On Twitter: @anthonycoppedge - TwitterForChurches.com - AnthonyCoppedge.com - Email Anthony   Hide/Reveal Header

"Twitter allows churches to send quick updates, drive traffic to websites & remind people of events more efficiently than ever."The blog is temporarily under maintanance for Internet Explorer Users. Check back very soon (tomorrow) for access. We apologize!

Archive for April, 2009

Nielsen Report On ‘Twitter Quitters’ Study Not Accurate

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Nielsen Media, the company that does the Nielsen ratings for TV shows, did a study on the number of users who sign up with Twitter and then don’t come back. Or, as they call it, Twitter Quitters.

The study and report, I think, is highly flawed. They only looked at those people who use Twitter.com to access their Twitter accounts. As I’ve pointed out repeatedly, there are far too many highly useful tools on both mobile devices and computers that make using Twitter easier and, in my opinion, better. Nielsen didn’t report on those users, which I would hazard a guesstimate to be no less than 35% and most likely a good bit higher percentage. Use TweetDeck? Tweetie? Twitterific? Twitterfone? Twhirl? You’re not a part of their study data.

Here’s a bit of what they said, and a couple of nifty graphs to illustrate their flawed viewpoint:

Currently, more than 60 percent of U.S. Twitter users fail to return the following month, or in other words, Twitter’s audience retention rate, or the percentage of a given month’s users who come back the following month, is currently about 40 percent.


Maybe we’re jumping the gun. Twitter is still something of a fledgling, and surely some other sites that eventually lived up to Twitter-like hype suffered from poor retention in the early days. Compare it to the two heavily-touted behemoths of social networking when they were just starting out. Doing so below, we found that even when Facebook and MySpace were emerging networks like Twitter is now, their retention rates were twice as high. When they went through their explosive growth phases, that retention only went up, and both sit at nearly 70 percent today.

Nielsen, in their own words, admits to “jumping the gun”, but I think their assumption that all and/or most users access Twitter through the Twitter.com website to be absurd. In effect, it makes this “study” highly suspect and, most likely, highly inaccurate.

How To Give Away Free Copies Of The E-Book

Friday, April 24th, 2009

I do my best to be as clear and concise as I can when it comes to laying out boundaries and policies. Yet, sometimes, I think I might just muddy the water!

Such is the case with the very unique End User License Agreement (EULA) I wrote for my e-book, “The Reason Your Church Must Twitter”. In this instance, I was trying to make it easy for church leaders to give away lots and lots of copies of the e-book. Why? Because, to me, it is more important for your volunteers to buy-in and understand the value of using Twitter with your church than it was to make lots of money.

Here’s how it works:

If you have three ministries that want to leverage Twitter, buy three copies of the e-book. If you have 15 ministries that want to learn how to use Twitter, buy 15 copies of the e-book. Each unique ministry that buys a copy can then give away FREE copies to the volunteers that serve in that particular ministry.

Ok, so that sorta is the big picture recap that I keep getting questions about via email & Twitter. Here, for the record, is the full text of the EULA:

Following the Biblical model of 1 Timothy 5:18, this e-book is a ministry tool of Anthony Coppedge Consulting and not a free giveaway.

We’ve kept the price low ($5) to make it affordable for everyone. All we ask is if you’re using this e-book for your ministry, please make sure you’ve bought it.

We fully license churches to buy a copy for a staff member and share this with volunteers for free. If your church has three staff members who could benefit from the book, then please pay the ridiculously affordable $15 and give out copies like free candy to your volunteers!

End-User License Agreement (EULA)

This e-e-book contains copyrighted material. Its use is subject to the following License Agreement that essentially says you may not give away the e-book you just purchased, except in the case of sharing with church volunteers under your authority.

1. Grant of License
Anthony Coppedge Consulting has authorized you one copy of the electronic book (e-book) and grants you a nonexclusive, nontransferable license to use the e-book according to the terms and conditions herein.

2. Usage
Printing. You may print the e-book for your personal use. You may not give printed pages from the e-book, or the entire printed e-book to others, unless they are church volunteers under your authority.
File sharing. You may not share e-book as an electronic file transfer to anyone other than church volunteers under your authority.

3. Intellectual Property Protection
The e-book is owned by Anthony Coppedge Consulting and protected by United States and international copyright and other intellectual property laws. Anthony Coppedge Consulting reserves all rights in the e-book not expressly granted herein. This license and your right to use the e-book terminate automatically if you violate any part of this Agreement.

4. Limitation of Liability
In no event will Anthony Coppedge Consulting be liable for any damages, including loss of data, lost profits or other special, incidental, consequential or indirect damages arising out of the use or inability to use the e-book.

5. Copyright, Use, and Resale Prohibitions
All content in the e-book is copyrighted under U.S. Copyright laws. Anthony Coppedge Consulting owns the copyright and the e-book itself. Other than as stated in this License Agreement, you may not copy, print, modify, remove, delete, augment, add to, publish, transmit, sell, resell, create derivative works from or in any way exploit any of the e-book’s content, in whole or in part, and you may not aid or permit others to do so.

6. Your Agreement
Your use of the e-book constitutes your agreement to the above license agreement.

Twitter & Worship Leaders

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Al Gordon of WorshipCentral.org has an excellent short post about Twitter and worship leaders. I highly recommend that you follow this link and go read it. :)

More Ideas for Twitter & Your Church

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

A wonderful discussion was started over at TwiTip, an excellent Twitter resource site. This is a main-stream site and they’re talking about using Twitter for churches! Love it!

Here’s a few of the ideas they tossed out for discussion. Be sure to read the entire post:

  • Showcase your staff: On your organization’s “staff” page, give clear links to those that are on Twitter. This is also a good place to link to their profiles on other social networking sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. Here’s ours as an examplestaff-listing
  • Summarize your staff tweets: Zappos does a great job of showing off their employee tweets. Kent Brewster has a script that can be plugged into almost any site to create a similar thing. To make it work, create a new twitter account and have it follow all of your staff members (and no one else). Plug that new twitter account into the script, and voila!
  • Show live chats from events: A simple hash tag can go a long way. At a recent youth event, we enouraged people to use a hash tag when discussing the event, then we pointed parents to the Twitter search results page for that hash. It was very popular, but you run the risk of a bad apple saying some inappropriate things, and it can’t be cleaned up if you’re using this method.
  • Tweet from retreats, events or mission trips: A great way to keep the people at home informed is a Twitter account dedicated to that event (like our current mission trip to Ecuador). The advantage to this over a hash tag is that parents and other concerned parties can subscribe to that user can get updates on their phone.
  • Post weather-related news: If you have ongoing weather-sensitive events, such as outdoor sports, create an account dedicated to field conditions. Our recreation update account is often very quiet, but it’s worth gold on rainy Saturdays in the summer. It saves a LOT of phone calls from wondering parents.
    rec-update
  • Post your blog entries: While the best Twitter interaction is personal, some users are losing interest in RSS feeds and just focusing on Twitter. Point your blog to a Twitter account as an alternative to RSS and e-mail subscriptions (blog to twitter). If you use WordPress, Twitter Tools is an excellent plug-in. If not, then twitterfeed can do the job.