Monday, November 16, 2009

Creating a Church Marketing Plan

This online resource from the Methodist Church takes churches through the process of creating a church marketing plan. Learn how to improve how you communicate with the people you want to reach.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Albino Killings in Africa

I just watched an eye-opening report on 20/20 about Albinoism. This aspect of the story - killings and mutilations of Tanzanians with Albinoism to sell their limbs to witchdoctors - is heartbreaking.
Link

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Find a Missionary blog

Find a missionary blog in this directory of more than 475.

SonLight Power, inc

SonLight Power establishes electricity in poor communities as a testimony of the light Christ brings to a dark world. Neat missions strategy.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Many children unsupervised after school

29 percent of Oklahoma’s students are unsupervised after they leave school, and another 12 percent are in the care of older siblings. 41 percent of parents of children not enrolled in after-school programs would enroll their children in such a program if one were available.

Link

Monday, October 5, 2009

Missional hermeneutic

Brian Russell offers this guide to reading the Bible with a missional hermeneutic. The more you understand the biblical basis for missions, the better you can communicate it to others - and market missions.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Google Wave is coming!

Google Wave launches in less than 24 hours. It's a new, real-time communication platform that the web has been buzzing about since Google first announced it. It's part email, part Wiki, part instant messaging, part something we've never seen before. Does it have use within the missions community?

Effective Presentations

Phil Prior is head of marketing for Wycliffe Bible Translators in Buckinghamshire, England. Here are notes from a PowerPoint training session he did earlier this week.

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Barna Group: Jesus' Health Care Plan

"As we think about the elements embedded in the national debate, perhaps each of us should be asking ourselves a few simple questions. What kinds of people within your realm of influence need health care assistance – and how do you respond? How do you figure out who to help – and who to serve them in partnership with? ...How do you decide when and how often to invest yourself in helping poor people who have health needs? What limitations do you place on the kind of health care assistance you offer to the needy? What gifts, talents, and resources can you be more aggressive at applying to the health care needs of the poor?"

- The Barna Group, Jesus' Health Care Plan

Avoiding communication failure

This is good advice for anyone involved in church outreach or marketing. It relates to a conversation I had with friends last night, when we said Christians need to stop saying Christianity isn't a religion. It's untrue, and it only makes sense to people who attend or used to attend church.

Phil Prior, the director of marketing for Wycliffe UK: "Lesson for today: If you are going to send a message, use a language that the recipient is going to understand."

Link

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Ways to make your website more social

Ministry is all about relationships, whether you are trying to win someone to Christ, disciple a believer, or gain a financial supporter. Social media reinforces your real-life efforts to connect with people. Mashable suggests 7 ways to make news sites more social, some of which can be applied to missions groups and missionaries:
  1. Feature prominent links to your Facebook, Twitter, and other social media accounts on your blog or website
  2. Include your Twitter updates or Facebook stream on your blog or website
  3. Live blog events your missions organization is hosting
  4. Use Facebook Connect or similar tools to allow people to interact with each other on your blog or website
  5. Include share buttons on your blog or website so people can share your content with others

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Writing for the Web

You shouldn't post a 2,000 word manifesto on your blog because no one will read it. Instead, keep your articles short and to the point. Here are 5 tips on writing for the web from Mashable.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Is the U.S. turning Hindu?

"But recent poll data show that conceptually, at least, we are slowly becoming more like Hindus and less like traditional Christians in the ways we think about God, our selves, each other, and eternity." - Newsweek: U.S. Views on God and Life and Turning Hindu

Friday, August 21, 2009

5 tips for promoting your ministry using social media

Mashable offers 5 tips for promoting non-profits using social media. Apply them to your ministry:
  1. Use social media to converse with financial partners and those you are trying to reach.
  2. Keep your accounts up-to-date, posting regularly.
  3. Personalize your ministry by focusing on the people, not the organization.
  4. Encourage people to share what you post with others in their social networks.
  5. Encourage everyone in your organization to use social media; establish a social media policy for employees\members, but don't prohibit use.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Update Twitter and Facebook Fan page simultaneously

You can now update your Twitter account from your Facebook Fan page. Save a step if you're posting the same content in both places and automate it today.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Build your church through Facebook

Jim Wilkes, pastor of Journey Community Church in Cleveland, Ohio, shares how he
used internet-based viral marketing campaigns to attract members of the
community to his church and the opportunities he had to pastor people because of
that.

- How to Build your Church through Facebook

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Integrity Matters

Over on the Church Marketing Sucks blog, author Anne Jackson responds to a question about how churches can ensure they have effective marketing and communications without burning staff out. In her response, Anne writes about the importance of integrity in church communications. She tells the story of a time she refused to design a mailer for a church because they insisted on projecting an image of their church that wasn't true. She lost the job as a result, but she kept her integrity.

This topic resonates with me because of Christians who have recently accused me of slapping photos of children on promotional materials to raise funds for missions the easy way. Our missions department does have a humanitarian ministry that meets the physical needs of many children, but we are careful to not convey a message that isn't true. If an offering isn't going to meet physical needs, we don't use images or language that would convey a lie. To do so, as she writes, would be a sacrifice of integrity incongruent with a holy life.

In addition to the overwhelming spiritual reasons to not mislead people about your ministry, such a strategy is also likely to backfire. Misleading your audience will confuse them. They may not recognize that the materials are for your ministry, or they may begin to associate your ministry with something else. Moreover, as your audience begins to discover that you have misled them, you will lose their trust. Once you have lost trust, good luck raising funds or recruiting volunteers.

Yes, a dishonest approach to fund raising may temporarily meet your needs. But it's not worth the long term consequences - to your ministry's credibility or your personal integrity. I find it interesting, too, that Anne suggests that dishonesty in church communications is one way to lead to staff burnout. If you don't want to burn out, don't lie.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Are goals just great ideas, while budgets are financial needs?

In my organization, we set an annual fundraising goal for our general missions offering. The goal is promoted throughout the denomination, with the hope people will be motivated to reach the goal. Regional groups of churches set a goal as well, and local churches and individuals are encouraged to set goals, too. We've even used the goals concept in a lot of our past promotional materials. An annual theme once challenged people to "press toward the goal" (Phillipians 3:14), and a video another year used soccer to generate some excitement about making goals.

We set a goal for the offering because that's the way we have always done it. But as Seth Godwin points out, we also set goals because they challenges us and provide a way to measure success. It is also reasonable effective, as we usually reach the goal.

Yet, we didn't meet the goal in 2008. It's easy to blame the economy, but I know of at least one ministry that raised its full budget. The Christian radio station Air1 initially fell short during their fall pledge drive. They did an additional end-of-the-year appeal, asking people to donate $100 so they could be "fully funded" in 2009. The DJs continually refered to the amount they needed to raise as their budget, but once, he slipped and called it a goal.

Almost immediately, he corrected himself, explaining: "It's not just a goal that would be nice to meet. It's a real financial need. It's our budget for 2009, and we need to be fully funded. Otherwise, we won't be able to do the ministry we have planned." By the end of the campaign, they had raised their full budget, and yet people still continued to call and donate.

His comment has stayed with me and caused to rethink our reliance on the word goals. I shared the idea with the ministry directors of our organization, but I'm curious what you think as well. Are fundraising goals just amounts that it would be nice to have, while budgets are the money a group needs?

Friday, January 9, 2009

Starving kids - making marketing missions easy?


Every so often, a colleague tells me it's easy to market missions. It's always someone from another department at our headquarters; they resent the amount of money we raise every year for missions because their fund raising efforts don't yield the same amount. While I know they mean well, I find it particularly appalling that the complaints often seem to include this argument: "You have it easy. You can slap a photo of a starving kid on the brochure, and voila, people give."

That argument fails to notice the obvious - there really are starving children in the world. I don't feel guilty for advocating on their behalf to concerned Christians. The argument also fails to take into account the vast amount of money spent on ministry in America. While our world missions department may raise more funds than one of our departments devoted to ministry in America, the combined budgets of the American ministries' departments far exceeds ours.

Of course, I do understand their heart. It can be difficult to raise funds for legitimate ministries in America, particularly if others are advocating for more needy parts of the world simultaneously. I would, however, like to a point out a few of the challenges unique to marketing world missions.
  1. People are inclined to care more about the needs of people like themselves and closer to home. It's human nature to identify more with the needs of someone like yourself. The challenge of marketing missions is to get people, who are often ignorant about the world's needs, to care about those who are truly foreign.
  2. Christians are motivated to give to missions for different reasons. Some are likely to give to humanitarian causes like feeding children, but others want to give to ministries they feel are more directly involved in preaching, teaching, and converting adults. When an overseas ministry isn't focused on humanitarian causes, photos of hungry children are not only misleading, they can alienate the very donor most likely to support the ministry.
  3. The needs of the world are great and complex. Raising funds for America is comparatively easier because the task is more easily defined and explained. The varied political, economical, and religious situations around the world make it much harder to explain how contributions will be used. Moreover, since the needs around the world are so great, it's easy for potential donors to feel as if their money won't make a difference; it's just a drop in an ocean of need. They are naturally inclinded to keep the money closer to home, where they can personally see the difference it makes (see my first point).
If I know one thing about promoting missions, it is that it is difficult. Simply put, it requires the help of God. Getting people to care about spreading the Gospel around the world is the work of God's Holy Spirit, however, He has always chosen to use people. I am grateful to be one of them, and I don't expect it to be easy.