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Do you remember phone trees? Our church used a phone tree method for our prayer chain for years. Each person on the tree was assigned to call several others, some of whom were assigned to pass on the prayer request to several others and the tree kept branching out like that. It worked...mostly...but there were always weak links in the chain. Perhaps someone moved away and the tree had not been updated. Or someone could not be reached, which in turn meant none of the people she/he was supposed to call would receive the prayer request, either.
Several years ago (February 2007 to be exact), I started an electronic prayer chain for our church using Google groups. It’s been a blessing to our church and, I think, drawn us closer to each other as a community. All anyone needs is an email address—no more technical skill is necessary than the ability to read their own email. It’s been the easiest thing ever to create and maintain.
Using Google groups may be very familiar to many of you, but I thought it would be worthwhile to describe in detail how to create a group, in case any of you out there would like to get one started for your church. With a Google group, you create an address for the group, and everyone in the group receives an email when someone sends to that address.
Sign up for a Google Account
If you don’t already have one, the first step is to sign up for a Google account. That’s easy, too. Just go to www.google.com, click on the little “Sign in” link at the top right, and follow the link and instructions to “Start a new account.” It’s free and takes just a few seconds. You can either use an email address you already have, or create a Gmail account.
Start the Group
Once you’re signed in to your Google account, click on the “More” link at the top left of the Google home page and select “Groups.” That will bring you to the Google groups home page where you can click on a link to “take a tour” of Google groups and learn more about them, or just click the “Create a group” button and get started.
You’ll be asked to give the group a name and email address (which will end in @googlegroups.com), write a brief discussion and select whether your group will be Public, Announcement-only or Restricted, which are defined as:
I chose Restricted and would recommend that, but you may have a reason to choose one of the other access levels. With Restricted, only the people I either invite or add to the group will be able to send to and receive messages from the group.
Add Members
The next step is to add members. You can either invite members—send them an email asking them to sign up for the group themselves—or manually add them in. Nearly all my members have been added manually by me. We have quite a few members who are not at all tech savvy, but they can at least read their email. By using the method where I add them in to the group myself, all they have to do is tell me their email address, and they’re in.
On the group home page there’s a “Management tasks” link. When you click on that, you’ll have a link to “Invite members by email” or “Add members directly.” As I said, I add members directly. If you decide to do that, too, just click on that link and enter the email addresses of those you are adding. Then write a little note to welcome them to the group, with any instructions you may wish to add.
Group Settings
You can determine some defaults and settings for your group. You can put a photo or image on your group’s welcome page, write a welcome notice, and some other settings. No one really has any need to go to our prayer chain group’s page and its address is not published anywhere so I did not worry too much about what I put there. I did write a custom footer (see below).
You Can Do It!
There are other tools for email groups besides Google groups. I’m most familiar with Google groups but, of course, current technology offers many options. Some sites offer more collaboration beyond email, such as text messaging, broadcast voicemail or sharing calendars. At this point, email still works well but as technology changes, you may want to use other communication channels.
If your church does not have a prayer chain, I encourage you to talk to your pastor or council and offer to create one. Your church family will appreciate it. You don’t necessarily have to be in any official capacity to do this for your church. It’s a simple way to serve others in your church community.
Gotchas
Sample Custom Footer
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"Name of group" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]
NOTES:
Church Communications
Church Communications, CRCNA and Synod
CRCNA and Synod, Church Communications
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Comments
Cool idea except for our church where our community is way behind and few people regularly check email if they have it. We have a small group of our folks on Facebook, but many of them don't check it regular either.
I certainly see the value for churches in larger populace centers where the majority of folks regularly use web services and social networks.
We are using One Call Now and it works great. Our people really appreciate it.
Hi Allen,
One Call Now looks like a great option. Using the phone rather than email might make a lot of sense, depending on the community, as you wrote.
Thanks for sharing the idea!
Mavis
i know this was posted a while ago, but I have a question - I see a possible issue if the person on the group does not have a google account? I know you can send/receive email without having a google account to the group, but you can't access the web based parts. Did you make each member create a google account? I think with the initial email you receive when you join the group this could cause confusion on the user since it tells them they can't access the group without having an account
Thank you!
Hi Desiree, I know this reply is coming very late but yes, I'd think you would need to clarify in advance that each person needs a Google account to access web based content. Did you ever go ahead with this?
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