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  1. Facebook Fan Page or Website - Where Should I Start?
    1. Having a web presence is no longer a nicety, but a necessity
    2. You have limitations, as do the various options for establishing your web presence
    3. It's not that difficult or stressful to make a decision, once you know what your choices are

    There are lots of ways to communicate online and there are a variety of costs - where should you focus your attention? Where should you start? Website? Facebook? Twitter? Google Sites? Blogspot? Tumblr? YouTube? MySpace?

    Well, you get the idea - there are a lot of facets to your online presence and you might want to hear what others have to say about building your online identity and communicating your message.
  2. Building an Effective Ministry Web Site
    Millions of people are on the Internet every day - how do you get just some of them to visit your site? Here are some easy to follow guidelines for building your site to draw people to it. Start by looking at the URL, the title and the description of each page.
  3. Communication: It Takes Two To Tango
    A conversation consists of more than 2 people talking - it also involves listening by all parties involved. What does this have to do with your church website? Everything!

    Are you using your website as another vehicle for broadcasting your message, or are you also using it to listen to what others are saying? A recent study by LifeWay Research indicates the majority of churches (even those with fewer than 50 in attendance each week) maintain websites for their church. Yet, of those, only about 40% are actually engaging their members and visitors in conversations on their websites through features such as prayer requests.
  4. XOOPS Meta Tags Basics
    Search engines and users rely on you to provide information about your site's content - leverage your XOOPS meta tags and begin to improve your position on search engine results page (SERPs)
  5. Finding Your Voice and Rising Above the Noise
    People are bombarded with information - radio, television, magazines, newspapers, text messages, email and social media updates. Despite all the noise, people are still starved for good information. How do you get heard above the noise? Contribute to the noise? Quantity does not guarantee quality.

    The biggest factor in getting heard is actually saying something on a regular basis. Not just anything, but something of value - timely and relevant. I will bet you have something of importance to share with people, but you haven't used your website to share it. Or, by the time you did post it, the timeliness or relevance was lost.

    'We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act, but a habit.' ~Aristotle
  6. We Have a Web Site - Now What?
    There are numerous web sites devoted to the technical, design aesthetics and usability aspects of web sites, but few help you with the editorial aspect (content) of your site. We start a discussion about what (and what not) to put on your church's web site.
  7. Church Websites 101: Easy. Not Simple
    Point. Click, Type, Click. Drag, Drop. Share. Take a fresh look at your website - it might be easy, but it ain't simple! The number of easy-to-use site building and publishing tools is climbing, but the task of building and maintaining a good website is not getting any simpler. Until now.

    The concepts are easily learned and, with proper discipline, you can have an effective, enjoyable website for your church.
  8. What Are You Trying To Say?
    In a post on Church Marketing Sucks, Brad Abare posted a series on producing church web sites that don't suck. Let's face it - it is just as easy to produce a web site that sucks as it is to create one that doesn't suck. Follow these tips so your site is good for more than just serving as a bad example.
  9. Church Websites 101: Set Goals
    If you don't know where you're going, you'll never get lost. And, you'll see a lot of new places!

    Setting goals is all about knowing where you're going and knowing when you arrive. We all have heard about S.M.A.R.T. goals - now is the time to put them work. Goals need to be specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time bound. Let's see how that applies to our church website and the strategy you are developing.

    This addition to Church Websites 101 will step away from the technology for a bit, because this is actually more difficult to master than the technology.
  10. SEO: Write for Your Readers, Not for the Robots
    As a web master, at some point you will undoubtedly begin to work on your search engine optimization, or think you need to work on optimizing your site for the search engines. Before you do, read this article and stop to think about who's more important - your readers or the robots?

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