Duncan Macleod on the Gold Coast

Brian Bailey on The Blogging Church

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Brian Bailey, who blogs at leaveitbehind.com, is the web director at Fellowship Church (Texas and Florida) and part of the AlamoFire team who produce social games such as PackRat on Facebook. Together with Terry Storch, terrystorch.com, he has published a book on blogging for church leaders.

The Blogging Church coverWhy Blog? Is blogging a toy or a tool? Bailey strongly recommends that churches only invest their leaders’ time in blogging if it is genuinely going to be useful. He suggests that blogging can be used for sharing news, casting vision, reaching out to the community, connecting staff with one another, volunteers and church members, learning from others, spreading the Word.

The book includes practical chapters on getting started, building a better blog, pitfalls to avoid, using RSS feeds, and podcasting.

Bailey intersperses his content with chapters asking five questions with Mark Driscoll (Mars Hill Church Seattle), Perry Noble (NewSpring Community Church Greenville), Craig Groeschel (Life Church, Oklahoma), Brad Abare and Kevin Hendricks, (Church Marketing Sucks), Tony Morgan (Granger Community Church, Indiana), Greg Surratt (Seacoast Church, Charleston) and Mark Batterson (National Community Church, Washington DC). There’s also a few references to interactions Bailey has had with well known bloggers such as Robert Scoble.

I’d recommend this book highly to any church leaders considering launching a blog or improving the effectiveness of their online work. The tip I picked up and intend to use is including a disclaimer “these opinions are those of Duncan Macleod and not his employer”.

Tags: , ,

Carnival of Australia Bloggers

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

Welcome to the March 12, 2008 edition of Carnival of Australia.

There are 25 posts to check out here. Your challenge is to take a look through them all, leaving friendly and helpful comments. Would you like to join this happy team of contributors? Read my earlier post on the ins and outs of the Carnival of Australia. The next edition will be in two weeks time,

Animals

Kay presents Having fun with digiscrap posted at Moggie Madness.

Naomi presents Diary From England: FAREWELL CROCODILE HUNTER posted at Diary From England.

Business

Ross Hill presents David Greiner from Freshview (hatchthat.com) posted at Hatch That.

Noric Dilanchian presents Australia’s first 11 in performance and valuation - Dilanchian Lawyers posted at Lightbulb, saying, “The vast majority of books on business success are either humdrum, American or fail to recognise that in many respects Australia is different. In this respect one standout, now in its second edition, is The First XI: Winning Organisations in Australia (John Wiley & Sons Australia, Sydney, 2007). However, its chapter titled “Comparing our findings with other studies” provides reasons why it is a good thing that the book’s discoveries are not startling.”

Megan Bayliss presents What we do at Imaginif posted at Imaginif…, saying, “Attending a professional network recently I was faced with how out of touch I have become with a non computer based audience. Several colleagues mused around not knowing what it is I do anymore because I do a lot of that weird computer stuff. Point taken. But conversely, do you know what the talk doctors of Imaginif do off line? This is who we are and what we do in the office of Imaginif:”

Current Affairs

char presents Back it Up Colleagues! posted at Psych Matters.

Gavin R. Putland presents 100 words for the Australia 2020 Summit posted at The World According to GRP.

Megt presents Things that make you go hmmm posted at Dipping into the Blogpond, saying, “Just a few random stories that make me think “WTF?”"

Micellaneous Mum presents A poem for World Women’s Day posted at Miscellaneous Adventures of an Aussie Mum, saying, “A poem by an Aussie Poet in honour of International Women’s Day”

Environment

Suzie Cheel presents Random Acts Of Kindness posted at The Abundance Highway, saying, “Last Sunday was Clean up Australia Day, so one might expect that there would be less litter around. I have continued on with my randon act of kindness each day we go to the beach. Mondays we usally go with a plastic bag as there is always more cans, paper cups, and often half full water bottles on the beach.”

Family

Carole Fogarty presents The Emotional Cost of Clutter: posted at THE HEALTHY LIVING LOUNGE, saying, “We all have an emotional attachment to our stuff. Sometimes healthy and sometimes very unhealthy. The trick is to take an honest look at everything t”

Food

Gillian Polack presents Explaining food posted at Gillian Polack.

Health

Sue presents World Voice Day 16th April 2008 - 6 PM until the fat lady sings! posted at Spasmodic Dysphonia, saying, “Come and join us giving voice to neurological movement disorders.”

Helping a mate

Two from Craig - as his first submission just missed the last deadline.

Craig Harper presents Just Another Life. posted at Renovate your life with Craig, saying, “Have you ever thought about your funeral? I have. Mine that is, not yours. Sometimes I wonder what it will be like. Who will be there, what they will say. Good stuff or bad? Will it be a sad or happy occasion? Will there be three people or three thousand? Or fifty perhaps? It’s certainly not something that I dwell on (that would be creepy), but from time to time (usually when I’m at a funeral myself) I let my mind wander and consider what that day might be like.”

Craig Harper presents Mind of a Teacher, Heart of a Student. posted at Renovate your life with Craig, saying, “To say that Bobby Cappuccio came from a background of adversity is like saying that Bill Gates has a few dollars in the bank.”

History

Jason presents 1902: Harry “Breaker” Morant and Peter Handcock, “scapegoats for Empire” posted at Executed Today.

Literature

Duncan Macleod presents One thing leads to another at Borders posted at Duncan’s Print, saying, “Borders Asia Pacific is helping customers make the connections between genres with a print advertising campaign, “One Thing Leads to Another”. Asia is connected with design and sculpture in an impressive hairdo. Travel is connected with D.I.Y. on the back of a motorbike. Automotive is connected with House and Home and Baby Names in the back of a Volkswagen Kombi.”

Politics

Gavin R. Putland presents Mark my words, Mr Rudd posted at Gavonomics.

Sport

Anne K presents A Funny (Yet Sad) Thing Happened At The Range Today posted at Doug Kercher Golf.

Technology

Duncan Macleod presents Schweppervescence Burst in Slow Motion posted at Duncan’s TV Ad Land, saying, “Schweppes has launched a campaign in Australia bringing new life to the branding concept of Schweppervescence. The ‘Burst’ campaign consists of five videos using slow motion cameras at 10,000 frames per second to capture the final moments in the trajectories of water balloons.”

Travel

poetloverrebelspy presents The Art of Being a Gracious Houseguest posted at Less Than a Shoestring, saying, “Travel on a Shoestring Carnivals highlight budget travel tips and destinations around the U.S. and the world. We would love to feature your posts on Oz hotels, restaurants, museums, churches, hikes, daytrips, parks, whatever! Submit by the third Wednesday of each month.”

——————–

That concludes this edition. Submit your blog article to the next edition of Carnival of Australia using our carnival submission form.

Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.

Tags: ,

Calling Aussie Bloggers

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

Every two weeks Australian bloggers collaborate to create “Carnival of Australia“, a selection of posts on a variety of topics. This coming week’s carnival will be posted here at Pacific Highlander. I’ve already received a good number of entries but, as they say, the more the merrier.

Carnival of Australia is a place to celebrate the diversity of thought and opinion of Aussie bloggers and bloggers who blog on Australia. All topics are welcome from Aussies living here or overseas and from visitors to our diverse country. NO adult content, or abusive and racist comments. One submission per site please. If you keep two or three sites, you can submit one article from each.

Submission categories are Culture, Food, Politics, History, Outback, Environment, Family, Indigenous issues, Slanguage, Travel, Technology, Business, Music, Helping a mate, Mates, Animals, Literature, Sport, Current Affairs, and Walkabout.

Deadline for entries is Monday (March 10) at 11 pm Australian Eastern Standard Time. Submit your post/s here.

Tags: ,