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Learning to use the “long tail of the internet”

March 12, 2006 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

I found an interesting article on U.S. News. Publish or Panic: The credibility of books is in a million little pieces.

It is especially interesting to read of print publishers who are finding the internet continues to bite into their sales, but are finding new approaches that leverage the uniquenesses of the internet to actually enhance sales. I think there is important perspectives in here about how publishers are using complex, multi-level approaches to modern publishing. They talk about the “long tail of the internet”.

Some quotes:

Their goal is to wag “the long tail”–a concept popularized in a widely read article by Chris Anderson, editor-in-chief of Wired.

When publishing executives invoke the long tail–and almost everyone interviewed for this article did–what they mean is that if you tote up enough small sales (especially via a low-cost, direct-to-consumer sales tool like the Internet), you can add up a big profit over time.

Oprah isn’t the only way to get readers; he relies on word of mouth (in person or online), pinning hopes on the long tail of the Internet, with interlinked blogs, online literary magazines, and reader- and writer-friendly chat rooms and E-communities. And the chief person he relies on to start the chain reaction is the author.

It’s interesting to see for-profit big-name publishers learning to use the various publishing media that we call the internet. Blogs, websites, online magazines, chat rooms, and e-communities, all working together to generate transactions, called sales.

We’re thinking of trying a similar “long tail of the internet” for outreach surrounding The DaVinci Code movie. We’re thinking of a combination of different media, all part of the “long tail of the internet”, to reach different people. Blogs, websites, evangelistic presentations, apologetics articles, podcasts, discussion, comments, PDF files. The goal is “transactions”, but in this case, it’s the transaction of the exchanged life.

Filed Under: Ministry, Thoughts

Internet Ministry is a “contact sport”

January 19, 2006 by Keith Seabourn 1 Comment

It’s Wednesday night. I’m on an airplane again. This flight is to San Antonio. I’m spending tomorrow helping train Christian Leadership Ministries staff to maintain a major website.

You may recall that 10 years ago in early 1995, God allowed me to be a part of the launch of a new ministry vineyard — the internet. I remember one well-meaning person counsel me that this was not going to amount to much. Bah! Humbug! The internet and ministry didn’t seem to mix well.

I have to admit that traditional ministries like our previous assignment with the Jesus Film in West Africa seemed much more effective.

But Kay and I knew the Lord was calling us into this new pioneering work of learning how to use internet communication media to minister to others.

And it worked!

Last year, Leadership University, which we pioneered in 1995, had 6 million visits by over 3 million different people (unique visitors, in internet-speak). Christian Leadership Ministries has continued its leadership in helping people bring the power of a biblical worldview to the many issues confronting our complex society.

The ministry strategies developed at Leadership University, Stonewall Revisited, World Religions Index, Doug Yeo, and many other sites in those early years at CLM have proven extremely effective and have been adopted and refined by almost all Campus Crusade for Christ ministries who are using the internet effectively for evangelism. Those strategies are being used to expose someone to the gospel every 5 seconds, and see someone indicate a decision to receive Christ every 20 seconds. Last year, 250,000 people indicated decisions for Christ through Campus Crusade for Christ internet ministries. They sent over 100,000 email messages which were answered by 1,000 trained volunteers.

So, I’m traveling to San Antonio to help another handful to be equipped to continue to minister through helping professors integrate their faith with their academics.

Hearing these great numbers is exciting — a quarter million decisions, a thousand trained volunteers, 9 new believers in the 3 minutes you’ve been reading this post. But it happens one-by-one. It happens when we take time to talk with others, at work, in our homes, in the neighborhood, or in an email.

After all, ministry is a “contact sport.”

Thanks you for partnering in this “contact sport.”

Filed Under: Ministry

8 things pastors need to know about e-ministry

December 15, 2005 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

I read a good, incisive article this morning: 8 things pastors need to know about e-ministry.

I’m involved in fulltime ministry for Christ and the rest of us need to know these things too! Here’s his main points:
1. Your target audience for church growth is Internet-savvy.
2. Your Web site will be your “first impression” for many people.
3. If you’re not on the Web, you don’t exist to many people.
4. Seekers will visit your Web site before attending your services.
5. A whole generation exists that will seek “religion” online.
6. The Web site is too critical to be run by a volunteer.
7. You can’t afford a cheap site.
8. People are viewing your current Web site right now.

Having spent over 10 years in e-ministry, I agree wholeheartedly. Want to read more? Try some of the articles on our technology website that my friend Rob has put together. Even better, read our e-ministry blog regularly. Rob is passionate about this! I’m supposed to post there also, but I don’t blog like Rob! 🙂

Filed Under: Ministry

Preparing Online Video

December 5, 2005 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

I regularly read Jakob Neilsen’s useit.com usability reports. If you are doing much on the web, you should sign up also.

Today’s was very interesting. Neilsen discussed a study that tracked eyeballs as people watched an online video clip. The maps were very insightful.

Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox for December 5 is now online at:
> http://www.useit.com/alertbox/video.html

Summary:
Eyetracking data show that users are easily distracted when watching video on websites, especially when the video shows a talking head and is optimized for broadcast rather than online viewing.

Filed Under: Ministry, Thoughts

Top Ten Web Design Mistakes of 2005

October 8, 2005 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

I recommend that everyone involved in web design, web applications, etc. read this article.

Top Ten Web Design Mistakes of 2005

Summary:

The oldies continue to be goodies — or rather, baddies — in the list of design stupidities that irked users the most in 2005.

Take something you’ve designed for your church, your personal site, an evangelistic outreach, publicizing an event, or whatever, and run through this list of 10 and see how your creation fares. Learn from it.

I am.

Filed Under: Ministry, Thoughts

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