On Church Websites

| By Scott McClellan | Found in Design, The Web | 8 Comments

Last week, I found myself looking for some information on the website of an extremely well-known church. It wasn’t long before I was completely frustrated. The site is an aesthetic hodgepodge overrun by banners, menu and sub-menu buttons, links, and text. And yet, among all those choices, the information I sought wasn’t there. Too bad.

The experience on this church’s website, combined with years of visiting church websites, prompted me to tweet this:

Here’s the thing: I don’t have any magic bullets or one-size-fits-all solutions for making the perfect church website. But I will offer you this challenge — spend some time this week making an effort to see your church website with new eyes.

Come up with a list of questions (Where/when do you meet? Where should I park? What options do you offer for kids? Do you have a marriage ministry? Who should I contact about finding a small group? Who should I contact about volunteering in the children’s ministry? How many families were helped by that recent service project?) and then try to answer them using your website. Better yet, ask someone who doesn’t attend your church to answer the questions, and watch them as they try to navigate your site. During the process, ask them how they feel (Confused? Overwhelmed? Welcomed? Comfortable?) and take note.

In many ways, your church’s website is the window through which your community looks in. It’s time to evaluate it thoroughly and honestly. Then, take your findings and act on them.

Good luck!

(Top image source: LOLcats)

  • http://www.wordonwomack.com David Womack

    Great post Scott. Over the last year I have done a lot of research of churches in my area. I've visited several. I was very surprised by this too.

    I would encourage churches to make address and service times extremely clear from the front page. As new visitor I can't think of more important information. As basic as this sounds, there are a LOT of churches that miss this.

  • http://topsy.com/www.collidemagazine.com/blog/index.php/2098/on-church-websites?utm_source=pingback&utm_campaign=L2 Tweets that mention Collide Magazine | Blog – On Church Websites — Topsy.com

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Collide Magazine, Todd Carter. Todd Carter said: On Church Websites http://bit.ly/9jYd9j [...]

  • http://silver-creek.org Travis

    We are in process of creating a survey (created using jotform.com) that we are going to attach to our weekly email newsletter, in which we are asking our regular attenders what they love and hate about our site, and what they'd like to see on it.

    Should be an interesting experiment, but it's our attempt to see our website with new eyes…

  • http://www.churchos.ca Matt Morrison

    This post connects with everything I've been working on for the past couple months. It's refreshing to know that other people in the church are feeling this frustration and have a desire to see change.

    Frankly, the church has neglected to see the amazing opportunity of the web to connect their communities. Hopefully we're ready to make a jump as far as how we approach things like websites and social networking.

  • http://www.veritascreativegroup.com/?p=148 Less is More | Veritas Creative Group

    [...] Magazine’s blogger Scott McClellan said about his recent experience with church websites: http://www.collidemagazine.com/blog/index.php/2098/on-church-websites This entry was posted on Monday, July 26th, 2010 at 8:57 pm and is filed under Veritas Blog. [...]

  • http://worshipVJ.com proctor

    we blogged about cats at the same time.
    awesome.

  • http://worshipimpressions.wordpress.com/2010/08/06/what-would-we-think-of-your-church-website/ What Would We Think of Your Church Website? « Worship Impressions

    [...] week, I read a blog post by COLLIDE Magazine. It prompted me to write about it on here. First, let me have you read what Scott from COLLIDE [...]

  • http://boyton.com.au Murray

    Great post. I just read that 85% of people visit your church first through your website. Who is our website targeting? Is our website an extension of our ministry, or are we simply proclaiming the church organisation?

    Everything should be done in the eyes of how is this being interpretated in the eyes of guests/visitors.