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 Outreach > Twintrack sites  < YOU ARE HERE  KEY:
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 More about Internet Evangelism Day - the new focus day in 2006

Twintrack websites

The synergy/co-operativity/symbiotic effect

"Synergy" - when two things working together produce an effect greater than the sum of their individual effects.
"Co-operativity" - the effect when two medications are given at the same time, and interact together to multiply each other's effectiveness much more than would be expected by simple addition.
"Symbiotic" describes the relationship of two very different organisms which live in very close relationship to each other, and benefit each other through their own different properties.

Many evangelistic websites are primarily a single-medium outreach - a 'one-track' approach. All the content is on the site, and followup is probably carried out by email in the first instance.

However, some evangelistic websites use a 'two-track' strategy, where each enhances and complements the other. We can divide these into two categories:

2+ parallel media

Now that Web access is so widespread, many ministries doing radio or literature outreach also operate a parallel website. The advantages are obvious. A tract of necessity can only contain a limited number of words (and an evangelistic contact card even less).

But a matching website can offer as much content as the ministry has time to write. ATS, for instance, has different followup sites for their different tracts - for instance Halloween tracts offer www.october31st.org, Easter tracts offer www.eastermessage.com, children's tracts use www.ATSkids.com and so on.

An outreach team working in a town or area can create a locality site to enhance their ministry.

Alternatively, if a group does not have the opportunity to make its own site, then a recommended 'more help' link can be made to a quality evangelistic site such as Power to Change - which incidentally will partner with other ministries to 'brand' their material with the partner's identity.

Evangelistic radio is an area with great scope for this approach. Additional material relating to a specific program can be included on the site, profiles of the broadcasters included, plus wider magazine-type material which will help listeners to identify with the ministry. Ron Hutchcraft Ministries are an example. Radio ministry sites can also include real-time streaming of the current program feed as sections of FEBC do, archived programs, and of course program schedules. RadioWorldwide offers evangelistic streamed programs. Streamed video (and live webcasts) are now reasonably practical for those with fast Internet connections - though the vast majority of web users will only have slow dial-up access for many years to come.

In the secular world, the example of a radio twin-track site is BBCi, UK's public service broadcaster. It is the most popular website in Europe, and the amount of material it carries has to be seen to be believed. Remarkably, the central technical team is very small - maintenance of individual program segments is done by each program's own team using 'content management' updates. In other words, each program administers its own individual customized area without needing to know HTML scripting.

Web/Face-to-face (W/FTF)

W/FTF sites are, naturally, those where a website is intended primarily to draw people into a face-to-face relationship with others. The most obvious example is a church site - these outnumber all other Christian sites by 5 to 1. Of course, the site may also act as a resource of information for the physical face-to-face community, and it may also operate as a single medium site to people geographically remote from the physical community. Indeed, there will probably be a spectrum in people's relationship to the site. Some may only occasionally visit, deriving a small benefit. Others may feel they belong to the cyber-community of the site, yet never for reasons of geography or inclination ever make face-to-face contact with the ministry. Many of these ministries can also be classified as creative evangelism.

Here are examples of W/FTF ministries which are primarily or partly evangelistic, and usually ministering to a specific felt need. Please submit others.

The mixed audience problem

On any website, it is very hard to write for a mixed Christian/non-Christian audience. In the context of a ministry which wishes to draw in non-Christians to its programs through a twin-track site, and yet also inform a Christian support base about its activities, this is particularly hard, and it may be wiser not to attempt it. Non-Christians are not usually very pleased at reading about themselves being referred to by Christians to other Christians as 'unsaved', 'unreached', etc. It's all very cringeworthy. Many ministries in this position maintain two different websites - one for non-Christians and the other for Christian supporters - sometimes even branded under different names.
Note: I chose the terms "Twin-track" and "W/FTF" because they seemed descriptive, and I have not heard any other words in use which would describe these concepts. However, I am very open to improved descriptions! Please send your comments.

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