Archive - June, 2009

5 (useful) links #10

Five websites and online resources to inspire, inform and enthuse.

  1. So, you want to be a Gmail ninja? Tips and shortcuts for making the most of your (g)mail.
  2. He Died. A simple site – a (very enthusiastic) gospel presentation on video.
  3. Internet World Stats. “an International website featuring up to date world Internet Usage, Population Statistics and Internet Market Research Data, for over 233 individual countries and world regions”.
  4. Re:Train. The Resurgence Training Centre opens its doors for students in 2010.
  5. Google Flipper. “a new visual method of ‘flipping’ through Google News.” h/t Switched On Media.

Promoting Worthy – a worship night

At Church by the Bridge on 31 July, we will be holding a worship night. It’s called Worthy.

Below is a short (simple) video I put together to promote the night at church, and on our website. It was created using Keynote and a stock image from iStockphoto. I then uploaded it to Vimeo, for simple distribution and embedding. The tools are out there to create useful (if not mindblowing) visuals to accompany or promote church activities. Give it a go, have a play, and share what you come up with!

If you’re in Sydney on 31 July, why not come along to Worthy. Let’s worship Jesus – he is worthy.

Balance Beam by Francis Chan

10 reasons to throw out your paper diary

Do you still go down to the newsagent at the end of each year to pick up your copy of next year’s Collins Debden diary? Converting to an online calendar is (at least from where I’m standing) a no-brainer. Using an online calendar saves a huge amount of time, but also provides great tools for maximising productivity and collaborating with others. Here are 10 reasons why you need to throw out your paper diary:

1.    Plan for the future

Most paper diaries last for 12 months (although, in an effort to sell more merchandise, the Twilight book/movie machine recently released an 18-month calendar!). When the diary runs out, you need to spend hours adding birthdays, anniversaries, staff meetings, etc into the new diary. With an online calendar you can just copy and paste.

2.    Set up recurring events

Even better, if an event takes place on a regular schedule (e.g. a staff meeting each Monday from 9-11am), it takes just a couple of clicks to set-up an event to recur as often as you would like it to. This saves the effort of writing in the details of staff meetings to every week of your diary (or birthdays, Bible study or whatever else you do or need to remember on a regular basis).

OnlineCalendar1

3.    Change recurring events

Regardless of how well organised you are, plans change. The ease of creating recurring events also means that if the details of an event change (e.g. the day or time of staff meeting), you can easily change the details for all future events with just a couple of clicks (saving you the time of crossing out the old details, and then adding in the new details).

4.    Collaborate with others

At Church by the Bridge, the staff use Google Calendar to manage church-wide events and bookings for the church and other church buildings. This enables staff to easily see what rooms are being used in a week, and avoids (or tries to avoid) double-bookings. This saves multiple emails back and forth, e.g. “is anyone using the Hub next Monday night?”.

5.    Share specific calendars

It’s easy to decide who you would like to share calendars with. For example, you can create a calendar and make it public (i.e. share it with the world), or choose particular people who can view or edit it – e.g. the whole staff team or specific lay people.

Share specific calendars

6.    Embed calendars on a website

For a simple solution for displaying a calendar on your church website, create a calendar using an online calendar and embed the code for that calendar (this is provided for you) onto your website. There are also lots of ways you can customise how the calendar appears.

Customise appearance

7.    Invite others to attend an event

When you create an event using an online calendar you can also invite others to attend. Just add their email address and they will receive an email with all the details of the event. Also, if they use an online calendar, it (usually) takes just one click to import the event you have sent them straight into their calendar. Through the online interface you can monitor who has accepted your invitation, and allow guests to invite others (if you wish!).

8.    View information in multiple formats (day, week, month, 7 days)

Multiple formats

Paper diaries come in a fixed format – e.g. day to a page, week to a page. In an online calendar you can choose how you wish to view your event information. On Monday morning as you plan how to tackle the various events of the week, you might like to view events in a weekly format. When you are planning events across a year, you can change the view and look at your calendar a month at a time. Need to print off your diary for the next week? That’s easy too.

9.    Multiple calendars for different responsibilities

Sometimes it’s good to keep different parts of your life separate. With an online calendar it’s easy to create multiple calendars (each with a different colour to distinguish it) – e.g. for personal events, birthdays, anniversaries, church events, etc. You can also ‘switch’ calendars on and off – e.g. to show or hide particular calendars.

10.    Never forget again!

Reminders

There’s no excuses for forgetting an event when you use an online calendar. When you create an event you can choose to receive a reminder as a pop-up or email, minutes, hours, days or weeks before the event.

Which calendar is right for you?

For this article, the online calendar solution I’ve had at the front of my mind (and have used the most) is Google Calendar. Other calendar options include Yahoo Calendar and 30 Boxes. More advanced solutions include FuseCal and Jiffle. However for my money (it’s free), Google Calendar is the simplest solution and includes the most common tools you will need to use.

Can you think of any other uses for online calendars?

Or have I missed the mark? Are there good reasons to keep your paper diary out of the bin?!

Village Church anticipates newcomer questions

I stumbled across the Village Church website on the weekend whilst trying to see if Matt Chandler has preached on Genesis. He hasn’t, but the visit wasn’t unfruitful. I was encouraged by the way the Village Church has thought through some of the questions visitors to their church might have, and addressed them on their website.

Two sections stood out to me – check out these screenshots below:

VisitingTheVillage

And:

VillageChurchHomepage

Lots of our church websites could learn from the Village Church. These links aren’t revolutionary – they simply show a willingness to consider the needs of potential newcomers, and making it as easy as possible for people to make their way into church. I’ve seen a lot of church websites, and I’ve never seen a link to ‘what was your first impression’. This links to a page where visitors can share if they felt welcomed and invited in. Great idea.

Have you seen other examples of newcomer-focussed web content and design?

On a related note

Matt Chandler is speaking at the Engage conference in August. If you live in Australia (and realistically, close to Katoomba), get along. Thanks to the internet, I’ve been encouraged by quite a few of Matt’s talks and I’m looking forward to hearing him live this year. You can get some practice in by checking out the Village Church’s sermon library.

5 (useful) links #9

Five websites and online resources to inspire, inform and enthuse.

  1. The faith of a 90 year-old woman. Inspiring story of an elderly lady witnessing to a gunman who attacks her.
  2. Soles4Souls. A novel way to fundraise for, and serve, the world’s poor.
  3. Next. Conference audio back from Next Conferences this year, back to 2004.
  4. Toronto Pastors Conference. Conference audio now available for this conference too.
  5. Webby Winners. The best of the web, in 70 categories, for 2009.

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