Last Call For Church Website Critique Entries

I'm leaving submissions open until Wednesday, and then I'll be picking out the five which I'll be reviewing in the coming weeks.  Just leave your comment/entry here.

Get Your Church Website Critiqued For Free!

Have you ever wanted to get a professional opinion of the work you and your church are doing?  Sometimes it can be hard to get an objective view from within our own church and it's good to get a perspective from the outside.  After all, none of us are perfect, and there's always something that we can do better.

If you've ever wanted to have this done, then today's your lucky day.  I am offering free website critiques to five lucky churches over the next month and a half.  In these critiques, I will examine what is being done well, what is lacking, and ways that the site can be improved.  In addition, the comments will be available on each entry to allow further peer review as well.

All you have to do is post your church's website URL below.  In a week or so, I'll choose five representative examples which I think will benefit not only that church, but all of us in this web design gig.

I look forward to seeing the fine work that many of you have already done, and hope to help make them the most that they can be!

Two Approaches To Displaying Events

In general, there are two approaches to displaying the events that are going on in your church: the calendar and the list. I've used each of these methods before, and each has it's pros and cons. In order to help you decide what is best for your church website, here's a little about each from my experiences:

  • Calendars: Calendars can be a great wayCalendar of showing what is going on in your church. However, many online calendar tools can be difficult and unwieldly, or the good ones can be very expensive and you still might not get all the features that you want. The manual updating of calendars will take up a lot of time and will need to be updated frequently so that they don't get out of date. Another thing I've noticed is that calendars work better in larger churches where there are a lot of regular activities going on. In a small church where there is little more than a Sunday service and a weekly Bible Study going on, a calendar tends to look bare.
  • Lists: Lists are very simple andLists striaght-forward tools for keeping your congregation on the up-and-up. I personally like to keep two lists of events: one for regular events that rarely change, and one for one-time events that come up occasionally. In these cases, I have a list that I can manually change as needed since the items don't change very item, and then I have a list I can use with a database where the changes can come quite frequently. Even if I didn't use a database, I'd have the two that I could keep and display seperately. I also it's easier to keep the regular activities on the main page of the site and then keep the other announcements on a separate page if need be. However, in a very large church, both these lists may become large an almost unmanageable.

As you can see, there is a place for each approach. Calendars tend to work well in situations where the information needs to be condensed as much as possible, but lists work better when there isn't as much information to manage.

One last note I'd like to share is that I've found is that people seem to plan better with calendars when they can see the dates laid out in front of them. With lists, people don't necessarily associate the date listed with a day of the week or month, and they can forget a single event if the actual date is not reinforced with them on several occasions. With this in mind, you may find that an approach using both lists and calendars to some extent may be best for your church.

Either way, the most important thing is to make sure that the dates are out there and available!

Community Service

Keeping track of dates of events may not seem like much of an outreach activity, but if done right they can be a quite powerful tool.

I don't know how many times I've heard fellow Christians speak about how their faith is not about religion, but a personal relationship with Jesus. It's completely accurate, but sometimes we forget that, within the church, it's not about the services provided, but developing relationships with others through these outreaches. Showing an interest in people's lives outside of church can be one of the easiest, yet often overlooked, ways to do just that.

You may be thinking, "That's great, but what does that have to do with datekeeping on our website?". Well, I'm gonna tell you!

Try treating your church calendar as a community calendar. This will show that your church is not just interested in their "church-selves", but in their entire life. No, you don't need to list every activity going on, but try to target activities that relate to your congregations lives. Some good activities may be:

  • Youth Sports League Signups
  • Adult Education Registration
  • Free Public Concerts
  • Special Events At Other Local Churches (plays, concerts, etc.)

This kind of listing can help make your church website a more valuable resource for people to use in their lives. It may even make them pay a little more attention to the dates of activities going on in your church because they may better see how they fit in with their daily lives.

Remember that, as a church, we are a part of the community. Let's work on increasing our role out there and not just keeping to ourselves.

BlogCFC was created by Raymond Camden. This blog is running version 5.9. Contact Greg