Are printed bulletins still needed in church?

Are printed bulletins still needed in church?

by Yvon Prehn
Are printed bulletins still needed in church?

Are printed bulletins still needed in church?

by Yvon Prehn

Paperback

$6.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

In a world of blogs, tweets, websites, video, Facebook pages, and PowerPoint, are printed bulletins still needed in the church?

Short answer: YES!

Here are some reasons why:
1) Printed bulletins are often a visitor's only way to understand what is going on at the service, what makes your church unique, what traditions you observe.
2) Printed bulletins provide the information that links the people who attend the primary weekend services with the church events that take place during the week, at other locations, or in the months ahead.
3) The printed church bulletin gives every person who attends your church, whether a regular attendee or a visitor, a way to connect with all the other communication channels of the church, in other words, visitors often need to see in print that you have a website, Twitter feed, or Facebook page.
4) A bulletin is taken home and can remind visitors about your church, explain the Christian faith, and provide links that can change their life.

This book gives you more reasons why and tips for how to make yours most effective.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781479254842
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 09/17/2012
Pages: 28
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.06(d)

About the Author

Yvon Prehn is the founder and director of Effective Church Communications and www.effectivechurchcom.com. For over 20 years she taught church communication ministry, skills, and strategy at seminars, conferences, and national conventions all over North America. She now writes and creates online training materials to equip, inspire and encourage church communicators.

Yvon has worked in communication ministry as a writer and teacher for over 25 years. She was a newspaper reporter and religion writer for the Colorado Springs SUN for nine years. When desktop publishing was first invented Yvon was a top-rated, national trainer in desktop publishing for Padgett/Thompson, the nation's largest one-day seminar company. She worked as a communications consultant and trainer for numerous Christian ministries in Colorado Springs and was senior editor at Compassion International and Young life International.

Yvon is the author of many books, including the first book out on desktop publishing, The Desktop Publishing Remedy, published by David C. Cook in 1994. She has written for many Christian magazines and has been the communication columnist for Christian Computing Magazine for 17 years. Her recent books include Connection Cards, grow your church, pastor your people, little cards, big results and Devotions for Church Communicators.

Yvon has a master's degree in Church History and has done additional graduate work in theology and communications. She taught high school English and was an adjunct professor in church history at Regis University.

In addition to her formal experience in these areas, Yvon gets the opportunity to practice church communications in very practical ways. She and her husband Paul (a bi-vocational pastor) have worked in many different areas of ministry in the church, including single adult ministry, adult education, and small group ministry. Yvon serves as a Bible teacher, as well as creating all the church communications and marketing materials, both in print and online, for the various ministries and churches she and her husband work with. Yvon and Paul live in Ventura, California.

Yvon's seminars, plus her written and web-based materials, have helped thousands of people in Christian ministry and churches maximize their communications and enabled them to use them to help their churches fully fulfill the Great Commission.

To contact Yvon Prehn, email her at yvon@effectivechurchcom.com.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews