Can Your Church’s Comment Policy Handle a Marital Spat?

When He-Said, She-Said Spills Into He-Commented, She-Commented

Comment Spammers = bad!
Photo by dnorman (Flickr)

Does your church allow comments on your site? If you ever consider a policy on comments and moderation for your parish, this column from the Washington Post’s ombudsman will give you some more areas to explore.

An article about a man who pretended to be employed to avoid the presumed shame of losing a job turned ugly in the comments section. His estranged wife noted that the man wasn’t downsized, but was “fired for pooer performance.” His teenaged daughter commented later that he had mental problems.

These comments generated even more remarks in response.

The Post’s ombudsman wrote in the column, “Legally, The Post isn’t liable for comments. Under federal law, responsibility rests with the commenters. But journalistically, what about accuracy and fairness? Is it all right to say someone is mentally ill without proof? What if [he] wasn’t fired?

The column goes on to discuss the tradeoffs of removing a comment that has already generated many comments in response.

How would you handle such a situation at your church? It’s a difficult one to assess, particularly in a way that meets the higher, compassionate standards a community expects from a faith-based organization.

You better have a good answer before you add comments to your church’s site.

[Add your thoughts to the comments. I’ll try to moderate them appropriately!]

Best Sources for Church Communications Technology Ideas?

Photo by RandomFactor on Flickr
Photo by RandomFactor (Flickr)

While discussing some of my favorite sources for information about church communications technology with Rex Hammock, I came up with this list based on my iGoogle church tech tab and Twitter feed. Thought I’d share it with you guys and then ask you what I should add to the list.

[Update: July 20, 2009 — OpenSourceCatholic.com looks like it’s going to turn into another great source. Check it out.]

[Update: October 3, 2009 — ProductiveCatholic.com “is designed to give Catholics tools and ideas on how to optimize their time and money in order to focus on their life’s purpose: to worship God and help others.” Try out the site, get fired up and make a difference.]

I’d like to build out this list. What are your go-to sources for finding inspiration about churches using communications technology in bold ways?

Tips from the June DC SEO – Social Media Meetup

DC SEO MeetupHere are the tips that the SEOs shared when we went around the room for introductions at the June 2009 DC SEO / Social Media Meetup. I’ve grouped them by category for your convenience…ooh, another tip—subheadings are a great place for keywords.

Tips for Getting Links and Ranking Better

  • You don’t want to be #1 in the SERPs (search engine results pages), you want to be the page. (Dominate the listings with your site, your blog, your LinkedIn profile (mine) and SEOmoz profile (mine), etc.)
  • Bloggers don’t want to pimp your press release, but they will feel like they’re doing a community service to write about your upcoming events. (This came from a diamond seller.) Reach out to them about events you sponsor and make sure the main URL includes your RSVP information.
  • Chat me up at an SEO Meetup and I’ll throw you some link love. That’s what Chris (@trentiles on Twitter) did. So, let me just say, are you looking for healthy recipes? Check out www.keepitsimplefoods.com.  Chris highly recommends it. While you’re at it, if you’re looking for VW, Audi, BMW forums—especially in Buffalo—check out http://www.dubsinthebuff.com. And if you like to grocery shop for healthy food in a fancy schmancy car, check out both sites.

OK, back to our regularly scheduled post.

Google SEO Tips

  • Create a Google profile (mine) as another way to get your name higher in the SERPs. www.google.com/profiles
  • When adding new clients or sites, link to them from your highest public Page Rank page, such as shown in Google Webmaster Tools. (I’d add do it from your home page as well.)
  • Add Google Analytics to your site so Google will visit you regularly — even if you use another analytics package.
  • Similarly, run Google AdSense links on at least some pages so Google visits your site regularly. (Along the same lines, upload an XML sitemap regularly.)
  • The updated AdSense policy might require a change to your privacy policy.  Generate a new one using (kudos to our host @1p for finding that link during the event).
  • Google Search Appliance Version 6 is out.

Blogging SEO Tips

  • Guest post on a blog for traffic and a link to your site. Make sure you have some good posts lined up for newcomers who check you out as a result – this might be your only chance to wow them. On your own blog, expand on your guest post or cover another aspect of the topic.
  • If you’re going to use Blogspot, make sure you register your dotcom name and use it on the site. A few attendees who started with Blogger later switched to WordPress with some difficulty. But if they had used the Blogspot address instead of their own domain name, they wouldn’t have been able to redirect traffic to their new host. (Hmm, maybe the lesson is really to start with WordPress in the first place.)

Site Tips

  • Get Internet liability insurance for your startup. Bonding yourself might not provide enough coverage. (Can I say “bonding yourself” on a site visited by church web teams?)
  • Use a flat site architecture with good, descriptive bread crumbs to help with spidering.
  • Try the Thirty Day Challenge to see how you can make money online [I’ve removed the direct link at the insistence of WordPress.com, which tell you what WordPress thinks about the site]. My natural reaction is to be suspicious, but the tip was greeted with some affirmative head-nods by other attendees. Your call. Let me know how it goes if you try it. (But not if that’s asking for some sort of Amway-type invitation.)

Social Media Tips for Twitter

  • Register all of your brand and product names on Twitter (defensively). Try to make as many active as you can.
  • Register “yournamesucks” as a defensive move on Twitter. (I’d treat this one carefully or with humor since you risk the page ranking for your name.)

DC Job Outlook for SEO

  • A corporate recruiter in attendance said that the DC area job market is picking up. 80% of the openings she sees are Web-related in some way, such as programming, SEO, copywriting, etc. (Secondary tip, if you’re looking for a job then show up prepared at a Meetup; sometimes recruiters and hiring managers are here.)

There you go. It’s almost like you were there, at least for the introductions.

Last time, my write-up of the SEO Meetup was primarily tips I had shared with others. This time the round of introductions helped all of the attendees participate in the information sharing. So what do you think of these tips–are you going to try some? Any that you think you should skip?

DC SEO Meetup – May Event Highlights

SEO Answers From the May 6, 2009 SEO Meetup

DC SEO MeetupThe conversations at the May 2009 DC SEO / Social Media / Affiliate Marketing Meetup (whew, that’s a mouthful) covered a range of topics. Here are the questions I heard along with recommended answers.

How can my law firm’s events show up better in the search engines?
Submit to eventful, upcoming.org, zvents, craigslist and Google Base.

What’s that URL you just shouted across the table – is it plural or singular?
Someone asked our host, Miles, whether his security alarm systems in Washington, DC domain was singular or plural. UrbanAlarm.com is singular, but after taking a look at the handy dandy mobile version of AjaxWhois.com, we saw the plural was available and Miles snatched it up.
Tip: If a plural of your domain name is how someone might hear it, grab it.

How can I get links to my blog?
Come to the next Meetup and chat me up! I’m always happy to share some link love and drop some sweet anchor text.

Why is your hand resting on my thigh?
This one wasn’t directed at me, but I think it’s best if we move on to another question.

How can I tell if I have duplicate content penalties? I have an old site I copied from one platform to another. Both sites are still out there, but I change the headlines and added pictures to the newer one.
It’ll probably take more than that to look different in the eyes of the search engines. One way to tell is to conduct some searches on unique phrases from an article that appears on both sites. Do both show up in the results? If so, you may be okay for now. If you see the following, you may have problems:

In order to show you the most relevant results, we have omitted some entries very similar to the x already displayed. If you like, you can repeat the search with the omitted results included.

It’s always good to 301 redirect, but that’s not always an option if you’re using a free blogging service rather than your own hosted site.

How can I get in touch with the social media scene in DC?
Follow @1p on Twitter. Paul hosts a bunch of social media events and is usually at these SEO Meetups.

How can I tell how well the search engines are picking up my Flash pages?
Search for site:yourdomain.com to pull up all of the indexed pages on your site.
Do you see all your pages listed? Are there descriptive headlines and blurbs that would make a newcomer want to click? If so, that’s good.

Or, are you seeing

[FLASH] Loading:
File Format: Shockwave Flash
Loading:

If it’s the latter, go fix it.

How do I handle SEO for Flash?
How can I make Flash show up better in searches?

How can I leverage my photos better for SEO?
Label them well in Flickr, geo tag them, include links back to your post, pick appropriate rights for sharing (Skelliewag has a handy overview).

I’m trying to get more leads from PPC. Any other ways to track these?
Try displaying a unique phone number or extension used exclusively in your PPC ads. Or a coupon code.

What’s the conversion rate for real estate agents using social media to generate leads?
One attendee reported about 5 percent of contacts become actual clients.

What’s the best way to learn HTML?
I recommend http://w3schools.com/html/ because you learn by coding HTML on screen and immediately see the results.
(I’ve heard good things about http://htmldog.com/guides/htmlbeginner/gettingstarted/ , too.)

Is there a course or program I should enroll in to learn SEO?

There you go — you get all that for the cost of a Cosi sandwich along with a dollar donation to the Meetup facilitator.

Anything you want to add? And are you gettng questions ready for the next SEO Meetup?