Website isnt workingIf I asked you to hire me then did nothing how long would you keep me? What if I only cost $50.00 a month?  Hopefully you will agree not long.

Chances are good you are doing just this with your website. Most ministries are paying anywhere between $25 – $250 a month for a website that just stands there.Thinking about your website? What are you paying?  What are you getting from it?  Are there definable goals that are set?

Why not?  If your blood pressure went up you’re not alone.

Websites today are as valuable, if not more valuable than your Greeters and Ushers you have or wished you had. To qualify that statement, Greeters and Ushers are; friendly, warm, inviting, cheerful, courteous and informative. Most Ushers are like the info desk at the mall, they can answer and direct able to direct anyone to anything.

Shouldn’t your website be offering the same service?

So now that we know websites should have a job but don’t. How do we get them to shape up or ship out?

  1. Define the job they need to do. look at other local churches website. What do they do or have that you don’t?
  2. Write on paper goals you would like. We want more people to sign up online, See the lost find us…..
  3. Find a web developer to evaluate your current website. This can allow your strength and weaknesses to be shown.
  4. Use free tools like Google analytic s to provide in site and establish definable goals. One of our clients had over 21,000 visitors last year. We know that on average 18% were new visitors. so we know that over the year over 3,000 new people visited and we know that 17,000 people kept coming back! We also know what pages were most viewed and what didn’t work at all! For good or bad we have knowledge and with on paper knowledge we can make better future decisions about our advertising capital.

If you are not happy with your current website or if you want to see if your doing all you can to keep your current population and attract more give Domonic Webster a call for your free website evaluation. Elev8 Web Design is a website and graphic design company in Baltimore, Maryland with extensive work in ministry and nonprofit web design and marketing. See some of the places we have helped http://www.elev8webdesign.com or call 443-986-8461.

The Why & How Of A Good Ministry / Church Event Flyer

Every event has some kind of promotional piece to advertise the next event. One of the simplest and most economical  way to reach local people are with flyers. The reason to have and hand out flyers isn’t just to remind people that you have a great event coming up. The first point of really any marketing design has to capture the attention of the target audience. Get their attention and they will want to come! So what makes a good flyer?  Well… Let’s start by what makes a bad one.

Some common errors are but not limited to:

  • Using too many fonts. Use no more than three different fonts on your flyers. Use one font for your headings and one for your smaller text. If you want you can use one font for the special words like Free Taco, Help Us or Door Prize! No more than that! In most cases Professional designers only use about 2 fonts.
  • Using strange looking fonts. people try to get fancy when it comes to the fonts they use on their flyers. Instead, use simple fonts that are easy to read. It helps get your message out there better. If you’re having a theme party find a font that will compliment your attraction.
  • Using low quality images or scanned images from a home scanner.
  • Not using white space. White space is not your enemy. It helps to make your flyer more readable and easy to look at. Your eyes need areas to rest. It’s similar to how sound needs quiet rests. Imagine if all you heard was blaring drums, guitars, pianos, singers and no one took a breath. Too many things too close do the same to your eyes as the music would do to your ears.
  • Putting content too close to the edge of the flyer. Be careful to avoid putting images or words too close to the side of your flyers. Placing anything there will be difficult for the customer to read and may be overlooked entirely.
  • Not remembering who the design is for. Personal tastes vary from person to person. Can you imagine designing a flyer for your youth retreat next month and using dull boring colors with pictures of senior citizens playing golf? It wouldn’t be very inviting to your youth.

So how do we fix some of these errors of design?

Think of your flyer as a something that is built, rather than something that is designed. Your first step would be your base or background. I recommend using something light for a few reasons. It will be the largest thing on your page so it will need to be easy on the eyes, easy to incorporate into your design, and if you print black and white it will still be visible. Can’t find an image? Many times I will use Google “Royalty Free Abstract Background” or if I’m developing something for a picnic I will search ” royalty free picnic images.” *(remember, images can and most likely are the property of someone. Please respect peoples copyrighted  images)

Don’t forget to use your organizations logo in all of your designs. The more you use it the more ingrained it becomes. Think Nike, or McDonald’s. They don’t even have a need to use words. A simple shape says it all.Once your base is established your fonts will be the main structure of your design. Think of your fonts as your outside walls. I love to get inspired from looking at fonts.
I think one of the best sources is at http://www.1001freefonts.com. All fonts are free and in categories for easy searching. Pictures and other details can be of great value to a design. Care should be taken when adding images and other “neat” things to your flyer. I usually ask myself the following when adding an image or little do-dads: Does this design add to it? What is the images purpose? Does it make sense? If the answer is no I don’t use it. Some of the best designs don’t have images in the foreground.

We will have more to talk about this in the future but for now happy designing 🙂

Domonic

 

 

 

 

Originally published on http://godpod.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=45&Itemid=78

Google Adsense is a great tool for generating extra income for your church or ministry. It’s very easy to set up Google Adsense. You must first create an account and select a username and password. You will be required to enter your tax exempt numbers and other personal information, so have them ready. 

Once your account is set up, decide what type of ads you want on your site, generate the code, and then copy and paste the code into your web page. Once the code is on your site, Google begins to generate relevant ads based upon your site’s content. I have been amazed at the accuracy of their choices. After that, when someone clicks on one of the ads, you make money.

Here are a few things that will help you get the most out of Google Adsense:

Ad placement. Where you place your ads is very important. Through trial and error we have found the best performer for us is a 160×600 vertical banner. We place it on the left side right below our navigation links. The second best performer is a 468×15 horizontal keyword ad. We place it at the top of the page right under our logo.

Ad format. The type of ad you choose will make a big difference in your performance. I use only text ads. I have tried image ads but they do very poorly on our site. You should experiment with different ad types because each site is different. For some sites using a combination of text and image ads works well. Google has a feature that allows you to create custom channels for each ad so you can track its performance.

Ad color. I have found that making the ads blend into our site as much as possible produces the best results. Google makes it easy to select colors for your ads. I use a white background with a white border and the title and URL are the same color as my navigation links. They don’t really look like ads, but additional links on our site.

Ad density. You are only allowed to have up to three ad units per page. We have two on every page and use an additional one on some pages. Often Google will only show one or two of the ad units at a time. You have the option of choosing either public service ads, or an alternate URL which will show the page of your choice during those times when the Google ads are not available.

Program performance. Google makes it easy to keep track of your site’s performance by showing how many clicks you have received and how many ad impressions have been shown. In the beginning a click-thru-ratio (CTR) over 3% is considered good. The amount of money you make is directly related to the number of visitors you have and how often they click.

Adsense for search. This is a great feature that allows your visitors to search for content either on your site, on the web, or a combination of the two. The landing page that is produced as a result of their search is full of relevant ads that will generate income if your visitor clicks on them.

Experiment with Adsense. If one type of ad doesn’t perform well, replace it with another. Once you have Adsense in place, Google does all of the work for you. Give it a try – you really have nothing to loose and everything to gain.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kim Linton is a freelance writer who covers a wide variety of topics including Christianity, technology and industry trends. Her work has been featured on major news outlets including The Wall Street Journal and USA Today, and has been published on a variety of niche sites including Woman’s Day and Intel.


 
originally read on http://www.ministrymaker.com

 

 

If your site’s outdated, you could be paying the price–in customers.
By Nichole L. Torres | Entrepreneur Magazine May 2006

You know the drill–you’re visiting a business’s website, looking for information on the latest sale or the types of services offered, and when you click on a link, you find it’s broken or the printout coupon has expired. The website is out-of-date, and that entrepreneur
is losing business because of it. Don’t let this happen to your business, warns Steve Grushcow, CEO of Edit.com, a website maintenance service provider in New York City. “We find that [some businesses] forget about [their websites] because they’re sort of intangible,” says Grushcow, “but it’s the face [of the business] to a lot of your customers.”

During startup, define what exactly you want your website to accomplish-will it provide information, make sales, or get people to call your 800 number? Once you get up and running, make sure it still meets those goals. Grushcow also suggests checking your site at least once a month for broken links or outdated news. You can even add a newsletter or blog to make your site feel more current. And if you keep a list of clients or samples of past work, make sure to keep that up-to-date as well. “Keep your business consistent,” says Grushcow. “Changes in your business should also be reflected on your website.”

You can update your website yourself with web-maintenance software
like Edit.com’s, but if your design needs an overhaul, call in a professional developer to give it the face-lift it needs.

And if you’re paying to advertise your site on search engines, you should be doubly concerned with keeping it updated and functioning well. “If your phone number is on your business
card and it doesn’t work, that would obviously be a problem,” says Grushcow. “It’s the same case for your website.”

Baltimore website design company Elev8webdesign developes new and redesigns of ministry web sites for the baltimore youthgroup, student ministries and other nonprofits in the Maryland area.

Elevate website design has developed websites with Joomla 1.0, Joomla 1.5 and now developes website designs for Joomla 1.6.

Baltimore, Maryland design company elev8webdesign also developed flash banners, logos, promotional materials for churches, youth groups, mission teams, drama groups and dance teams in the Assembly of God. 

Located in Dundalk, a suburb of Baltimore we look forward to designing your ministry marketing needs. Some of our clients are: Teen Challenge, Impact Baltimore,  Eastern Assembly. Of God, Highland Assemblies of God, Hamilton A/G, Captain Rons Boat wash, Crossfire Youth Ministry, Remedy Youth Ministries, Elevate Ministries, Faith School of Theology, The Chesapeake Group, Cpa, Dr. Ben Carson scholars, Pete’s Cycle of Baltimore and many more!

If you need a html website, a cms website or just a monthly maintenance program for your website give us a call for a free quote 443-986-8461 or email us at sales@elev8webdesign.com or dom@elev8webdesign.com. To see our designs or to learn more about our services. Visit us on the web @ http://www.elev8webdesign.com http://www.elev8webdesign.com.

Gmote Turns Your Android Phone Into a Remote Control for Your PC

Gmote Turns Your Android Phone Into a Remote Control for Your PCAndroid only: Gmote controls your desktop PC directly from your mobile phone, letting you control playback of music and movies, browse your file system, or even use your phone as a keyboard and mouse.

To get the media playback controls working, you’ll need to make sure that your PC has VLC installed, install the Gmote server application—there are versions for Windows, Mac, and Linux, and then install the Gmote client on your phone. Once you’ve completed the setup you can connect the mobile client to the Gmote server by IP address, and start controlling your PC from your phone.

It’s definitely not a substitute for a good media center remote, but it’s a great way to control a PC using your Android phone. Hit the link for the download, or check out the How-To Geek guide for a screenshot tour of how it works. Gmote is a free download for Android, Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Hey world elev8 web design will be hopefully completing the text insertions on faith school of theology today. 

We learned a lot from this website. Both from a business and an artistic standpoint. 

With every ministry website we design I feel we get better results by praying about the design vs looking for inspiration in other designs.

Its awesome to see the websites we designed have an impact for the ministries. By looking at their analytics their websites are generating on average 600 visitors a month!

If your business, ministry or outreach needs a website or if you want to see what we can do. Give us a call 443-986-8461 or visit us WWW.elev8webdesign.com

Life lessons

Posted: July 14, 2010 in Uncategorized

I was very lucky in hindsight to have a pseudo-father growing up. An artist and poet, with a giving heart to the beat down and tired. Not wealthy by the worlds standard yet one of the richest people I have ever known. He would make his living by going to flea markets buying then reselling the things the people had for sale. Many times when I asked him why he bought that worthless dirty thing he would say

“One man’s junk is another man’s treasure”

I always thought this was about material possessions. This morning I wonder if it means a man may see one person as worthless, while others will see him valuable? Or maybe the “bad things” we go through in life can be junk to us, but to others our experience are useful, like addictions or abuse. So many times in life we may never know that the hard times we can go through can help so many other people. Mr. Rodgers said

“If only you could sense how important you are to the lives of those you meet; how important you can be to people you may never even dream of. There is something of yourself that you leave at every meeting with another person.

Our past can shape someones future. The stuff we go through can either build or destroy not only us but the people come into contact with and even our loved ones. Like the child with an alcoholic or abusive parent who becomes an addict. The way we deal with trials and hardships develop our character, good or bad. Helen Keller once said
“Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. Only through experience of trial and suffering can the soul be strengthened, ambition inspired, and success achieved”.

How different my life would be if I had never went to the flea market with my Uncle Bob. I learned everything from discipline, work ethics and later in life, perspective. Many of my charter traits are from him and his time, love and quotes that he poured into me. I hope this encourages you to look at anything your going through in a new light and reminds you that we are all connected to each other. Lastly

“There was a man and they called him mad;
the more he gave the more he had”.

One of the big buzzwords in Christian technology and design circles is social media and its role in online engagement and community. To answer some of the questions about church social media, I’ve provided this short guide, which is the first in a series of posts about church social media strategy.

1) Quality content. Stories, art, insight, and fun content that keeps readers interested. You might also consider video if that works for you.

2) The three most important components to consider in your church’s social media vision are:

Spiritual gifting and passion
Intended audience
Available time and resources
God’s mission for you and His gifting to your church staff will likely orient much of the content and nature of your online and social media ministry efforts. For instance, one strategy is the use of the bridge strategy to guide social media efforts.

3) Focus on evergreen content over time-specific content. One way to help create more evergreen content is to create a series on particular issues important to potential members. What would be helpful or valuable to my members which I feel is consistent with my faith? Realize that time-specific content like church, community, and event announcements are still incredibly important, but this tip is more about focusing on what will be valuable 3 years from now than just 3 days from now.

4) Consider re-purposing content. If you already have a church newsletter or e-mail newsletter, perhaps 65 to 85 percent of that could be valuable to your users. One great way is to re-purpose sermon content in 1 to 3.5 minute snippets. Most users won’t be interested in listening to 25 minute lessons, so making short snippets available so they can access core lesson components in short bursts is important. One website that has done a great job of putting their content into snippets and is an example of video social media best practice in this regard is Stanford E-Corner website, which provides short themed segments.

5) Idea board. Create a document, wiki, or whiteboard to explore ideas for the blog. You might even just use a traditional paper model. This helps centralize your ideas so that no ideas get left behind. There are a ton of great free and low cost Enterprise 2.0 and Web 2.0 tools that are perfect for document collaboration (Google Docs and PB Wiki are available for free, while Zoho Docs and Basecamp are inexpensive paid platforms). This is also a great way to collaborate productively on ideas in staff and ministry groups.

6) Try to keep it personal and conversational. This is one of the core precepts of the new era of social media on the web. One way to do this is with your tone. Another is to have short interviews with community members about important issues and events.

7) Look to models and proven social media best practices. Check out the top 100 church blogs. What do they share in common? This can provide you with strategic insight about what type of content is link worthy and therefore SEO friendly.

8) Think about users. What are the 7 to 10 most relevant items? This is the same decision you might make in a Christian newspaper or magazine. Front page your most important content by putting links on the top or side menu bar. Another user-centric design consideration is to keep your design visual.

9) Aggregation. If you have multiple publishing platforms online you may consider consolidating them in one place via aggregation. Content aggregation makes it easy for users to access and view all the content on one particular topic all in one easy to use location. Widgets and content aggregation is one way for you to bring in content from your favorite Christian magazine, website, or blogger.

You will want to return to some of these concepts every 6 to 12 months as you review your church social media goals and strategies. Make no mistake, it is a time and content creation commitment. Often solving that issue is just a matter of focus and time management.

If you have questions about church search engine optimization or church website design, don’t hesitate to give us a call.


What should a website cost?


this is a common question many people ask…..


To not show favoritism because I am a developer and graphic artist I have take the pricing from the source many freelancers use to price their work….. The following comes directly from http://www.designquote.net/html/dq_estimate_wizard.cfm

Web Design Pricing Calculator

Average Hourly Rates

Student/Offshore $15 – $30/hour

Freelancer/Company $25 – $75

Expert Consultant $50 – $250

Professional Firm $75 – $200

Average Cost Guide

Logo Design:
$100 – $250+ (Student or Offshore)
$250 – $1000+ (Professional Designer)

Basic Brochure Website:
$500 – $1000+ (Student / Offshore)
$1500 – $5000+ (Professional Designer)

E-Commerce Website:
$1000 – $5,000+ (Outsourced Offshore)
$2000 – $10,000+ (Experienced Developer)

Custom Database / Interactive Website:
$1500 – $15,000+ (Offshore)
$2500 – $25,000+ (Experienced Developer)

To put this into perspective….. Elev8 Web Design just completes a website of 10 pages with a logo and 20 images, a java image slider with 5 custom images and client included 10 microsoft word documents that i placed in the pages. This site also included a email contact form… Our Cost….. $750.00

VS

Estimates: Note: These are ballpark estimates, submit a project for real bids.
Premium Medium Discount
Professional Designer or Company Small Company or Freelancer Student or Offshore
BallPark:
$11,305.00 – $15,295.00


DesignQuote Budget:
$10,000 – $15,000
BallPark:
$6,783.00 – $9,177.00


DesignQuote Budget:
$7,500 – $10,000
BallPark:
$2,826.25 – $3,823.75


DesignQuote Budget:
$2,500 – $5,000

If you need a website let us know free quotes and prompt attention to details are our calling cards. For examples of our work visit us @ Http://www.elev8webdesign.com or email sales@elev8webdesign.com