Category: Social Media (page 6 of 10)

5 church planting gurus you should follow

Since Grace Community Church, where I serve on staff, is going multi-site in early 2011, I thought it fitting to mention some of the people who are influential in the world of multi-site churches.  You can read the rest of my “Follow Friday” series HERE.

Mac Lake – Mac is the Chief Launch Officer of The Launch Network, a new church planting network based out of West Ridge Church in the greater Atlanta, Georgia area.  You can read his blog HERE, and follow him on Twitter HERE.

Greg Surratt – Greg is the founding pastor of Seacoast Church, one of the early adopters of the multi-site model. Located in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina,  Greg is also a founding board member of the Association of Related Churches (ARC).  You can read his blog HERE and follow him on Twitter HERE.

*While you’re at it, go ahead and follow his brothers on Twitter, too: Chris Surratt (small groups pastor at Cross Point Church in Nashville, TN) and Geoff Surratt (pastor of ministries at Sea Coast, co-author of The Multisite Church Revolution and A Multisite Church Roadtrip; you can read his blog HERE).

Larry Osborne – I was introduced to Larry through his book, Sticky Church.  It was basically a book about how to add a stickiness (encourage people to continue attending your church) to your church through small groups.  Larry is the pastor at North Coast Church in Vista, CA, one of the pioneers in the video venue church services.  You can follow him on Twitter HERE and read his blog HERE.

JD Greer – Pastor at Summit Church in Raleigh, NC, a church that meets in multiple locations, and does small groups incredibly well.  You can follow him on Twitter HERE, and read his blog HERE.  If you care…their small groups pastor is a good friend of mine, and you can follow him on Twitter HERE, blog HERE.

Darrin Patrick – Pastor at The Journey Church in St. Louis, and author of Church Planter.  Darrin is a leading voice in the Acts 29 network of church planting, a network that has planted over 300 churches in the last 10 years.  You can follow him on Twitter HERE.

Who did I leave out that I should have included?

 

Scheduling Updates

Ever wonder how some people always seem to be online?  They’re posting updates to Twitter and/or Facebook all throughout the day, even into the night!  I’ve got 2 explanations for that.

1. They’re online all of the time.

OR

2. They’ve learned how to schedule their updates.

If you fall into the first category, then please, please, please…get off of your computer, call a friend, and share a face-to-face conversation.

I am often asked, “How do you have time to always be on Twitter/Facebook?”  My answer: “I don’t.”  Part of my strategy is scheduling my updates to go live throughout the day.  Keep reading to find out which I use, and how to schedule out your updates.

There are many programs out there to schedule your updates (Twuffer, Future Tweets, Tweetdeck, Tweetlater, Social Oomph, Sendible…just to name a few), but the best that I’ve found (by far) is HootSuite.  

Here’s why I like Hootsuite:

  1. It’s free.
  2. It’s really easy to use.
  3. You can manage multiple social network accounts (including Facebook, Facebook Page, Twitter, FourSquare, MySpace, LinkedIn, Ping.fm, and WordPress).
  4. It supports Twitter lists.  Which means you can put certain followers into lists, and see their updates first.
  5. URL shortening.  It shortens your links so they’re not 3 lines long.
  6. Scheduling is incredibly simple.
  7. You can use it on your phone (iPhone or Android) and your desktop, and have them sync lists and settings.

How do you schedule updates?

  1. Sign up for an account at Hootsuite.
  2. Add your social networks (if it doesn’t prompt you automatically, simply click the picture of the owl in the top left corner of the screen.  Scroll down to “Setting” and click on “Social Networks.”  At the top of the middle column, click “Add Social Network.” Your social networking options will be on the left side of the new popup box.).  Remember, you can add multiple accounts, and update them all from Hootsuite.
  3. Indicate which social network you’d like to post to by clicking your avatar (right beside the status bar at the top of the screen)
  4. Type your status.
  5. Click the icon below your status that looks like a calendar (it should have the number “30” in the middle of the icon, and when you hover your mouse over it, it should say, “Schedule Message”)
  6. Choose the date and time you’d like to post your update, and click “Okay”.
  7. Click the “Schedule” button, on the bottom right corner of your status update.

Now, you can schedule out your updates so they don’t all happen at one time on one day.  In fact, the way I often update my accounts is this way, sitting down for 5 minutes and typing out (and scheduling) lots of updates at one time.  This saves me the time and hassle of logging back onto Twitter or Facebook (or both) to update my status regularly.  It frees me up, and keeps me from being tied down to my computer and/or phone.

What do you think?  Is this do-able?

Do you feel deceived that I (and others) use scheduling, and don’t post everything live?

 

Only you can be you

I have hair on my knuckles.

I tore my ACL my senior year of high school.

I have a bachelor’s degree in animal science.

I once said, “I’ll never be on staff at a church.”

I have a 2 year old son.

My wife is hot.

I live less than 2 miles from where I grew up.

I had no plans of living less than 2 miles from where I grew up.

I have a Master’s Degree in counseling.

I was once stuck in London because of a volcano.

I’m decent at golf.

God has gifted me with a passion to learn new things.

I like creating systems that work.

I enjoy running.

I enjoy helping others understand how much God loves them.

______________________________________________

And it is out of these (still not sure, though, where the hair on my knuckles fits in…) that I lead at home, at church, and in my community.  It is out of these experiences, and the ones God continues to give, that I write this blog.

You can’t be me.  And I can’t be you.

If you try to be me, you’ll fail.  You’re not gifted like me.

If I try to be you, I’ll fail.  I’m not gifted like you.

You don’t have to blog like me.  Walk like me.  Talk like me.  Preach like me.  Write like me.

God’s created you unique.  Which means that there’s nobody else like you.

We need you to be you.

 

Leveraging Technology

The problem in our churches isn’t our use of technology.  Technology is just a medium, a tool we can use for the sake of the Gospel.

In their book, The Multi-site Church Revolution: Being One Church in Many Locations, authors Surratt, Ligon, and Bird talk about the history of leveraging technology.

The idea of leveraging the latest technology for kingdom service is nothing new. Nor is the pushback, questioning, or occasional controversy raised by such changes. When I (Warren) was visiting relatives in Germany, I toured a famous medieval monastery in Germany. I learned how they took the church into the community by doing religious dramas. To reach the most people, they performed some of the dramas at night, which raised the need for lighting. By putting candles in front of colored glass, they created colored lighting, much like today’s stage lights. “Was this controversial?” I asked our guide. “What do you think?” she responded with a smile. Reading church history is fascinating because it reminds us that every generation asks about the appropriateness of using technology to do church.

In our church, we leverage all kinds of technology: colored lights, speakers, microphones, amplifiers, video projection, YouVersion Live, computers, and iPods.

In our small group, we leverage technology as well: DVD players, TVs, cell phones (to read our Bibles), and email and Facebook to communicate throughout the week.

Technology itself isn’t evil.  It’s a neutral medium that the Church is called to utilize and redeem.  It can often make our services, and our small groups, more engaging, more attractive, more relevant, more influential (allowing churches to broadcast to multiple sites), more streamlined, and more connected.

But maybe I’m wrong.

Are there certain technologies that should be considered off-limits to churches?

How does your church (or small group) use technology to advance the Gospel?

 

Michael Hyatt and growing your platform

Michael Hyatt, at Catalyst 2010, offers three ways you can grow your platform:

How do you grow your platform?

1. Establish a command center. This is a homebase, that you own and control, whether a website or a blog.  The most important thing you can do is write compelling content on a consistent basis.

2. Set up embassies. These are places you don’t own or control, but have a regular presence.  The trouble with making these places (Twitter, Facebook, etc.) a command center is that they could go away.  Case in point…Myspace.

3. Develop an intelligence agency. Monitor what’s being said about you or your company, because stuff is being said!

What’s your platform?

 

Measuring success

How do you measure the success of what you do in social media?

Is it by the number of people who follow you?

RSS counts?

Number of clicks on your blog?

Number of Retweets?

Offline conversations spurred?

For me, I measure success by interaction.  Which explains why I end so many blog posts with a question.  And why I pose so many (seemingly random) Twitter and Facebook questions, also.  Because I want to spark discussion.  Encourage you to think and interact.  Cause you to laugh.  Help you look at life differently.

I measuring success by looking at social engagement, not simply the number of followers that I amass.  Because I could have thousands and thousands of people reading my blog, but if nobody interacts, I would consider my work unsuccessful.

Would you rather have 10,000 followers, with very little interaction…or 100 followers that think, dream, discuss, disagree, and take the conversation further?

 

The “cheap” generation

If you’re a part of my generation, you probably expect that everything that’s digital should be free.

From music, to articles, to old sermons, podcasts, TV shows, and movies.  If you can find it online, it should be free, right?  And it should give you exactly the information that you want.  And you should be able to easily find it.  And it should be presented well, with a good eye for design.  And it shouldn’t be too long.  Or too short.  Or have too many internal links, because that’s just self-serving.  Or have too many external links, because I’m probably not going to click on them anyway.

You want it your way.  And you don’t want to have to pay a penny for it.

And for much of that, we can be thankful.  So many great leaders offer high-quality content online for no charge.  What a great blessing that our generation can enjoy.

What kind of content should be offered for free?

Is there a blog, a site, or a podcast you’d consider paying to get updated content from?  What makes it worth the cost for you?
 

Life and Theology Survey

I love the interaction that I get with you guys here at Life & Theology. You help me think, grow, and mature.

But honestly, I feel like I don’t really know you.  I mean, a comment here…a Retweet there…a Facebook snide remark one day…it just doesn’t help me really get to know you.  And for that, I’m sorry.

So, in order to get to know you a little better, and in order to continue to offer fresh, relevant content that is helpful to you, readers of Life and Theology, I’ve set up a quick survey for you to fill out.  Don’t worry…it’ll only take you 5 minutes.

Can you help me out?  Please click HERE for the survey.

Thanks!

 

5 Funny guys you should follow

Continuing my Follow Friday series (you can catch up HERE), I’ve got 5 more people I think you should follow.

And they all make me laugh.

5 Funny Guys you should follow

Jon Acuff – author of the book Stuff Christians Like, and the BLOG by the same name, Jon has recently moved to Nashville to work with the Dave Ramsey Show.  His blog does a great job mixing pop culture references with the goofy things we Christians do…the things Jon brings up, and the way he writes about them, will make you laugh.  In fact, I often laugh out loud when I read his stuff.  You can follow him on Twitter HERE.

Tyler Stanton – Tyler writes for his self-titled blog, TylerStanton.com, and produces short videos with Tripp (below) at TrippAndTyler.com.  I don’t know how to describe it.  But one thing I can say for sure about his blog: it’s trivial.  And it makes me laugh. (And that’s more than one thing…sorry) But that’s his goal.  He wants to make people laugh.  And it’s clean, PG-rated stuff.  You can follow him on Twitter HERE.

Tripp Crosby – I first saw Tripp when he interviewed Rob Bell after Catalyst last year.  You can see the hilarious video HERE.  Owner of Green Tricycle Studios, Tripp’s sense of humor connects with me.  And like Tyler (above), it’s often pointless.  You can read his blog HERE and follow him on Twitter HERE.

Bryan Allain – Bryan’s blog is hilarious, and he’ll help you be a better blogger and writer.  Read his blog HERE, and follow him on Twitter HERE.

Xianity – I don’t know who this Twitterer is, but they do a great job poking fun at Christian culture in a lighthearted, non-threatening, non-offensive way.  Follow them HERE.

Who else would you include in this list?

 

Favorite blogs

Do you read blogs?  If so, you’ve got to have a favorite or two.

Some you find incredibly helpful.

Some you make sure to never miss.

Some that help you think more clearly about life.

Some that help you strategize.

Some that help you love God and others more.

Some that are unique to your niche in leadership.

Some that make you laugh.

Here’s the time to brag on them!

I’ll start it off.

1. Graced Again – this is the blog of my pastor, Ron Edmondson.  He paid me to put his blog on here.

2. Stuff Christians Like – I know that some of my good friends (I won’t name NAMES) think this blogs is too long…but I think it’s great.

What are your favorite blogs/sites?

 
Older posts Newer posts

© 2025

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑