Yesterday I listened to a webinar put on by Drew Goodmanson and Cynthia Ware on the State of the Church Online. You can read an excellent review of the research findings that they presented over here and the slides from the presentation are here.

These guys are doing a really good work. I personally believe that this research and the motivation behind it is edifying, reverent and inspired. God’s timing is perfect. Churches are undoubtedly trying to make some sense of all this social networking, private community tools and online technology. And they have nothing to guide them.
Kevin does an excellent job of pulling out the conclusions that have been reached. He points out:
One thing that stands out to me when I look at those key findings is the overwhelming awareness in the church market of Facebook yet very little brand awareness of comparable tools designed specifically for churches. You might chalk this disconnect up to ineffective marketing strategies but I believe it points to a more crucial issue which is: churches aren’t approaching social media strategically.
Kevin goes onto to point out that:
Churches dive headlong into social media (primarily on Facebook and more and more on Twitter), investing their time and their churches reputation without a solid sense of how exactly their efforts are going to redeem lives and bring glory to God.
Let’s also take into consideration the top 5 requested features/functionality sought in church/Christian social networks:
- Ability to find, register and/or get details for events.
- Ability to post prayer requests or needs.
- Ability to find serving opportunities at the church based on interest of gifts
- Ability to join and interact with home/bible study groups.
- Integration with existing church website.
Here’s my conclusion so far: The respondents are NOT looking for another social networking tool!
In fact, there are so many instances where churches are looking to use social networking for communications, logistics, planning, etc. when that’s not at all what social networking is intended for. It’s intended to “network”. Facebook is definitely not the best way to connect your members and groups. When you’re in a church and are involved in various ministries and groups you don’t need to network with these folks, you need take care of the business of being a member. You need to plan, share a calendar, get reminders, have discussions and generally be accessible to each other. Technology and the internet is perfect for that! It’s not about social networking. It’s about giving the groups in your church and other organizations a place for them to connect, share information, share ideas, plan, and again, be accessible to each other. This takes the burden off the administrators of the organization, by empowering the groups to connect and get things done on their own accord! What they want is a private, groups communication tool.
The Phase 2 of this research and its findings will be a very powerful step forward in helping churhes sort through the options of online private community and group communications tools (of which MemberHub is one, of course). We are looking forward to that research that will be available in the fall.





Have you found anything that accomplishes this: "What they want is a private, groups communication tool". The reason I ask is because I want the same thing whereby I can coummicate in public groups and view stuff from those groups but also communicate in private. I have created something along these lines called MusterBlog: http://www.musterblog.com. It is very alpha and I am trying to see if people are trying to fill the same need that I have. Let me know.
Hey Roger. Thanks for dropping the note. Well, MemberHub.com is certainly a private, groups communications tool. Tell me more about wanting to communicating in public groups. Do you mean you want the group to be accessible and open to the public at large?
Would Thumbdive (http://www.thumbdive.com) be able to help? This is a private group (we call them "SharingPools") based communication platform that is designed to promote genuine conversation and timely sharing. It's still in private beta and lots of improvement would still be required, but if there is something we can do to make modern Christian fellowship stronger, please contact us and we'd be very glad if we can be of any help.
Wendy, thank you for stopping by. For some reason this comment is not showing up in the blog and I don’t know why. Thumbdive looks interesting; thank you for sharing.
To freely bloom – that is my definition of success.
Thought provoking page. My colleagues and I were just talking about this the other night. Also your blog looks great on my old laptop. Now thats uncommon. Nice work.
[...] social networking application or communication tool. But that doesn’t mean that you should be using Facebook as your communication tool. And it also doesn’t mean that you need a really cool social tool to enhance [...]