Tag Archive for 'simple websites'

make a website

standrewsHaving a website, say for your parish or community, is no longer as difficult as it might look, or as you might think.

Rev. Andrew Hedge took the ideas I presented on how to make a free website simply and has produced a most admirable, attractive, and useful website, easy to keep up to date, and all basically free. The essence of my idea is taking the simple, powerful, free blogging platform, Wordpress, and with a little trick – making it the foundation of a website, not only a blog.

Here’s how you make a website
Here’s some more resources

Andrew has, for quite a while, been recording sermons which are accessible through iTunes (another option might be to investigate such free resources as Sound Cloud). Today there is a funeral that family members in America are unable to physically attend. These family members asked if the funeral could be broadcast so that they could be part of it via the internet. Andrew says, “It hasn’t taken much by way of addition to the setup in the church, just a secure internet connection and video camera really, and we’ve been able to broadcast this morning’s service as a test run.” (Here’s the link found on the site).

I received a significant number of requests for the link to live streaming, or at least a video recording of a recent episcopal ordination here – what our national church was not able to achieve, an ordinary parish church is not finding difficult. Our national church used to have a website with digital resources online such as “For all the saints”, daily reflections, readings, and prayers we could use and cut and paste into our worship. The site clearly needed refreshing, and we look forward very much to the flash new version. But, rather than leave the site up with those resources still accessible to all, it was just taken down a quarter of a year ago. We are a small church (we don’t keep statistics, but I’m guessing that maybe only 0.8% of the population was in an Anglican Church here on Sunday?) I wonder if we are unable to accept how small we actually are, and work fruitfully to produce simple, appropriate resources from that acceptance. Here’s a website I made in half an hour. It is free. Moral of the story? Keep it simple?

Rev. Peter Carrell on his site is reflecting on “Fresh Expressions“. He suggests, “Install a webcam and feed services live”. He is more cautious than I about this, and concludes, “Ignore the above. That is me trying to second guess (again!) what the Spirit is saying to the church. But do not ignore the Spirit.” Well, I understand what Peter is meaning, and I’m sure he knows me well enough to understand my preparedness to “second guess” the Spirit on this ;-) Waiting for the Spirit to indicate that your community needs a website is like waiting for the Spirit to indicate that you need a sign on the road, or a telephone. A website is as essential in the 21st century as a sign and a telephone were at the end of the last millennium. I’ve been told that research shows 80% of new visitors to a church check the website first – my unstatistical experience confirms this. No decent website, and…

Step 1: get a website
Step 2: get a facebook page

If you REALLY can’t bring yourself to follow my simple instructions: buy some pizzas and some coke and get some teenagers to do it for you. Win-win-win!

The website of St Andrews Anglican Church, Cambridge, New Zealand (Vicar: Rev. Andrew Hedge)

Free website part 2

I have already given instructions on how to make a simple, free website quickly using Wordpress. That is the system I recommend as it satisfies simple, free, quick – and it is also very powerful. But there are a number of other free, simple, quick systems that you might like to try and play around with:

wix.com

yola.com

webstarts.com

weebly.com

webs.com

moonfruit.com

Some of these I have tried, some I have not – you may know of others. You may also have opinions about some on this list. Please add further suggestions, ideas, comments, reviews in the comments.

Free websites showcase & resources

Showcase

The following illustrate putting into practice my Make your own free, simple website quickly
If you want your site to be considered for a future showcase, please send me the web address.

St Andrews Anglican Church, Cambridge The vicar, Rev. Andrew Hedge, tells me it took him a couple of hours to produce this website from scratch following my instructions, never having used wordpress previously!

Most of that has been experimenting with different themes, playing around with photos for the banners and learning the system.

I like the way the tabs are easily made, by making pages and not just posts.

Your instructions were helpful to get started and I soon found my way through the tabs at the bottom of the “Write – Pages” page to learn how to control comments etc. I particularly found your instructions about making the front page a static page very helpful. I think that without that information I probably would have lost interest in the usefulness of Wordpress because it would have appeared to just be a site for continual blogging.

Andrew found that some images were slow to load. Reducing the resolution and image file size prior to uploading may help that and not affect the final look in any way. That, of course, also takes time!

Andrew wanted to put an email address on the site. I am very wary about putting an email address straight onto the internet unless you have good filters for spam. You can, of course, rewrite email addresses: liturgy.co.nz AT gmail DOT com, or similar. There are also instructions for encrypting an email address here and here. Another way I suggested is to leave comments “open” on a contact page and just moderate the comments – never placing them on the site with an introduction to that effect. Andrew has followed that suggestion here.

Another very attractive site produced following my instruction is the “work in continual progress” by Union Presbyterian Church. This also makes very good use of Google Maps which will be explained in the resources.

And of course there also continues to be my original parish of St Isidore of Seville.

Resources

There are a number of simple, free, online resources that quickly enhance and enlarge your website:

  • I have already mentioned You Tube. After joining you can upload video clips. You can embed videos onto your website – copy and paste what is in the “embed” window to the right of the video clip onto where you want it to go on your site. This is a good example.
  • Flickr is a similar site for photographs. After joining you can upload photos from events, groups, leadership. These can be set for public or private. You can put links from your site to individual photos or a collection of photos.
  • Picasa is similar to Flickr but part of Google. You can see a good example of its use as a link on the bottom of this post of mine.
  • Yahoo Groups can powerfully expand your site. You can store documents, photos, organise calendars, and have a variety of discussions organised into threads. You could have a number of different groups linked to your site. They can be moderated, partially moderated, or a free for all. They can even be a service-outreach beyond your community providing a place for safe discussion or advice…
  • Google Groups are similar to Yahoo Groups but part of Google.
  • Google Maps can be used well to indicate where your community meets.
  • Facebook is a very popular social networking site. You can form a group or have a page in relation to your site and/or community. You can even raise money through “causes”.
  • Bebo is similar to Facebook. You will need to ascertain which is more appropriate for your context. Or both.
  • And you may go even more powerfully – and create your own social networking site – your own ning.

Don’t forget

Your free, simple, powerful website has its own “Blog stats” on your dashboard so you can see what is working and what is not. A thousand people have already visited my St Isidore’s parish site!
And also – don’t forget to link your site to “Liturgy” www.liturgy.co.nz
And if you want to have your site considered for a future showcase – email the URL to me.
Write about this post and the introduction. Let others know about this site and what it offers.

Make your own free, simple website quickly

Update February 10 2010: Wordpress has been upgraded since this post. Click for a new version of this post which is available here.

I am surprised (that’s a polite way of say “appalled”) that there are Christian communities, parishes, etc, that do not have a website – or have one that is unattractive, difficult (almost impossible!) to find your way around, and completely out of date!

I am setting myself a task of, from time to time, producing an example of a parish/Christian Community website. It will have the following criteria

  • It will cost nothing – there will be no cost for anything from software to hosting
  • It will be simple – so that anyone can set up a website
  • It will be quick – so that busy people can set it up, and keep it up to date

My first attempt is using wordpress.com. Log in, and play around – if you don’t like it – it really doesn’t matter. There is help for wordpress. Some of the information about wordpress, and the videos, for example, on youtube, often refer to previous versions and can be confusing for the beginner – but, positively, do point to general principles of how to use this platform.

I made the following website in less than an hour: The website of the Parish of St Isidore of Seville. The “Front page” is normally the blog – the vicar, pastor, or any other person, could use it as a blog. I decided to close the comments on all pages and create several “pages” rather than “posts”.

A “page” or “static page” has unchanging content – unless the webmaster changes it – and does not (need to) have a date on it. A “blog” (short for Web log) always has a date (and so is in danger of appearing dated!) It is regularly used as an online personal journal – though clearly that concept can be adapted.

You could use the “front page” like a blog, with weekly updates (or as often as you like), for notices, reflections, sermons, whatever (you can switch comments on or off, and moderate them or not). I’ve got St Isidore’s site looking primarily as a website and less like a blog to show you that option – adapting wordpress (initially a blogging platform) for our needs of making a simple, free website.

Make your website

Click on “Write” and choose “page” to create a new page. Easiest for starting is to use “visual” and under that click the last button on the right (hover to read “show kitchen sink”). Save what you have done – then you can “preview”. Clicking “publish” makes it visible on the web. You can delay what you write being visible on the web and have it appear automatically at a fixed time and date by clicking “edit” above “publish” changing details there and then clicking “publish” (very useful if you want to plan ahead, or you will be away – don’t forget to click “publish” or it won’t appear on your specified date and time).

You can change the look of your website completely in one click under “design”. I chose a design in which you can change the “custom header” and I’ve used a (copyright free from Wikipedia) picture of Canterbury cathedral. All the content of your website is independent from its look – so you can change the look with one click (including when you tire of its current look).

I added a video clip from youtube. Go to the video on youtube you wish to add. Copy the information in the “embed” box, paste it where you want the video to appear. Save. Publish. Done.

You can authorise a team of people to be able to work on your website – so that several people can be responsible for it (”users”). Children’s ministry updates that section. Someone else adds the text and recording of Sunday’s sermon. Someone else keeps the service times and notices fresh. The sky is the limit. It is free, simple, and fast.

If you have not done anything like this previously PLAY AROUND WITH IT – you cannot damage anything. If it does not look right, or does not work as you would like – all is easily changed.

One final (slightly) tricky bit that will make your site look even cooler.

You can add as many pages to your site as you like – but initially the front page is the blog – and so always has a date. If you want the front page to be a “static page”, not blog-looking:

  • Create the page you want to be your front page. I made “Welcome to our parish” and put what I wanted there. Save & publish.
  • If you still want to use the blogging facility somewhere else on your site: create a page where you want that to go (I called mine “This week”) and write nothing on it. Save & publish.

Front pageNow, breathe deeply for a moment, here comes the tricky bit:

We want “Welcome to our parish” to be the front page. Go to “Settings” click “Reading” (Settings > Reading) and put Front page displays Front page “Welcome to our parish” Posts page “This week”. Save changes (Don’t forget this!) Last bit: if you now check your site you will find “Welcome to our parish” AND Front page.

parentWe don’t want the same page twice. So we will “bury” the second occurrence deeper into our site: Go to the page “Welcome to our parish” page (Manage > pages – open the actual page). By using “Page parent” bury the second version under another page (in my case I made the page parent “This week”). SAVE (Don’t forget – easily done!). Check your site. All completed.

  • If you don’t want to use the blog function at all: at the Settings > Reading, leave Front page displays Posts page to “select”.

Don’t forget: if something is not appearing on your site – you may have forgotten to save (changes); you may have forgotten to publish.

THERE IS A PRICE for my efforts at making it easy for you. Please, when you have your website, place a link to “Liturgy” www.liturgy.co.nz. (”write” “links” – go to manage links first and remove the two standard links – you don’t need those).

Enjoy yourself – getting online has never been this easy

Please contact me with any questions or comments that I can incorporate into future assistance.

Showcase of websites following these instructions and further resources