Web Sites For Churches

December 23rd, 2008 | by Conrad Walton |

I have some experience with building and maintaining web sites for churches. Most of my professional life has been building them for large corporations, which is cool. It paid the bills. My heart is for church web sites though.

It just hurts to see what some of them look like out there. I am going to change the direction and focus of this site a little bit to point it more towards churches. Most of the advice and knowledge about small business web sites will apply to churches as well.

I’ll write a new version of the Web Site Starter Kit, this one will be for churches. You’ll learn how to build a site for FREE! Yes, this means that there will be no excuse at all, for not having a web site.

I am going to change the direction and focus more on churches.

I am going to change the direction and focus more on churches.

My first church web site was in 1996. I had discovered the wonders of this new toy called The Web, so I registered the domain name for the church I was attending at the time. I had a web hosting business (I still do), so I built a simple site that had the basics; service times, a map, statement of faith, bios of the staff, etc.

I told the worship leader about it and he was excited. He “got it” back then.

I had a meeting to tell the church business manager about it. He told me to take it down immediately. The Internet was for child porn and software pirates, not churches. He was angry that I had even registered the domain name. Wooah… Dude. Slow down.

I left the meeting disheartened. Of course, being the obedient, submissive soul that I am, I left the site up and did what I knew was the best thing for the church anyway. Idiot.

There were more meetings and the business manager backed down. He began to see the benefit of the site. People were actually excited about it and word got back to him that it was “a good thing”.

The next step, after the “fear and loathing” step, was obviously the “control” step. They wanted to dictate to me exactly what should be on the site. They wanted everything approved before it went on the site. Again, I submitted by doing the best thing for the church. He never went to the site, so he never knew any better.

We finally got some people in the main office trained to keep it updated. It began to really become a useful tool in the life of the church. They started to look for a higher end publishing platform and spend money on it. About this time, there was another political shift in the church, unrelated to the web site, and my lovely wife and I chose to leave and help start a new church.

The original site fell into the hands of the, well, we’ll call them ill-equipped to design and maintain a web site. They didn’t spend any money after all and the site follows all of the “10 Common Mistakes for Church Web Sites”. It’s horrible, last time I looked.

Based on that wonderful experience, and the others that followed, I’ll be giving my advice on how to create and maintain a web site for a church. I’ll try to not go on religious rants, whether they involve Calvinism or Microsoft.

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