Less Clutter. Less Noise. Book Tour

Less Clutter. Less Noise.

If you’re looking for proven “now” communication strategies to make every aspect of a person’s engagement with your church or organization more rewarding, then make this book happen for you.  Reading Less Clutter. Less Noise. will shape the way you do things.  Author and Communications Director Kem Meyer knows her stuff and shares her experiences, as well as practices that are currently in play.

Kem, what ways have you found effective to communicate to regulars, who like the way things are, why changes are necessary in order to better connect with guests?

The best technique I’ve found is to create space for conversations with leaders (staff or volunteer). If I invest in them, they help carry the torch to their sphere of influence. I ask the same types of questions to “lead the witness” and navigate around talking points to help shape shift perspectives (for me and them). A friend of mine had the title of Communications Director but said it should be changed to Communications Redirector because he spent 50% of his time redirecting people and projects. I think it is a fair perspective and good example to follow, regardless of what your role or job title may be.

Sometimes there is tension, though, because people are coming to you to get something done. They really aren’t interested in being “re-directed” or processing more questions with you. Other times, the tension is there because what they’re asking you for isn’t going to help them. In fact, it might even hinder them—and you know it. But, they didn’t come for you to tell them they’re wrong. You can’t sell what they’re not looking for.

Every conversation and project has different dynamics, but if you can find a system that helps you avoid spending too much time creating or too much time regulating, it’s a win. It’s never a win if you consistently find yourself playing the role of the communications police. One way is to start every project with a healthy skepticism and simply…ask questions.

Somebody smart told me about the three areas they evaluate for everything they do. I don’t remember the who, but the what stuck, and it is a system we use. Here are the three areas we use as a filter to evaluate everything we do and some of the questions we ask along the way.

  • Is it appealing (context)? Are we focusing our energy from the “inside out” or from the “outside in”? Do we know why people will spend their time and attention on us? Does it apply to their life in a practical way? What makes it worth the hassle? Do we know the comfort zone?
  • Is it engaging (presentation)? Are we unifying our message or diluting it? Are we reducing the noise in people’s life or adding to it? Are we removing the barriers to entry? What problem is this solving? Does this support or compete with the intended experience for our audience? Are we making things easy for them to find? Easy to understand? Easy to do?
  • Is it helpful (content)? Are we giving people what they want, when they want it? Or, are we answering questions they haven’t asked yet? What expectations are we setting that are unrealistic or out of our control? Are we promising something we can’t deliver on?  Are we making statements as if they were facts, when in reality they are subjective and left to personal interpretation? Are we baiting people with exaggerated benefits?

Sometimes, you’ll end up leading the witness with your questioning; other times, the two-way collaboration comes naturally. Either way, the result is breakthrough thinking and new insights from everyone on the same page.

[The contest portion is now closed. Thank you for the excellent dialogue.  Keep it coming.  Congratulations to Alicia Nordeen for winning a copy of the book!]

Comment on the Q&A with the answer to one of the questions below.

  • What kind of potential can better communication have where you work or worship?
  • Where is there a need for less clutter and noise in your life?
  • Bonus: Create your own and answer it! [But be surrious about it. React to the Q&A, if you'd like.]

Have fun!

Handle With Care

handlewithcareI’m not sure what happened to “handle with care” in the United States Postal Service, but this is how I received a package containing good stuff for you today.

lcln

Rest assured, the content of the package, your free copy of Less Clutter. Less Noise. for the giveaway tomorrow, is safe and secure in the comfort of my (mother’s) own home.

Check back tomorrow at 10:00 AM EST for your chance to win it!

I Love This Dog

rebelquilt

I love both of my dogs, but this one seems to always find a reason for me to break out the camera.

Here’s Rebel looking pretty comfortable in preparation for the nap she’s now taking.

The Pizza Experience

537590_pizzaThere are two words in college ministry that always seem to draw the biggest crowds: free pizza.  It is the staple to any party, gathering or function.  You see it in the healthiest-eating doctor’s office and on the least-disciplined dieter’s plate.  It’s good hot out of the oven for dinner and cold out of the refrigerator the next morning. 

It’s hard to find someone who doesn’t embrace this round, cheesy goodness.  What they get out of it may be a different experience for each individual; our taste buds make this so.  What are the numerators within this common denominator?  The toppings, the cheese, the sauce, the crust, etc.  They all come together to make something most people enjoy, even though the enjoyment may vary with personal likes.

It’s funny that a food such as pizza is such a big hit in college ministry, as each delicious slice can serve as a reminder to what works for people.  Pizza unifies a large audience by what it is.  When people eat it, they all experience pizza, and look for certain things in their pizza experience that enhance their connection.  Maybe it’s the amount of sauce, the thickness or thinness of the crust or just the right topping.  Maybe in our worship experiences, it’s the music or the speaking or the prayer time.  We all come together for ministry, but different things connect us to God, and that’s where we feel our needs are met the most.  It takes all of them to make the experience though.  If a pizza were just a bowl of sauce or stack of pepperoni, wouldn’t you be looking for something else to eat?

What makes your worship experience?  Is it the songs you sing, the message you hear, the mission work you take part in, etc?  Where do you think your encounters with God would be without those things?  Finally, are you hungry for some pizza now?  My bad.

Look Who’s on Facebook

popeonfb

I read last week on Mashable where Pope Benedict XVI has apps on Facebook and iPhone, in addition to his YouTube channel and other forms of social media.

Here’s a line from the front page of the Facebook application:

Spread friendship with the Pope and become a witness of Christ in the world through the web.

The Pope.  On Facebook.  To connect with millions via social networking.  All for the cause of Christ.

Amazing!

The initiative the Vatican is taking here is a reminder to engage with the world around us by the means the world is using to engage with each other.

How are you implementing this in your personal ministry?  How can you be?

Turning 100 Never Looked so Good

I teased I had some news for you today.  The rest of this paragraph isn’t the news, but it is what we call build.  This is blog post number 95.  That means this blog is about to be 100!  A hundred posts on what is probably my 800th blog attempt.  And you’re still here!  Man, I owe you one.

You know what?  Not only do I owe you one, I’m going to give you one.

One heck of a one hudredth blog post featuring one guest.

Next Friday, May 29 at 10:00 AM ET, author and communications connisseur Kem Meyer will be stopping by for a little Q&A!  If you don’t know who Kem is, check out her blog here.  Whether you know who she is or not, she’s still making something really cool happen for you; she’s hooking me up with a copy of her book Less Clutter. Less Noise. to hook you up with!

Since you knew there had to be one, here’s the deal:

From the time the Q&A goes up next Friday (10 AM ET) until the following Monday, June 1 at 8:00 PM ET, your comments on the post will put you in a drawing to win the book!  And, believe me, you want that to happen.

Just comment beginning next Friday with the answer to either one of these two questions:

  1. What kind of potential can better communication have where you work or worship?
  2. Where is there a need for less clutter and noise in your life?
  3. Bonus: Create your own and answer it! [But be surrious about it.  React to the Q&A, if you'd like.]

A big spell-out to Kem and the fine folks at thirty:one press for making this happen.

Be checking back for new posts each day next week, and thanks for playing the game at home!

Dropping News

You’ll want to check back here tomorrow beginning at 12 PM Eastern.

At that time, I’ll be dropping some news for you to catch.

Be here tomorrow, and watch your head!

That’s all for today. 

¡Hasta mañana!

Well Done

Sunday afternoon, I received a call from my aunt, informing me that Mrs. Annie Geldart had passed away the morning before.  Her life lived for Christ is an example for us all.  My memories of Mrs. Geldart go back to growing up in First Baptist Church of North Augusta.  The childrens ministries met under the sanctuary at the time, and I can hardly remember not walking down those green steps and into a classroom to find Mrs. Geldart with a smile on her face and enough enthusiasm to brighten up the foulest of moods.  She had to be in her 70′s then, but love and care like hers made a connection that broke through any age barrier.

I can remember being in Third grade Sunday School when Mrs. Geldart was teaching.  This was one of, if not my my most favorite years of Sunday School.  When it was time for music, she would be the one at the piano bench as we sang The B-I-B-L-E.  Playing the piano is something I recently read was a joy of hers.  I also remember her sense of humor and the one-on-one time she spent with me.  Even as someone who has always been able to keep myself pretty well entertained, she had interesting things to add to whatever was occupying my curiosity.  Something like a dropped set of ten commandments on a shelf that I liked to touch (because they were granite or marble or something cool-feeling like that) was an opportunity for us to talk about how Moses broke his first set.

When I heard Mrs. Geldart had passed away, I couldn’t stay negative about it for long.  I kept picturing that big smile she always had on her face, and how much bigger it must have gotten as she stood before the One she so faithfully served throughout her life.  At 89 years of age, I have no doubt that on the morning of May 16, 2009, she heard her service here was well done.

If you knew Mrs. Geldart and would like to leave a message for her family to receive, you may do so at the Rowland Funal Home website (http://www.rowlandfuneralhome.com) under “Visitations” at the top.

Things I’ve Enjoyed Lately

People say I’m easily amused.  I agree with them.  Maybe that will come out in a few of these.

Here are some things I’ve enjoyed lately:

  • Watching TrueNorth’s Facebook Public Profile reach the 400 mark earlier this week.  That’s 1/3 of our congregation connected, if not a little more.
  • Seeing a local radio ministry engaging with their audience using social media.
  • Reading Kem Meyer’s book Less Clutter. Less Noise.
  • Recently realizing that it may be possible to make every car wash I get in the summer to be at a fundraiser.
  • Just realizing I had planned to be on the other side of town getting my car washed to help out a ministry at 9:00 AM when it is now 11:50 AM.
  • Seesmic Desktop.  I’ve never been down with updating Twitter from other places besides the official website and my phone, but this one finally sold me.  I like the look, user-friendly feel and being able to update multiple accounts.
  • Hearing people say they don’t get Twitter, and seeing those same people update a Facebook status.
  • Seeing that Creed is back on tour, although I don’t plan on caving to ridiculous service fees to get my hands on some $30 seats.
  • Long weekends.  Memorial Day will be my first non-sick day off since New Year’s.  Following that, I have a mini-vacation in mid-June.  I hope Charlotte wears something nice for me.  (Charlotte, NC, that is.)
  • Posting on a Saturday.  I’ve been thinking about it just about every week, and must say that it feels so right.

That’s all for now.  Go outside.

That’s How I Poll

Since Facebook gets a lot of response when features are added or updated, I wonder what you think.

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