Tag Archive - network

Missionary Slide Shows…

"I want to tell you a story about Joe.  He's the little boy on the left... the one looking at the camera... can you see him?"

"I want to tell you a story about Joe. He's the little boy on the right... the one looking at the camera... can you see him?"

Bring a missionary with a compelling story into my church for a presentation and I am almost instantly reduced to a blubbering wad of tears and snot… It doesn’t matter if they have slides or media or authentic costumes… I am drawn into the stories.

I am the exception… not the rule.

Most people, especially in the US, are over-stimulated by media.  So, if the presentation is dull or too long or not visually engaging, they check out about 45 seconds into it.  And we’ve all seen that mission trip picture: underexposed foreground that makes the 4 African children playing in the street 100 feet away look like tiny, black specks.  

Take a quick look and go back to text-messaging your girlfriend… and totally miss the amazing story of Joe (third speck from the left) and how he came in dying from malnutrition and malaria three years ago…

Great stories + lousy media = boring presentation.

So, in the minds of church-goers there are basically 2 types of missionaries: interesting and boring.  The interesting ones raise lots of money and the boring ones struggle to get the support they need to make ends meet.

Ironically, the interesting ones often get the support of a couple of rock bands who end up raising money for them so that they can keep doing the work of their ministry… But the boring ones tend to spend a third of their time going from church to church asking for support which comes in the form of pathetic, little love-offerings.

The sad thing is that the boring ones almost always have a great story to tell.  They just need a little help in telling it. 

And that’s where we come in…

We’re artists:  photographers, graphic artists, media designers, filmmakers, songwriters, indie bands… The visual and emotional flash that these missionaries need to engage their audiences, hold their attention and get help for Joe and other kids like him… it’s just a “doodle” for us.  Seriously, a day of pro-bono work from you could make the difference for a ministry that provides food for street children in India or an orphanage in Uganda.

Next:  Why artists have to make the first move…

Development Confessional…

...it's beginning to look like this to us...

...it's beginning to look like this to us...

We’ve been looking at our site for about 6 months now.  It has moved through three distinct incarnations and the version that you see now has been revised almost daily for the past month… Looking at your own webpage is like looking at a picture of your baby:  all you see is the cute baby… all anyone else can see is the huge booger in her nose.

So, we took a long hard look at our baby this morning and found some boogers that need… um… picking.  We thought we’d share this info with our readers, so you won’t just abandon us in our infantcy.

So, here are the items that we’ve identified for immediate improvement:

1.) The social networking links in the top feature bar look really wonky on IE7… We didn’t realize, because we don’t use IE7.  But the bar itself is badly designed and detracts from the overall appearance of the site. That entire bar is going to be replaced by an iconic interface located at the top of the sidebar.

2.) We’ve tried to use open source plugins for the Featured Artist and Flickr Friday slide shows.  We found one that works great, but doesn’t look good on the light background that we’re using.  We found another one that gives us all sorts of design latitude, but requires the user to click the images to advance… We’ve bee told that this is “janky” and that sounds bad, so we’re going to be working on developing new code for our own custom app.

3.) We decided that the advertising that we’re using makes the site look gratuitously commercial.  Gone.  We will begin inserting relevant and useful ads for resources that benefit our readers as we become aware of them.

We want WorshipOnPurpose.com to be the best site on the web for encouraging artists to use their gifts in ministry…

Any other suggestions?

WOP on Facebook and Flickr…

facebook

 

You can become a fan of Worship On Purpose.com at our new Facebook page…

  flickr

 

Or start contributing to our Flickr Friday slideshow by joining our group and submitting your images…

 

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