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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VIDEO: How to ZIP files using WINZIP

4 December, 2011 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

This 5 minute video was created to answer this question from an Effective Church Communication Member:

  "I’m having no luck creating a zip file so that I can e-mail projects-in-progress, such as flyer designs, around to other committee members for their input. I”ve tried the free 30-day trials of Stuff-It and WinZip and am just lost. Any chance you might put together a how-to video that cuts through the jargon on their Help files?"

Her question caused me to remember when I first got WINZIP. As with many programs today, it seems the companies attempt to flood a person with all kinds of options and special features and ways to do things I have no need to do--but all I wanted was to ZIP and send files. After quite a bit of experiementation I found a very simple way to ZIP files and that's all. I made a 5 minute video that shows exactly what I do, in fact, I had a set of files I wanted to ZIP and will be sending this week. I'm sure WINZIP is a fantastic program that can do all kinds of things--but all I care about, and I imagine many church communicators are the same, is that it does the one important thing I need it to do.

NOTE: after I did this, I got another question about file compression--to see that article and to suggestion options, please CLICK HERE.

Check out the video below to see what I do to create ZIP Files:

I use WinZIP almost every week because it is the program I use to create the files that Effective Communication Members can download and that contain a variety of files: editable MS Word & MS Publisher, ready-to-print PDFs, image files, videos any and all kinds of files.

There are many files available for Effective Church Communication Members that will save you many hours of time and provide a starting point and inspiration for many projects.

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Filed Under: Basic Church Communications Training Tagged With: how to compress files, how to ZIP files, WINZIP

FREE Church Publicity Workshop: How to promote your church events to local media

1 December, 2011 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Publicity Cover page
This is the first page of presentation notes for this extremely helpful Publicity Workshop for churches. At the end of this article you can download the notes and PowerPoint presentation.

At this holiday time of year, we work so hard to put on Christmas events and we want as many people as possible to attend.In addition to all you do at the church, if you can get free media advertising, this can be a way to reach people who are unfamiliar with your church.

To help you do that, reach your community, and get them to your events, ECC Member, Sandra Coulson, a newspaper reporter and copy editor has shared a Publicity Workshop presentation that she presented to her church. The advice in it is clear, simple, easy-to-follow and tremendously useful.

The ZIP FILE at the end of the article has her PowerPoint presentation and PowerPoint notes. Below is her cover email that explains what she did.

I can't thank her enough for sending it. If you have training materials like this that you would like to freely pass on, please email me with them at yvon@effectivechurchcom.com.

Sandra's email and cover letter for the Publicity Workshop Presentation

Hi Yvon,

We recently tried a publicity workshop for leaders of groups at my church and it seemed to help many of them with an area in which they were struggling.

Some background: I’ve worked as a newspaper reporter and copy editor for 30 years. Although I sit on the other side of the fence, I understand the general approach that publicists use to attract attention to their cause. I also noticed that some of the posters, flyers and public service announcements that groups at my church were putting out were missing the mark. (At my church, each group often does their own publicity.) So I volunteered to put together a short, simple presentation on the basic of publicizing events.

I sent out invitations (mainly by e-mail) to all group leaders. Since I work nights at the newspaper, the easiest time to organize it was right after church on Sunday morning. The alternative was a session on Saturday, but I figured most of us would be there on Sunday, so I chose that day. I made up a PowerPoint presentation and an A-V Team member kindly stayed after church to run it for me. I prepared a handout with the PowerPoint slides and a list of all the media outlets I could think of in our city where events could be promoted: dailies, weeklies, magazines, newsletters, radio stations, TV stations, neighbourhood bulletin boards (the old-fashioned, non-electronic kind), websites, Twitter hashtags. (I didn’t provide all the details on how to contact each outlet because that seems to change quite often, but at least having a name gets them started.)

I think every group was represented either by the leader or a substitute the leader sent along, so I must have touched a need. Another church across the city heard about the presentation and asked for the material to use there. My presentation took only 20 minutes and there was a bit of discussion afterward, mainly with group leaders sharing with each other additional media outlets that I hadn’t thought of or whether some seemed more effective than others. Since then, some of them have continued to e-mail me with new ones they come across (mainly websites) and I have forwarded those to others who attended the workshop, so our list continues to grow with options for them to choose from.

I’ve attached the PowerPoint presentation. I thought it might be of some use to Effective Church Communications.

Sandra Coulson
Church of the Ascension
London, Ontario

I'm making this file free for everyone for the next few weeks and then it will be available for ECC Members only.

CLICK HERE to download the ZIP file that contains the PowerPoint Presentation and Notes page PDF.

Once you download the ZIP file, save it to your computer and then click to open.

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Filed Under: Church Outreach and Marketing, Evangelism & Outreach Tagged With: church advertising, church christmas outreach, church PR, church publicity, how to advertise church events

Our most important time, our quiet time with God

29 November, 2011 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Gayle Hilligoss Picture
Article by Gayle Hilligoss

Ed. note: We are all familiar with the story of Mary and Martha, but it is so easy to forget when we are working so hard for Jesus, to spend time with Him—Gayle's article is a wonderful reminder of how important that time is.

Even in churches it is easy to neglect to leave “God room” in our plans—room for God to reveal His will regarding our goals. While all time is essentially God time, setting aside a quiet period with God each day is surely our most important time.

The Scriptures provide a fine textbook on time management. Jesus gives the ultimate example of the value of planning. He spent thirty years planning for his three years of ministry. Spending time in God’s Word keeps us on track and helps us put our priorities in order. It inspires us to aim for excellence.

In aspiring to excellence, avoid becoming perfectionistic. Jesus was perfect, not a perfectionist. He worked with imperfect people in an imperfect system. He entrusted his work to us! Would a perfectionist do that? Do your best; then turn it loose. God will bless your honest efforts.

Everyone who has ever read a book on time management or who has attended a seminar on the subject has been reminded we all have the same amount of time. We all, regardless of status in life, have only 24 hours a day.

Time is a resource—our most precious because, unlike money or energy, it cannot be saved up to be used later. The minutes go by; we cannot truly manage them. What we can manage is the way we use our time.

Be aware of time as you go through your day. Scrutinize the jobs you do and look for creative ways to cut minutes off each task.

Even so, don’t fall into the stressful game of “Beat the Clock.” Find a comfortable pace and whatever transpires, don’t neglect your quiet time.

Be sure to schedule and to take a couple of breaks during the day. Leave the office for a lunch hour. Studies indicate that people who take short breaks mid-morning and mid-afternoon and who take a full lunch hour are more productive than those who work straight through. Tired minds and tired bodies simply do not produce good results.

A good rule is to ask yourself several times during the day, “Is what I’m doing the best use of my time now?” Your schedule must be rigid enough to be effective yet flexible enough to allow for priority shifts beyond your control.

Amid all your busy-ness, your quiet time is essential. This is when you gain a clear picture of the results you want to accomplish—not simply the tasks at hand. God time allows you to know your true goals and to focus on them. No priority is higher.

 

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Filed Under: Christmas, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: Church Communication time management, Quiet time

Christmas Holiday visitors—how to turn them into regular attenders

21 November, 2011 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Christmas invitations and how to keep them
Here are ideas to keep your Christmas visitors coming back.

As we go into the holiday season, your church will be holding many events that will attract visitors. You want these visitors to become regular attenders and you can help make this possible not only by the quality of your holiday event, but by the follow-up publications you send out.

Successful follow-up publications DO NOT mean a mass generated “so glad you were here….” letter. Instead, try these ideas:

Position your church positively

Sending out a “so glad you were here” publication is OK to do if you have the time and money, but there is nothing usual or memorable about that. People expect churches to be glad they came and of course a church wants them to return.

What might be a bit more surprising is if your church, instead of asking for something, gave something away. For example, what if you sent out a series of postcards or a series of one-page newsletters and tips that would give people ideas that would help them get through the holiday season. What if those publications didn’t ask for anything, but were genuine servant publications with the motive of honestly helping the people they were sent to.

This would put your church in an entirely different place and a very positive one that would cause people to want to return. Following are some specific publications that could do this:

Countdown to Christmas Postcards/flyers or emails

Depending upon how far back from Christmas you start this, let’s assume you have a list of families who attended your Fall Harvest Festival. You make up a series of perhaps five post-cards,  tri-fold flyers, or follow-up emails in bright colors with topics like this:

Countdown to Christmas

Week #1—some inexpensive, creative, and alternative ideas on how to plan Christmas shopping and gift exchanges, drawing of names, deciding to give to charities in the name of family members, what charity opportunities are available in your community, if any churches (your church?) sell third world gift items.

Week #2—some favorite recipes from your congregation: a favorite fudge, a hot cider mix, a special grandma cookie recipe. Many families today don’t have family members close by and many young families don’t know how to prepare holiday items. Make sure your directions are simple and easy.

Week #3—the meaning of advent and some ideas on how to help families celebrate it. Perhaps offer an advent booklet for free by simply calling your church or requesting one from your church website.

Week #4—Offer to pray for people during this busy and sometimes stressful time of year. Have a prayer line where they can leave requests or an email address. Assure them it is confidential and is a gift from your church to them.

Week #5—An invitation to take part and the times your church offers free baby-sitting so busy parents or especially single parents can shop, locations where your church is doing totally free gift-wrapping.

On all these postcards be sure to clearly give the address of your church, your service times and times for children’s church or education programs, contact phone number and web site. Be sure also to always say something like “Your Local Community Church is there for you and your family, not only at Christmas time, but any time of the year. Please contact us if we can serve you in any way.” If you say something like that, be sure there is a team in place and ready to respond.

You could also do electronic versions of the postcards by creating electronic postcards or emails with the same content. The holiday postcard templates at www.constantcontact.com include wonderful designs that can be very useful in this way.

What it’s really all about

Another option would be a series of cards explaining the meaning of different traditions at Christmas. If you do a Google search on the web you’ll find dozens of pages with explanations of various Christmas traditions.

You could choose one tradition a week and again send out a series of cards. Again, many people today don’t know why we celebrate the traditions we do and you can give them a Christian explanation. Be sure to always remind them, that in addition to the reasons we have candy canes or Christmas trees (both with very Christian historical traditions) the “reason for the season” really is that Jesus, who was fully God, became fully man to grow up and become our Savior.

What’s most important

The most important thing about either of these communication/church marketing projects is not how fancy your clip art is or how stunning the type face that you choose. What is most important is if you create these and send them out with lots of love and prayer for the visitors to your church, you have a tangible way to let them know you care.

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Filed Under: Christmas Tagged With: Christmas, Communications, evangelism, outreach communications, Seasonal, yvon prehn

Successful Christmas Outreach Strategy

17 November, 2011 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Christmas tree
For Christmas outreach to be successful take lots of work and prayer.

For many churches, their idea of successful Christian outreach means finding and buying the best looking, professionally done postcard and then paying lots for mailing lists and a large mailing.

It doesn’t matter how great your outreach marketing piece looks, how flawless the printing, how inspired your slogan, no one piece can carry the weight of assuring a good turnout for a Christmas event. Even if you do get a good turnout, that doesn't mean that the response of the people who attend will be anything more than appreciation for a good time.

This is not to say that these things don’t matter, because they may be steps towards a connection with your church and Jesus, but the key thing to remember if you want your Christmas outreach to be ultimately successful, is that it takes many actions by every part of your church and here are some suggestions:

1. First for leaders and decision-makers in the church, spend time in prayer asking God to impress on your heart the seriousness and the privilege of our opportunities this time of year. Remember, this might be your one opportunity to share the gospel of Jesus with visitors and relatives. The eternal destiny of people can be decided at your church this holiday season. [Read more...]

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Filed Under: Christmas, Evangelism & Outreach, Seasonal Tagged With: Christmas church outreach, christmas communications, church bulletins for Christmas

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