Archive for September, 2011

How to Build an App for Your Ministry

Monday, September 19th, 2011

@Ew4n @jebbrilliant just sketched this in Tactilis; thoughts? on TwitpicWhile we’ve talked in the past about the considerations you should taken when looking to build a mobile application or mobile website, we’ve not had for sometime a post that leads you down a few simple steps to having an app (ignoring website for the moment) for your ministry. The below items are strictly high level and may not apply to all ministries in the same manner – however, this should at least give you a starting point from which to build and market a mobile application experience for your ministry.

Step 1: Collect and Organize Your Content

Figure out what it is that should be in your mobile app. Whether its sermons, announcements, videos, music, or all of the able, you need to know what’s going in the app (and why it deserves to be there).

Create a small organizational chart that lists where these will be in relationship to how someone will use it. For example:

  • Home
  • Latest Sermons
  • Latest Videos
  • Calendar and Networking
  • Pastor’s Blog
  • Help/Support

Your outline might be a touch more in-depth than this, which is fine. The key is making sure that you at least know what’s going into your application and at a high level what you will be building.

One of the things that I like to do at this step is to use either a physical whiteboard or my iPad to create a general wireframe of what it is that the app should look and function like – sometimes including points to other systems that feed into the application.

You may decide that you want something other than a Bible/sermon/brochure app – that’s a good thing. Outline your expectations and what should be in there as well.

Step 2: Figure Out Your Mobile Platforms

There are several mobile platforms out there, and its very hard for any ministry to support them all. I recommend that you do some kind of survey (informal is just fine) toward figuring out the kinds of mobile devices that people have to which you will be creating this application for.

This doesn’t mean that you will only target one platform (such as Apple, Google, BlackBerry, etc.), but it does mean that you have an idea of what your potential use base will be.

You may also need to do additional research on mobile applications and many other parts of the mobile industry. We’ve got a list of resources that can help you get started (warning, its a lot of reading).

Now, here’s the important point, if you/your ministry is making the statement they want to support every platform *no questions asked,* then you need to stop thinking about an application at this point and point your energies towards making your website work best for mobile devices.

Step 3: Build or Buy

For the next step, you need to figure out if you are going to build the application from scratch, or purchase a application service-platform with which you’ll use to build your application.

Our list of mobile website and mobile application services

If you have decided that you will build your application from scratch, and your outline for what you want to offer looks like our example above, this is the type of team that you want to have in place for the least amount of fuss:

  • 1-3 mobile application developers who know the ministry’s current content management system
  • 1 software tester
  • 1 person who understands all of the current produced content within your ministry
  • 1 person who understands all of the current and near-future marketing messages within your ministry
  • 3+ people who will simply support the effort by prayer alone
  • 5-10 people who have the target devices and are ok with being a closed beta testing group
  • 1 person to document the application, frame/organize training if needed

This is optimal. This isn’t always what happens, and in many cases one person carries many of the hats mentioned here. The bigger the expanse of the application however, the more these specific points need to be taken into account.

If you’ve decided that you will build your application from a template (application-creation service), these are some of the items and people that you’d need:

  • 1 person who is responsible for creating and/or collecting all of the graphic assets that will be used in the application (ideally, this is the same person already responsible for this for web and other marketing materials)
  • 1-5 people who would be available to create or edit text content that will be used within the application
  • 1 person who understands the technical requirements and capabilities of various mobile application development platforms
  • 1-3 people to build the application on the mobile application development platform
  • 1 person who understands all of the current produced content within your ministry
  • 1 person who understands all of the current and near-future marketing messages within your ministry
  • 3+ people who will simply support the effort by prayer alone
  • 5-10 people who have the target devices and are ok with being a closed beta testing group
  • 1 person do document the project, application, frame/training, and manages the relationship with the application-creation service provider

Step 4: Build the Application
At this point, its just a matter of getting the code, graphics, and media together into something that nearly-works.

Its in this step that you are testing the application. The developer(s) should be testing as they go along, your test grip should have some kind of structured testing script that they are using. Don’t over-do the testing, but also don’t be afraid to take the medicine either. If something isn’t working, this is the time to figure that out.

If you are working with an application-creation service, they might also offer consulting services to help you through this part of creating your application.

Step 5: Promote Your Application

No matter if you have built the application from scratch, or used an application-creation service, you need to now let people know that there’s an application available from your ministry.

First, use the communication channels that you always use for announcements (during service, in the bulletin, on social networking services, etc.). That’s the easiest and least expensive way to get some attention for your application. If you do this quietly (“going viral”), then you might also catch som issues that might have been missed in the formal testing rounds.

Second, connect with media outlets that cover ministry and technology applications and ask if they would be open to reviewing or republishing the press release about your new application. In many cases, this opens new audiences for your ministry, while also allowing you a glimpse into what other people might think of your ministry offering (feedback is always good).

Third, use your application in public. Outside of contemplative or video applications, there are very few reasons not to fire up your ministry app when waiting in the line at the bank or at the doctor. Bonus points if your ministry’s senior leadership doesn’t just use the application to posture the project, but genuinely enjoys engaging your ministry resources in this manner.

Step 6: Update and Enhance

Things don’t end when you have released the application. Back in your testing queue, you most likely found things that were “better left to version 2.” Taken advantage of that information and get to work on version 2 of your application. You don’t need as large a team as you had the first time around to add those iterations, but it does help if you can keep your testing team(s) engaged.

Help! This is too much!

It is totally understandable that these steps are a bit more involved than simply opening the app store and saying “create me an app.” If you want it done right, you’ll do these, and similar steps in order to make sure that not only you create a great application, but that the experience of using it follows the expectations that you have.

If you find that you are having trouble in getting through these steps, MMM offers consulting services to help you and your ministry get through these moments. Contact us to set up a free, initial consultation (our rates afterward are reasonable for both the knowledge and niche that is mobile ministry software). If you are a developer or development company looking to get connected to ministries who need an app or mobile service, we can get you connected, drop us a line.

And now you can move forward making your ministry and your mobile application to being the best experience that it should be, and a solid representation of Christ to your community and the world.

 

From an Email: A Powerful Rod

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

600 Philistines Killed by Shamgar, via the Brick TestamentI received this via email last week, and as I meditated on it, I saw so many parallels between the rods spoken here and the mobiles that we have. For some, mobiles simply are tools, but in the hands of those who peruse the will of God, a simple tool becomes so much more.

Light from the Book: Wed., Sept. 7

You shall take this rod in your hand, with which you shall do the signs. — Exodus 4:17
 
Conventional wisdom questions how much can be accomplished with little. We tend to believe that a lot more can be done if we have large financial resources, talented man power, and innovative ideas. But these things don’t matter to God. Consider just a couple of examples:
 
In Judges 3:31, a relatively unknown man named Shamgar delivered Israel from the Philistines single-handedly. How? He won a great victory by killing 600 Philistines with nothing more than an oxgoad (a stick sharpened on one end to drive slow-moving animals).
 
In Exodus, when God asked Moses to lead the people of Israel out of Egypt, Moses was afraid the people wouldn’t listen to him or follow him. So God said, “What is that in your hand?” (4:2). Moses replied, “A rod.” God went on to use that rod in Moses’ hand to convince the people to follow him, to turn the Nile River into blood, to bring great plagues on Egypt, to part the Red Sea, and to perform miracles in the wilderness.
 
Moses’ rod and Shamgar’s oxgoad, when dedicated to God, became mighty tools. This helps us see that God can use what little we have, when surrendered to Him, to do great things. God is not looking for people with great abilities, but for those who are dedicated to following and obeying Him.

Attributed to Albert Lee (Our Daily Bread)
 
Wisdom for the Journey: Little is much when God is in it.

Image via The Brick Testament

 

Mobile Ministry Should Not Neglect Accessabiliy Practices

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

It isn’t often that we can cite the many miracles Jesus and the Apostles did in respect to their efforts to those whom their communities considered disabled or access-restricted. We find it as some of the more sincere and humbling acts of Scrpture when those persons are met and not simply healed, but addressed and considered as part of the greater community, not a layer to be ignored until public relations or peer pressure dictates they need attention (Matthew 5:1-15).

So, how do your mobile ministry practices address those who might be disabled or have restricted access due to physical, psychological, or political disabilities? For example, you built that mobile app for your church’s content, but are you relying on Apple/Google/RIM/Nokia/MS to have accessibility controls so they can navigate to your content, or have you designed high contrast, voice-powered interfaces that are independent of whatever the platform may or may not do?

Regard these words from technokitten in a recent post:

It’s not that big a deal, right? I can still do everything I used to be able to do. I only need glasses for a smidgeon of my time. And it can’t be that big a deal when we’re talking technology? Or so you’d think. My experience with mobile devices and my not-quite-as-good-as-it-used-to-be eyesight is pretty appalling:

  • Going to a website on my phone and being forced to view the mobile version where the font is fixed and is too small (only by 1 or 2pts) to read without my glasses. Why can’t I zoom in or increase the font size?
  • Going to a mobile site where having squinted at the article I’m reading, only to find that I can adjust the font size right at the bottom. That should be at the top, no? There’s little point in struggling to read the page only to find at the bottom, I could have made it a whole lot easier for myself.
  • But neither of those are as bad as the app situation. Oh my word. That is simply horrid and a frustration. And I’m speaking having used apps regularly on Android, Windows Phone 7, Nokia N95 and N8, Android and Palm Pre II. Why can’t I increase a font size in an app? Why does the font have to be so small in the first place?

And this is from a person who is simply speaking of her accessibility needs which tend to happen to us all as we simply age. I know from close relationships just how much even mild disabilities are ignored in computing – and more so when it comes to religious applications and connected services.

Now, you can take the approach that this isn’t your fight. But, you’d have a hard time finding your efforts ministering to much of anyone if you do. Sure, you meet the goals of building something via mobile, but you miss the point of “a love that serves” over simply having a talent (1 Corinithians 12-14).

Or, you can take the approach of getting up to speed on what you can do, even going as far as entering contests such as the Vodafone Foundation Smart Accessabiliy Awards. Its really up to you. The testimony of what you address though will be clear in time (Matthew 25:31-45).

 

The 10 de’s of the Bible Also Describing Mobile

Monday, September 12th, 2011

hourglass by Dave Hayward-Naked Pastor, via FlickrToday, it seems a foregone conclusion that mobile (and what mobile connects you to) disrupts life. But, before mobile became something easy to see, you can imagine the fun we had in talking about its disruption. If only we had Naked Pastor’s list back then:

  1. de-stabilize
  2. de-nationalize
  3. de-centralize
  4. de-culturize
  5. de-colonize
  6. de-religiousize
  7. de-textualize
  8. de-intellectualize
  9. de-theologize
  10. de-spiritualize

Check out Naked Pastor’s post for the definition of these ideas. And then consider this:

every change in communications technologies has also reset the actualities and expectations of the relationships we have towards one another and the industries that broker our relationships

Mobile is more than just a channel. It a reseting of the description(s) of realities that are relevant.

Image from Naked Pastor

 

Merging the Tech Windows of a Biblical Expereince

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

I am fast to say that there are aspects of mobile/web/connected technologies that make sense towards engaging and being transformed by the Bible or other texts. But, the experience is always layered. There’s the device… the moment… the software… the text/audio… what window can I engage it in at that given that that will enable me to put my entire being in that Joshua 1:8 state?

And then I looked at this and smiled:

Now, this is a video demonstrating various technologies available and in use right now (XBox Kinect, Microsoft Surface, Windows 7 on a tablet, Windows Phone 7, email, IM, SMS, optical recognition technologies, etc.). But, it gets me excited because its not beyond anything that many of us have in our homes in whole or in part towards taking that “get in the Bible” experience and pushing it a bit more.

Let’s reframe the video a bit see what I mean:

  • You see in the beginning that small group IM/SMS session that’s going on? That could very easily be your small (cell) group and a conversation that’s happening amongst them.
  • The blueprint you see overlaid could be the entire Bible, or more specifically the sermon outline with some identifiers to Bible, commentaries, Wikipedia/Britannica, and web search entries that further expand the central them (the room being a theme, the rooms being the explorations of those themes)
  • Now, the key here is that there’s not a layer to the communication aspects. Some might be in the same room using an XBox Kinect to “see” the same experience, but others might be using voice only, mobiles, tablets, or some combination to engage the discussion.
  • Love that part where “Bill” takes us into the master bedroom. Can that be the “taking us into a tour of the temple?” Going a bit further than Glo Bible (a well done app experience I might add) of showing pictures, but we get a virtual room of the building and the people in that context.
  • That end result, changing the door handle and adding a lamp, what happens when we are in a room (world) and we add a door or light to the environment?

Several weeks ago, my aunt and I were talking about an iPad and I shifted the discussion to what she would think of as the perfect Bible app. She responded to something like this video and our reframing – a visual and audio tour through the world of the Bible, but it connects to the physical world so that you could get a literal learning of the text and more readily apply the lesson.

If you are a pastor or lesson leader, could you get along with merging things like this? If so, do you think some of this is possible right now with what you have on your desk, in your pocket, or even, in your family room?

video via istartedsomething

 

Not Your Usual Means of Doing Music on a Mobile

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

Of the many things that you can do on a mobile that will lead to an edifying lifestyle, putting on music that is made by other believers ranks pretty high on my list. That said, I’m not on a PC, I don’t therefore use iTunes (though if I can hijack a PC, I do use Amazon Music) to download music to my mobile. So, I’ve got to find some alternative means of getting music onto my device legally.

A method that I had forgotten about but was refreshed about when fellowhsipping with LJ before the holiday weekend was to check out music review/download sites like Holy Culture Radio and Sphere of Hip Hop. With both of those sites (and similar sites) they occasionally leak singles or even full albums from artists that you’d not usually hear in mainstream channels, but would be just as good (many times much better).

Now, checking out those sites is good. But, again, I’m on a mobile. Downloading files has to be efficient and just kind of flow with how I am on my mobile. Here’s a method that I use on my Nokia N8:

  • Go to the website in question (for this example, Sphere of Hip Hop’s Daily Download Page using my mobile’s browser
  • Then I click on the link for the Dailyh Download RSS feed
  • I then get a prompt from my mobile asking if I want to add the RSS feed for Sphere of Hip Hop’s Daily Download RSS feed; I say yes.
  • I then click to refresh the feed and can see that there are different artists who have been profiled over the past 15 or so days; I click on those I’m interested in and get a small page talking about the artist and the project.
  • I can then click through to download the file or share the the link with a friend or two who might be interested in the project
  • and that’s it

Now, when I am looking at those web feeds that update daily or weekly on my mobile, I am able to download from their available library of content music directly to my mobile. What’s nice and simple about this is that I can (and do) put this in effect for multiple music sites.

So, I’m not only getting music, but am constantly refreshing my ears and library with artists whom I might not be more familiar with. In many cases, I’m impressed enough at the snippet that I’m getting that I’ll search for the artist’s website so that I can learn more about them, how faith influences their music, and purchase from them full or previous/future projects.

Sounds a bit less put together, but again, this is putting my mobile device’s abilities to work in a way that might not usually be thought about to get around something that seems simple (downloading music to my mobile) with other devices or systems.

Now, do you have a means of getting content onto your mobile for reflection or sharing that might not be the conventional means? Let’s hear from you in the comments.