Top Banner
Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013
16

Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Dec 17, 2015

Download

Documents

Benedict Webb
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Website Content Management

How to Market Your Church WorkshopApril 5, 2013

Page 2: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

“When we moved, a church’s website was our first filter to find a church. A lot of churches had crummy websites and regardless of how great a church might be, we would pass them by.”

From market research collected by The Episcopal Church 2009

Page 3: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

What is Content Management?

• The creation,

• publication,

• and ongoing maintenance of

relevant content.

Page 4: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Creation

Understanding what your audience/user needs to know about you

and delivering it in a compelling way.

Page 5: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Creation

• Good content should:– Tell your story– Answer people’s questions– Motivate– Allow for decision-making– Manage expectations

Page 6: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Elements

• Text• Graphics• Video• Audio• Links

Page 7: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Style

Defines the guidelines by which all content is governed.

Page 8: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Style

• Set a template for editorial style:– Font– Font size– Use of logo/name/image– Capitalization – Use of italics– Use of images

Page 9: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Publication System

How to organize, deliver, and preserve your content.

Page 10: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Publication System

• Break the creation of content into manageable pieces.

• Designate someone — the gate keeper — to aggregate, edit, and post the content.

• Always have an extra set of eyes for proofing prior to publishing.

Page 11: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Publication System

• Think of your website as a house you are building.

• Organize your content in categories by key messages.

• Deliver your content with your user’s point of view in mind always.

Page 12: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Site Map

Page 13: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Content Site Map

Page 14: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Maintenance

• Designate specific people to be responsible for specific sections of content.

• Provide an easy way for them to submit changes to existing content.

• Have one person — the gate keeper — responsible for making the changes.

Page 15: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Key Things to Know

• Your website is never “done.” It will always be a work in progress. Build that into the plan right up front.

• Publish content in one place ONLY.• Effective content is always about what the

audience needs or wants, not about the internal workings of the church itself.

Page 16: Website Content Management How to Market Your Church Workshop April 5, 2013.

Key Things to Know

• Deciding what to leave off your website is just as important as deciding what goes on.

• There are only two things that matter when it comes to web content: your church’s goals and your audience’s needs.

• Don’t commit to content that you do not create or maintain.