8 Ways Your Church Website Can Welcome First-Time Visitors Before They Arrive

8 Ways Your Church Website Can Welcome First-Time Visitors Before They Arrive
Kevin D. Hendricks

 

So let’s talk about those online first impressions.

I recently asked some friends for suggestions of multicultural churches in my area. I’m not leaving my church, but I wanted to visit a few churches in the area. Since I’m not ready to church hop every week, my choices had to be limited. Unfortunately, church websites make it all too easy to cross churches off the list.

I found two distinct categories of lessons for church websites: The church service experience and the website itself. “Your visitors have busy lives. They need to know how long they’ll be stuck in your pew on Sunday morning.”

Glimpsing the Church Service Experience Online One of the greatest things your church website can do is give first-time visitors a glimpse of what they can expect when they show up in-person.

1. How long is it?

I’ve never really thought the length of the service was that important. You tell people when it starts and they’ll find out when it ends. But your visitors have busy lives. They need to know how long they’ll be stuck in your pew on Sunday morning. So let visitors know when the service normally ends. You’ll make it easier for them to plan the rest of their day and make sure church fits in their schedule. If the length of your service varies too much then you’ve got a problem. This isn’t a matter of the Bible vs. football, it’s a question of being considerate of other people’s time.

2. What’s the Dress Code?

Telling people what they can wear is a no-brainer these days. You absolutely must tell people how they should dress so they can feel comfortable. And detail is important. One person’s “casual” is another person’s “dressy.” If your church is at all dressy, be sure to include casual crowd shots of your people so visitors can see whether or not their Sunday best will work.

3. What’s It Sound Like?

Picking a church is hard. For better or for worse, the music style is one of the first things we use to filter our church choices. Accept that and use it to your advantage. You can’t hide the fact that you rock the old school hymns. If you mislead a visitor into checking out your service, you haven’t gained anything. They’ll never come back if they hate your music. So give visitors a taste of your music online. High quality audio recordings can be a nightmare, so don’t over-think this. Grab an iPhone and shoot some quick video of your worship team. Embed a few YouTube videos on your site and you’re done. This post on creating short videos might help. Just be sure to sort out licensing. A 30-second clip is probably fair use, but I’m no lawyer. If you’re unsure, use original material (with permission) or public domain songs. “You can’t hide the fact that you rock the old school hymns. So give visitors a taste of your music online.”

4. What about the Kids?

Children are the future, right? So what do we do with them during the service? This was a major question as I was looking at churches. Could I bring my kids with me? Would they have to sit through a 45-minute sermon? Or would I be signing them over to some Disney-fied experience where I’d wonder if they were being brainwashed (and having more fun than me). Spell out what the options are for kids and make those over-protective parents feel OK about dropping off their kids.

5. Back It up

If your church is known for being multicultural—and especially if you claim to be—your website better back it up. Don’t show me an overly perfect rainbow stock photo. If your church is really multicultural, you wouldn’t need stock photography. I expect real photos to show your diversity. And if that fails, I expect to see it on the staff page. No church can claim to be multicultural if the pastoral staff is all white dudes. I seriously came across a church in my area that claimed to be multicultural, yet the only people of color on staff were part of the janitorial team. Ouch. How Your Website Itself Can Help or Hurt First-Time Visitors Your website can tell visitors what to expect. But the site itself will also tell first-time visitors a lot about your church. Be careful what kind of messages you’re inadvertently sending. “Your homepage shouldn’t still be promoting your VBS that started in early August.”

6. Test Your Site

One church in my area had a sticker-like graphic on the homepage that said “New to our church?” Perfect, I thought. That’s where I can find all the details I need. Yet clicking on the button didn’t take me anywhere. It was linked to the homepage. Huh? That’s either a really horrible design or someone never tested the site. It’s an easy excuse for potential church visitors to skip your service.

7. Correct and Current

Almost as bad as a broken website is an outdated site. It’s early October. Your homepage shouldn’t still be promoting your VBS that started in early August (and sadly, this is a real example). When your information isn’t current you sow seeds of doubt in visitors’ minds. Is this place really worth visiting?

8. Mobile Friendly
Imagine its Sunday morning. A potential guest is running late. They jump in the car and go, only to realize they don’t remember exactly how to get to your church. At a stoplight they pull up your site on their phone to check for directions. Are they going to find what they need? Will your site even work on their mobile phone? Your site needs to help people get to your church, in some cases literally. If your site doesn’t work on a mobile phone, your visitors will give up. Make It Easier for Visitors I don’t think anybody likes church shopping. It’s a constant struggle to find what you’re looking for. Your hopes rise each Sunday and too often they’re dashed by churches that don’t feel like home. Help first-time visitors decide by making your website more helpful.

 

From: http://www.churchmarketingsucks.com web site. June 2012.

The above article, “8 Ways Your Church Website Can Welcome Frist-Time Visitors Before They Arrive” was written by Kevin D. Hendricks. The article was excerpted from www.todayschristainwoman.com.

The material is copyrighted and should not be reprinted under any other name or author. However, this material may be freely used for personal study or research purposes.

This article may not be written by an Apostolic author, but it contains many excellent principles and concepts that can be adapted to most churches. As the old saying goes, “Eat the meat. Throw away the bones.”