Effective Church Communications

Effective Church Communications provides Timeless Strategy and Biblical Inspiration to help churches create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission

Effective Church Communications provides Timeless Strategy and a Biblical Perspective to help churches create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission. Our tools constantly change; our task doesn’t; we can help.
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In the church office: Keep It Simple, part two

6 June, 2012 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Gayle Hilligoss Picture
Article by Gayle Hilligoss

 Ed. note: Part one of this series got us started on ways to simplify our office and in doing that become more productive and help us accomplish all God wants us to accomplish. This second set of suggestions by Gayle Hilligoss will challenge and equip you even more.

• Don’t reinvent the wheel
Establish written policies and procedures for how to handle recurring jobs and situations. While this is helpful for all tasks, it is particularly beneficial for jobs done only every few months.

The advantage of following written steps, rather than just doing the task, is that a guide reminds you of what needs to be done and when. You have already figured out what works. Use your experience. So simple.

• Share the responsibility
Simplify your schedule by making another person responsible now and then. If a vendor hasn’t delivered by the promised date and asks you to check back in a day or two, ask him to give you a call when the job is ready. Give similar responsibility to coworkers and members when situations allow. The more you practice this kind of sharing, the easier it becomes.

• Commit plans to writing
A weekly planner, either paper or digital, is the 21st century version of the to-do list. Organizing by the week provides a broader view of your schedule, more flexibility, and the best possibility for using your time productively.

Dozens of formats are available; choose or design one that works well for you. Make it detailed enough to be effective, simple enough to ensure you use it.

• Establish priorities
All tasks are not of equal value. Life is more simple once the important is identified and addressed, and the nonessential is eliminated—either ignored or dispatched as quickly as possible. No one has the time or energy to do everything; invest your efforts in what produces the results you want. Many tasks just burn hours; they have no payoff.

We have learned not to write down most busywork jobs. The next step is to learn not to do them.

• Start your day productively
Time studies reveal that in many offices the first hour of the day is the most nonproductive. Desks are tidied, plants watered, papers shuffled, pleasantries exchanged—but nothing done toward reaching the day’s goals.

Simplify your life by noting your tasks for the next day before leaving the office each afternoon. Be the person who hits the office with a clear sense of purpose and ready to go. Making your first hour purposeful makes the following hours less stressful.

• Concentrate on one thing at a time
Interruptions are sure to occur during your day, ones you cannot sidestep, but you can avoid interrupting yourself. Once you start a task, do your best to stick with it. Moving randomly from one assignment to another is self-defeating behavior that can easily become a habit. If you are distracted by someone else, make a quick note to mark your place. Do what you must; then resume your work and see it through to completion.

• Set self-imposed deadlines
One of the undeniable facts of life is that nothing moves a task along as well as having a specific time when it must be finished. Think of occasions when you have accomplished the seemingly impossible in record time simply because it had to be done. Doesn’t that make you feel great?

Attaching a target time to every meaningful task is an effective way to simplify. Since work tends to fill the time allotted for it, deadlines keep you from spending longer on a project than it is worth. You work with purpose, maintain focus, and experience a valid sense of accomplishment. Great payoffs.

• Group similar tasks
You can greatly increase your productivity by grouping related activities. Use one or more blocks of time to schedule the day’s time intensive tasks (filing, data entry, correspondence) instead of doing bits and pieces throughout the day. What you save is the “getting back in the groove” time involved every time you stop and have to restart.

• Take the threat out of big projects
Many tasks you handle can’t be completed in a day or two. Some require many, many hours; some can be intimidating.

Simplify by breaking these huge projects into small, measurable tasks. First, determine when the entire job must be completed. Then, jot down everything that must be done to achieve the desired results. Put the tasks in order and give each a deadline. Allow ample time for each segment and for a final review.

Finally, working backward from your completion date, place those tasks on your planning calendar at the appropriate dates. This system converts your big job into a series of doable little jobs.

• Go basic
Even in today’s casual work environment, office attire matters. Create a wardrobe of comfortable separates that work together. Your closet will be trimmer, your upkeep less, and dressing appropriately will take less time and effort. Use the same system of going basic with makeup, toiletries, household linens, furnishings, landscaping, whatever makes your life more simple and satisfying.

• Create quiet times
Stores, restaurants, and offices constantly bombard us with sound. We compound the racket with phones, iPods, television, and more. It is not just kids who are accustomed to constant music or chatter. No wonder we find it hard to get in touch with our inner voice, to think, to reflect, to meditate, to pray. Try turning off what you can when you can. Life can be beautiful without being constantly connected. Really.

• Focus
There isn’t time in life to do everything, but simplifying life gives you time for all the important things. You need not try to convince any who may say your ideas are undoable; you have the power to work your plan. Success begins with small steps taken daily. Simple.

________________________________________________

To read part one of this article, CLICK HERE.

 

 

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Filed Under: Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: church office skills, church productivity, Communications, siple life tips

In your church office: Keep It Simple, part one

4 June, 2012 By grhilligoss@gmail.com 3 Comments

Gayle Hilligoss Picture
Article by Gayle Hilligoss

A cell phone’s ring tone during a meeting of ministry assistants sparked a conversation about how complicated life is today as compared to just a few short years ago. One of the youngest of the group remarked, “Even I remember when multitasking was something computers, not assistants, did. I think I was more productive then. For sure, I was less stressed.”

Experience in the church office leads many assistants to believe the key to achieving the maximum joy from work lies in keeping things as simple as possible. The process starts with making wise choices—decisions designed to manage your job and your life effectively.

• Delegate what you can
Volunteers can take over many hours of your work week to free your time for the kinds of tasks that cannot be delegated. Granted, enlisting and training volunteers takes time and effort. And there are some obvious disadvantages to relying on unpaid help. But, done well, delegation will simplify your days.

• Identify avoidable negatives
Worrying about the future, ruminating over the past, being involved with gossip, remaining in outgrown friendships, indulging in harmful habits, setting unrealistic standards for yourself and others—imagine the tranquility you could gain by discarding these life-complicating behaviors.

• Trim your tasks
Today’s alternative to delegate is eliminate. What do you habitually say yes to that you could say no to?

Ask yourself:
• Does it really need to be done?
• Does it need to be done right now?
• Does it need to be done this way?

We tend to hold on to old habits and notions even if we are not satisfied with the results. Most likely there is a better way. Look for the most simple technique to achieve the desired outcome. Moving beyond the “we’ve always done it this way” syndrome is a huge first step toward implementing new techniques.

Get even choosier about how you spend your time. Take a serious look at your week’s agenda. Identify things which give you a low return on your time and effort investment; cut them from your routine.

• Seriously unclutter “stuff”
Church offices can be collecting places for all sorts of (is there a better word for it?) stuff. Gain control by having a proper place for each item that belongs in the office and a system for moving things that don’t belong there to more appropriate places.

Ask yourself:
• Do I need to keep this item?
• Does it need to be kept in the office?
• Where is the best place for this item?

Every office needs a workable policy for ditching things. If you have one, use it. If you don’t, see what can be done to get a policy in place.

Unclutter your personal space as well. The more things one has, the more time and energy must be devoted to caring for them. Go for quality rather than quantity. Having fewer possessions—only what you use, need, and enjoy—allows you to appreciate each more fully.

 

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Filed Under: Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors, Planning and Managing Tagged With: church office, Church Office Assistant help, managing the church office, Volunteer Management

Why training church communicators takes so much time and effort and the 10,000 hour rule

31 May, 2012 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

In the video that follows, Malcolm Gladwell talks about his 10,000 hour rule. This rule, based on extensive research, is that it takes about 10,000 hours to achieve mastery in a field. To make that number more manageable, it means that you need to work on something 40 hours a week for 250 weeks, or slightly less than 5 years to become really good at it. Take a quick look at the video and then I'll share how this applies to church communicators:

How this applies to church communications

Don't get lost in the details of this idea. I've ordered his book, Outliers, to look at his thesis in more detail and will blog about it more later, but the point is, you don't get good at anything quickly. We know that's true in many areas of life--you don't become a great preacher with your first sermon, a great cook the day you buy a cookbook, a great apologist the first time someone asks why you think the Bible is true.

Why is it then, we expect people in the church who have no advertising, marketing, design, layout, typography or technical training to become instant masters at website design, church bulletin layout, and newsletter writing?  From the earliest days of the computer revolution when a church secretary would often come into the church office and find her typewriter replaced by a computer (this really happened more times than I could count). She would then be informed, with great excitement, by whoever did this, that by next week she would get to create the church bulletin and newsletter with it! With the extraordinary tenaciousness innate in church secretaries along with many tears and prayers, she would often get it done. She would go on to learn the computer and the software, usually with no formal training at all and on her own time.

That lack of respect for the person and ignorance of the training needed to do complex communication tasks has continued wherein church secretaries and communications people are told to create a website or various forms social media for the church. It usually happens, but often not easily or well.

The true Biblical Church of Jesus Christ, who lived, died, rose again and is coming back is not doing very well communicating our message (when we look at declining numbers and the public perceptions of the church) when we have the most extraordinary tools available in the history of humanity.

The key is, we haven't taken the time to learn to use them really well. That reality is what motivated me to start the ministry of Effective Church Communications and that's what keeps it going today. Here are some of what I have to help you get the 10,000 needed hours of training.

  • There are many resources available at: https://www.effectivechurchcom.com to train church communicators.
  • PLEASE check out the site--there is a LOT on it, but there needs to be.
  • If you are a church communicator, sign up for the newsletter, check out the site often to learn the continuously added and updated lessons.
  • If you are a church leader who is responsible for church communicators, buy them an ECC Membership and GIVE THEM TIME TO USE IT (yes, all caps and shouting to make the point). You must give your people time to learn communications.
  • Please also check out my books on church communications--this is an ever-growing resource that will help you learn about the importance of Effective Church Communications and what you need to do in your church to create them. The materials are available in all digital formats and in print. Check out, just click on site title:
  • Smashwords--the source for all digital formats, free materials and special editions here. Just scroll down the page to get to the books--I wish they didn't have my bio first, but I had no control over page layout.
  • Amazon.com--the source for Kindle and print versions.

10,000 is a lot of time to learn something. We have been entrusted with the Words of Eternal Life--that task is worthy of them.

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Filed Under: Misc. Advice and Articles

Q & A: Where can you find Free PowerPoint resources, artwork and templates?

30 May, 2012 By Yvon Prehn 2 Comments

Question:

"Our church has recently added a video screen to our sanctuary. We are in the beginning stages on learning how to use it for announcements and other parts of our church service. We have found some resources for slide backgrounds, videos and countdowns. Most of the video and countdown sites have a fee to use these. We are a small church and just wondering where the best sites are for these things, and possibly free usage sites also. Any suggestions?"

Answer:

Though there are many excellent companies that create PowerPoint presentations for churches, many do charge a hefty fee for their materials. As someone who creates resources for churches, I know everyone needs to make a living, but at the same time, I as someone who is married to a bi-vocational pastor and whose work at the church is done for no compensation, I do know that church resources can be very tight, while ministry demands can be challenging.

I did a good bit of research on this and found the following websites have some excellent FREE resources! Rather than simply telling you about them, I did 3 video reviews, so you can actually see the sites. Following are video reviews of the sites I found most useful with preliminary comments and direct links to them.

PLEASE respond in the comments section if you have other sites that you use either free or paid for. Any extra comments would be very helpful. Thanks so much!

Free PowerPoint Templates from Christian sources

Heartlight.org
http://www.heartlight.org/powerpoint/2262.html
This site is just WONDERFUL! Lots of free materials, really good quality, and I found the overall attitude of the site encouraging and uplifting. Not only PowerPoint, but lots of other materials you'll find very useful for church communications.

Ebibleteacher.com
http://www.ebibleteacher.com/
I didn't find this as useful for worship-type PowerPoint as some, but I really like their teaching materials. Good graphics and maps section and OK background images. I use a lot of maps and historical images in my Bible teaching to remind people that the Christian faith is rooted in real history that took place in real places.

Hyperpixels Media
http://www.hyperpixelsmedia.com/motion-background-loops/fire-flow
I really liked the materials here. This site has mostly materials that cost, but they also have some free materials, that change and that are wonderful. Their quality is excellent and their prices are very reasonable. This does cost, but their video: A Man's Thesaurus had me laughing out-loud. Check it out when you need a bit of humor.

Free PowerPoint Templates for Churches Video Review

Free PowerPoint templates from Secular Sources

PowerPoint Styles.com
http://www.powerpointstyles.com
This is a weird site—but useful weird. Be sure to look at the video before you go to it. It has some GREAT material and it's all FREE, but what is weird about it is all the junk ads, software download boxes and other stuff that clutter up the site. But if you take a few minutes with it, you'll be rewarded with some really great PowerPoint Templates.

Microsoft.com
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templates/results.aspx?qu=presentations
The link above goes directly to the free PowerPoint templates from Microsoft. As you'll see the best ones they offer don't come from Microsoft themselves, but from companies that give free resources to them. It is a little tricky to find and access these resources, but the video that follows shows you how.

Free Templates and Clipart for Churches from Secular Sources

Free Power Point Training Resource

Indezine.com
http://www.indezine.com/
This is a very interesting site—it does have lots of free templates for PowerPoint and the video below shows you how to access them, but it also has lots of educational information on all sorts of topics related to PowerPoint, such as an extensive tutorial about presenting on the iPad. There are lots of links to books and other resources related to PowerPoint and links to downloads of software trials. Their religious templates feature ones for non-Christian religions, which could be very useful for world religion classes. Bookmark this site as the offering and education materials change often.

Free PowerPoint Templates and Training, a video review of Indezine

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Filed Under: Father's Day, Graphics, Images, PowerPoint, Videos Tagged With: Free PowerPoint templates, PowerPoint how-tos, PowerPoint in church, PowerPoint templates

Father’s Day Post cards, a great set, ready-to-use

22 May, 2012 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Here is a set of postcards for Father's Day, that can also be used as stand-alone images in PowerPoint, websites, newsletters or however else you want to use them. These publications and images come in a ZIP file you can download in these formats:

  • A PDF of postcard size publications that is ready-to-print as is, but that you can also personalize on the back side with your church information.
  • An editable MS Publisher file of the images that you can modify however you choose.
  • A graphic image in either png or jpg format that you can use any way you want, in newsletters, on the web, however, you'd like.
Word Cloud image 3
These images for Fathers Day can be used for postcards, inserts into bulletins and invitations to celebrate Father's Day.

The images above illustrate only some of what is available for Father's day. All of the files on this page are FREE for ECC MEMBERS, some of the other files will be available for everyone. Members can download the ZIP FILE, at the end of this. If you are not a Members of Effective Church Communications, CLICK HERE for membership information --it is only $9.99 a month for many free resources and training available 24/7.

The images and postcards were created with Word Clouds, created with http://www.tagxedo.com.

These are illustrations only, the zip file containing all the files, PDFs, etc., is available at a link below the images.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD the ZIP file containing the PDFs, graphic images, and editable MS Publisher files.

 

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Filed Under: Father's Day, Men's Ministry Tagged With: Church Father's Day, Church men's ministry, Fathers day advetising, fathers day church marketing, Fathers Day postcards, Fathers Day publications

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