Building a Church Website
by Chris RyersonHave you been
asked to build a website for your church? Building There are
thousands of people building websites everyday. It is becoming
increasingly important for many small organizations and groups
to build their online presence. This helps in getting their
ideals, goals, and mission out to the general public. Therefore
at an increasing rate many of us with computer skills are asked
by organizations to put together a website. This happened to me
about two years ago when the school I worked at asked me to
build a website for them to help advertise their special arts
programs.
The only problem with this is many of us do not have the skills
nor the time to build and keep up a whole site. It takes a lot
to be the webmaster of a website and it is no simple task.
However often it is too expensive to pay a web designer to
build a custom site for an organization and so the task often
falls to an armature or even some one with no experience. This
is what happened to me with the website that I build for my
school. I didn't have the first clue about website design or
html. So that forced me to learn the basics and use what
tutorials and templates that i could find online. I made it
through the experience and like many others found that it was a
lot of fun. Therefore I started building a bunch of other
sites. I would bet that this happens to many.
This article will help the beginning web designer or even
volunteer set up a basic Church website. However since there is
not a lot of money to spend on the project and often people
have really unrealistic ideas about what a website can do we
will give you some good guidelines and tips to get started.
The first thing that you need to have a real good idea about is
your level of experience with building websites. It is really
important to be honest with yourself and the church that you
belong to in order to create a realistic expectation. If you
are a beginner then it is fine to admit that, we all have to
start somewhere. However, if you are a beginner don't plan on
building an elaborate SQL php backend that can be dynamically
updated or anything like that. Below I have provided some basic
definitions of skill level that might help you assess where you
are at.
Beginner - You are this level fall anywhere in between never
setting up a site to having built a site or two with an online
website builder or a pre made website like those provided on
Yahoo, or AngelFire.
Intermediate - If you have either set up a website with an
online builder and customized the site some or built a website
using a template then you fall into the intermediate
category.
Advanced - You have set up many sites before and often use
templates for ideas but tweak them so much they hardly resemble
the template when you are finished.
How you choose to build your website depends largely on two
factors, your time commitment to the project and your skill
level. These two factors have a strong correlation between
them. Meaning if you have lots of time and are a beginning you
will be able to build more advanced websites. However if you
are an advanced designer and have very little time to build
another site then you will want to go with something very
basic. If you fall on either the not enough time or not enough
experience end of the spectrum then you should really consider
buying a template to either make your site or at least get you
started. However if you are at the intermediate or advanced
level and have time then you should forgo the template and
create a really cool design yourself.
Some of the tools that you will need to build any website are
included below:
Graphics Software - The standard for creating website is Adobe
Photoshop. Photoshop has a great add-on product that comes with
the software that allows you to slice the images you create and
export them as html.
HTML editor - This can be anything from Microsoft Notepad all
the way up to a high end WYSIWYG editor. WYSIWYG stands for
What You See Is What You Get and it means that the program does
the html coding for you. Some editors that you might want to
look into would be (ranked from least expensive to most) Coffee
Cup HTML Editor, Microsoft FrontPage, Macromedia
Dreamweaver.
Before you start with getting your hands dirty it is really
important to lie a good foundation for your website. In order
to have a high quality website it is important to have a good
foundation and site plan before you start. In a Church, School,
or Club it is important to have a group of people working on
the website planning. The actual work might be carried out by
one person but it is important to have a group plan the site
plan in order to get global perspective of the organization.
During this stage it is important to gather ideas, thought, and
and opinions and get them down on paper. As the group refines
their plans it is important to come up with a site map. A site
map is a graphical representation of every page that will be on
the website and how they will connect to each other. It is also
important to get some basic ideas on the layout of the
site.
Next you can go online and check find the templates that are
available. Look around and find different ideas and templates.
If you are like many people you might find that one template
does not work. I often want a part of one and part of another
template. If this is the case and you are experienced it is not
really a problem but if you are new to website design then you
might want to pay someone to customize the site for you. You
can see some resources on our site dealing with template
customization and templates.
It is important now if possible to assign sections of the
website to different individuals. They don't even need any
experience with website design. If they can type you will be
able to use them. Assign sections to each member of the team to
complete. That team member will then work on their own computer
in Microsoft word or a simple text editor to create the text
and collect any graphics, pictures, or sounds that they would
like to add to the site.
Below is a list of some of the content areas that you might
want to include on a church website
* Events
* Services
* Calendar
* About the Priest or Pastor
* Church's Mission Statement
* gallery of recent church activity
* picture tour of the church
* Sunday school or singles groups etc.
Each member can then turn in their section of the website on a
disk to you and you will compile all of them onto the actual
website. You can often do this by a simple cut and past command
in most WYSIWYG editors. It is important at this stage to name
all of the files in a consistent way and stick to the site map.
If you make changes to the site as you are building make sure
you reflect these changes on your site map. It can become very
easy to build a huge website with literally 1,000's of of files
including images, html documents and much more. If you are not
consistent with your file naming and site map then you will not
be able to update or make changes tot he website because you
will be lost.
Once your website if complete you will need to find a host and
upload it to the host. If you have trouble at this stage
typically the host will help you with it. After your site is up
then you will breathe a big sigh of relief and feel like you
don't want to see the site ever again. However the work has
only really begun because website are constantly evolving an
have to reflect what is happening in the world and your
organization. So your work has only begun. You will now need to
work to publicize your site sot hat people can find it and you
will need to continually update the site and keep the content
fresh and up to date.
This article was written by: Chris Ryerson who is the owner
and designer of over 10 sites that are currently on the web. If
you are interested in reading this article and other articles
like it you can go to www.crowntemplates.com/articles. You may
also want to check out the wide variety of Templates and
Free Webmaster tools at Crown Templates.
marketing@crowntemplates.com
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