Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM)

Posts Tagged ‘innovation’

When Does Innovation Matter to Mobile Ministry

Friday, May 4th, 2012

Sitting on this side of the mobile ministry discussion, it can at times look as of there is little to no progress happening (mind you, this has been an endeavor since 2004; it’s a distinct perspective). And yet, that really isn’t the case if one were to take into account how change has happened when other behaviorial and technological paradigm shifts have happened:

…The most common response to such griping has been, just wait. Many techno-optimists base their thinking on a famous 1990 paper by economic historian Paul David, which described how, for decades, electricity had little effect on industrial productivity as manufacturers simply swapped out older energy sources for electric power but changed nothing about how they made things. It was only as new factories were built that took advantage of the unique properties of electric motors that a productivity boom ensued. Just give the digital age a bit more time, and you’ll see huge changes (and, one hopes, improvements) in how we work and live…

Read the rest of When Will This Low-Innovation Internet Era End at Wired Mgazine.

The self-speak goes more like, “don’t be discouraged. They will see what you see, and then change will happen quickly.” Be encouraged fellow laborers.

 

Lesson’s Mobify’s CEO Learned from Google

Friday, February 10th, 2012

If it seems as if we’ve been pulling from the list of contributors noted on the recent Carnival of the Mobilists, that’s only because these have been items also sitting in our periphery as notes to pay attention to as we derive some knowledge and wisdom about mobile which is applicable to mobile ministry. Sometimes, this just happens to intersect well with other’s views of what is important in mobile.

Another set of insights pulled comes from a report by Mobify’s CEO (Igor Faletski) relayed via GigaOm. These insights are important to us because MMM uses Mobify to transcode and deliver our mobile website (http://m.mobileministrymagazine.com). Where he is taking is platform, we eventually follow in some respect. So, in hearing some of the lessons he learned in a recent excursion with Google’s Mobilizing Mobile event, there just might be something we could gain as a movement going forward.

Here are the individual points (described as numbered lessons:

  1. Set the agenda
  2. Make your innovation tangible
  3. Focus, focus and focus
  4. Track the micro, decide on the macro
  5. Bringing it together

Read the details and examples of these ‘lesson points’ at the GigaOm article.

Our Reflections, Actions Forward
Its really easy to read something like this and just take it as another set of perspectives from a leader who’s gotten there and is basically setting the pace. But, we needed to go a bit futher here. How these lessons applied to MMM pushed forward some thoughts and initiatives that were already underway.

For example, one of the motions that we wanted to emphasize this year is that while we are in favor of the app movement many are prescribing towards in reference to going mobile, an app isn’t a strategy, and focusing on an app, or series of apps, would be a losing proposition with the kind of support we could push there (see how we explained about resource constraints with mobile apps/websites in a previous article. We decided therefore to decommission all of our mobile apps to an experimental status, and focus on cleaning up our use of WordPress so that we could be more readily accessible in a mobile format (see the Mobile/Web App Beta). There’s still a significant level of work needing to be done behind the scenes in terms of article categorization and dynamic page templates, but, not to the minute level of needing dedicated attention to each mobile platform out there. Will it take us longer to have a “solution?” You bet. Will we be better as a lighthouse for the extent of audiences we have here? Most definitely. That’s our focus, and the clarity we aim towards here.

Your steps might not be as drastic (then again…). What you need to decide as you are going down this path of being mobile, is that your success will hinge on the amount of planning, focus and execution that you can do or manage. If you are trying to control too much, however, you’ll find that the tentacles of mobile ministry will choke the purposes you initially had for your project, leaving you quite still in a mobile world.

 

How Much Is This Worth

Friday, October 7th, 2011

An item sitting on the plate this week is that of accepting a speaking engagement for one conference and partnership with another group. For both groups, its the unique and specalized knowledge behind MMM that’s desired. Both groups have spoken clearly their reasons for asking for MMM, yet only one has adjusted their request for participation in such a way that seems like they understand the value of what they are asking for.

While I totally understand that some groups just don’t have a budget to bring out a speaker/trainer/consultant/subject matter expert (that’s another issue of organizational management, but I digress), the very unique nature of the few folks in digital/internet/mobile ministry can’t be freely given away if folks aren’t just asking for that knowledge/wisdom, but also travel and any other expenses.

I am finding it very hard – as a person doing this as a primary endeavor – to say yes to engagements when there is literally only ego compensation (am not the only person who thinks that economy is backwards, re: Jaron Lainer). I run a site which is free, it feels very much like a slap in the face to ask for me to also put up lodging, registration, travel, setup, and (the inevitable) post-speaking activities when there’s nothing coming back this way. This puts me in a very hard position. I’ve got to spend hours looking for work/clients, as well as working current projects, and then spending the time to develop that specialized knowledge. Even if this was a multi-person operation, that would be hard (we won’t talk about folks that don’t pay in a timely manner and the 8-ball that presents).

Simply: if you would consider MMM or any uniquely gifted person or organziation is worth asking for their time, they are also worthy of being compensated for those labors. A laborer is worthy of their wages, and digital is where we labor. Yes, there needs to be some meeting halfway for many of you whom are also financially constrained. That’s one of the reasons why *everything* you see on this site is freely available. There’s too much data out there for commentary and analysis of this degree not to be. But, when you want something specialized, then you move into that space where you can’t rely on free, and have to be considerate of the time and resources that it takes to make specialized work for you.

Services like MinuteBox (see profile) I’ve started using to help faster convert some of those conversations into compensated events. I’m not sure that it is any longer (or if it ever was) fair to ask any of us in this space to give place to speaking/demonstrating our knowledge in this space without some form of compensation. There aren’t a lot of people in this space – check the list. If this is worth its value to up-skill your organization to meet their goals, then demonstrate that in your approach. Don’t let the perception of “Christian online/mobile” be that of “undervalued and under-appreciated.”

IE Day pointed to similar questions of value and our approaches in ministry in this post.

Disclaimer: Our hosting (incl. domain registration and WordPress administration) had been taken off my (Antoine’s) hands for sometime now. LW (name withheld) has managed that for us freely for years. And for as appreciated as I am that he has done so, I would love to be at the point where I could compensate him for the few times a year that there’s a request for domain/WP items. Or, remove the site completely and let MMM live completely on mobile and self-hosted servers…

 

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

 

Effective Tech As Making the Most of Resources

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

iPhone 4G (l) Epic 4G (r) - Share on OviA person recently asked me “how do I keep up with the latest technology and its pace of change?” The answer that I gave them was simple, “I don’t.” I have specific goals that I look towards in regards to how I use and understand technology, and do my best to not overwhelm myself with knowing or having the latest this or that. 

Now, that’s something that I’ve learned over time. And certainly, this is something that anyone who is involved within IT in ministry will run into. That’s while I like this recent article by Tre Lawrence at Church Mag. Here’s a snippet of the wisdom towards tech on a minimal budget:



…First, I try to satisfy the congregation’s love of media. Pictures, videos and music. I have albums worth of music on my Android EVO all the time, and a few more on Dropbox. With a good sound guy (and ours, Jay, is the best in the world), we could run service from my phone if needed. The Android OS “Share” functionality allows me to instantly upload videos to Youtube, and I have started using the cloud capabilities of Google+ to store Church pictures. I can get pictures on the Church’s Facebook page and further disseminate via Twitter. Even the two free navigation apps are useful, as anyone who has traveled half a dozen hours with a van full of spirited teenagers can tell you…



Read the rest at Church Mag.



Note that he’s not simply using products becasue of a minimal budget, there’s a strategy there that makes the best use of the time, resources, and people available. The products and behaviors mentioned in that article I would say are great to keep in mind, and even make sure that you are emphasizing if you are in the realm of being the IT-person of your ministry/organization.



An easy way to get started here is to simply make a spreadsheet of those devices you have, the abilities they have, and the abilities you need. This means more than mobile, social networks, email systems, etc. Look at it all in one place, and be honest with the needs of your department or organization. The next step would simply be setting a priority towards those organizational needs. After that, you can easily make the decision towards devices, services, support, and even upcoming strategeic engagements. The last step there is once you have your top items, get a plan to get them accomplished with what you have in your hands. Nice and simple.



I think the quote goes something like, “those who fail to plan are those who plan to fail.” Being efficient and effective is simply planning with what you have, and using it to God’s glory and to your best ability. This article proposes several products and wise behavior. What have you put forth in your ministry or organization?

 

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