What's Best Next

  • Newsletter
  • Our Mission
  • Contact
  • Resources
    • Productivity
    • Leadership
    • Management
    • Web Strategy
    • Book Extras
  • Consulting & Training
  • Store
    • Online Store
    • Cart
    • My Account
  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Our Core Values
    • Our Approach to Productivity
    • Our Team
    • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for 2 - Professional Skills / b Hard Skills / Web Strategy

Come to the Biola Digital Ministry Conference

April 19, 2012 by Matt Perman

I go to the Biola Digital Ministry Conference every year I can. I think since 2007 or so I’ve only missed once (it used to be known as The Christian Web Conference). It is a fantastic time to learn, innovate, and connect with other like-minded people who are excited about ministry and the web.

The Aim and This Year’s Theme

This year’s conference is June 5-7 at Biola. Here’s the aim of the conference:

The Biola Digital Ministry Conferenceis designed to empower individuals with the vision, knowledge, and relationships necessary to be thoughtful designers, developers, and practitioners of digital technologies for the cause of Christ.

Well said.

The theme this year is “The Disruptive Nature of Digital.” The sessions will focus on three key topics: theology, strategy, and technology.

That’s incredible because so often, ministry conferences focus only on strategy and tactics. But they will be focusing on the theology and philosophy of digital ministry as well.

What I’ll Be Talking About

I will also be speaking there again this year. I’d be highly recommending the conference either way, but since I’ll be out there, I’d love to see any of you as well.

My message will be: Practical Usability: Why So Many Websites Frustrate their Users and How to Make Your Site a Destination that People Actually Enjoy.

Last year I gave a theology of usability — why it ought to matter greatly to us to make our websites usable, and the (very interesting) biblical basis for doing so. This year I’m going to dive more fully into the nuts and bolts: how do you actually create a usable website? And how do you do this in the midst of budget constraints? I’ll talk about the core fundamentals of web usability, which we built the Desiring God website on the basis of, and practical principles that are at the core of almost every easy-to-use website.

Also, I love questions, especially super hard ones. So bring your questions on usability or ministry web strategy in general, and we’ll take some time to interact with them.

And, if anyone is interested in getting together to talk in more detail about ministry web strategy while out there, contact me (see the tab above) and I’ll see if we can pull a meal or something together.

The Essential Importance of Usability

Here’s one way to summarize the importance of usability: free is not enough. Even if you post all your content online for free (which I highly recommend!), your content will still not serve people or spread to the extent it can if your site is not usable.

Good content is not enough, either. You have to make your site usable. And, this comes from actually understanding usability and knowing how — you can’t just do what you think will be good. You have to actually know what you are doing.

Other Speakers

Other speakers include:

  • Drew Goodmanson (CEO of MonkDev, creators of Ekklesia 360)
  • Chad Williams (CEO of Five Q)
  • John Mark Reynolds (professor of philosophy at Biola and founder of the Torrey Honors Institute)
  • Brett McCracken (social media manager at Biola University)
  • And many others
Registration
You can register here.

Related Stuff

Here’s the article I wrote back in 2007 at Desiring God on why every ministry should post all of its content online, for free, without requiring registration, in a maximally usable interface.

And here’s the message I gave at the conference last year:

Filed Under: Other Conferences, Web Strategy

How the Gospel Should Shape Your Web Strategy for Those in the Twin Cities

November 9, 2011 by Matt Perman

This Friday morning (November 11th) I’ll be speaking at the Social Media Shepherds monthly event on “How the Gospel Should Shape Your Web Strategy.” It will be 8:00 – 9:30 am at Bethlehem Baptist Church (downtown campus), 720 13th Ave S, Minneapolis, room 203 (upstairs and to the left).

For anyone in or around the Twin Cities interested in web strategy and social media, it would be fun to see you there.

Looks like you can also RSVP and get more info on Facebook.

Filed Under: Other Conferences, Web Strategy

The Web Strategy of Desiring God

October 5, 2011 by Matt Perman

This is a message I delivered to a class at The University of Northwestern in the fall of 2011. I outline the web strategy that my team and I developed at Desiring God. 

Hello again. Thanks for having me back.

Last time I spoke about productivity and the gospel and ran out of time before I could talk about Desiring God’s strategy for media, which is what I’m going to talk about today.

Now, before moving ahead, I mentioned last time that these two topics are not wholly unrelated. There is a connection between productivity and media at Desiring God. And that connection is this: Just as technology has amplified our ability to engage in good works, so also technology has amplified our ability to spread our message through media to more and more people around the world.

So the key connection here is technology and it’s role in amplifying the good that we should be doing anyway.

Now, let’s talk about our media strategy at Desiring God.

Talking about our media strategy really means talking about our web strategy, because the web is the core of our media strategy. When we think of media, we think of the web.

Here’s our strategy in a nutshell: Our strategy is to post everything online for free without requiring registration in a maximally usable interface.

First I’m going to talk about the goal and principles behind this strategy. Then I’m going to talk in more detail about each of the four specific parts of that strategy.

 

The Goal and Principles Underneath Our Strategy

Our Goal: Amplify Word of Mouth

The goal of our strategy is to spark and amplify word of mouth.

This is because we aren’t the best people to spread our message. The people we serve, who love our message, are the best people to spread it.

You can see this in your own lives. If you see a commercial on TV for a new restaurant, you might or might not check it out. But if a friend recommends it to you and tells you that they loved it and it was fantastic, you are much more likely to go.

Likewise, the people we serve are the best people to spread our message. Thus, our role is to equip and motivate them to spread the truths that we exist to proclaim.

The internet is what makes it possible for this to work on a large scale. Word of mouth has always been the most effective means of spreading anything. But before the internet, word of mouth died out very quickly and easily. You would tell a few people, but it was very hard to tell a lot of people.

As a result, companies resorted to mass media advertising to spread their message. The philosophy was this: Get your message before enough eyeballs, and a certain percentage will respond. The problem with this is that it was expensive, and so the door was closed to most smaller players—like a ministry.

The internet changed all of this. It takes us back away from the impersonal, shot-gun-blast, expensive approach of mass media back to word of mouth. The reason it can do this is because the internet amplifies word of mouth.

In other words, word of mouth no longer dies out so quickly. Instead, it is amplified because one person who loves what you are doing can now easily notify a hundred or a thousand others—who, in turn, can likewise spread the message if they are interested.

This is far cheaper than mass media advertising and thus opens the door to smaller players with less money, such as a ministry like Desiring God.

Principle 1: Be Remarkable

But the issue now becomes: How do you get people talking? How do you do that?

And the answer is: be remarkable. To be remarkable doesn’t mean to be perfect or pristine or flawless. It means being worth remarking on. It means doing things worth talking about.

Seth Godin gives this illustration. [Purple Cow.]

So the key to success online is to be remarkable. Do things that are worth talking about, and people will talk and spread your message. The internet, in turn, amplifies this word of mouth, resulting in each person being able to tell dozens and hundreds, rather than just a few. So if you are really remarkable, your message will spread to a large number of people.

Hence, no longer does money make the difference; rather, being interesting and truly useful to people does.

Principle 2: Remove Friction

Now, once you’ve sparked word of mouth by being remarkable, then what do you do? You need to help add velocity to that word of mouth by removing friction—that is, anything that slows it down.

In other words, the internet amplifies word of mouth, but there are certain things that slow it down. These are things that make it harder to spread the message—things that make it more complicated to tell someone else, make it take longer to tell them, or make it harder for them to access it once they have been told. I will give some specific examples here shortly.

Once you’ve sparked word of mouth, you will shoot yourself in the foot if you don’t remove friction and make it as easy as possible for your message to spread.

With these things in mind, we can now take a closer look at our strategy and see how these principles flesh themselves out.

 

Our Strategy

That’s why we post everything online, for free, without requiring registration, in a maximally usable interface. All five of those things are aimed at being remarkable and reducing friction.

What we Post is Remarkable

First, what we post is remarkable. If you don’t have engaging content that is worth talking about, you won’t be able to get any farther. You can’t add the other parts of our strategy on the top of poor content and expect anything to happen. At DG, what’s remarkable about our content is that we seek to teach what the Bible says. The Bible is remarkable, and our aim is not to cover that up and thus become boring. By saying what the Bible says, you will be remarkable because the Bible is remarkable. I would also add that John Piper has a particular gift of communicating biblical truth in a compelling and engaging way.

We Post Everything

Second, we post everything, not just some things, because if something isn’t posted, people can’t benefit from it and share it. Not having something posted at all is the ultimate form of friction—something can’t spread if it isn’t available.

Further, posting everything is remarkable. The result is that we have 30 years of sermons and articles online. That’s amazing. There’s a wow factor to that.

For Free

Third, we post everything for free because having to pay is a barrier to accessing the content. It creates friction. Note that the problem is not mainly the price. People can usually afford a dollar for a sermon or whatever. The main barrier is the payment process itself. It is complicated and a pain to pull out your credit card and go through that process to buy a sermon. It creates friction that would result in less people listening.

Making everything free is also remarkable. The key here is everything. It would be one thing if 50% of Piper’s sermons were free, and the other 50% you had to pay for. That would be nice, but it wouldn’t be remarkable. To be remarkable you have to go all the way—you have to hit the extreme. Saying everything is free is remarkable. Saying 99% of his sermons are free would be a whole different reality than being able to say 100% are free.

[Note: For more on free as a web strategy, see my article “Make it Free: Improving Online Effectiveness by Removing All Barriers to Accessing and Sharing Content.”]

Without Requiring Registration

Fourth, we post everything without requiring registration for the same reason—going through the registration process is an obstacle to accessing the content. It creates friction because it gets in the way and is a pain.

Example of being sent a link only to see that registration is required.

In a Maximally Usable Interface

Fifth and finally, we seek to make our web interface as usable as possible because hard to use websites are also a form of friction. You cannot access or share the content if you cannot find it easily, and if the site doesn’t give you an overall sense that it is easy and pleasant to use.

[Note: For more on usability, see the resources I’ve collected here.]

 

Two Other Reasons

Two other reasons we do this:

It is Right

First, it is right. More and more, organizations are realizing that they don’t get free pass from the obligation to be human.

In other words, the golden rule applies to organizations just as much as to individuals: do unto others as you would have them do unto you. In other words, seek to be of benefit to others before you are a benefit to yourself.

Making everything free is not the only way to put others first in how we do things as a ministry. I don’t think it would be wrong to charge. But it is right and good to make everything free because it shows that our aim is to first serve our people rather than ourselves. We exist first and foremost to be a benefit to others, not ourselves.

And thus, our strategy must reflect this. So many organizational strategies don’t—they seek to protect the organization or play it safe, and the leaders of the organization justify it on the basis that “if we don’t keep existing, we can’t serve anyone.” But that’s lame and boring and actually backfires. If you serve yourself first, you end up not doing cool and interesting things and you aren’t as useful to people. As an organization, we don’t exist to exist. We exist to serve. And we aren’t going to say that with our lips and then turn around and do something else with our actions. And, ironically, by putting yourself out there to benefit others before yourself, you end up prospering more as an organization.

It Demonstrates the Gospel

Second, it demonstrates the gospel. The gospel is free. Since the gospel is at the heart of our content, it makes sense that we would make our content available for free as well.

Again, we don’t have to do this. But our desire is to demonstrate the gospel not just in what we say, but also in how we say it. We want the things we do as an organization to as much as possible be visible illustrations of the freeness and greatness of the gospel. Making all of our content available for free is one way of doing this.

 

On Film

These things are central to spreading anything—even if you are interested in something like film. For a long time we had a media department that was making inroads into film, as another way to spread our message—namely, through story. That affects people in a different way. The web gave an outlet to the short films and other products our media department produced and enabled them to get wide exposure for low distribution costs.

Even if you go a more traditional route with films you create, the principles here are important for how you do the promotion of your film. You can use the internet to effectively and widely promote your work, for a low cost, by means of these principles. And also one reminder: being remarkable is not something you can add on after the fact. It has to be part of the essence of what you are doing—whether it is a film or message or whatever it is.

Filed Under: Web Strategy

How the Gospel Should Shape Your Web Strategy, Not Just Your Web Content – My Message at the Christian Web Conference

July 25, 2011 by Matt Perman

Here’s the message I gave at the Christian Web Conference on “How the Gospel Should Shape Your Web Strategy — Not Just Your Web Content”:

Here are some of the things I talk about:

  • A few words on my upcoming book, and how technology and productivity practices exist to amplify our ability to do good.
  • What usability is.
  • Why there is a biblical case for making our websites (and everything else we do!) usable and helpful to people.
  • The process we went through creating the major redesign of the Desiring God website of 2006 on the basis of sound usability principles.
  • Some of the (perhaps unorthodox!) extreme productivity measures involved including 90 hour weeks and three all-nighters in a row.
  • On the necessity of avoiding the self-protective mindset in organizations in order to keep the user and people you serve first.
  • How it is Christian to make websites usable and just plain good workmanship in general.
  • Reducing friction so ideas can spread.
  • 5 principles for making websites usable.
  • A few words on why ministries should post everything online for free.
  • And other stuff!

Here are my slides (there’s just a few for this one):

And here is my manuscript/notes for the message:

Most of us aim for the content of our sites to be true to the gospel and gospel-centered. The gospel—the truth that Christ died and rose again for us, and that through faith in him we enter a right relationship with God—is at the heart of what we are here to say. Everything else that we say is founded on this. That’s what makes us Christian ministries and organizations, and just plain Christians, period.

This is as it should be. But I want to take us a step further and argue that the gospel should not only shape our web content, but should also shape our web strategy—that is, it should shape how we go about our websites altogether.

In other words, the gospel has implications not only for what we say on our sites, but also for the strategy behind how we architect our sites and design our sites and build our sites and utilize our sites. It should be behind everything about our sites, not just the content.

In particular, I want to look at two primary ways the gospel should shape our web strategy. First, the gospel implies that we should make our sites maximally usable. In fact, we should take pains to do this. Second, the gospel implies that we should make our sites free—even at sacrifice to ourselves.

And these two factors—a site that is maximally usable and free, combined with excellent content—are the pillars of an effective web strategy. That is, they not only are fitting ways to reflect the gospel, they are also what work best. There is no ultimate conflict behind a web strategy that seeks to embody the gospel and a web strategy that works.

1. We Should Take Pains to Make Our Sites Usable

We should take pains to make our sites usable. But what is usability? What do I mean when I talk about usability?

What is Usability?

Here’s one definition of usability, from Web Design: The Complete Reference: “Usability is the extent to which a site can be used by a specified group of users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction in a specified context of use” (Powell, Web Design: The Complete Reference, 50).

But as Steve Krug has so simply shown in his book Don’t Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, one simple sentence sums up the definition of usability: A usable website is one that doesn’t make people think about how to use it.

In other words, it doesn’t raise question marks in people’s minds about how to do this or that, how to get here are there, or how to respond to the information on the page. They see the page, and know what they need to do, and how to do it.

[Here’s an example of a hard to use page]

[Here’s an example of an easy to use page]

This principle is “the ultimate tie-breaker in deciding whether something works or doesn’t in a Web design” (Krug, Don’t Make Me Think, 11). It is the very definition of what a usable site is.

Krug fills out the meaning of this principle more fully:

It means that as far as is humanly possible, when I look at a Web page it should be self-evident. Obvious. Self-explanatory.

I should be able to ‘get it’—what it is and how to use it—without expending any effort thinking about it.

Just how self-evident are we talking about?

Well, self-evident enough, for instance, that your next door neighbor, who has no interest in the subject of your site and who barely knows how to use the Back button, could like at your site’s Home page and say, ‘Oh, it’s a _____.” (With any luck, she’ll say, ‘Oh, it’s a _____. Neat.” But that’s another subject.)

Everything boils down to this: Don’t make people think. A usable site minimizes the amount of thinking people have to do to use the site.

But why should we make our sites usable? One reason is that making your site usable is simply good strategy in general.

Why This is Good Strategy in General

1. If your site is not usable, it distracts from the content.

Hard to use sites add to people’s cognitive workload. This causes frustration and is distracting. Here’s how Steve Krug puts it: “When we’re using the Web every question mark adds to our cognitive workload, distracting our attention from the task at hand. The distractions may be slight but they add up, and sometimes it doesn’t take much to throw us” (Krug, 15).

People are doing important things. When our sites are hard to use, it makes it harder for them to do what they are doing—such as doing research for a sermon, or preparing a Bible study, or trying to find answers to questions their friends have asked them about the Bible or apologetics or such. We don’t want to make these important tasks even harder for people. We want to enable them to focus on their task rather than adding to their already significant cognitive workload.

2. In fact, if your site is not usable, people might not even invest the time to find and benefit from the content.

Not only are you making things harder for your user if your site is hard to use, you are also shooting yourself in the foot. When the user has a hard time with your site, he or she might just give up altogether and go somewhere else.

A hard to use website can cost you site visitors.

And even if it doesn’t cost you site visitors, it will cost you user satisfaction. People won’t like coming to your site as much, and they will be less likely to tell others because they won’t be having a good experience.

Conversely:

3. When your site is usable, everything just seems better.

Usability creates a better impression all around for the user. The user might not even be able to point to why they like the site, but they will walk away with a better experience and more enthusiasm for the site because it met their needs.

Here’s how Krug puts it: “Making pages self-evident is like having good lighting in a store: It just makes everything seem better. Using a site that doesn’t make us think about unimportant things feels effortless, whereas puzzling over things that don’t matter to us tends to sap our energy and enthusiasm—and time” (Krug, 19).

4. When your site is usable, it increases site usage and user satisfaction

This is not just theory. We have seen results of this in the real world. For example, in 2006 we redesigned our entire site on the basis of sound principles of usability. Within four months of releasing the new site, visits increased 99%, audio listens increased 356%, and page views increased 359%.

To this day, we receive a continual stream of comments from people on how easy to use the site is. In other words, usability not only increased site usage, but also increased user satisfaction. People go away from the site with a more satisfying experience that makes them more inclined to tell others and come back to the site.

So there is a strong strategic case for focusing on usability. But there are also biblical reasons for making your site usable. And this is what is most important.

Why This is Biblical

So usability is good strategy. But that’s not the main point I want to make. The main point I want to make is that usability is biblical. In other words, there is a biblical case for usable websites.

1. Good usability is a matter of loving your neighbor as yourself

Jesus said the Great Commandment is to love God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength and “your neighbor as yourself” (Mt 22:37-39). The Golden Rule is another way to put that: “do unto others as you would have them do unto you. This is the law and the prophets.”

How do we want people to do unto us? Do we want them taking shortcuts on their web design so that we have to muddle through their hard to use sites? Do we want people making things easier for us or harder for us?

Is there anyone here who likes hard to use websites?

Making our sites easy to use is simply a way of doing unto others as we would have them do unto us. It is a way of loving our neighbor.

Here’s the thing: we often think we have to go to Africa to obey the command to love your neighbor; that’s a rare and special thing you have to pick up and leave town to do. You don’t, you don’t, you don’t. It’s great to go to Africa. But don’t limit your notion of service to large and complex and uncommon acts of mercy, like missions trips. We are to spend ourselves for the good of others right where we’re at: that is, in our vocations. And if you are in charge of your organizations website, that means making it usable.

Wilberforce said “Where is it that in such a world as this, health, and leisure, and affluence may not find some ignorance to instruct, some wrong to redress, some want to supply, some misery to alleviate?” Do this with your websites. You don’t have to Africa to do this. Start in your vocations. Make a difference where you are.

Now, it is interesting that this also syncs with good web strategy. Most people point out that the key to an effective blog or website is to serve the reader. You need to be about your users and creating value for them, not first for yourself. Sites that are about themselves don’t work. Sites that put the reader first are the sites that succeed.

Well, that’s not just good strategy. That’s biblical. That’s a matter of loving your neighbor—of loving your users.

And this extends not just to content, but to site architecture, site design, site construction. Everything.

We should be always seeking to make things better for people. Life is hard enough. Seek to make things better, not harder for people.

GPS: time crunch, tired. I don’t need the added difficulty of the buttons being hard to push.

Hotel room lights: Always hard to find. Last night I walked in, it was totally dark, no light switches turned a light on, and I had to feel around for the lamps.

My house: The hose box. The sump pump. (My whole neighborhood with sump pumps.)

In everything, we should seek to be making things work well for people.

2. Good usability is a matter of serving your user

This is simply another angle on what I have already said. Making your site usable is a matter of serving your user.

This angle also adds another dimension: it shows that we should make our site usable even at cost to ourselves. This comes out when we look at some of the texts on serving.

For example, Matthew 20:28 says:

“For the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many.”

We see this teaching continued throughout the NT:

“Let each of us please his neighbor for his good, to build him up. For Christ did not please himself, but as it is written, ‘the reproaches of those who reproached you fell on me’” (Romans 15:2-3).

“Let no one seek his own good, but the good of his neighbor” (1 Cor 10:24).

“So then, whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God. Give no offense to Jews or Greeks or to the church of God, just as I try to please everyone in everything I do, not seeking my own advantage, but that of many, that they may be saved. Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:31-11:1).

“Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who … made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant” (Phil 2:4-7).

Spend yourself for the good of others.

And where are we to have this mindset? Only when we do large and complex things, like going into missions or going on a short term trip? Certainly not. This is a mindset we are to have every day, in everything that is before us. And so one of the primary avenues in which we exhibit this mindset is in our vocations—our day-to-day responsibilities of life. The very fabric of our lives and work, and therefore of our strategies and approaches to our websites—is the arena for manifesting this mindset.

Be looking out for the interests of your users. Be genuinely concerned about their welfare, as Timothy was for the Philippians (Phil 2:20), and as Epaphroditus was, even to the point of risking his life (Eph 2:30). This is not about you. It is about them. Many web strategists rightly point out that the key to an effective site is to serve your users. Focus on them. Do what will benefit them and add value for them, not first yourself. That’s good strategy. And now we see that this is also biblical. What secular web strategists have recognized is simply an echo of the greater realities that the Bible teaches. So how much more, as Christians, ought we to be devoted to our users?

And we should take pains to serve them, because this is the biblical ethic of putting others before ourselves. We make our own lives harder in order to make other’s lives easier. We are to take the burdens of the user on ourselves.

Which means: instead of creating a site that the user has to spend time figuring out, spend that time yourself on the front end to iron out the problems. This may take you a lot of time, but it will save thousands and perhaps even hundreds of thousands of people lots of time and trouble. And that’s a pretty good investment: a few people taking time to iron out the difficulties saves time for thousands of people. That’s a pretty good investment.

That’s why at DG we took an inside-out approach to technology rather than an outside-in approach. Explain.

3. Good usability adorns the gospel

Mt 5:16: the meaning of good works again, and their role in relation to the gospel.

Dan Cathy example.

4. Good usability is simply good workmanship

“He who is slack in his work is a cousin to him who destroys” (Proverbs 18:9). Hard to use websites are slack work. If your website is hard to use, you are a cousin to him who destroys because slack work makes life harder for people. Life is hard enough. Don’t make it harder.

5. Good usability enables maximum spreading of the gospel

Because it reduces friction.

This is all about reducing friction so the content can be primary. Eliminate anything that gets in the way of accessing and spreading the content.

Making your site maximally effective for spreading the gospel.

6. Good usability echoes the gospel

 

How Do You Make a Site Usable? Five Principles

1. Don’t Make People Think. This is the guiding principle, and we have already discussed this above. Seek to eliminate question marks. Etc.

2. Provide good orientation. Global navigation and local navigation.

3. Use good principles of classification.

4. Make obvious what is clickable.

5. Use the smallest effective difference.

 

Synopsis

The first principle for an effective web strategy is: create excellent content and make your site usable. You want users to think hard about your content—not about how to use your site. But usability doesn’t only make your site better and more effective. It is also important for biblical reasons because it is a way of serving your users and demonstrating the gospel that we exist to proclaim.

In other words, the gospel has something to say about how you do your website. Not just what content you put on your site, but what your overall web strategy is.

That’s what we’re going to talk about in this session. We will look at how the gospel should shape our web strategies and how we have sought to do this so far at Desiring God. This will take us on a tour of the biblical and strategic reasons for making your website usable, five simple usability principles that are at the center of every easy-to-use website, the four principles that matter almost as much as usability, and more.

As a bonus, bring your most difficult and challenging questions on web strategy. We’ll spend the last part of the session talking about them.

Cuts

We Should Make Our Sites Free—Even at Sacrifice to Ourselves

Reasons

Making your site maximally reflect the gospel

Free is a form of usability

Reduces friction and increases spreading

Funding: A Biblical Case and a Business Case for Why This Won’t Bankrupt You

One of the big questions people raise about free is: How do you fund this? What is the funding model to support making everything free? I wish I had time to talk about this, because there are two very cool things here. There is first of all a biblical case to be made for how making everything free can actually create a self-sustaining source of funding, and there is also a business case to be made that shows exactly how making everything free translates into revenue—often more revenue than you would have had if you sold sermons. So there is a biblical case and a business case for free, and if I am able I’ll make those another time.

Our Vision at Desiring God

Our web vision at Desiring God, stemming from these things: Post everything online, for free, without requiring registration, in a maximally usable interface.

This is actually very efficient. I spent 2 weeks I think it was pouring over how to do the architecture for the Desiring God site. During those two weeks, my visible productivity was very low. But the time I invested has saved millions of others substantial time. That is a high leverage activity.

Other Notes

It follows from the Christian principle of service, which is rooted in the gospel.

– First, this is actually rooted in the law. “Love your neighbor.”

– But it is even more rooted in the gospel, because of Christ’s example. And so we have a new commandment, “love one another as I have loved you.”

– So we are here to serve, and our love for ourselves and Christ’s love for us are the two principles that guide us here.

– How do we love ourselves? We don’t make things harder for ourselves, but easier. Now, the Christian ethic doesn’t say: “focus your life now on making things easy for yourself.” Rather, it says, “OK, you love yourself by making things easier for yourself. So now sacrifice that to some degree by spending yourself to make things easier for others.”

Related: See my message from the following year for additional discussion on the nuts and bolts of how to make your site usable.

Filed Under: Conference Messages, Usability

Proposal for a Message at the 2011 Web 2.0 Conference

April 11, 2011 by Matt Perman

This is a proposal I submitted for the 2011 Web 2.0 Conference. Though it was a secular conference, I submitted a proposal on how there is a biblical basis for web usability because it seemed that that topic would be of general interest. I’m posting it here as an example of doing public theology — that is, of seeking to bring a gospel-centered perspective on things into the wider culture in a (hopefully!) winsome, appropriate, and respectful way.

Description (65 words)

Website usability is not simply a good idea; there is actually a case to be made for it from the Bible. This transforms not only how we understand usability, but also how we understand all of our work. Now matter what your religious views, it is surprising (and helpful!) to see that the Bible has something to say about even the more sophisticated aspects of everyday life and work.

Full Description

The first principle for an effective content strategy is: have excellent content and make your site _usable_. You want users to think hard about your content–not about how to use your site.

But usability doesn’t only make your site better and more effective. There is also a case to be made for it from the Bible, because it is a way of serving your users.

This session will show how usable websites are an expression of the core biblical commandments to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Luke 10:27) and put others before ourselves (Philippians 2:4). Even for those who do not have religious beliefs, or who do not share a belief in the authority of the Bible, it can transform our work to see it not simply as a job or a way of making money, but also as a way of serving and doing good for others.

Secular thinkers such as Patrick Lencioni and Howard Schultz and even Tom Peters have long pointed out that work is not just about the work, but serving others and even uplifting the human spirit (see, for example, the beginning of Schultz’s latest book, “Onward: How Starbucks Fought for Its Life Without Losing Its Soul,” or the last chapter of Lencioni’s “The Three Signs of a Miserable Job” or Tom Peter’s discussion of “transcendence” in our work in “In Search of Excellence”). This session will show how these thinkers are echoing an even greater reality that is in tune with the worldview of the Bible itself. We will also make an application to exactly why usability is a matter of serving others well, and how understanding usability in this way motivates even greater excellence–for since excellence is hard work, it is ultimately only possible when we put others (in this case, the user) before ourselves.

Seeing these things is not only surprising and engaging in itself, but will also give those who attend a snapshot into the worldview of many of their own web visitors, as a majority of web users do have at least a loose religious affiliation and concern for spiritual issues.

Additional Information

The purpose of this session is not to persuade people about religion or create any controversy in any way at all. People can choose to believe what they want, and my aim here is not to address any controversial issues.

Rather, it is simply interesting and illuminating to see that the Bible has things to say about the everyday things we do in life–including really cool things like interactive design and making sites usable. Even (especially) people who have no religious viewpoints or do not hold to the Bible as a special book will find this session interesting as they see how a book that many in our culture _do_ hold in high regard has very engaging things to say about everyday life and the world of technology.

While the content of my session will be engaging and interesting and surprising, it will not be religiously controversial. The compelling and interesting thing is the fact _that_ the Bible has relevance to these things, and _how_ this is so. And that is broadly interesting and applicable. Additionally, this session will help meet the diversity value listed in the criteria by which sessions are selected, as it looks at web design from a unique perspective not typically addressed at the conference, while also shedding light for attendees into how many of their users think about the world (as 50% + of the population does at least have some lose religious affiliation).

Filed Under: Conference Messages, Web Strategy

How to Make Your Website 100 Times Better

November 4, 2010 by Matt Perman

Read this book and do what it says:

Don’t Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd Edition

This book has influenced our thinking on website design and structure at Desiring God more than anything else we have come across.

Filed Under: Web Strategy

Why Kiva Works

January 20, 2010 by Matt Perman

Seth Godin has a good section in Meatball Sundae on how Kiva serves as a good example of the difference between an organization that is in sync with the nature of the web and one that isn’t.

He writes:

I attended an all-day brainstorming session with one of the oldest, best-known nonprofits in the country. They have a fancy web site, loaded with Flash features, tell-a-friend buttons, and a blog.

Last year, the site raised two million dollars. This year they want to do more.

With a mailing list of five hundred thousand e-mail accounts, this organization has demonstrated that they can extract money from people who sign up for “e-mail blasts.” And the stated goal of the group is to increase the size of the list by a factor of six, to three million. Then, using free stamps (e-mail), they can hammer this list to raise a lot of money for their good work.

Compare this organization to Kiva. Kiva is a brand-new [it was a few years ago, when Godin wrote this] organization that, after just a few months, generated nearly ten times as much traffic as the older group. And they are raising more in a month online than competition does in a year.

Is it because they have a better site?

Nope. It’s because they have a different sort of organization. They created a web-based nonprofit that could never even exist without the New Marketing. One group uses the web to advance its old agenda, while the other group is of and by and for the web.

One is focused on market share, on getting big by controlling the conversation. The other is into fashion, in creating stories that spread because people want to spread them.

And that’s the schism, the fundamental demarcation between the Old and the New.

One organization wants the New Marketing to help it grow a traditional mailing list so it can do fundraising and support a traditional organization.

The other (Kiva) is creating an organization that thrives on the New Marketing rather than fighting it.

Kiva works because the very nature of their organization requires the Web at the same time that their story is so friendly to those who use the web. Kiva connects funders (that would be you) with individuals in the developing world who can put a microloan to good use. Doing this in a world of stamps is almost impossible to consider. But doing it online plays to the strengths of the medium, and so, at least for now, the users of the medium embrace the sotry and spread the word.

Please note that I’m not insisting that everyone embrace these new techniques. All I’m arguing for is synchronization. Don’t use the tactics of one paradigm and the strategies of another and hope that you’ll get the best of both. You won’t.

After just a few minutes of conversation at the older nonprofit, one person realized, “So, if we embrace this approach, we don’t have to just change our web site — we’re going to have to change everything about our organization. Our mission, our structure, our decision making. . . . ” Exactly.

Filed Under: Web Strategy

How Google Wave Differs from Email

December 4, 2009 by Matt Perman

This is a good 8-minute explanation of Google Wave by two of the product managers for it:

Filed Under: Web Strategy

Facebook Plans to Start Geotagging Your Activity

November 1, 2009 by Matt Perman

According to Fast Company, it looks like Facebook will soon link geo-location information to your actions on the site.

Filed Under: Web Strategy

Top 100 Twitter Users

September 22, 2009 by Matt Perman

In terms of number of followers, here’s the list.

Filed Under: Web Strategy

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page »

About

What’s Best Next exists to help you achieve greater impact with your time and energy — and in a gospel-centered way.

We help you do work that changes the world. We believe this is possible when you reflect the gospel in your work. So here you’ll find resources and training to help you lead, create, and get things done. To do work that matters, and do it better — for the glory of God and flourishing of society.

We call it gospel-driven productivity, and it’s the path to finding the deepest possible meaning in your work and the path to greatest effectiveness.

Learn More

About Matt Perman

Matt Perman started What’s Best Next in 2008 as a blog on God-centered productivity. It has now become an organization dedicated to helping you do work that matters.

Matt is the author of What’s Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Things Done and a frequent speaker on leadership and productivity from a gospel-driven perspective. He has led the website teams at Desiring God and Made to Flourish, and is now director of career development at The King’s College NYC. He lives in Manhattan.

Learn more about Matt

Newsletter

Subscribe for exclusive updates, productivity tips, and free resources right in your inbox.

The Book


Get What’s Best Next
Browse the Free Toolkit
See the Reviews and Interviews

The Video Study and Online Course


Get the video study as a DVD from Amazon or take the online course through Zondervan.

The Study Guide


Get the Study Guide.

Other Books

Webinars

Follow

Follow What's Best next on Twitter or Facebook
Follow Matt on Twitter or Facebook

Foundational Posts

3 Questions on Productivity
How to Get Your Email Inbox to Zero Every Day
Productivity is Really About Good Works
Management in Light of the Supremacy of God
The Resolutions of Jonathan Edwards in Categories
Business: A Sequel to the Parable of the Good Samaritan
How Do You Love Your Neighbor at Work?

Recent Posts

  • How to Learn Anything…Fast
  • Job Searching During the Coronavirus Economy
  • Ministry Roundtable Discussion on the Pandemic with Challies, Heerema, Cosper, Thacker, and Schumacher
  • Is Calling Some Jobs Essential a Helpful Way of Speaking?
  • An Interview on Coronavirus and Productivity

Sponsors

Useful Group

Posts by Date

Posts by Topic

Search Whatsbestnext.com

Copyright © 2025 - What's Best Next. All Rights Reserved. Contact Us.