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What are the Must Haves on a Church's Website?
I'm always surprised to have looked up some congregation and found there's no street address or map shown anywhere. It's as though they think a phrase like "In Downtown Pleasantville" or "Serving the Bryant Hill neighborhood" is sufficient.
Prominent appeals for donations, sometimes complete with Paypal instructions and the like.What things SHOULDN'T be on a website?
Prominent appeals for donations, sometimes complete with Paypal instructions and the like.
I have to assume that current members of the church/congregation already know this information while "seekers" want other information first, even if they also realize that joining any church will include taking on financial obligations.
Do you like reading the history of that congregation? How about photos of the people? Which groups do you want to see a page devoted to?
I thought of that as I was reading some of these websites, but it's only the "worst" of them that I had in mind. I remember one that was the home page of a small denomination and all that was on the page was a paragraph identifying the denomination, with contact address, and an appeal for contributions and how to do it.Would you find any appeal for donations offputting? I can see why it would be useful for regulars and members who wanted to donate, although I'd agree if it's too front-and-center it could come across as offputting for people just looking for a new church.
Balloon jumps, carnivals, raffles, "Revival in Two Weeks", etc.What things SHOULDN'T be on a website?
I thought of that as I was reading some of these websites, but it's only the "worst" of them that I had in mind. I remember one that was the home page of a small denomination and all that was on the page was a paragraph identifying the denomination, with contact address, and an appeal for contributions and how to do it.
Yes. And when I see that, I can't avoid wondering why someone who is merely looking for a church to join, or somewhere to worship while in town, or is curious about something they've heard concerning the teachings of a certain denomination would be attracted by a website like that. (?)I think the sort of thing you're describing, that says little more than "Twenty words about who we are, please give, give, give, give, give" would bother me. Probably enough to not go to the church at all.
Yes. And when I see that, I can't avoid wondering why someone who is merely looking for a church to join, or somewhere to worship while in town, or is curious about something they've heard concerning the teachings of a certain denomination would be attracted by a website like that. (?)
If your church live streams your service or even just posts them online, easy access to those services allows for the modern person looking for a church to do a little pre-scoping to see if the church is right for them.
If your church live streams your service or even just posts them online, easy access to those services allows for the modern person looking for a church to do a little pre-scoping to see if the church is right for them.
Or the "modern person" (whatever that means) could just go to the church and find out what it's actually like, rather than treating it as just another consumer product.
That's not always feasible if you're moving to a new area and want to check out churches ahead of time. It's something I would do if I had to move again.
But can't we agree that unless there are only three churches in town, for example, it can be a very arduous task to personally observe every available congregation in action??? A good website helps both the congregation and the inquirer/new resident/new Christian...even if it cannot answer every last question.You can check out churches ahead of time but you can only gain so much insight from watching things on a screen. You can only gain so much from even attending a church a couple of times.