Tag Archive - calendar

Avoiding church calendar overload

At Church by the Bridge we’ve started planning the calendar of events for next year (yep, in August!).

And as with most churches, there are a lot of events – all of them worth going to! For example:

  • Prayer meetings,
  • Carols under the Bridge,
  • Annual Vestry Meeting,
  • Women’s events,
  • Anglicare Winter Appeal,
  • Weekend Away,
  • Connect Groups,
  • PowerPoint training,
  • Worship leader training,
  • and many more!

As we prepare the calendar, three considerations come to mind:

  1. We want to promote the events, without making church members feel overwhelmed by all that’s happening or obligated to come to everything,
  2. There are some events that we’d really like people to prioritise, while others are good, but less essential, and
  3. Some events are relevant to everyone (e.g. church weekend away), while other events are relevant to smaller groups (e.g. women’s event, or newcomers dinners).

I’ve been thinking about how to communicate these events most effectively, keeping the above considerations in mind, throughout the course of the year.

Here are four steps to a communications strategy for promoting events – I’d love your feedback on what your church does, and how this process could work better.

Step 1. I think the first step is to identify available communication channels. We’ve got quite a number of communications channels at Church by the Bridge:

  • church news during services
  • printed newsletter distributed at services
  • printed quarterly calendar (example)
  • weekly e-news
  • website news
  • website calendar
  • Facebook page
  • Facebook events
  • Facebook advertising
  • Event-based minisites (e.g. www.iheartkirribilli.com)
  • Twitter account
  • phone
  • face-to-face
  • Connect Groups
  • meetings (i.e. communicating to people to a select group of people face-to-face)
  • emails to all of church/groups within the church
  • A6 postcards (mainly to promote events to people outside the church, e.g. I Heart Kirribilli)
  • letterbox drops
  • noticeboard (housing A3 posters)
  • A1 posters (positioned in frame against the wall outside the church)
  • community newsletter (example – though we haven’t printed a second edition!)
  • community noticeboards

There are other communications channels available too – for example text messaging isn’t something we’ve explored, but I know of churches using FrontlineSMS for group messaging. Other channels that come to mind are online platforms like On The City, and video messaging (e.g. facilitated by TokBox).

Can you think of any other useful communication channels?

Step 2. Identify which audiences these communication channels engage most effectively with. For example, announcing an event in church will communicate with everyone who is in the service (and listening!), but miss anyone who wasn’t at church that week. Similarly, the church noticeboard, community newsletter, A1 posters, A6 posters are all primarily targeted at people who don’t currently attend the church.

Step 3. Categorise the events. The events can be categorised in (at least) six ways:

  1. by type (e.g. training, church service, outreach),
  2. by primary audience (i.e. church members, church members and local community)
  3. by broad audience (e.g. men, women, everyone at church, local community, parents, Connect Leaders, etc), and
  4. by importance – this category is to help members of the church if they need to decide between two events. For example, church services and the weekend away fit into the ‘essential’ category, whereas everyone doesn’t need to come to every outreach event that’s run throughout the year.
  5. by regularity (e.g. weekly – church, quarterly, annually, one-off – weddings!)
  6. by necessity (e.g. child protection training is essential for anyone working with kids)

By this stage, you’ve got a list of all events, communications channels, the audiences for each channel, and the six categorisations of each event. It’s sounding complex, but I think the clearer the planning, the better the communication to the people who need to hear about the events.

Step 4. At this point, I think a matrix would come in handy. I played around with several formats for this, and decided on a form. It’s rough and there’s information missing, but it should give you an idea what I’m thinking of. Check out the Calendar Communication Matrix. I’m thinking that events could then be entered into the form, one at a time, with each of the fields completed along the way. One of the many advantages of creating this form in Wufoo is that all the information can easily be exported out into other formats.

Once events had been entered, you could look at the spreadsheet and plan how each event will be communicated throughout the year, based on all the elements supplied in the form.

What do you think about this strategy? Would it be helpful? Is it far too complicated? How could it be improved?

Web apps for ministry – what do you use?

This Saturday I’ll be presenting two seminars at the Create conference and I’d like to ask for your help. One of the seminars I’m presenting is entitled “I’m not cheap, I’m entrepreneurial”. At it, I’ll be sharing free or cheap tools to assist with ministry. I’ve got lots of ideas for apps that fit into this category (and I’ll be sharing 2-3 per category, plus some surprises!), but I’d like to hear your ideas. Below are some categories and examples – what tools do you use and recommend?

Will your church join LA city council?

Most churches and ministry organisations have two core technology tools – email and word processing (I’d add calendars to this list too, but most ministries and people in ministry probably aren’t using online calendars – yet!). Most churches and ministry organisations would use a desktop email client (e.g. Microsoft Outlook or Apple Mail), and Microsoft Office for word processing. Not only can these tools be expensive, in need of regular upgrading and specific to particular operating systems, there are some real benefits to using online tools for these tasks.

Last week, technology blogs Mashable and Cnet that the Los Angeles’ city council is about to start using Google Apps. For those unfamiliar, Google Apps is a set of tools provided by Google to assist organisations with communication, collaboration and publishing.

How does it work?

Most churches and ministry organisations will already have their own domain (e.g. www.stanglican.com). You can keep this domain and use Google to manage these common tasks:

  • Email – use Google’s email tool (Gmail) to manage your email. Your email address will remain the same (e.g. steve@stanglican.com), but there are added benefits such as awesome spam filtering, access to email wherever you have internet access, and a dedicated team working behind the scenes, 24/7/365 to make sure your email is always available. Here’s some more tips and benefits to using Gmail.
  • Calendars – use Google’s calendar tool (Google Calendar) to manage your schedule and collaborate with the schedules of others in your team/ministry/church. There are many benefits to not using a paper diary, but one of the most compelling for ministry is collaboration. Google Calendar will allow you to create multiple calendars, see who has what on when, allocate resources, find common meeting times, and publish (where appropriate, of course) particular calendars online for anyone to access. That’s a very brief sell – check out a tour with more of the features.
  • Documents – use Google’s document creation/management tool (Google Docs) to create documents, spreadsheets and presentations. You can import (eg. from Word/Excel/PowerPoint) and export to the same formats (and others) – i.e. you can maintain most of the benefits to using Microsoft Office and open documents others send you. Again, one of the key features is collaboration – Google Docs is a great platform for sharing documents and allowing others to work with you on particular documents, without the issues associated with emailing these around and hoping you’re working on the most current version. And importantly, you don’t need to be connected to the internet to access your documents.

There are other tools and benefits provided by the Google Apps service – all available free for non-profits (i.e. churches and most ministry organisations!) Learn more of the features of Google Apps, or sign-up.

Will your church or ministry organisation join LA city council?

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?!

Find a time that suits everyone

Ministry involves a lot of meetings. Few people enjoy meetings, but unless you are the only one involved in a particular ministry (or desire to be the only one involved in the ministry!) – meetings are unavoidable. One of the challenges of organising a meeting is finding a time to meet. There are two ways you can organise a meeting time:

  1. set a time, send out the email, and wait for the emails to come back in from people who can’t make the time you suggested. This cycle can continue indefinitely!
  2. make use of the free online tools that help you organise a time that will suit everyone.

I’ve been exploring some of the websites that assist in the process of finding a suitable meeting time. Whilst they have varying features, the basic premise of each is this:

1.    As the event (meeting) organiser, you select the dates and times that you are available to meet.
2.    You send details of the event (a link to a website) to the people you would like to attend the meeting.
3.    On the website, the invitees select their available times from the list of times you provided.
4.    You review the times people are available, and settle on a time for the meeting.
5.    You email the invitees the confirmed time.

This is a time-efficient and cost-effective (i.e. free) way of working out a meeting time. It avoids emails coming back and forth and frees you up to prepare for the meeting itself. Here are a couple of suggestions for websites you can use to arrange your meetings.

When is Good

It’s not the prettiest website to use, but it’s very easy to use. Here’s a screenshot of what an invitee would see when they click on the link to the event you send them via email:

whenisgood_screenshot

As the event organiser you are given a link to view the results (i.e. the dates and times that work for your invitees).

Meeting Wizard

Meeting Wizard has more options that you can select from when creating a meeting. For instance you can select the duration of the meeting, specify if the meeting times are approximate or definite, and select the type of meeting (face to face, teleconference, social, etc). You can also decide if you would like the invitees to know the other people you have invited to attend, and if you would like them to be able to see the times that suit others (see screenshot below). You can even create a reminder to automatically be sent to invitees X days before the meeting.

meetingwizard_screenshot

Schedule Once and TimeBridge

One of the features I really like about both Schedule Once and TimeBridge is the ability for invitees to indicate preferred times. Not only can you give your invitees the option to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to a proposed time, but they can also indicate if a particular time works best for them – creating a hierarchy of preferences, if you will.

scheduleonce_screenshot

timebridge_screenshot

Other options

A couple of other options to explore include:

For my money (or lack thereof), When is Good [link: http://whenisgood.net/] is the simplest and easiest solution. However, your meeting needs might be different to mine, so let me encourage you to explore these options and find a better way to arrive at a suitable meeting time.