53
Converging faith on- and off-line: What the church can learn from the “real world” to aid in missionary work Episcopal In-House Meeting January 15, 2014 Mara Einstein, PhD Queens College, City University of New York

Media & religion - faith on- and offline

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

This presentation was a keynote address that I gave for the annual Episcopal Church in-house meeting. It explains the current converged relationship between faith in the "real world" and in the digital space. I also address issue of brand hijacking and content marketing.

Citation preview

Page 1: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Converging faith on- and off-line: What the church can learn from the “real

world” to aid in missionary work

Episcopal In-House Meeting January 15, 2014 Mara Einstein, PhD Queens College, City University of New York

Page 2: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

“And Jesus said to Peter…”

2

Page 3: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Today: No separation between media & religion

Religion and the media seem to be ever more connected as we move further into the twenty-first century. It is through the media that much of contemporary religion and spirituality is known….The realms of ‘religion’ and ‘media’ can no longer be easily separated.

-- Stewart Hoover,

Center for Media, Religion and Culture

University of Colorado, Boulder

3

Page 4: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Agenda

Changing relationship between media and religion

Special impact of digital media in changing relationships between producers and audiences

Case studies integrating media and religion

Best practices – What sacred can learn from the secular

4

Page 5: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Convergence of Media and Religion

5

Page 6: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Convergence of Media and Religion

Religion Media

• Advertising, websites and social media are used to communicate with followers

Media Religion • Remains a popular topic across media platforms

6

Page 7: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

7

Page 8: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Non-Fiction/Reality Series

8

Page 9: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Digital Media Has Changed the Relationship between Producer

and Audience

9

Page 10: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Digital media impact

Digital natives move fluidly from online to offline

Need to find a way to fit into people’s lives, not disrupt it

Millennials expect to “come as you are”

How is church going to help me live my life?

Content producers—sacred or secular—no longer control the message (“brand hijacking”)

10

Page 12: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

I'm Joy. I'm The 2008 Longboard Champion, Love Jesus Christ & I am a Mormon

Video

12

Page 13: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

13

Page 14: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

14

Page 15: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Mormon.org

15

Page 17: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Mormon response: More content, more online missionaries

17

Page 18: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

18

Page 21: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

21

Page 22: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Catholicscomehome.org

22

Page 23: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

But….

None of these insert themselves into people’s lives

The perspective is from the POV of the institution, not the audience served

Producer-to-audience mentality

23

Page 24: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Online Communities

Create ways for people to come together

People spend time with things they love and care about

And, they tell others

24

Page 25: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Nutella

25

Page 26: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Media as Competition, or is it?

26

Page 27: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Media is Pervasive

1.19 billion monthly active users on Facebook

73% of American adult Internet users use at least one social networking service 42% use multiple sites, including FB, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest

and LinkedIn

78% watch videos online

1-2 hours/day one mobile devices*

* Little agreement about exact figures 27

Page 28: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

(Religious) Media as Competition

Convenient

Provides choice

Anonymity

Democratized

28

Page 29: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Questions to consider:

What are religious institutions doing or not doing that makes people turn elsewhere for this content?

If religious institutions can present their message via a converged media-religion hybrid is that necessarily a bad thing?

29

Page 30: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

30

Page 31: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

31

Page 32: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

32

78% of Protestant churches have a website, less than half use them for interactive purposes (Lifeway, 2011)

Page 33: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

33

Page 34: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

34

Page 35: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

35

Page 36: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Case Study

LifeChurch.tv

36

Page 37: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

LifeChurch.tv

LifeChurch.tv, also called Life Covenant Church or "Life Church“

Multi-site evangelical church (14 + Second Life)

32,000 members

Stream services over 50 times each week (audience: 80,000 unique computers).

Shares content with 52,000 other churches (open.lifechurch.tv).

37

Page 39: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

39

Page 40: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

LifeChurch.tv on Second Life

40

Page 41: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

YouVersion—Bible App

41

Page 42: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

42

Page 43: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Case Study

Hillsong

43

Page 44: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

HillsongNYC

Pentecostal megachurch started in Australian

NYC “satellite” church founded 3 years ago

Approximately 6000 weekly attendees over 6 services

44

Page 45: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

45

Page 46: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

46

Page 47: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

47

Page 48: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

From presentation to practice

48

Page 49: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Best Practices

On and off line are not mutually exclusive. Find ways to enable this rather than fight against it.

Find ways to engage current members and prospective congregants instead of talking at them

If members become online missionaries, support them in their passions.

Stick to your knitting; find out what your provide that no one else does and do it—really, really well.

49

Page 50: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Questions to ask:

Who are you?

Who do you want to be?

Who do you want to join you?

How can you reach them?

50

Page 51: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

The question of marketing

Little separation between media and marketing (branded video and branded journalism are the biggest trend for 2014)

Are marketing and branding consistent with religious values?

YES – Marketing = Evangelizing

51

Page 52: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

Book: Brands of Faith: Marketing religion in a commercial age

Email: [email protected]

Twitter: @MaraEinstein

52

Page 53: Media & religion  - faith on- and offline

THANK YOU