@GregSwan's presentation to the Social Phonics Summer Camp on 7/16/2012.
Join Social Media Shepherds on Twitter (@smshepherds), Facebook and our monthly meetups in Minneapolis.
Email: info@socialmediashepherds.org
8. "This world of ours is a new
world, in which the unity of
knowledge, the nature of
human communities, the order
of society, the order of ideas,
the very notions of society
and culture have changed
and will not return to what
they have been in the past.â
- Robert Oppenheimer
(1963)
14. Who cares? Iâm
interested in
ministry, not
gadgets.
Real ministries
donât use social
media.
15.
16. 42%
of churches actively
use Facebook
20%
use social tools in church
LifeWay Research, 1/2011 management software
packages
17. 2%
use a church-specific package
like Cobblestone, Unifyer, or
The City
40%
of churches do not use any
LifeWay Research, 1/2011 social networking tools.
18. More than 17 million
non-churchgoers visited the
website of a local church or
place of worship in the past 12
months.
Grey Matter Research, May 30, 2012
19. What if that was your church
or ministry organization?
What did they find?
Did they come visit?
Did you ask them if they visited
your website?
21. How frequently do regular churchgoers
(who are online) visit their own
congregation's website?
âą 28% In the last 30 days.
(21.5 million adults)
âą 44% In the past six months.
(34 million adults)
âą 57% In the past year.
(44.8 million adults)
âą 32% Never.
(Or no website.)
Grey Matter Research, May 30, 2012
22. How frequently do non-churchgoers (who
are online) visit the websites of places of
worship?
âą 2% In the last 30 days. (1.6 million adults)
âą 10% In the past six months. (10.6 million
adults)
âą 16% In the past year. (17.4 million adults)
Grey Matter Research, May 30, 2012
23. What people do on websites of places of
worship:
âą Check to see the times of services: 43%
âą Check what activities are offered: 29%
âą Look for a map or directions to the churchâs location: 28%
âą Watch streaming video: 26%
âą Listen to streaming audio: 26%
âą Check to see what the churchâs religious beliefs are: 22%
âą Request prayer: 18%
âą Downloading a podcast: 15%
âą Checking what denomination or group the church belongs
to: 15%
âą Send a message to the pastor or leader: 12%
âą Post on a bulletin board or forum: 5%
Grey Matter Research, May 30, 2012
24. Changing Nature of Church
Communications:
1. Same Gospel
2. Parables = storytelling
3. Marketing is necessary
4. Technology shifts
happen
5. IRL still critical
25. Social media is about ENGAGEMENT, not
selling
ï± Goal: strengthen relationships with your audiences
and build your reputation
ï± Tone: friendly, not too formal
ï± Add value: provide news, ideas, drive
conversation
ï± ROI: establish measurable goals
25
26. Be
RELEVANT
AUTHENTIC
TRANSPARENT
CC @ J. Strife 26
27. We have limited resourcesâŠ
How can we be all things to
all people?
You canât.
Be what your ministry needs
you to be. Prioritize.
37. For example, ask:
What is the online experience like
for our visitors before they even
walk in the door?
1. Website easy to find, relevant
information
2. Online maps, directions
3. Social sites welcoming, populated
4. Engaged membership socially
39. 5WâS TO SOCIAL MEDIA MINISTRYâŠ
WHY: Build your brand and forge
stronger connections with audience
WHO you want to reach with social
media
â Congregation, Youth, Unreached
WHERE you want to reach them
â Your website, social media
channels, theirs or both
HOW you want to be represented
â Tone of communications
â Voice: ministry rep, spokesperson,
volunteer
WHAT you want to shareâŠ
39
40. Whose job is social
media in ministry?
CC @ amanky
41. 1. Leadership:
establish vision
2. Church/Org:
set policies
3. Communications
team/lead:
set tone, manage
channels, recruit
volunteers
4. Everyone else:
check-in, tweet,
take photos, blog,
share
43. âą Church/Ministry news and facts
âą Financial information
âą Details on upcoming events, live stream links
âą Photos and recaps from events
âą Details on community, campaigns and contests
âą Positive news from members
âą News on missions, outreach and partnerships
âą Links to media stories
âą Prayer requests
âą Responses to questions or comments
âą And, of course, the gospel (sorry thatâs last)
43
45. âą 50%+ - US mobile users
will have a smartphone
by the end of next year;
highest 25-55, then
18-24
(eMarketer, April 2012)
âą 63% -- U.S. adults now
access the Internet
through a mobile device
like a cell phone, laptop,
e-reader, or tablet
(Pew, April 2012)
46. âą 58% -- Smartphone
owners use geosocial
and location-based
services, like maps, Yelp,
Foursquare
(Pew, Sept. 2011).
âą 88% -- Of those who
look for local information
on their smartphones
take action within a day
(Google, April 2011)
47. Responsive Design?
When you visit a webpage on a computer, phone
or tablet, its design should adapt â be
responsive -- to match the size and shape of the
screen. This is called "responsive design.â
http://www.vanseodesign.com/web-design/why-responsive-design/
48. 5 Steps to Mobilizing Your Ministry
1. Research your target audienceâs
mobile behavior.
2. Design responsive and mobile
brand experiences that add value.
3. Donât just put a QR code on
traditional marketing (see #2).
4. Challenge your organization to think
about mobile first.
5. Measure. Evaluate. Adjust.
49. In summaryâŠ
1. Social happened
2. Stakeholders use it
3. Mobile is now
4. The More You Put In,
The More You Get Out
49
50. Do be: Donât be:
Relevant Dishonest
Honest Repetitive
Transparent Too salesy
Informative Too corporate
Respectful Ignorant
Call for action Late
Prepared Absent
Polite
Sharing
51. Thanks!
@gregswan
www.socialmediashepherds.com
@smshepherds
facebook.com/socialmediashepherds
This presentation:
http://bit.ly/smshepbc
51
Notas do Editor
1382 â John Wycliffe translates the bible into English. 1450 - The printing press brought the living Word to thousands of people who had not heard or read its words. Before Gutenbergâs time, only the monks and church officials could even read. 1522 - Luther's German translation of the New Testament is published. 2012 â the Jesus Daily FB page â most engaged page on Facebook â beating Barack Obama and Lady Gaga, with 13 MM fans.
Just as the church has evolved, so has communications. Who can sit where, who can speak, who can read the bible. One way communication, down.
Even aged churches have digital screens now. Check out those screens
Busting out phones during church isnât bad anymore â tablets in services, taking notes, etc.
Heck, even the organist has gone mobile
Changing nature of church communications
Changing nature of church communications
Changing nature of church communications
Changing nature of church communications
Changing nature of church communications
Changing nature of church communications, first computers in churches, initial websites, introduction of big screen, social
Um, probably not phonebooks
Search? Definitely.
Maps â certainly.
Increasingly, geolocation based search, too
All the more reason to drop that yellow pages ad in favor of a mobile ad
Are your congregants checking into church on Sundays? Each one of their friends are seeing that.