Month: September 2007

  • Beautiful Disaster: Jon McLaughlin

    JonmclaughlinI’m reviewing the new album by Jon McLaughlin for YMX. There are sometimes when a lyric is just so real that you can’t help but identify with them. Actually, I think in one way or another every Christian can identify with this song:


    She’s giving boys what they want, tries to act so nonchalant,
    Afraid they’ll see that she’s lost her direction.
    She never stays the same for long,
    Assuming that she’ll get it wrong.
    Perfect only in her imperfection.

    Chorus:
    And she would change everything, everything just ask her.
    Caught in the in between, a beautiful disaster,
    And she just needs someone to take her home.
    Full song lyrics

  • Moblog test message

     

    I am testing out the mobile blogging feature from typepad on my smartphone. so far, so good.

  • Woody Allen interviews Billy Graham

    I thought this would make everyone think. With Billy’s health now failing, it’s good to see him as a vibrant 50-something exchanging wit with Woody Allen. Part 1 Part 2

    HT to Think Christian

  • 6 Free Ways to Generate Web Traffic to Your Blog, Money-Back Guaranteed

    Here are 6 basic tips that will help you build traffic for your blog. These 6 things are simple to do and generate plenty of traffic for me. Best part, they don’t you a dime.

    1. Post regularly. (1-2 times per day seems to be a good pace)
    2. Post comments on other blogs you read; if you refer to a blog consider posting a trackback
    3. Tag your posts into categories and ping Technorati
    4. Join a referral service like BlogRush.
    5. Link your blog to your Facebook
    6. Put a link to your blog in your email signature

    Depending on the feedback I get from this post, I may give 4-5 next step secrets for unlocking the power of the web to drive traffic to your blog or website.

  • Recommended Reads & Tunes

    I am a student of culture and I try to keep up on the "latest & newest" resources. The following resources, I recommend to my readers. You can also read reviews of each of these items by going to the Resource Review section of Youth Ministry Exchange.


  • Reflections on Online Community

    Reflections on Online Community

    Last week I sat in on Kent Shaffer’s session on “Communicating without Words” at the Internet Ministry Conference. And tucked deep in the session were his “7 Steps for [creating/managing] an Online Community”

    After all, if Seth Godin said this is one his top new jobs of the future, it’s worth talking about.

    I wanted to take a few minutes to apply those thoughts… letting them play out.

    1. Define your purpose. For an existing community, I would swap the word “define” to “defend.” I’ve found that to be the hardest thing with managing YMX. There are both internal (mostly from myself) and external pressures to take the community in an unintended direction Effectively managing an online community takes overseers who are willing to guard the purpose. I think this has been one of the strengths of YMX, but it’s tough sledding too.
    2. Define the user experience you want. This is actually pretty important. Because taking the time to map out both what you want the community to be and how you want to form that community are two entirely different things. The platform your community uses is tremendously important to this. For YMX, we use a forum software package that really compliments the type of community we want to be. Open source, willing to try new things, secure, and flexible. That kind of paints a picture for who we are as an online community. But YMX is so much more than just our forum community… and as that picture gets more and more clear for us… we’re able to add features and remove features based upon our user experience design.
    3. Evaluate the system. We do this all the time. Better yet, our users do it for us. Every time I add a feature to the site I start a thread asking for feedback. If people try it and don’t say anything I presume that it worked. If they don’t give us feedback I take it to mean they tried it, it worked, but they didn’t like it. But if it doesn’t work, we always hear about it! Another important element of evaluating the system is noticing how people are using your online community in un-anticipated ways. When you notice that (for us, this was our recipe section) you have to decide… do I kill this? Do I allow it to be an abnormality? Or do I embrace it? For the recipe section… we decided it would be within our purpose to embrace it. And it’s taken off.
    4. Tweak it. Patient users of YMX will know we constantly tweak stuff. Features, design, layout… we tweak big and small things all the time.
    5. Observe it. Often times I perceive something as not working when it really is.
    6. Tweak it.
    7. Observe it. Getting the idea this is an ongoing process? I think this is one of the reasons why MySpace failed so hard. Once they got big they never added features, got rid of abuses of the system, or listened to customer feedback.

    I’ve had loads of people tell me that online communities are just a fad that will quickly fade. Well, as someone who manages a community (rather, I’m part of a team who manages a forum) I feel as though if we just continue a process similar to the way outlined… we’ll just continue gaining steam.

    YMX just crossed the 200,000 post mark. We’ve got about 1100 members. And overall I see us as “just getting ready to go public with our service.”

    At the end of the day… any organization would be wise to obey this process. It isn’t a God-ordained, perfect process. But it is a process that works.

  • Perry Noble’s Rant: Amen

    PerryI’m sure most of us have felt how Perry Noble felt when he posted this today:

    I recently heard of a church in the area taking a stab at NewSpring
    DURING a worship service, saying that we allow people to dress any way
    they wish and that suits and dresses are not required, even frowned
    upon in our church. This comment was made to criticize us…but lets
    unpack it for a second. 🙂

    I hate this too. There is nothing worse than a church attacking your church. It’s just annoying and funny at the same time. Been a while since we’ve gotten this… but it comes and goes.

    I love his response.

    It’s time that Christians people that go to church
    STOPPED this crap! Dressing up does not make you godly…for many it
    simply means they are good looking hypocrites!!! The REAL question is
    how is your heart…are you and I doing what Jesus outlined in Matthew 22:36-40?  THAT matters!!!  (Once again please note they asked Jesus about what was most important…and He never mentioned a dress code!)

    Preach it Perry-man.

  • Strike Update

    Just to update a post from yesterday. In the middle of the night, UAW and GM reached a deal that sent 70,000+ workers back to the production lines today.

    As with all negotiations… when both sides leave thinking they’ve won… it’s a good thing.

  • See You at the Pole

    Syatp_07Today is "See You at the Pole" all around the country and as I write this thousands of parents, students, and school employees all around the country are lifting up their schools to the Lord.

    I was over at Romeo Middle School… for about 10 minutes. Unlike other SYATP’s I’ve been to, this one was short and sweet for the 30 or so students who were there. Just kind of just stood around, adults prayed… no kids prayed… then it was over the second a bell rang. You’ve got to love middle schoolers!

    A couple of people over at YMX have said that they didn’t plan to do a thing for SYATP. (Certainly, that was my position last year… I even overslept and missed it.) I think Tim Schmoyer added the best quote to that conversation. He posted "one day of prayer for your schools is better than no days of prayer for your schools. Well said.

    Last night I co-hosted a See You Before the Pole Party over at Simpson Park.  It wasn’t  very well-attended… but we got a very late start in telling people about it as well.  The most important thing that happened was that more than 1 church was part of putting it on. In this town that is a miracle. We hope it’s just the beginning of events that get local students together to worship and fellowship together.  We’re getting together today to come up with an event… probably in early January.