According to research conducted by Barna, 91 percent of non-Christians believe that the church isn't sensitive to their needs. Why? Jargon ("insider terms"), incomplete information, information that doesn't address daily concerns.
Tip: Design and write "for the least" among potential visitors. Avoid "churchy" language.
If your site contains a lot of churchy language, start editing now.
Source: http://www.pastors.com/
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
Blogs influence traditional web sites
"Increasingly, web users also expect ordinary websites to have blog-like fresh comment and news too."
- Christian Blog Evangelism
A church with a small web site may do well to use a Blog plus a few static pages. The free Google Blogger now lets you add up to 10 static pages to a blog.
If your church has bought a hosting package that includes RSS feeds , consider adding a teasers to them on the home page to blogs (pastor, youth director, ..)
If you have static web pages for your main site, consider adding home page links to any dynamic content you may have -- such as blogs or photos.
- Christian Blog Evangelism
A church with a small web site may do well to use a Blog plus a few static pages. The free Google Blogger now lets you add up to 10 static pages to a blog.
If your church has bought a hosting package that includes RSS feeds , consider adding a teasers to them on the home page to blogs (pastor, youth director, ..)
If you have static web pages for your main site, consider adding home page links to any dynamic content you may have -- such as blogs or photos.
Labels:
blogs,
content,
photos,
planning,
social networking
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Desktop publishing basics
Putting out an appealing newsletter, brochure or other print publication for your church is often not simple or easy. Most people need some level of training on how to do it well.
Your information needs to be in an easy-to-read, eye-catching format. Good publication design delivers news and messages effectively. Take the time to understand and follow simple fundamentals of design. The end result will be a publication that is easy to quickly understand and easy on the eyes.
[reference: Technology for Ministry, UMCom]
Your information needs to be in an easy-to-read, eye-catching format. Good publication design delivers news and messages effectively. Take the time to understand and follow simple fundamentals of design. The end result will be a publication that is easy to quickly understand and easy on the eyes.
Layout basics
It may be fun to use the variety of colors, graphics and fonts offered with many design tools, but remember tha readability is the most important aspect of your piece. Due to the web, more people now "scan" even written text rather trhan read it. So we need to adopt new techniques to help people find what they want and read it easily.Easy-to-read pubs use
- A serif font for text and a sans serif font for headlines and subheads. Serif fonts have extra strokes at the end of the lines that form the letters; sans serif fonts have no extra strokes.
- A type size of 11 points or larger.
- Left-aligned margins, not justified.
- Text in columns and boxes -- not spread wide across a page.
- Grouping of related stories on a page.
- Graphics or photos that visually describe the story and draw interest. It's OK to use up to three fonts in your publication — one for text, one for headlines and one for your banner or nameplate. But suing more than three can cause clutter and look "circusy".
Headlines
Headlines (and even subheads) need to quickly tell tyhe reader what the text is about. Avoid "cute" headlines or ones that allude to the text but don't rteally describe what's important. Articles at the top of a page normally should be larger than those lower on the page. Size and placement relates to importance.White space
White space — the space not occupied by text or graphics — makes the page easier to read. Don't avoid it -- treat is as your friend. Cramming a page full makes it look like a tough read. Some people avoiud tough reads. Use white space on all four margins, between columns and within text itself.Simplify text
A rule of thumb when writing for the web is to try to delete 50% or more of the existing text. After boiling down the text to the essentials, look for "lists" of things and change them to bullets. Then break up the longer articles with subheads.[reference: Technology for Ministry, UMCom]
Labels:
church bulletins,
church newsletters,
design,
graphics,
photos,
usability,
writing
Monday, February 22, 2010
New, smaller PDF Reader
Adobe products, even the free Adobe Reader, are getting attacked pretty heavily these days and experts say it's likely to continue. The security patches are coming out much too frequently for my piece of mind. So what's a great solution if your church needs a free PDF reader? Nuance PDF Reader.
Nuance now offers the free PDF Reader. It's much smaller, fast, and full of features. I have been waiting for this to come out, as my favorite PDF editing software is from Nuance also -- PDF Converter Professional. I've been testing PDF Reader ever since it was announced a few days ago. Last night I removed Adobe Reader from my computer.
Keep your church office and personal computer safer -- remove Adobe Reader and use Nuance PDF Reader instead.
PDF Converter Professional -- Acrobat replacement
Nuance was originally called ScanSoft. They are well-known for the industry-leading OminPage OCR software and for the PaperPort software that comes with some scanners. They also produce the Dragon NaturallySpeaking speech recognition software. I first learned about Nuance when researching a replacement for Adobe Acrobat for work. I am very enthusiastic about the quality and features of Nuance PDF Converter Professional. Their conversion from PDF back to an Office type file such as MS Word, is exceptionally good.
I recommend replacing Adobe Acrobat if not for the security considerations as well as pricing. My replacement is PDF Converter Professional from Nuance.
The Nuance folks tell me that Microsoft hired them to provide the file-to-PDF converter for Microsoft Office ... you may notice a "printer" called "DocuCom" or "DocuCom PDF driver" -- that's done by Nuance. Out of that PDF Converter program grew PDF Converter Professional, a full-blown, powerful PDF editor as well as converter.
PDF Converter Professional is much less expensive that Adobe Acrobat and has the features that businesses and churches need. Why pay the outrageous amount Adobe asks for Acrobat? Even with a church discount through the UMC TechShop, Acrobat is twice as expensive as PDF Converter Professional.
Nuance now offers the free PDF Reader. It's much smaller, fast, and full of features. I have been waiting for this to come out, as my favorite PDF editing software is from Nuance also -- PDF Converter Professional. I've been testing PDF Reader ever since it was announced a few days ago. Last night I removed Adobe Reader from my computer.
Keep your church office and personal computer safer -- remove Adobe Reader and use Nuance PDF Reader instead.
PDF Converter Professional -- Acrobat replacement
Nuance was originally called ScanSoft. They are well-known for the industry-leading OminPage OCR software and for the PaperPort software that comes with some scanners. They also produce the Dragon NaturallySpeaking speech recognition software. I first learned about Nuance when researching a replacement for Adobe Acrobat for work. I am very enthusiastic about the quality and features of Nuance PDF Converter Professional. Their conversion from PDF back to an Office type file such as MS Word, is exceptionally good.
I recommend replacing Adobe Acrobat if not for the security considerations as well as pricing. My replacement is PDF Converter Professional from Nuance.
The Nuance folks tell me that Microsoft hired them to provide the file-to-PDF converter for Microsoft Office ... you may notice a "printer" called "DocuCom" or "DocuCom PDF driver" -- that's done by Nuance. Out of that PDF Converter program grew PDF Converter Professional, a full-blown, powerful PDF editor as well as converter.
PDF Converter Professional is much less expensive that Adobe Acrobat and has the features that businesses and churches need. Why pay the outrageous amount Adobe asks for Acrobat? Even with a church discount through the UMC TechShop, Acrobat is twice as expensive as PDF Converter Professional.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Making websites that are evangelistic
Websites offer us incredible power to share the Good News. But to make use of this potential, we must understand
these six issues:
these six issues:
- The nature of the Internet -- It is a pull medium.
- There is no automatic audience for any website.
- There are only three ways that someone will find a site:
- using a search engine
- following a link from another website
- by a personal recommendation – in an email, on a contact card, in print, TV/radio etc.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Selecting a web hosting service
Web Designs From Scratch has a near-realtime comparisons of hosting services' uptime and support.
This could prove quite helpful in selecting a web host.
While checking out web hosting companies recently, I noticed that it pays to carefully compare options by any one company. In one case, a Linux server hosting would get you a free blog or two compared to the Windows server option. But then you lost a feature or two that got offered with Windows hosting.
Also, make sure you check on whether web statistics come with a package or not. You'll want the stats to help you learn where you are effective, what people are searching for, and more.
This could prove quite helpful in selecting a web host.
While checking out web hosting companies recently, I noticed that it pays to carefully compare options by any one company. In one case, a Linux server hosting would get you a free blog or two compared to the Windows server option. But then you lost a feature or two that got offered with Windows hosting.
Also, make sure you check on whether web statistics come with a package or not. You'll want the stats to help you learn where you are effective, what people are searching for, and more.
Sunday, January 03, 2010
Church web site templates
Finding really good web page templates for your church can be frustrating. You want one that is strict XHMTL 4.01, pure CSS -- no use of tables for layout, one that is attractive, yet a look that accurately reflects your congregation.
Depending on your web hosting service, you may not be able to change the menu links area other than to specify the name and URL for the existing "buttons" or links. Make sure to check out all aspects of any website building software offered by a web host.
Using stock photos may add eye appeal but actually be misleading. Here are a few of the templates I've been checking out when looking for a possible new, reasonably priced web hosting solution.
Depending on your web hosting service, you may not be able to change the menu links area other than to specify the name and URL for the existing "buttons" or links. Make sure to check out all aspects of any website building software offered by a web host.
Using stock photos may add eye appeal but actually be misleading. Here are a few of the templates I've been checking out when looking for a possible new, reasonably priced web hosting solution.
- http://church-webs.com/new-templates.htm
- http://readychurchwebs.com/rcw/startdesign.htm?catid=religion
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