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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What you bring to the job

22 April, 2014 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

What You bring to the job
Though skills are important, YOU are the most important component of your work in the church office and this week we celebrate YOU!

Ed. note: Gayle asked that I publish this on YOUR celebration day for Administrative Professionals and I couldn't agree more. YOU are the heart of the church communications ministry and I celebrate your service to our Lord and praise Him for YOU!

You have worked hard to develop and strengthen your skills. You stay updated on techniques, learn the ins and outs of the latest software, and network with others to share ideas and tips.

Are your hard-won administrative and interpersonal skills all that important to the work of the church?

Absolutely!

But the most important component you contribute to the job is none of the above. You bring an element even more valuable than your excellent skills of organization, of communication, time management, or desktop publishing. You bring you!

As essential as your ministry tasks may be, what you are is even more valuable than the tasks you do.

Your unique contributions—faith, commitment, ethics, how you relate to others—these things most certainly affect others in ways your expertise with newsletters and data bases cannot.

Aspects of contributions only you can provide:

• Personal faith
Whether you are a member of the church you serve or of another congregation, being committed to the tenets of your denomination enhances your service.

• Professional image
While it must never replace substance, image does matter. You want what shows on the outside to accurately reflect the professionalism you possess on the inside. Look, speak, think, and act like the professional you are.

• Positive attitude
The only trait more contagious than a positive attitude is a negative one. Your positivity helps make problems solvable, cares bearable, goals reachable.

• Sense of humor
Sharing a good laugh can change a sad circumstance into a funny one. Learn to look for the humor in situations; it is usually there.

As you continue to grow in your job, appreciate your most valuable contribution—YOU.

 

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Filed Under: Church Communication Management, Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: Admin Professionals in churches, Church Administrative Professionals, value of church administrative professionals

Advice to prevent problems with plugins on your website

20 April, 2014 By Yvon Prehn 2 Comments

A solution for plug in problems
Plugins are great tools to increase website options, and the suggestions here can help you without damaging your site.

Ed. Note: Ewald Wuschke wrote this in response to my deletion of the Timely plugin and is great advice for managing plugins on any site.

I can sympathize with the issues some plug-ins (especially free versions) can create with website Content Management Systems such as WordPress and Joomla.  It can take many hours, if not weeks, to try to resolve.

A while back, I needed to experiment with a room booking system for our church's website.  The website is based on Joomla, not WordPress.  I installed a plug-in component called "Scheduler"  and encountered multiple conflicts that caused the website to break.

The solution was to create a separate Joomla website within a new subdomain, where the only plug-in installed was "Scheduler".  The new website used a much more up-to-date version of Joomla compared to the church's main website which worked better with "Scheduler".   To go to the "Scheduler" site, one simply has a link from the main church webpage; on the "Scheduler" site there is a link to return to the main church webpage.  The beauty of having a separate website, is that when one decides not to use "Scheduler" anymore, one can delete the website and its database without affecting the main website and database.   It also means that the main website is not affected by any bugs that may arise while using the plug-in.  The two websites are independent of each other, just "connected" by links.

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Filed Under: Columnist Ewald Wuschke, Contributors Tagged With: plugins on church websites, solution to plugin problems, website security help

Assignment: Teamwork

15 April, 2014 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Teamwork
Not only when we are preparing for holiday activities, but all year-long, we need to work as a team for truly effective church communications.

Ministry assistants say they hear a lot about the concept of teamwork, but not so much about the specifics of what makes a good team player. These basics apply to every member of the team. On excellent teams all follow the rules.

• Be genuine
Team members like to know that the person they are working with is who she is—not one person with Sally and another with Bob. Be straightforward, authentic, sincere. Never play games.

• Keep your word
Before you commit to a task be sure you can deliver. Once you promise, you must follow through. Those who give their word lightly or fail to produce may find it difficult to regain the trust of those they have let down.

• Meet deadlines
A huge problem in some teams is that a member or two consistently ignore or break deadlines. The person  who does this is, intentionally or not, showing disdain for the others. Honoring deadlines is a tangible way to show your respect other members of the team. The team functions better when everyone’s priorities are considered.

• Communicate
No one enjoys being in the dark. Build stronger team relationships by keeping all members in the information loop. Ask opinions; share insight and information. Teams benefit by pooling creativity, expertise, and knowledge. Very often mistakes and missteps can be avoided by simply running ideas by others before actions are taken.

• Give your best
Set standards for your personal best and consistently strive to meet—or even exceed—them. Establish an impeccable reputation for the quality of your work, your dependability, your positive attitude, and your integrity. These attributes build trust and confidence—two indispensable qualities essential to excellent teamwork.

Sometimes the assistant is the leader of the team. Whether you are supervising volunteers, working with officers in your professional organization, or chairing a committee, these guidelines help you handle the task like a pro.

• Match worker to task
Every person has something productive to contribute; everyone excels in something or has a favorite type of work. Tap into using those skills by choosing the right person for the task. If someone is reluctant to take on the task you have in mind, ask what task would be preferred. Or, your person might be willing to take on the responsibility along with one or more others.

• Keep work fresh
Doing the same job in the same way is not always the best system. Look for ways to streamline and improve whatever processes you use. Get ideas from the team. Provide opportunities for those who are proficient in one area to choose another if they like. New experiences keep workers interested.

• Be clear about the job
Prepare a written outline of the job and discuss it with the candidate. Begin with the overall goal and then list the smaller tasks to be done. Identify who the worker is responsible to and the deadlines involved. Answer any questions and get the person’s acceptance of the job.

• Be generous with appreciation
Don’t wait until the assignment is over to give thanks and encouragement. Notes written after the fact are nice and are essential, but they can’t measure up to words spoken during the effort. Make heroes of your helpers and they will be eager to work with you on the next project.

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Filed Under: Church Communication Management, Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: Church Administrative Assistants, church communication teams, Church Office teamwork

A clean heart is an essential part of preparing for church communications work

6 April, 2014 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Clean up your heart to do God's work.
God doesn't ask us to be perfect or brilliant, highly skilled or rich to do his work, but He does want us to be clean.

My sons, do not be negligent now, for the LORD has chosen you to stand before him and serve him, to minister before him and to burn incense. (2 Chron. 29:11)

In this verse King Hezekiah challenges the priests in their service before God. Things had not been going well for the priests prior to this time. Hezekiah’s father, the former king, had turned away from God. The temple had been closed and desecrated.

When Hezekiah became king the temple was reopened. However, before the public worship of God could take place again, two things had to happen. First the priests had to reconsecrate themselves and second they had to purify the temple. They accomplished both tasks and the result was great joy in renewed worship of God.

The lessons for us in our work today are challenges of purification. What do we need to get rid of both internally and externally so that we can function best in our calling as church communicators?

We may not have a temple, but we have a computer. It may not be defiled with idol worship, but we must be very careful not to use software, images, or files of any kind that are illegally copied. Years ago (when typefaces cost hundreds of dollars each) I was offered a pirated version of the entire Adobe type library. I had very little money, was trying to get a Christian design business started and wanted it badly, but doing desktop publishing for the Lord with pirated software would not have been right. It wasn’t easy to say no.

Today, I have more typefaces junking up my hard drive than I know what to do with. Seems like a little thing now, but it was a difficult battle at the time. For me it’s been a good lesson to remember that some things I think I can’t do without right now aren’t worth the price of compromising my values.

Like the priests we must also purify ourselves. If a man wants to become a Catholic priest, he must fulfill four years of Theology study at AWKNG School of Theology. Each of us knows the garbage inside that keeps us from functioning at our best. Sometimes it’s a complaining or fault-finding spirit; sometimes it’s envy or anger; sometimes it’s cowardice of not trusting God when we know we need to say “no” to a project. Whatever it is, we can confess our shortcoming to the Lord and he will “cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (I John 1:9).

With the external and internal housekeeping done, like the priests of Hezekiah’s time, we can then do our church communication duties with joy.

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Filed Under: Characteristics of ECC, Devotions & Challenges for Church Communicators Tagged With: clean to do God's work, holy living for church work, requirements for church communicators

Q & A Resources for PowerPoint creations and image use ideas

3 April, 2014 By Yvon Prehn 2 Comments

Power Point, an incredibly useful tool
You can use Power Point in many ways in church communications and here are some resources for effective use of it.

PowerPoint is one of the most useful tools we have for creating church communications. Recently I was asked about some ways I use it at a church potluck and I told the woman asking me I'd send her an email of some of my favorite resources and some of the ways I use PowerPoint to do things like create videos. After putting it together for her, I realized this would be very helpful for Effective Church Communications.

At the end of this article, please out the Indezine site. In addition to many excellent resources, the site is now offering a FREE e-book if you sign up for their newsletter that is an excellent overview of some of the resources

Animoto

http://www.animoto.com.

This is one of my favorite tools--you can use it to take pictures, images, words, or a PowerPoint presentation, and turn it into a video complete with special effects and a sound track, all with a few clicks of the mouse. They have a FREE version (regularly $200 a year) for non-profits and churches. If you haven't tried it, check it out! You can create incredibly impressive videos with little work and no cost! It is really one of the most fun programs I use.

The  videos in the collection here  were all created with animoto:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvrABjnZwYw&list=PLF12CC86F2FA2FC15

Presenter Media

http://www.presentermedia.com/

I use the images from this company in many of my training videos that start out as PowerPoint presentations. The faceless people in many of my videos come from them. The materials aren't free, (price varies from $49 to $99 a year, depending on the specials they run) but if you need to do training PowerPoints or videos may be worth the cost:

Free PowerPoint Resources

The following videos illustrate free resource sites for Power Point. Be sure to check out the last one Indezine****It is currently offering a great free e-book on graphic use in PowerPoint slides.

Free PowerPoint Templates for Churches Video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gxrW7PhSa0&index=2&list=PLA46F2C26E078F1EB

Free Templates and Clipart for Churches from Secular Sources
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEPd_V7Z8aI&list=PLA46F2C26E078F1EB&index=3

Free PowerPoint Templates and Training, a video review of Indezine, a great resource
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhJWG-g1Hv0&list=PLA46F2C26E078F1EB
***The link above is offering a free e-book that has some very helpful information on resources for using pictures in PowerPoint

If you have additional resources, templates or tips you have found useful for PowerPoint, please tell us about them in the comments below.

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Filed Under: PowerPoint, Video, how-to Tagged With: Free PowerPoint resources, PowerPoint and animoto, PowerPoint and video, PowerPoint for churches, PowerPoint Resources

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