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My Dream Youth Ministry Communication Application

By Matt · Comments (16)
Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

No, it doesn’t exist yet, but I wish it did. If any super web-savvy people (who also happen to have a ton of money or can get people to invest) could pull this off, they could make a killing off of this idea for an application. It would be especially helpful in youth ministry but organizations of all sorts could benefit. Heck, maybe it’s out there and I haven’t found it yet. Here’s my idea:

The Concept

The idea is a one-stop place online to manage all contact information for everyone that needs to get information from you: parents, students, whatever. With all the information on that site, you go to one place, type in information you want to send to everyone, and then it sends it out in whatever format it needs to depending on which avenues of communication people have signed up for.

Outputting Information

In order to streamline communication, one input on the site (i.e. “Mission Trip deposits due tomorrow”) would be automatically converted as necessary and distributed through the following avenues to each member of the group depending on what accounts they have set up.  I think with all the APIs and third party apps floating around out there that most, if not all of the following would be possible.

  • Email – Obviously teenagers don’t use this but their parents do. Still the best way for me to communicate en masse with parents. Depending on your platform you could also email your own youth ministry blog and automatically create a blog post.
  • Facebook wall post – I don’t think Facebook messaging is as effective as a wall post.
  • Twitter – If people have a twitter account, it gets sent there.
  • MySpace – I’m not sure if this is possible, but I still have a few kids left on MySpace and it would be nice to include them in communication.
  • Text Message – One of the best ways to inform teens of things is through texting.
  • RSS – That way if you want to do any fancy RSS-to-newsletter or automatic blog posting you can set that up.
  • Voice: phone tree message – Especially with some parents, the answering machine or voicemail is still a good form of communication. This would likely have to be input separately from the text information (but maybe not, see below), but likely wouldn’t take but a minute.
  • What else am I leaving out?

Inputting Information

So, getting the information out would be pretty sweet, but inputting information could be streamlined as well

  • Website administration interface – Obviously, you should be able to log in to your account and send out info to other people, but that may not be the more efficient way of doing things.
  • Email – It would be pretty easy to give each main account certain email addresses (different ones for each distribution group perhaps) that administrators could send an email to that would automatically be sent out through the program.
  • Text Messaging- Same goes for text. On vacation in the Bahamas and forget to remind everyone youth group is canceled? Text the info to your group’s number and everyone gets the info.
  • Voice – There might be some way to integrate this with Jott.com so you could convert voice to text and email it up to your account. And/or it could save the voice audio and automatically send that out via a phone tree while the transcript is sent out via the text avenues.
  • Twitter – Twit an @reply to a unique profile and it’s sent out to everyone.
  • Other?

User Management

This would be one of the cool features. Each person could login with either their email address, their Facebook name, their cell phone number, whatever, and manage their communication options. They can input all of their account information and update things as it changes. You could have different lists set up for devotionals, announcements, Confirmation, High School, Junior High and people could subscribe or unsubscribe to them as they like. With this setup, the whole church could be on the same account and people just subscribe to the relevant information. Then, when you want to tell people to bring cookies to Youth Night Out, the program sends it out to everyone on the appropriate list via all the communication avenues they selected.

The idea is once you do all the front end work of setting up user groups all you ever have to do past that is send out information to people. No more moving people into different email lists, keeping your phone records updated, remembering to add the kid who just got a cell phone to your text messaging group. Everyone can manage all their own information.

Can it happen?

Well, I think it can happen. I just don’t know if it’s cost-effective to do all of this together. I know some of these features are available as stand-alone programs that cost $20+ a month or more. That could mean $100+ a month. Is this worth $1,000 or more a year?

I know that a program like this would make my life much easier and allow me to hit everyone in whatever medium they use to stay in touch with people without having to go through three or four different avenues. What do you think?

Adam McLane, Tim Schmoyer, are you listening?

Comments (16)
Categories : Theology, Youth Ministry
Tags : communication, email, facebook, myspace, text messaging, twitter, web 2.0

"Old People," Change, and the New Facebook

By Matt · Comments (2)
Friday, October 3rd, 2008

As someone in youth ministry, I often battle the generational conflict that occurs between young people and “old people.”  You know the comments that teenagers like to say:

  • “How come the old people are so stuck in their ways?”
  • “I wish the old people wouldn’t be so against change.”
  • “Why are they so stuck in the past?”

I usually counter that the teenagers are just as averse to change as anyone else, they just want other people to change to agree with them.  Believe me, when you mess with teenagers’ traditions, they are just as bad as any demographic when it comes to whining about it.

As a case study to prove my point, I offer the social networking site Facebook.  As someone who remembers when people started putting links in their AiM profiles that said “FACEBOOK ME,” I’ve seen the phenomenon from the very beginning.  The evolution of Facebook has been fairly gradual, but at every major innovation, the old guard of Facebook cried out against the new change.  This is peculiar, since, especially at the beginning, users of Facebook were limited only to the free-spirited, open-minded, liberal college students of America.  Surely our colleges are bastions of progressive thinking, aren’t they?

Well, look at the major phenomena in the evolution of Facebook (these may not be in exactly the correct order, but I think they are):

  • Facebook, originally a college-only social networking site, opens up to anyone.
  • Facebook creates the “mini-feed,” whereby users learn recent actions and updates made by their friends.
  • Facebook opens up their software to allow developers to create their own applications that users can use like Pieces of Flair, Top Friends, and iLike.

Each and every one of these stages in evolution was met with a Facebook group called something along the lines of “[Pick a number] against [Facebook's latest change].”  Every change met harsh resistance:

  • The elites didn’t like high school students invading Facebook.  It was started as a college-only site and should stay that way. High schoolers’ immaturity would ruin it.  And no one dared to think of their parents being on Facebook.
  • The mini-feed soon became known as the stalker feed.  Thousands were against it; they said it creeped them out.  However, users soon realized they enjoyed the convenience of not having to check hundreds of their friends profiles for the latest update.  It was all in one easy-to-use location.
  • Some of us, me included, didn’t like have to scroll down for miles to find someone’s Wall when people put 47 different applications on their page and cluttered it up like crazy.  Facebook was turning into MySpace.

As a result of Facebook opening up to thousands of different applications, it became obvious that people’s Facebook profiles were way too cluttered, and a solution was devised.  It is called the “New Facebook.” Instead of having one huge Facebook page on your profile there are now usually four different tabs users can choose from in order to get to the information they are looking for.  This allows users to click to appropriate tabs rather than scrolling.  Simple, right?

Right now, there is a group called, “I Hate The New Facebook.” It currently has over 1,526,000 members. Yup, over a million people.

With every innovation in the life of Facebook, I wonder what the newest users thought about the “old” Facebook.  Chances are, they didn’t  think anything of it, because they didn’t know how Facebook existed before they joined up.  Ask someone who joined Facebook immediately after the “stalker feed” was added if they think it is a useful tool, and I’d bet they’d say yes.

It’s interesting how good and bad are such subjective opinions.  Usually good means “they way it’s been and I’m used to” and bad means “I have to adjust” (which has profound implications for what it means to be a Christian, but that’s a post for another day).  This goes across generations.

If this is the case, when making changes to a church or ministry, the most “objective” and innovative opinions are those of the people who have been there the least amount of time.  Instead of getting together the charter members of a church when evaluating ministries and thinking about the future, maybe we should be talking to the people who are newest to the community without a dog in the traditionalist fight.  Their imagination has not yet been conformed to the status quo.

Whatever the case, next time your youth are complaining about the old people not liking change, just ask them “How many of you like the new Facebook?”

Comments (2)
Categories : Ecclesiology, Youth Ministry
Tags : change, facebook

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