This deck was shared on Thursday, July 13, 2017 as the seventh live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 22, 2017 as the fourth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 15, 2017 as the third live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, July 6, 2017 as the sixth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 29, 2017 as the fifth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 8, 2017 as the second live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 1, 2017 as the first live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
Do your church’s communication efforts lead people closer to the Gospel? Or is nothing more than just announcements and prayer requests? Learn the basics of a complete communication strategy that will focus your efforts, personalize your messages, and encourage action from your audience. This session will be an overview of the free 14-week course offered by Concordia Technology Solutions.
This deck was shared on Thursday, July 20, 2017 as the eighth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 22, 2017 as the fourth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 15, 2017 as the third live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, July 6, 2017 as the sixth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 29, 2017 as the fifth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 8, 2017 as the second live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, June 1, 2017 as the first live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
Do your church’s communication efforts lead people closer to the Gospel? Or is nothing more than just announcements and prayer requests? Learn the basics of a complete communication strategy that will focus your efforts, personalize your messages, and encourage action from your audience. This session will be an overview of the free 14-week course offered by Concordia Technology Solutions.
This deck was shared on Thursday, July 20, 2017 as the eighth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This second session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Personal Profiles and how they are used in a communications strategy.
This third session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Journey Maps and how they are used in a communications strategy.
This fourth session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Content Maps and how they are used in a communications strategy.
This document discusses strategies for a church's online presence and communication with audiences. It describes using a website as the home base for driving conversions through forms. The media empire uses blogs, videos and emails to provide long-form content of value to different persona groups. Search engine optimization is also important to support the website as an outpost for organic search. The goal is to find personas and move them through stages to further engagement with content and actions that benefit the church.
This fifth session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on the Content Framework and way role Social Media plays in reaching your audience.
The document proposes a social media plan for Green Pines Baptist Church. It recommends cleaning up old Facebook pages and groups, creating guidelines for current groups, and approving any new groups or pages. It suggests having a main church Facebook page and limiting other groups to include "Green Pines Baptist Church" at the end of their title. It also recommends having a Twitter account for staff and leaders to connect with members and the community. Training resources like ProChurchTools and social media certification courses are mentioned. Having a social media coordinator is proposed to oversee pages and groups.
Attracting more visitors to your church - ACR straegiesDon Koehler
The document discusses how churches can attract more visitors by focusing on building relationships. It emphasizes that relationships are key, both in developing a personal relationship with God and connecting with others through small groups. While evangelism used to happen primarily through face-to-face interactions, many now build relationships online through social media. The document recommends that churches identify their strongest "relationship builder" like music or a pastor's sermons, then promote this on social media groups and platforms by engaging people who share related interests and driving them to the church website.
This deck was shared on Thursday, August 17, 2017 as the eleventh live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
A presentation at Social South that is uploaded and covers the philosophy of how and why church should use social media - what it will have to sacrifice and change to do so successfully.
This document provides guidance on creating an effective church website that engages both visitors and members. It outlines strategies for optimizing the website URL, utilizing members to promote the site, keeping the site simple, creating a strong first impression, clearly communicating basic information for visitors, introducing the pastor, including essential elements like worship times and location, and giving a clear invitation. It also discusses ways to engage members by giving them exclusive access, sharing relevant content, encouraging participation in groups, and personalizing mass communications. The overall message is that an effective church website needs to have a clear audience and purpose in its communication.
The Outreach Ministry Team discussed plans for a Stop Hunger Now event between April and September 2014. Carl will check on availability and assign a coordinator. They discussed increasing member participation in Outreach activities and building relationships with other faith communities. The budget was $8,000, with $2,800 allocated to Stop Hunger Now. They need to recruit more members, especially youth, to monthly meetings.
The Youth Ministry Team reviewed job applicants for a youth director position. They extended the application deadline and established a timeline for hiring with initial reviews, candidate selection, and interviews through May. They discussed replacing the current youth leaders and logistics for the new hire.
The Communications Ministry Team reviewed branding guidelines and suggestions for
This document discusses using social media in churches. It begins by outlining six major cultural shifts in the 21st century around authority, mobility, spirituality, structure, influence, and technology. It then discusses assumptions about social media and how it relates to these cultural shifts. The document outlines dangers and possibilities of social media use, defines common terms, and provides examples of effective usage and platform options for churches. It concludes by asking for questions.
This document discusses factors contributing to young adult dropout from church and proposes strategies to address it. It suggests the dropout problem stems from a lack of parental discipleship, incomplete youth conversions, and churches not having clear plans for making disciples. The document outlines an essential model for churches with four elements: simplify discipleship process, deepen biblical teaching, expect member commitment, and multiply outward focus. It advocates discipling youth through milestones and providing guidance through life transitions. The goal is for churches to develop proven plans that deepen faith and commitment.
Online ministry allows a Unitarian Universalist congregation to extend its principles and activities online. It facilitates connection, care, discussion, transparency, and outreach. Members share their beliefs, engage in social justice work, and participate in religious education online. Visitors can learn about the congregation through its online presence. Usage data shows high engagement from members and visitors, demonstrating that online ministry effectively strengthens and expands the congregation's work.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church as a global organisation is designed to place the local church in the driving seat when it comes to mission and leadership. Every 4-5 years (5 years globally) we elect administrators to serve the global movement to equip, resource and build the capacity of members towards mission.
In the run up to the 63rd Session of South England Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Luke Whyte, Leader of Templeway Church conducted a 30-day satirical campaign to be elected as president of the South England Conference and in the process; stimulated cross-generational dialogue and engagement in the workings of the church as an organisation, set out a compelling manifesto for change and highlighted some of the more subtle and insidious challenges within the cultures and dynamics of our church as an organisation.
In the eventuality of winning, Luke was fully prepared and ready to execute a clear mission and compelling vision. Although NEVER done before in the Seventh-day Adventist context, Luke Whyte created and presented his manifesto, all through social media. He solicited feedback, responded and clarified where necessary.
Here is that manifesto.
#luke4prezident
#LocalMissionGlobalVision
#Vision2020
The document summarizes the performance of a church's social media ministry over 2.5 years. Some key findings include:
- The site had over 175,000 total visits from over 80,000 unique visitors, with 95% from the US.
- The social media presence reaches far more people (potentially 37 times more) than the church's membership, establishing it as one of the largest UU digital presences.
- Content on services, programs, and sermons were most popular. Increased sharing on Facebook has boosted visits.
- The ministry plays an important role in outreach and engagement, and should be further integrated and supported across the church.
This is a sample strategic plan for a church that needs to promote spiritual growth within its membership and make connections with its local community organizations.
This document summarizes a presentation on using Facebook for Jewish education. It outlines key Facebook functionality like profiles, pages, groups and events that can be used for marketing, communications, and community building. It encourages reflecting on the educator's role in using Facebook and understanding how to craft content for the Facebook algorithm. The document provides tips on using photos, video, comments, tagging and questions to engage people and make content more discoverable through search and usernames. The next session will cover Twitter strategies for parent communication and professional learning.
An overview of the importance of children's ministry and how Pioneer Clubs can help churches reach the next generation. Please visit our website www.pioneerclubs.org or contact us at 1-800-694-2582 for more information.
The document discusses the life cycle of congregations and four organizing principles for congregational development: vision, relationships, programs, and management. It states that vision provides direction and energy, relationships attract new people and help current members grow spiritually, programs embody the vision and meet member needs, and management facilitates decision-making and supports the other principles. The life cycle stages shift from emphasizing vision and relationships to programs and management as congregations mature.
This second session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Personal Profiles and how they are used in a communications strategy.
This third session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Journey Maps and how they are used in a communications strategy.
This fourth session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Content Maps and how they are used in a communications strategy.
This document discusses strategies for a church's online presence and communication with audiences. It describes using a website as the home base for driving conversions through forms. The media empire uses blogs, videos and emails to provide long-form content of value to different persona groups. Search engine optimization is also important to support the website as an outpost for organic search. The goal is to find personas and move them through stages to further engagement with content and actions that benefit the church.
This fifth session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on the Content Framework and way role Social Media plays in reaching your audience.
The document proposes a social media plan for Green Pines Baptist Church. It recommends cleaning up old Facebook pages and groups, creating guidelines for current groups, and approving any new groups or pages. It suggests having a main church Facebook page and limiting other groups to include "Green Pines Baptist Church" at the end of their title. It also recommends having a Twitter account for staff and leaders to connect with members and the community. Training resources like ProChurchTools and social media certification courses are mentioned. Having a social media coordinator is proposed to oversee pages and groups.
Attracting more visitors to your church - ACR straegiesDon Koehler
The document discusses how churches can attract more visitors by focusing on building relationships. It emphasizes that relationships are key, both in developing a personal relationship with God and connecting with others through small groups. While evangelism used to happen primarily through face-to-face interactions, many now build relationships online through social media. The document recommends that churches identify their strongest "relationship builder" like music or a pastor's sermons, then promote this on social media groups and platforms by engaging people who share related interests and driving them to the church website.
This deck was shared on Thursday, August 17, 2017 as the eleventh live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
A presentation at Social South that is uploaded and covers the philosophy of how and why church should use social media - what it will have to sacrifice and change to do so successfully.
This document provides guidance on creating an effective church website that engages both visitors and members. It outlines strategies for optimizing the website URL, utilizing members to promote the site, keeping the site simple, creating a strong first impression, clearly communicating basic information for visitors, introducing the pastor, including essential elements like worship times and location, and giving a clear invitation. It also discusses ways to engage members by giving them exclusive access, sharing relevant content, encouraging participation in groups, and personalizing mass communications. The overall message is that an effective church website needs to have a clear audience and purpose in its communication.
The Outreach Ministry Team discussed plans for a Stop Hunger Now event between April and September 2014. Carl will check on availability and assign a coordinator. They discussed increasing member participation in Outreach activities and building relationships with other faith communities. The budget was $8,000, with $2,800 allocated to Stop Hunger Now. They need to recruit more members, especially youth, to monthly meetings.
The Youth Ministry Team reviewed job applicants for a youth director position. They extended the application deadline and established a timeline for hiring with initial reviews, candidate selection, and interviews through May. They discussed replacing the current youth leaders and logistics for the new hire.
The Communications Ministry Team reviewed branding guidelines and suggestions for
This document discusses using social media in churches. It begins by outlining six major cultural shifts in the 21st century around authority, mobility, spirituality, structure, influence, and technology. It then discusses assumptions about social media and how it relates to these cultural shifts. The document outlines dangers and possibilities of social media use, defines common terms, and provides examples of effective usage and platform options for churches. It concludes by asking for questions.
This document discusses factors contributing to young adult dropout from church and proposes strategies to address it. It suggests the dropout problem stems from a lack of parental discipleship, incomplete youth conversions, and churches not having clear plans for making disciples. The document outlines an essential model for churches with four elements: simplify discipleship process, deepen biblical teaching, expect member commitment, and multiply outward focus. It advocates discipling youth through milestones and providing guidance through life transitions. The goal is for churches to develop proven plans that deepen faith and commitment.
Online ministry allows a Unitarian Universalist congregation to extend its principles and activities online. It facilitates connection, care, discussion, transparency, and outreach. Members share their beliefs, engage in social justice work, and participate in religious education online. Visitors can learn about the congregation through its online presence. Usage data shows high engagement from members and visitors, demonstrating that online ministry effectively strengthens and expands the congregation's work.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church as a global organisation is designed to place the local church in the driving seat when it comes to mission and leadership. Every 4-5 years (5 years globally) we elect administrators to serve the global movement to equip, resource and build the capacity of members towards mission.
In the run up to the 63rd Session of South England Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Luke Whyte, Leader of Templeway Church conducted a 30-day satirical campaign to be elected as president of the South England Conference and in the process; stimulated cross-generational dialogue and engagement in the workings of the church as an organisation, set out a compelling manifesto for change and highlighted some of the more subtle and insidious challenges within the cultures and dynamics of our church as an organisation.
In the eventuality of winning, Luke was fully prepared and ready to execute a clear mission and compelling vision. Although NEVER done before in the Seventh-day Adventist context, Luke Whyte created and presented his manifesto, all through social media. He solicited feedback, responded and clarified where necessary.
Here is that manifesto.
#luke4prezident
#LocalMissionGlobalVision
#Vision2020
The document summarizes the performance of a church's social media ministry over 2.5 years. Some key findings include:
- The site had over 175,000 total visits from over 80,000 unique visitors, with 95% from the US.
- The social media presence reaches far more people (potentially 37 times more) than the church's membership, establishing it as one of the largest UU digital presences.
- Content on services, programs, and sermons were most popular. Increased sharing on Facebook has boosted visits.
- The ministry plays an important role in outreach and engagement, and should be further integrated and supported across the church.
This is a sample strategic plan for a church that needs to promote spiritual growth within its membership and make connections with its local community organizations.
This document summarizes a presentation on using Facebook for Jewish education. It outlines key Facebook functionality like profiles, pages, groups and events that can be used for marketing, communications, and community building. It encourages reflecting on the educator's role in using Facebook and understanding how to craft content for the Facebook algorithm. The document provides tips on using photos, video, comments, tagging and questions to engage people and make content more discoverable through search and usernames. The next session will cover Twitter strategies for parent communication and professional learning.
An overview of the importance of children's ministry and how Pioneer Clubs can help churches reach the next generation. Please visit our website www.pioneerclubs.org or contact us at 1-800-694-2582 for more information.
The document discusses the life cycle of congregations and four organizing principles for congregational development: vision, relationships, programs, and management. It states that vision provides direction and energy, relationships attract new people and help current members grow spiritually, programs embody the vision and meet member needs, and management facilitates decision-making and supports the other principles. The life cycle stages shift from emphasizing vision and relationships to programs and management as congregations mature.
The document discusses various strategies for developing and growing small groups within a church. It provides examples of different types of small groups, such as affinity groups based on common interests and covenant groups focused on Bible study. It also discusses strategies for getting more adults involved in small groups through church-wide initiatives that align small group curriculum with sermon themes. Additional tips include starting new groups through a small group booth or thematic short-term groups, and using community groups for pastoral care and outreach in a particular geographic region.
The document discusses various strategies for developing and growing small groups within a church. It provides examples of different types of small groups, such as affinity groups based on common interests and covenant groups focused on Bible study. The document also discusses strategies for getting more adults involved in small groups through church-wide initiatives that align small group curriculum with sermon themes. It suggests starting new groups through a small group booth or by having existing leaders launch and apprentice new groups. The document also discusses "community groups" as a larger small group option that can help transition people into smaller cells or provide a congregational experience.
At the Cedar Hill Church's August 14th Town Hall meeting, the Renewal Team provided a progress update. This update included a brief review of the recent Reveal Survey results and Listening Round table.
United Methodist Church: Agency ProposalDiana Herrera
The document outlines an integrated marketing campaign plan for the United Methodist Church (UMC) to attract millennial members. It includes an executive summary, analysis of UMC and the marketing challenge, market research findings on declining church membership among millennials, target personas, an experience map, marketing strategy overview, objectives, messaging platforms, creative concepts, and media plan. The goal is to make UMC relevant to millennials and communicate that their values provide spiritual fulfillment, community, and opportunities for philanthropic involvement.
The document discusses becoming a disciple-making church and outlines key aspects of discipleship according to Jesus' model. It emphasizes that discipleship is a lifelong commitment, not just a program or activity. True discipleship results in spiritual growth and character development rather than just knowledge acquisition. The document suggests churches should measure outcomes like spiritual maturity levels and number of mentoring relationships instead of just attendance and offerings.
A simple introductory course on Church Planting. The majority of the course notes presented here are based upon J. D. Payne's Planting Apostolic Churches
This document contains the magazine of the Covenant Community Methodist Church. It includes articles on moving to new responsibilities in an interview with Pastor Khoo Kay Huat as he prepares to leave CCMC, a profile of Pastor David Wee who has recently joined CCMC, and a call for submissions for a new CCMC logo. It also contains regular features on getting to know members, recipes, Bible studies, songs and more.
These are notes from a simple introductory course on Church Planting. The majority of the course notes presented here are based upon J. D. Payne’s Planting Apostolic Churches.
This document outlines principles for church planting and discusses the importance of evangelism, community, discipleship, and accountability. It argues that Christianity is a movement, not just a monument, and churches must be missional. True fellowship allows discipleship to naturally occur, but accountability is also needed to protect the community. The goal is for churches to become communities of disciples making more disciples.
This document outlines a youth ministry training session focused on developing programs that go both "deep" in spiritual growth and "wide" in evangelism. Participants are asked to introduce themselves and consider how to address youth who are apathetic, interested, or coachable spiritually. Suggestions are provided like assigning accountability partners, studying Scripture together, and field trips to motivate evangelism. The goal is for youth leaders to leave with a homework assignment to immediately apply something from the training in their ministry.
The document provides guidance on how to build connections within a Bible study group at different levels - as members, as ministers, and as missionaries. It suggests focusing on engaging with God's word, fellowship, prayer, care for one another, and living out the great commandment to love God and others. It also discusses indicators of connectedness like participation, preparation, sharing needs, and finding and following Christ. The overall message is that groups can become communities and be commissioned for mission by ministering to members, caring for one another, and helping members engage in ministry outreach.
Presentation given at the "Urban Academy" of The Desert Southwest Conference of The United Methodist Church. The content is Copyright 2009 by David & Kathy Lynn. All Rights Reserved
Youth ministry is tough- and helping youth develop biblical literacy can prove to be unique challenge. Join us as we explore creative ways to help youth encounter, engage, and respond to scripture.
Christian Youth Work In The Majority WorldSean Marston
Young people in the majority world are becoming part of the global youth culture. This often means that the churches they are part of don't know how to relate to them or work with them and so many are leaving the church. What are the issues involved and what are some ways to connect young people in the majority world back into church and their relationship with God?
This document contains responses from Rev. Curtis Boehm to questions about his preaching style, concerns about a congregation that uses exclusively contemporary Christian rock music, views on the importance of a permanent facility for a mission plant congregation, ways to address spiritual growth needs outside of Sunday service with a time-bound facility, approaches to communion in a mission plant setting, guidelines for confirmation, whether others would view him as a hands-on leader, barriers to reaching the lost in a traditional Lutheran setting, important characteristics of a successful mission plant, things he has learned about himself in ministry, and a note about his current situation with family and training.
The document discusses principles for ministry to young adults, including that relationships are more important than rituals, purpose is more important than activity, and significance trumps loyalty. It also discusses that most people feel their lives have meaning or purpose, though religiously unaffiliated people are more likely to lack a sense of purpose. Churches should consider how to reach the millennial generation. The document outlines guiding principles for missional-emergent ministry, including being interactive, engaging, and experiential.
The document provides an overview of Core Discipleship, a faith-based Christian organization that uses a discipleship process based on Jesus' inner circle of Peter, James, and John. The process involves three strands: large group gatherings, small groups, and core groups of 3-4 people. The core group workbook provides a 1-year curriculum to help believers mature through close, confidential relationships and multiplication of spiritual generations. The purpose of core groups is to fulfill the Great Commandment and Commission by teaching disciples to obey all that Jesus commanded and make more disciples.
Similar to Communicating in the Right Context | Session 7 - Church Online Communications Comprehensive (20)
This seventh session of the the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course focuses on Communications Calendars and establishing Campaign Templates.
Does your church have a communications strategy? Or are you just pursuing communication tactics? In other words, do you feel like you are communicating without a singular purpose?
Church communicators are given are hard task. They are asked to share messages with a large audience while operating under a small budget, and often this is done in a part-time or volunteer capacity. To top it all off, technology changes so fast that as soon as you figure out a tool, it changes.
Wouldn't it be great if you could focus on what's really important, regardless of the specific message or platform?
Join Peter Frank, Senior Manager of Marketing Technology at Concordia Technology Solutions, as he leads you through the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course.
Does your church have a communications strategy? Or are you just pursuing communication tactics? In other words, do you feel like you are communicating without a singular purpose?
Church communicators are given are hard task. They are asked to share messages with a large audience while operating under a small budget, and often this is done in a part-time or volunteer capacity. To top it all off, technology changes so fast that as soon as you figure out a tool, it changes.
Wouldn't it be great if you could focus on what's really important, regardless of the specific message or platform?
Join Peter Frank, Senior Manager of Marketing Technology at Concordia Technology Solutions, as he leads you through the free seven-week online Church Communications Strategy Training Course.
This document outlines a 5-step strategy for churches to use their church database software to minister to inactive members: 1) Track relevant member data like attendance and offerings; 2) Identify inactive members using tools like smart groups and reports; 3) Share inactive member lists with pastoral staff; 4) Follow up with inactive members through visits, emails or calls and log the interactions; 5) Keep other pastoral staff informed through notes, visits and permission-based access to member data. The goal is to better leverage existing software to empower outreach and reconnect inactive members with their church.
As people of all ages spend more time on social media than ever before, does a church website still have a place in your ministry? The short answer is “yes” (otherwise there wouldn’t be a need for this session), but the purpose of your website has certainly changed. Learn what you need to do to ensure your church website leverages the latest technology and extends the interactions that start on social media.
If you’re one of the 2 billion monthly active users on Facebook, you’ve probably already figured out that it has a lot of potential for outreach and most likely already have a page for your church. Take the next step by learning some of the advanced features of Facebook and trying some new strategies to grow your audience and reach your community.
There is no shortage of things to do, especially at a church. Rather than working more hours in the church office, learn how to use free online tools (Airtable, Asana, IFTTT, and Slack) that will help organize your work, automate your tasks, and communicate with your staff. This session will introduce you to these apps, show you how to get started, and provide some practical tips that you can use today.
This deck was shared on Thursday, August 31, 2017 as the final session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, August 24, 2017 as the thirteenth session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This document discusses how churches can effectively utilize social media. It recommends establishing a content framework to distribute content across communication channels and engage audiences. Social media is an important platform because that is where many audiences spend their time. The document outlines challenges of social media like its time commitment but emphasizes its importance for sharing information, building community, and providing education and inspiration to audiences. It advises churches to start using social media and try different content types to engage audiences.
This deck was shared on Thursday, August 3, 2017 as the tenth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
This deck was shared on Thursday, July 27, 2017 as the ninth live training session in the Church Online Communications Comprehensive, a 14-week online training course.
Story. Narrative. Engagement. These may be the marketing buzzwords of the day, but the Church has a history of engaging people through storytelling that is rooted in the best story: the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Whether you are using digital avenues, print, images, or videos, you will learn more about the elements of a story, how to find and use stories in your ministry context, and how to keep Jesus at the center of it all.
Volunteers can make or break an event or organization. Finding the right volunteers and keeping them is one of the most difficult things an organizer can do. We will talk through some tips and encouragements as you build up your volunteer base for your online presence.
Peter Frank discusses content frameworks for churches. A content framework is an organized strategy for distributing content across communication channels to guide an audience through a defined journey. It emphasizes moving audiences forward in their journey. The framework defines goals and desired movements, then creates engaging content for channels like websites, social media, email and videos to keep audiences progressing toward conversions. The key is not sending audiences backwards by ensuring each message provides a call to action moving them forward.
Community is not limited to the walls of your campus. Connect your congregation to the mission and ministry of your church online. Through videos, hashtags, and other social media platforms, your church can create an online community that connects the multigenerational members of your congregation.
Join Peter Frank in his second presentation of the day as he talks about the key ingredients of a communication plan. You’ll learn how to identify unique aspects of your congregation and turn them into effective, consistent pieces of communication that are shared with just the right people.
The document discusses emerging trends in church communications. It notes that communications are now seen as a key aspect of discipleship and spiritual growth rather than just an administrative function. Churches are investing more in communications positions and training for staff. There is a move away from large church-wide messaging towards targeted communications through smaller channels. Websites are being updated more frequently and livestreaming of services is becoming common. Video is also being used more for promotion and storytelling across social media platforms like Facebook.
AI Best Practices for Marketing HUG June 2024Amanda Farrell
During this presentation, the Nextiny marketing team reviews best practices when adopting generative AI into content creation. Join our HUG community to register for more events https://events.hubspot.com/sarasota/
From Hope to Despair The Top 10 Reasons Businesses Ditch SEO Tactics.pptxBoston SEO Services
From Hope to Despair: The Top 10 Reasons Businesses Ditch SEO Tactics
Are you tired of seeing your business's online visibility plummet from hope to despair? When it comes to SEO tactics, many businesses find themselves grappling with challenges that lead them to abandon their strategies altogether. In a digital landscape that's constantly evolving, staying on top of SEO best practices is crucial to maintaining a competitive edge.
In this blog, we delve deep into the top 10 reasons why businesses ditch SEO tactics, uncovering the pain points that may resonate with you:
1. Algorithm Changes: The ever-changing algorithms can leave businesses feeling like they're chasing a moving target. Search engines like Google frequently update their algorithms to improve user experience and provide more relevant search results. However, these updates can significantly impact your website's visibility and ranking if you're not prepared.
2. Lack of Results: Investing time and resources without seeing tangible results can be disheartening. The absence of immediate results often leads businesses to lose faith in their SEO strategies. It's important to remember that SEO is a long-term game that requires patience and consistent effort.
3. Technical Challenges: From site speed issues to complex metadata implementation, technical hurdles can be daunting. Overcoming these challenges is crucial for SEO success, as technical issues can hinder your website's performance and user experience.
4. Keyword Competition: Fierce competition for top keywords can make it hard to rank effectively. Businesses often struggle to find the right balance between targeting high-traffic keywords and finding less competitive, niche keywords that can still drive significant traffic.
5. Lack of Understanding of SEO Basics: Many businesses dive into the complex world of SEO without fully grasping the fundamental principles. This lack of understanding can lead to several issues:
Keyword Awareness: Failing to recognize the importance of keyword research and targeting the right keywords in content.
On-Page Optimization: Ignorance regarding crucial on-page elements such as meta tags, headers, and content structure.
Technical SEO Best Practices: Overlooking essential aspects like site speed, mobile responsiveness, and crawlability.
Backlinks: Not understanding the value of high-quality backlinks from reputable sources.
Analytics: Failing to track and analyze data prevents businesses from optimizing their SEO efforts effectively.
6. Unrealistic Expectations and Timeframe: Entrepreneurs often fall prey to the allure of quick fixes and overnight success. Unrealistic expectations can overshadow the reality of the time and effort needed to see tangible results in the highly competitive digital landscape. SEO is a long-term strategy, and setting realistic goals is crucial for success.
#SEO #DigitalMarketing #BusinessGrowth #OnlineVisibility #SEOChallenges #BostonSEO
Dive deep into the cutting-edge strategies we're employing to revolutionize our web presence in the age of AI-driven search. As Gen Z reshapes the digital realm, discover how we can bridge the generational divide. Unlock the synergistic power of PPC, social media, and SEO, driving unparalleled revenues for our projects.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era"" is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
Basic Management Concepts., “Management is the art of getting things done thr...DilanThennakoon
The managers achieve organizational objectives by getting work from
others and not performing in the tasks themselves.
Management is an art and science of getting work done through people.
It is the process of giving direction and controlling the various activities
of the people to achieve the objectives of an organization Management is a universal process in all organized, social and economic activities. Wherever
there is human activity there is management.
Management is a vital aspect of the economic life of man, which is an organized group activity. A
central directing and controlling agency is indispensable for a business concern. The productive
resources –material, labour, capital etc. are entrusted to the organizing skill, administrative ability
and enterprising initiative of the management. Thus, management provides leadership to a
business enterprise. Without able managers and effective managerial leadership the resources of
production remain merely resources and never become production. Management occupies such an
important place in the modern world that the welfare of the people and the destiny of the country
are very much influenced by it.
1.2 MEANING OF MANAGEMENT
Management is a technique of extracting work from others in an integrated and co-ordinated
manner for realizing the specific objectives through productive use of material resources.
Mobilising the physical, human and financial resources and planning their utilization for business
operations in such a manner as to reach the defined goals can be benefited to as management.
1.3 DEFINITION OF MANAGEMENT
Management may be defined in many different ways. Many eminent authors on the subject have
defined the term "management". Some of these definitions are reproduced below:
In the words of George R Terry - "Management is a distinct process consisting of planning,
organising, actuating and controlling performed to determine and accomplish the objectives by the
use of people and resources".
According to James L Lundy - "Management is principally the task of planning, co¬ordinating,
motivating and controlling the efforts of others towards a specific objective",
In the words of Henry Fayol - "To manage is to forecast and to plan, to organise, to command, to
co-ordinate and to control".
According to Peter F Drucker - "Management is a multipurpose organ that manages a business and
manages managers and manages worker and work".
In the words of J.N. Schulze - "Management is the force which leads, guides and directs an
organisation in the accomplishment of a pre-determined object".
In the words of Koontz and O'Donnel - "Management is defined as the creation and maintenance
of an internal environment in an enterprise where individuals working together in groups can
perform efficiently and effectively towards the attainment of group goals".
According to Ordway Tead - "Management is the process and agency which directs and guides the
operations of an organisation in realising of established aim
Did you know that while 50% of content on the internet is in English, English only makes up 26% of the world’s spoken language? And yet 87% of customers won’t buy from an English only website.
Uncover the immense potential of communicating with customers in their own language and learn how translation holds the key to unlocking global growth. Join Smartling CEO, Bryan Murphy, as he reveals how translation software can streamline the translation process and seamlessly integrate into your martech stack for optimal efficiency. And that's not all – he’ll also share some inspiring success stories and practical tips that will turbocharge your multilingual marketing efforts!
Key takeaways:
1. The growth potential of reaching customers in their native language
2. Tips to streamline translation with software and integrations to your tech stack
3. Success stories from companies that have increased lead generation, doubled revenue, and more with translation
Lily Ray - Optimize the Forest, Not the Trees: Move Beyond SEO Checklist - Mo...Amsive
Lily Ray, Vice President of SEO Strategy & Research at Amsive, explores optimizing strategies for sustainable growth and explores the impact of AI on the SEO landscape.
Top Strategies for Building High-Quality Backlinks in 2024 PPT.pdf1Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
As we move into 2024, the methods for building high-quality backlinks continue to evolve, demanding more sophisticated and strategic approaches. This presentation aims to explore the latest trends and proven strategies for acquiring high-quality backlinks that can elevate your SEO efforts.
Visit:- https://www.1solutions.biz/link-building-packages/
Embark on style journeys Indian clothing store denver guide.pptxOmnama Fashions
Finding the perfect "Indian Clothing Store Denver" is essential for those seeking vibrant, authentic, and culturally rich attire in the heart of Colorado. Denver, a city known for its diverse culture and eclectic fashion scene, offers a variety of options for those in search of traditional and contemporary Indian clothing. Whether you're preparing for a wedding, festival, or cultural event, or simply wish to incorporate the elegance and beauty of Indian fashion into your wardrobe, discovering the right store can make all the difference.
What Software is Used in Marketing in 2024.Ishaaq6
This paper explores the diverse landscape of marketing software, examining its pivotal role in modern marketing strategies. It provides a comprehensive overview of various types of marketing software tools and platforms essential for enhancing efficiency, optimizing campaigns, and achieving business objectives. Key categories discussed include email marketing software, social media management tools, content management systems (CMS), customer relationship management (CRM) software, search engine optimization (SEO) tools, and marketing automation platforms.
The paper delves into the functionalities, benefits, and examples of each type of software, highlighting their unique contributions to effective marketing practices. It explores the importance of integration and automation in maximizing the impact of these tools, addressing challenges and strategies for seamless implementation across different marketing channels.
Furthermore, the paper examines emerging trends in marketing software, such as AI and machine learning applications, personalization strategies, predictive analytics, and the ethical considerations surrounding data privacy and consumer rights. Case studies illustrate real-world applications and success stories of businesses leveraging marketing software to achieve significant outcomes in their marketing campaigns.
In conclusion, this paper provides valuable insights into the evolving landscape of marketing technology, emphasizing the transformative potential of software solutions in driving innovation, efficiency, and competitive advantage in today's dynamic marketplace.
This description outlines the scope, structure, and focus of the paper, giving readers a clear understanding of what to expect and why the topic of marketing software is important and relevant in contemporary marketing practices.
Boost Your Instagram Views Instantly Proven Free Strategies.pptxInstBlast Marketing
Join Performance Car Exclusive to drive the finest supercars, engineered with advanced materials and cutting-edge technology for peak performance.
https://instblast.com/instagram/free-instagram-views
Empowering Influencers: The New Center of Brand-Consumer Dynamics
In the current market landscape, establishing genuine connections with consumers is crucial. This presentation, "Empowering Influencers: The New Center of Brand-Consumer Dynamics," explores how influencers have become pivotal in shaping brand-consumer relationships. We will examine the strategic use of influencers to create authentic, engaging narratives that resonate deeply with target audiences, driving success in the evolved purchase funnel.
Boost Your Instagram Views Instantly Proven Free Strategies.InstBlast Marketing
Supercars use advanced materials and tech for top-speed performance. Join Performance Car Exclusive to experience driving excellence.
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Boost Your Instagram Views Instantly Proven Free Strategies.
Communicating in the Right Context | Session 7 - Church Online Communications Comprehensive
1. COMMUNICATING
IN THE RIGHT CONTEXT
Session Seven
Church Online Communications Comprehensive
How can we contextualize our message?
2. OUTLINE
Quick review of previous sessions
What is a content map?
What kind of “content” should be shared?
Why is content mapping important?
How do you complete a content map?
Specific examples of content mapping
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 4
3. PERSONAS
A persona is a fictional representation
of your target audience.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 5
Session Three
4. PERSONA EXAMPLES
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 6
MILLENNIAL MELODY
Melody is a single 25-year-old who was
actively involved in youth group as a
teen and is trying to regain a connection
to the church as an adult.
FORTY-ISH FRED
Fred is a 42-year-old father whose
schedule revolves around kids and
work. It’s a struggle to get him
involved in much outside worship.
OLDER ADULT ALICE
Alice is 72 years old and is just
starting to admit she needs
assistance with her health. She’s
fearful of losing her independence.
5. PERSONA PROFILES
A persona profile gives each persona
a name, a face, a personality, and a story.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 7
Session Four
6. PERSONA PROFILE EXAMPLE
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 8
Photo
Key Facts
Scales
Narrative
Bullet Points
Single Page
Differentiator
7. JOURNEY MAP
A journey map tracks your audience’s actions
from the first point of contact through the
completion of your desired church goals.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 9
Session Five
8. JOURNEY MAP EXAMPLE
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 10
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
9. MESSAGE MAP
A message map is a visual representation of your
primary messages developed for the sake of
aligning and prioritizing your communication.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 11
Session Six
11. WHAT IS A CONTENT MAP?
A content map represents the messages you
want to communicate with your audiences at
different stages of your journey map.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 13
Session Seven
12. CONTENT MAPPING
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 14
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
13. WHAT IS “CONTENT?”
“Content” is the message that is being delivered,
regardless of the vehicle.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 15
14. WHAT IS “CONTENT?”
The important thing is to make sure the
right message is getting to the right
person at the right time.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 16
15. HOW IS CONTENT DELIVERED?
Email
Website
Blog
Videos
Social
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 17
16. WHY IS CONTENT MAPPING IMPORTANT?
There is no such thing as
one-size-fits-all in communication.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 18
17. WHY IS CONTENT MAPPING IMPORTANT?
Content mapping takes what we do
naturally and puts it into a plan.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 19
18. WHY IS CONTENT MAPPING IMPORTANT?
It allows you to be specific and relevant
with the content you share.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 20
19. HOW DO YOU CRAFT A CONTENT MAP?
It’s a combination of your…
Journey Map
Personas
Message Map
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 21
20. HOW DO YOU GET STARTED?
1. List the Personas
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 22
21. PERSONA PROFILES
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 23
MILLENNIAL MELODY FORTY-ISH FRED OLDER ADULT ALICE
PREFERENCE?
FINANCES?
AVAILABILITY?
INTERESTS?
Social
Weekends
None
Fellowship
Email
Weeknights
Stable
Worship
Bulletin
Weekdays
Fixed
Fellowship
22. HOW DO YOU GET STARTED?
2. List the Stages
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 24
23. JOURNEY MAP EXAMPLE
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 25
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
24. HOW DO YOU GET STARTED?
3. Make a Matrix of Content
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 26
25. CONTENT MAPPING
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 27
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
26. HOW DO YOU GET STARTED?
4. Enter Your Current Communication
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 28
27. CONTENT MAPPING
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 29
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
28. HOW DO YOU GET STARTED?
5. Find the Gaps
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 30
29. CONTENT MAPPING
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 31
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
CONTENT
31. PERSONA EXAMPLES
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 33
MILLENNIAL MELODY
Melody is a single 25-year-old who was
actively involved in youth group as a
teen and is trying to regain a connection
to the church as an adult.
FORTY-ISH FRED
Fred is a 42-year-old father whose
schedule revolves around kids and
work. It’s a struggle to get him
involved in much outside worship.
OLDER ADULT ALICE
Alice is 72 years old and is just
starting to admit she needs
assistance with her health. She’s
fearful of losing her independence.
32. CONTENT MAPPING – MILLENNIAL MELODY
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 34
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
Invitation to
a discussion-
based Bible
Study with
coffee and
snacks
Offer free
meals at a 12
week
evening
class
Details on
growth of
faith through
worship
Invitation to
worship with
people your
age and
recharge for
the week
Encourage
participation
in small-
group Bible
studies
33. PERSONA EXAMPLES
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 35
MILLENNIAL MELODY
Melody is a single 25-year-old who was
actively involved in youth group as a
teen and is trying to regain a connection
to the church as an adult.
FORTY-ISH FRED
Fred is a 42-year-old father whose
schedule revolves around kids and
work. It’s a struggle to get him
involved in much outside worship.
OLDER ADULT ALICE
Alice is 72 years old and is just
starting to admit she needs
assistance with her health. She’s
fearful of losing her independence.
34. CONTENT MAPPING – FORTY-ISH FRED
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 36
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
Information
about child
care and
length of
Bible study
Include
families at a
12 week
Sunday
morning
class
Share
methods of
support for
families
Information
on the
importance
of raising a
family in the
church
Invitation to
a lecture-
based Bible
study with
childcare
provided
35. PERSONA EXAMPLES
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 37
MILLENNIAL MELODY
Melody is a single 25-year-old who was
actively involved in youth group as a
teen and is trying to regain a connection
to the church as an adult.
FORTY-ISH FRED
Fred is a 42-year-old father whose
schedule revolves around kids and
work. It’s a struggle to get him
involved in much outside worship.
OLDER ADULT ALICE
Alice is 72 years old and is just
starting to admit she needs
assistance with her health. She’s
fearful of losing her independence.
36. CONTENT MAPPING – FORTY-ISH FRED
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 38
ATTENDED
FELLOWSHIP
EVENT
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
FIRST TIME
ATTENDED
BIBLE
STUDY
STARTED
NEW MEMBER
CLASS
BECAME
CONFIRMED
MEMBER
ATTENDED
WORSHIP
REGULARLY
ATTENDED
BIBLE STUDY
REGULARLY
PROSPECT VISITOR
POTENTIAL
MEMBER
PRE-
MEMBER
NEW
MEMBER
ENGAGED
MEMBER
Welcome to
a fellowship
after Bible
Study
Invitation to
a 12-week
weekday
morning
class
Information
on care
provided for
the aging
Details on
transportation
assistance
Invitation to
a discussion-
based Bible
study
38. SUMMARY – CONTENT MAPPING
It’s all about getting the right message
to the right person at the right time.
It’s simply documenting something that
we do naturally in conversations.
It’s better to start implementing than to
wait until everything is place.
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 40
42. NEXT LIVE TRAINING SESSION
Making the Most of Each
Communication Channel
Next Thursday, July 20 at 11:30 a.m. CDT
/ConcordiaTechnology
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 44
43. SCHEDULE
Church Online Communications Comprehensive 45
Jul 20 | Making the Most of Each Communication Channel
Jul 27 | Building a Great Website for Church Communications*
Aug 3 | Establishing a Communication Hub for Your Church
Aug 10 | Utilizing Social Media in the Church to the Fullest
Aug 17 | Understanding Search Engine Optimization
Aug 24 | Saving Time in Your Online Communications
Aug 31 | Sharing Excitement about Your Communication Strategy
*Presentation may be recorded