Giving Twitter another try

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009 | Internet Ministry, internet ministry course

twitter_logo_125x29I joined up on Twitter several months ago and never could figure out what it was good for.  I heard about it on the TWiT podcast and it was being talked up like it was going to change the way people communicated with each other.  If you haven’t heard of Twitter, the easiest way to describe it is as a clearinghouse for text messaging: you send the text message to Twitter and it forwards it on to anyone who has chosen to receive messages from you.  The tools of Twitter are the Twitter web site, your mobile phone, and a plethora of third-party Twitter tools.  Twitter allows you to customize how you send and receive messages to meet your needs – if you would rather not involve your mobile phone, then you can use their web site or other software tool.  The only real restriction is that the messages must fit within the 140-character limit of a text message.

So I signed up last year and began subscribing to messages from a few people, but the novelty wore off quickly and I pretty much disconnected myself.  It seemed that all I got were messages from people telling me that they were having a latte at Starbucks or that they hated the weather or other commentary that was just not interesting to me.  When I spoke at the Internet Ministry Conference last fall, there was unbounded enthusiasm among much of the “ministrati” (that is, the ministry digerati) for using Twitter as a ministry tool (though there was also a minority of Twitter haters as well). I tried to understand their enthusiasm, but I just couldn’t. To me, Twitter was just another honk in the vast sea of Internet noise.

twitterforchurchesLast week, Cynthia Ware visited my Internet ministry class.  She has been a big fan of Twitter for quite a while and sees its potential for ministry.  Though I don’t (yet) share her views, I think a discussion of Twitter’s capabilities for ministries is important, so I invited her to speak in my class next month on just that topic.  I asked Cynthia if she had a resource that could help me understand some Twitter “best practices”, and she pointed me to a new e-book on Twitter called The Reason Your Church Must Twitter, by Anthony Coppedge.  This book explains what Twitter is and how it can be used in a church setting.  It does a good job of explaining the fundamentals of Twitter as well as giving specific examples of its use.

After reading the book, and further discussion with Cynthia, I am going to withhold judgment on Twitter and re-evaluate it.  In fact, I do have one theory about Twitter that I will put to the test over the coming weeks: Twitter could be the breakthrough tool that will bridge the online/offline gap. Every organization that plans on using the Internet for ministry must deal with how to bring the online and offline worlds together. Twitter, with its ability to integrate with mobile devices and web sites, may be the tool that finally allows us to bring those two worlds together.

So, I am re-starting my use of Twitter and giving it renewed effort. I have updated my Twitter username to “DaveBourgeois”, I have begun “following” several more people, I have installed a Twitter “gadget” on my home page, I use Twitter to update my Facebook status, and I have installed a software tool called twhirl which is supposed to make Twitter easier to use. I have even put a Twitter “widget” on the sidebar of this blog that shows my latest “tweets” and gives you the option to “follow” me.  I will keep you posted on my thoughts as my experiment progresses, both on this blog and on Twitter, of course!

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5 Comments to Giving Twitter another try

Anthony Coppedge
February 19, 2009

Dave,

Glad to hear that you’re seeing something beyond the typical noise that is associated with Twitter.

I’d be happy to dialogue with you about my conclusions and yours.

Blessings,

Anthony

wscottcheney
February 19, 2009

Thanks for a very interesting post, Dave!

Your point about bridging the online/offline gap is important. The “digital divide” can be construed in many ways, and I know the term brings in all kinds of connotations (class and access being one of the biggest). But apart from the fact that all churches should be ministering to people without the economic luxuries many of us enjoy (read: iPhones, laptops, etc., etc.), the truth of the matter is that the there still exists a digital divide.

Who is online? Is it just the younger people sitting in the balcony? Or perhaps the middle aged parents sitting up front? Or what about my grandmother who is 90? There are individuals from each group online in mass, if the people who are friending me on Facebook are any indication: My parents friends more than my own!

But the real question is this. What is the best way to not only get these people to enjoy community with each other, but to enhance the fellowship they are already having? And here is where I think Twitter has a real opportunity to make a difference: small groups.

Many of the small groups I have been involved in start out awkward, especially if everyone is just meeting each other. I’ve also experienced small groups with people I know better and feel comfortable with. Real growth in both settings happens when God allows us to be interested in the details of the lives of group members. [Enter Twitter.] In this context, I think it is ultimately important to know that Jerry is at the mall with his kids or that Susan is eating a bowl of strawberry ice cream. Individually, these details can be just that. Details. But these kinds of connections allow for social links to be made where more important connections can be made later. For instance: Jerry’s at the hospital with his daughters. Or Susan just lost her job. Etc.

I’m not sure Twitter is going to be THE answer for anything, but like a lot of online services, it has a growing niche. And with the crazy GPS functions on cell phones people are experimenting with…well, that’s another story.

Sorry for the long post. I’m trying to figure out Twitter myself. I think it is an important task.

Thanks, Scott

Christian Web Trends
February 20, 2009

Hey Dave, I’ve resisted Twitter thus far because it looks like a monumental distraction to me. I look forward to hearing how your second try at Twitter goes.

- Paul

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[...] my Internet ministry class is looking at Twitter this week as a tool for ministry. I myself am trying it out again, but I am not liking it any better. This clip from the Daily Show sums up my feelings on Twitter, [...]

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