
Change: When It Helps and When It Hurts Your Church
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
Don’t get me wrong. My last blog may make you think print is dead. That’s far from the truth. Instead, the print world is figuring out how to co-exist within the digital world. Get it correct, even though it’s diminishing; and print will continue to have influence.
We still read books and flip through print magazines. We just do it differently. Yes, your print bulletin will probably be around for many more years.
Although if fewer people are reading them, your bulletin may be known for bad communication. Let’s solve the issues so more will read it!
One of the benefits of digital communications is the way we can analyze reading and user habits. It’s difficult to do that with print. We can’t track eyes, how long people spend on pages, or what they engaged with.
So let’s take what we’ve learned from the digital world and incorporate that knowledge in the print world:
Once people see you’re using this style of compressed communications and they’ll scan the bulletin more so they won’t miss anything.
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
Every week families arrive at church. They walk through the main doors and head down familiar paths toward “their” seat.
When a legal expert asked Jesus, “Who is my neighbor?” it followed the command to “love your neighbor as yourself.”
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