Monday, April 23, 2012

Foster community with your website

I occasionally like to review the conclusions that Dr. Charles (Chuck) Zech draws from his two books on research about behavior of Catholics.  In "Why Catholics Don't Give and What Can Be Done About It"  and the continuing in "Best Practices of Stewardship Parishes", Chuck observes that parishes that have active and vibrant communities accompanied by generous financial gifts use similar practices.  One recurring theme relates to communicating to parishioners through tools such as newsletters and websites. Separately, Al Winseman describes levels of engagement in "Growing an Engaged Church".  Church member engagement begins with "What do I get" and ranges from "What Can I Give" to "Where are we going". 

The challenge for all of us continues to be time.  With the high level of activity in the parish office, we find ourselves deferring some items to handle the "urgent" needs of today.  Yet we must find time to provide our parishioners with interesting and useful information and evidence of how we serve out our parish mission if we are to move parishioners to higher levels of engagement. Our parishioners must feel that they belong at the parish and believe in and support the good works of our parish.

A number of parishes are stepping up to this challenge and are deploying web sites (along with other communications) that are accessible and interesting.  They are taking the step to provide information that brings parishioners back for more.  Our Sunday Visitor introduced "Faith In Action" websites to help parishes get up and running quickly so they can focus on specifics of the parish.

Some examples of beautiful parish websites include:  www.stedwardpb.com ,  
www.sjvaz.net and   www.hgcatholic.org 
 


Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Update Your Status

So you have spent some time creating new pages and editing existing ones. You're adding pictures, uploading a year’s worth of bulletins into your new website, and adding all the flourishes that make your parish website unique. You even ran an announcement in the bulletin talking about the new parish website so your parish will take notice. 

Now it is time to update the rest of world -- outside of the parish. 

Just like when you move to a new house you notify all your friends, family, and businesses about the new location, the same should be done for your new online home.  The post office makes you fill out a change of address form so your mail gets forwarded... but there is no official form for your website!

What about all the links on all other websites that might have an old or new domain name for your parish?  Access all your accounts, from the diocese to the phone book and change or alter the new website address. Here are just a few places to remember to change your status.
  • Diocese information
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Your blog(s)
  • Phone book
  • Chamber of Commerce listings
  • Local newspaper listings
  • Any Directory you may be posted in. Local service organizations like the Boy Scouts, Knights of Columbus, related forums, etc.
Do an online search for your parish and check the results.  When you find a site with old info, make the contact and update your status! (Websites that link back to your site are called backlinks.)