Survey focuses on churches and the digital cloud

Survey focuses on churches and the digital cloud

March 8, 2011 at 3:54PM

A recent survey conducted by LifeWay Research found that very few churches are thinking about "the cloud" as anything more than fluffy, white vapor hanging in the sky.

It seems that church leadership has not moved from the desktop and hard drive-based world of church management – or even from the paper and pencil variety – and onto "the cloud" as it refers to Web-based management tools, according to the Lifeway, the research and publishing arm of the Southern Baptist Convention.

A September 2010 survey found that only 12 percent of Protestant churches use Web-based church management software to share information about their church members and ministries.

The survey also asked about what other tools churches use "to share information about members, volunteers and events across ministry areas or departments," and revealed that about one-third say they use computer-based management tools, 28 percent use multiple software packages, 8 percent say they don't use any tools, and 12 percent aren't sure.

Curtis Simmons, vice president of marketing and community at Fellowship Technologies shared the reason they sponsored this research: "We wanted to see how many churches were running software in the cloud. Our goal is for the church to focus on its core competency – ministering to people. Cloud solutions seek to provide a church access to their information anytime, anywhere they need it without local software to maintain."

Ten percent of churches participating in the survey say they use "other" tools to communicate information, but those "other" tools are rarely formal church management tools. Rather they are items like the phone (1 percent), bulletins (1 percent) or e-mail (2 percent).

Though knowledgeable about heavenly things, many church leaders still have limited access to information about the earthly information about their own church. In the average Protestant church, half of their leaders "can personally access data about their own ministry or group such as attendance, contact information and trends," the survey revealed.

Churches might be slow to place information on "the cloud," but their leaders seem to be less slow about personally adopting some other forms of technology, particularly the use of mobile devices. More than half of churches, 53 percent, say staff members use mobile devices to access e-mail and 33 percent of churches say staff members access their calendars via mobile device.

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