008 - Awkward Video Pauses, Traditional Church Services, & Confetti Canons
The Pro Church Tools Show with Brady Shearer
English - April 29, 2014 07:00 - 31 minutes - 25.5 MB - ★★★★★ - 400 ratingsChristianity Religion & Spirituality Spirituality askbrady bradyshearer prochurchtools Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Previous Episode: 007 - How to Convince Stubborn Leaders that Church Media is Important
Next Episode: 009 - Gear Gluttony: The problem you never knew existed
http://prochurchtools.com/008 - In this session of the Pro Church Podcast I continue my conversation with Pastor Brett Esslinger from last week. We talk about video announcements, traditional vs. contemporary worship services, confetti canons, awkward video pauses, and that's just the beginning.
Show Notes & Resources Mentioned
Follow Pastor Brett on Twitter here. ProPresenter: mentioned and highly recommended on the podcast. Brand new motions graphics every single month from Church Motion Graphics for only $10/month! Haters VideoBrett Esslinger, senior pastor at Engage City Church answers questions about media in the church in this session of the Pro Church Podcast.
2 Instant Takeaways
Digital relevancy is subjective. Younger congregations, urban congregations, or pastors with a strong media emphasis will have different ideas about how much media to bring into the church. When making your choice, consider your demographic. But keep in mind that young people -- and this includes everyone under 35 -- live lives embedded with media, technology, images and digital effects. If your church wants to attract that demographic, you need to speak their language. Don't be a miracle worker. If you are the worship media person at your church, back off on the complicated stealth maneuvers that save the day. You are scrambling to meet a standard that no one else can meet (and that includes you) so make it easier on yourself and other volunteers by investing in decent software that minimizes errors, hangups, delays, buffering and frozen screens.