Gentiles and he used a different approach. One illustration:

One night the Lord spoke to Paul in a vision: “Do not be afraid; keep on speaking, do not be silent. For I am with you, and no one is going to attack and harm you, because I have many people in this city.” So Paul stayed in Corinth for a year and a half, teaching them the word of God.  Acts 18:9-11

He was not talking to a group of people who grew up hearing the promises of Messiah. This audience had never seen a lamb sacrificed in recognition that they could not meet the demands of a holy God. They didn't know why Jesus had to die. Paul taught day after day explaining, teaching God’s Word, giving them the background necessary to understand why it was important that Jesus die and why they needed to live life differently once they trusted him as Savior. The Greco-Roman world was filled with many gods, but to trust one solely for salvation and to change one’s moral behavior because of it was a radical idea for most.

Application: We live in a world like Paul’s where people (as hard as it is to understand) may know nothing about the Christian faith or what it actually means to live it. We cannot assume anything in either our written or verbal, web or print communication. In all your communications you need to explain as much as you can, as clearly as you can. Ask if people understand. Explain again.

Be prepared; you may irritate some of the long-time church members. When they express impatience with reading your explanations of things they already understand, ask for their prayers that your church clearly communicate to people who know nothing about Jesus as the only source of eternal life.

We have many challenges in our work as church communicators, but if you work on these three, you will more effectively share the words of eternal life.

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Filed Under: Design, Website Creation Tagged With: Church communication mistakes, church design mistakes, design mistakes, evangelism mistakes, website mistakes

Progress, not perfection is what’s important in church communications

13 March, 2013 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

We can't implement every communication challenge, but we can make progress.
We can't implement every communication challenge, but we can make progress.

As I finished the article: 9 essentials to prepare your church website for Easter,  I realized that though all the points are important and truly essential for a church website, to carry out all of them before Easter may be impossible for many churches.

That's OK.

Take a deep breath, relax. Have a cup of tea.

Even if you only get one or two areas updated on your website before Easter you will have made progress in better communicating what your church is about and how to find Jesus.

In some ways this ECC site is like a fashion or home-decorating magazine

What I mean by that is that almost nobody really dresses like the women in fashion magazines or has a home that looks like the ones in home decorating magazines. These are ideal images, goals, visions of style to strive towards. [Read more...]

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Filed Under: Website Creation Tagged With: church communication ideals, church communication progress, perfection in church communications

Resources for how to create and use video for church and outreach ministry

31 October, 2012 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Video creation doesn't take a team like this
You don't need a team like this to create church videos--today one person with a computer can do great things!

Though video is a popular tool to promote, advertise and instruct in almost every area of life, many churches and ministries do not use it to its full potential. This week I posted two videos on how I create training videos and the links to them are below.

But there is much more to video training, creation and use. The links following will help you get started. The most important one is the first one as this article gives you not only how to's but great ministry examples and inspiration.

Video creation does not need to cost very much and is not difficult to do--it is merely one more tool that enables us to be "all things to all people that we might win some." [Read more...]

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Filed Under: Multi-Channel Communications, Website Creation Tagged With: Christian video creation tools, church video, church video resources, free church video resources

Communication creation tips for reaching time-stressed and time-starved audiences

15 October, 2012 By Yvon Prehn

Remember time stress when creating church communications
Remember the time stress of your audience when creating church communications.

Need some evidence that it isn't just your imagination making you feel stressed out? An article in the Wall Street Journal concluded: ". . . .at the end of the weekend, you are more than a full day behind in your activities. Even if we went to an eight-day week you still would be 4.5 hours behind."

Ed note before I continue: I wrote this article several years ago and while updating the website ran across it. The time challenges of your audience today make it worth another look because though a few years have passed if anything the situation of time demands has become even more challenging as we attempt to reach people. Following is a reprint of the article with a number of updates added.

An article in the Wall Street Journal reported Americans work an average of 53 hours a week. Dale McFeatters took that statistic and calculated that if an individual did all the activities reported such as sleeping, TV, dressing, etc., without multitasking, that person would have a 28.5 hour a week time deficit. In addition to helping explain why we often feel stressed and tired,his calculations help explain why it is so difficult to get people respond to the communications from your church. Following are some ideas on how to communicate your church's message to a time-stressed and time-starved audience. [Read more...]

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Filed Under: Characteristics of ECC, Website Creation Tagged With: Church Websites, Communications, time-saving communications, volunteers, yvon prehn

A primer on responsive websites, what they are and why they are important

20 September, 2012 By Yvon Prehn 1 Comment

Responsive websites, a primer
A responsive website is one that adjusts to any device you use to view it--here's some basics about them.

Before we talk about responsive websites, a clarification is important. A responsive website, for the purposes of this article, doesn't mean one that meets the needs of seekers to your website, though that is important for a church website.

What I'm talking about is a website that adjusts, (responds) to any technology that is used to view it. It's also one of the most important web trends today. It's also the foundation of the changes that I'm making on this site to serve you better.

 An honest disclaimer first

I'm not writing this as an expert website creator, even though I've created several websites for churches and ministries, plus I created and maintain this website for my ministry Effective Church Communications.  Though I can do a little coding if I have to, I usually mess that up and rely totally on WordPress.

In the process of updating this website, I discovered responsive websites and was totally impressed with and excited about how they can expand the ways my ministry can help church communicators. Fortunately, WordPress has some fantastic FREE website templates that have all the complex coding of responsive websites built-in. Making this site responsive was as easy as replacing the template.

Well, not quite that easy. I'm still rearranging material to take the best advantage of the new way it displays content. Still, the shift to a responsive design using WordPress is relatively painless and I wanted to share this at the start because I don't want you to worry about this being too complex for you to do if you want to do this for your site.  As with many things in ministry technology, somebody has to do the heavy lifting in coding, but I think it is a much better use of most church communicator's time to use a template where the programming framework is already done and you can focus on the content. WordPress allows you to do that. Later I'll have some links that show you how easy it is to create sites using it.

Responsive technology, what it is and why we need it

Here is a more complete definition of a responsive website:
A website that responds to the device that accesses it and delivers the appropriate output for it uses responsive design. Rather than designing multiple sites for different-sized devices, this approach designs one site but specifies how it should appear on varied devices.

From: https://itservices.stanford.edu/service/web/mobile/about/terminology

This is very different from what happens on the most websites today. Though you can view them on a variety of devices, like a mobile phone, the website is simply smaller on the smaller device.  Unless you know what is already there, it is difficult to move around and expand a section of it, even if you have a phone that can do that. To actually use the site, to use drop-down menus, for example, is almost impossible.

A responsive website is also different from a website having a secondary version of it coded for mobile phones.

A responsive website in contrast, without additional coding for each device, automatically adjusts to the size of the device used to view it, and it shifts the organization of the content, so that you can always read the primary content on the screen. You can view the difference  here is a short video I did to illustrate the difference:

Why we need them

A quote from Jeff Veen gives the technology reason:

“Day by day, the number of devices, platforms, and browsers that need to work with your site grows. Responsive web design represents a fundamental shift in how we’ll build websites for the decade to come.”

The ministry reason is this is simply another step in "becoming all things to all people so that we might win some." Websites are an essential way for churches and ministries to communicate both the plan of salvation in Jesus as well as the details about our church or ministry and how people can connect with us. Though the content remains the same, people now view our websites on an ever-increasing variety of devices.

The idea of responsive websites developed as an option for having to create a completely different size for every size device. Instead of having an exact layout for each one, responsive design determines the device and then scales and rearranges content to fit it.

If we want to both have our ministry material available to everyone who needs it and be able to manage the creation process at the same time, responsive design is a great tool.

How to make responsive design work for you

Many of you have highly skilled webmasters or companies that created and or maintain your site and they are most likely in process on adapting responsive design principles to it—if you are happy with that—keep with it.

My advice is for those of you who want to create your own website easily and for free (or almost) and that is to consider WordPress. You can start out with http://www.wordpress.com, which is completely free. It is extremely easy to learn and use. At this link here I have a series of free videos that show you how to create a basic site with WordPress. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhAhP30CKzo&list=PL35207ECE78421EF4&feature=plcp

Update note on the link above: some of the interface examples have been updated on WordPress, but it is still a useful video to enable you to see what you can do with it.

For more about Responsive design:

I realize I've barely touched the surface of this exciting development in website design, but below are some additional resources, from a visual explanation to some excellent and more technical articles.

Following is a scrolldeck of responsive design, don't get overwhelmed by the how-tos at the end of it: http://johnpolacek.github.com/scrolldeck.js/decks/responsive/

I highly recommend this overview article: http://arstechnica.com/business/2012/05/whats-responsive-web-design-all-about/

A good, more technical overview and links to basic resources: http://blog.teamtreehouse.com/beginners-guide-to-responsive-web-design

Keep learning and growing in your service to your people and our Lord

Work in computers and communication never stands still and here is one more challenge. Let's charge ahead trusting the Lord that this is yet another way we can serve Him and His people.

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Filed Under: Website Creation Tagged With: how to do church websites, responsive websites, responsive websites for churches, websites

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