Archive for the ‘People’ Category

Merry Christmas to All!

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

christmas From everyone here at nineteen05 we want to wish you all a Merry Christmas, a safe holiday, and wonderfully rich time with your family and loved ones.

We here have been blessed beyond measure in this past year and are so grateful to have wonderful friends and clients like all of you.

And suddenly there appeared with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying,
“Glory to God in the highest,
And on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased.”

-Luke 2:13-14


Designing for Everyday

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

church-bridgeOne of the trickiest parts about working in the technology industry or the church is that we very quickly end up in this bubble. A bubble where our concept of normal becomes skewed. In the technology side of things we assume everyone has the same or comparable gear that we do. We want to utilize our gadgets and sell our customers on them as the current trend. In web development one of these examples is mobile websites. Only a fraction of people access the web from their phones in the US (and recent cell phone improvements have made the need to develop a mobile site even less necessary).

The church is no different. Without a meticulous focus on the mission and vision of the church every organization will begin to do things simply because they can, and these new things will be exciting for the core team of people at the church. There are 3 key questions that are very simple: (more…)


Is the ‘Social Media Revolution’ Real?

Thursday, September 17th, 2009
YouTube Preview Image

For many people the idea of social media seems to be a fad or something that is inconsequential in today’s society. For much of the last decade it was seen as the place for teens and unproductive young adults. Today it has become a force to recon with. This video pulls together some amazing statistics on just how social media is transforming our culture and our world.

This reality is on of the driving forces behind many NGO projects like the One Laptop Per Child program designed to decrease the digital divide between the haves and the have not’s. It is this same reality that makes the online presence of your church so important.

So, what is your church doing to be a part of the Social Media Revolution?

Let us know in the comments below.

Video by SocialnomicsSources


Bi-Vocational Mega Church Pastor – Tim Gray

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

I personally love hearing about Bi-Vocational pastors (as that is where the Lord is leading my wife and I) and here is a man who is doing just that, at a mega church. This goes against many of the assumptions people make about bi-vocational ministers. Mainly that their ministry isn’t large enough to support them.

Enter Tim Gray

Tim not only is the Lead Pastor/Vision Director of The Bridge Community Church in Leadington, MO but also the Athletic Director for Mineral Area College. The folks over at the Catalyst Space blog did a great interview with him. He shares about his approach to church and is worth the time to listen to it. He talked about being bi-vocational starting at 4 minutes.

Just imagine preaching about tithing when you don’t draw all or any of your salary from the church among any other subjects. Since preachers asking for money regularly tops the list of things un-churched people fear about coming to church.

(Hat Nod: catalystspace )


Quick Guide to Twittiquette in 10 Steps

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

twitter-etiquetteWith the rise of twitter (and their 140 character limit) there has been much confusion over what should be considered appropriate and what should be avoided. As I’ve read blog after blog on the subject these are the top 10 ideas the bubble to the top.

  1. Define your purpose for this account, and be interesting
    When you clearly understand what your account is for everything will fall in line. People who follow you will understand the content you are posting, and will understand what content is coming in the future. This will attract the followers that you want.
  2. Posts that have pass-along value
    When posting something decide if it has value that someone else might pass along. This would exclude comments about what you had for breakfast or what you are doing at this very moment. Unless of course what you are doing would have value to those you are interacting with on twitter.
  3. Be a part of the Conversation
    Don’t just simply follow people. Talk to people about what is going on in life. There will be people you don’t know, and people you do. If you begin to interact you’d be surprised to watch some of these relationships make the online to offline jump.
  4. Remember it’s Public
    Be smart about what you post. Remember that anyone out there can read your tweets. To avoid subjects that would be seen as culturally taboo, unless there is a purpose for it.
    YouTube Preview Image
  5. Not for chatting
    We understand that people want to chat. There are several services out there for chatting online. Remember #4, that that conversation is completely public. People seeing this conversation will likely be turned off by it.
  6. Response to someone RT your tweet?
    Its flattering and encouraging when someone retweets something you posted. As a best practice send a private message to those who you can. Otherwise a short reply (@username) saying thanks goes a long way.
  7. When you RT from someone else
    Let people know that you are re-tweeting their post. It’s really simple, all you need to do is write ‘RT: @username -’ and then post the tweet. If it is to long when you re-post, see if there aren’t words you can shorten or take out.
  8. Keep your content Fresh – NO Repeats!
    Don’t keep posting the same thing. People will stop following you since they believe they already know everything you are going to share with them.
  9. Get an Icon, good description, and Custom Background
    There are very few customizable options on twitter, so use the ones you have! Use an icon people will recognize, and same goes for the background. Keep it simple. Make your description a sort of vision statement for your tweets. If you say you’re a Web Developer you should have posts about being a developer. If you say you’re a pastor you should post pastoral tweets.
  10. Watch the self promotion!
    If you are posting good and original content then the need to self promote should be minimal. This includes bragging about the number of followers that you’ve gotten to. Keep the content fresh and relevant and people will understand your value.

Thats my top 10 list. There might be something that would be added to the list. Anything you want to add to it? Leave it in the comments or reply to us on twitter @nineteen05.

Related Post: Twitter and 50 Ways to FAIL

Sources: NetworkWorld, Adam Copeland, Brandflakes,

http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/web/2009/042709web1.htmlNetworkWorld

How People use their Time – Visualized

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

people_use_timeThis really is an awesome flash visualization (via NYT) that you just have to check out online. It has a number of demographic break downs to see the different in how people use their time. You can also click on a part of the stacked line graph to see how that activity breaks down for the selected demographics.

Below are some quotes from the project that are particularly relevant to the church. Remember, the better we understand how people are using their time the more likely they will be to make sacrifices for Jesus.

“On Sundays at 11 a.m., about 13 percent of Americans are at church or participating in other religious activities.”

Time spent on Religious Activity per day:

By Race:

  • White people spent 7 minutes
  • Black people spent 17 minutes
  • Hispanic people spent 8 minutes

By Age:

  • 15-24 spent 5 minutes
  • 25-64 spent 8 minutes
  • over 64 spent 15 minutes

By Gender:

  • Men spend 7 minutes
  • Women spend 10 minutes
  • Everyone averaged 8 minutes

View the Visualization Online

(hat nod kottke)


Who uses twitter and for what?

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

twitter_growthTwitter is one of the fastest growing social networks on the web. One thing people always seem to say about it is, ‘what is it for?’ To be honest it seems as though everyone has their own answer to that question. The data below does lend some insight as to how people are using the site as of this summer.

In June 2009 a survey was done on twitter by Sysomos to see how people are using twitter. The results include the following.

  • 72.5% of all users joining during the first five months of 2009
  • 85.3% of all Twitter users post less than one update/day
  • 21% of users have never posted a Tweet
  • 93.6% of users have less than 100 followers, while 92.4% follow less than 100 people
  • 5% of Twitter users account for 75% of all activity
  • New York has the most Twitters users, followed by Los Angeles, Toronto, San Francisco and Boston; while Detroit was the fast-growing city over the first five months of 2009
  • More than 50% of all updates are published using tools, mobile and Web-based, other than Twitter.com. TweetDeck is the most popular non-Twitter.com tool with 19.7% market share.
  • There are more women on Twitter (53%) than men (47%)
  • Of the people who identify themselves as marketers, 15% follow more than 2,000 people. This compares with 0.29% of overall Twitter users who follow more than 2,000 people.

How do power users use twitter?

twitter-agegroupOf those 5% who account for 75% of the activity they discovered that (source):

  • Of the most active Twitter users updating more than 150 times/day, nearly all of them are bots operated by sources such as hotels offering deals, regional and national news services, regional weather services, the top news within Digg, games, anim services, tags within del.icio.us and financial aggregators. These very active bots account for one-quarter of all tweets.
  • Among the most active Twitter users with more than 50,000 followers, we find singer Tyrese (@tyrese4real), actress Alyssa Milano (@alyssa_milano), celebrity Tila Tequila (@officialtila), tv host Jonathan Ross (@wossy) and evangelist Guy Kawasaki (@guykawasaki).
  • 60.6% of the most active Twitter users live in the United States, while 6.9% are located in the U.K, 4.7% in Japan, and 4.3% in Canada.
  • The split between genders among the most active Twitter users is fairly balanced with 54% male, 46% female.
  • 88% of the most active Twitter users have never missed a day without making at least one update, while another 2.1% have only been inactive for one day.
  • 48% have more than 100 followers, compared with 6.3% for overall Twitter users.
  • 44% of more than 100 friends, compared with 7.5% overall.
  • 33.7% of the most active Twitter users have joined Twitter this year, compared with 72.5% of overall Twitter users who have signed up this year
  • The most popular keywords within bios are Internet marketing, music lover, Web designer, video games, and husband/father.

When to post on twitter?

twitter-hourofday

It is interesting to note the times of day that are most used on twitter. If you are posting something and hope others to see it is it best to be on the upside of these curves. Which would place it between 10 and noon, and then between 6 and 8pm.


10 Biggest Mistakes I Made as a Church Planter

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

connect_romeWhen I came across the blog of Josh Roberts as he lays out 10 mistakes he made when planting his church, Connect Rome, in Georgia. They are coming out as he posts them, so we’ll be updating our list as they are posted.

Here at nineteen05 we have a passion and heart for church planters. We are birthed out of a church plant (substance church) and are using nineteen05 as a platform to let us plant a church in Europe in the next 5 years. So needless to say we were excited to read through these gems.

10 biggest mistakes I’ve made so far

  1. I took it way too personal
  2. I missed out on life
  3. I tried to promote me rather than the mission
  4. I did too much and delegated too little
  5. I didn’t clearly define expectations
  6. I sometimes forgot that this was God’s thing
  7. I didn’t have healthy ways to deal with anxiety
  8. I took myself too seriously
  9. I spent too much time with the wrong people and not enough time with the right people
  10. I focused way too much on the urgent rather than focusing on the important

As Josh posts more of these, we’ll update the list above with links to those posts.


What is Spec Design Work, and Why is it Wrong

Friday, August 21st, 2009

spec_hurts_posterAsking someone to do work on Spec means that they put all the time and energy into the work without any guarantee that they would ever receive any compensation for the work. We are nineteen05 are whole hearted against SPEC work. So why is it wrong?

The reason it has been an issue for designers in particular is that after a designer has finished their work, the client would reject it not liking something and the designer is then out of their time/effort/money. While the concept of spec work does exist on large scale (competitions for major building designs). Unless you are holding a competition for your new church building, don’t do spec work. Even with volunteers.

The newly appointed president of AIGA (the international designers association), Debbie Millman, on Spec Work.

I am personally vigorously, passionately and fundamentally AGAINST designers being asked to do work on spec and neither I nor my firm will ever participate in speculative work. I have said it before and I will say it again: Speculative work denigrates both the agencies and the designers that participate. If we give away our work for free, if we give away our talent and our expertise, we give away more than the work. We give away our souls.

Read the full interview over at NO!SPEC.

For more information on the NO!SPEC movement.

In another article about the Debbie Millman, the author referenced these great articles. The top three are particularly helpful for how the church is most likely to cross the SPEC boundary line.

Hat Nod: swissmiss


What are the 3 Ways the Brain Creates Meaning?

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

tom-wujec

Communicating the meaning and value of an idea (and the Gospel) has been a goal for as long as civilization has existed. This video takes a look at some of the physiological factors that cause our brains to create meaning. Understanding this can help us create more impacting messages and better forms of communication.

Watch the 6 minute video for all the details

Keys to help the brain understand meaning are:

  1. Use Images to Clarify Ideas
  2. Interact with images to create engagement
  3. Augment Memory with Persistent & Evolving Views

If you have been reading here for a while you’ll know that I love the TED conference (Technology Education and Design). I love even more that I don’t have to shell out thousands of dollars to attend plus the cost of room+board and can instead watch video of the talks online or through iTunes.