Sorry, didn’t mean to go into hibernation there for a second. I’m actually in Oklahoma City right now for a team building at my new job and to go apartment hunting. It’s been a hectic past couple of days. As one of my team members puts it, it’s “gonna feel like drinking from a firehose”. Yeah and I’m a sponge.
Category: Church Communications
The Multi-Site Movement
I heard this quote “If I had more time, I would’ve written shorter.” and took it to heart. This is probably why I love infographics. They have a way of presenting relevant information in a concise manner. Since my home church UBC is gearing up to go multi-site, I was happy to find an infographic on that topic. I know a lot of churches are heading that direction as well so I thought to share this with you all. Enjoy!
Optimizing YouTube Videos – Part 1
Almost every church has a video channel. Based on my observations, the two most common video sites are YouTube and Vimeo. This post isn’t a comparison of the two. As far as I’m concerned, it’s all a matter of preference. Most of my clients use both. However, with YouTube being the 2nd most important search engine in the interwebs, I’d like to dedicate the post in how to optimize videos in that little corner of the web. This will be part 1 of 2 posts.
Philosophy of Sacred Space
I stumbled upon Cultivate 2011 through Kem Meyer’s tweet. The whole conference blew my mind. I thought I was the only communications nut who geeks out on comm theories and technologies.. especially when they’re geared towards sending out the most important message of all – God’s love. If you want to know more of my thoughts on Cultivate, click here.
Aside from realizing I’m not so weird afterall (okay fine, I’m still a little bit weird), Cultivate 2011 introduced me to Mel McGowan, president and founder of Visioneering Studios. I admit I didn’t hear much because I was listening at work while multi-tasking. But he did talk about creating relational environments. That piqued my curiosity so I started digging a little bit deeper. Came across one of his interviews about theology of place. You can check it out here.