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A website for your parish or organisation

last updated 13 May 2008

 

In a nutshell...

Why have a website?

What do we have to do to get a website?

  1. Talk about it with people in your parish or organisation.
  2. Know why you want a website. (If you don't have good reasons then you probably don't need one.)
  3. Read the guidelines (below) and be sure you understand them and agree with them.
  4. Choose someone who wants to be the website representative for at least a year. This person will need to communicate with whoever creates the site and make sure the site stays up to date.
  5. Arrange for someone to create and maintain your site.
  6. Send the URL (web address) to the diocesan webmaster so he can place a link to your site from the diocesan site.

Can you recommend someone who can create and maintain a website for us?

Peter Jerrim, the diocesan webmaster can organise a site for you at a reasonable price. Or he can recommend someone who could do it for you.

Contact Peter to find out more.

How much will it cost?

It's usually more than you would expect. For a small site for a parish or organisation a professional would charge at least $4000. But it could be much more, depending what is required.

That cost would normally include:

What if someone in your parish or organisation can create the website?

Creating a good website takes a lot of time, knowledge and experience.

If there's someone with the time and the skills to do it in your parish or organisation then that's great. But realise you are asking them to undertake a serious commitment to finish the site in a timely manner and to keep it up to date.

But you can have a FREE site!

There are many options on the web to create a cheap or free site. Many of these are supported by advertising over which you have no control - so we do not recommend them.

Recently Google has created an excellent free website building tool with many features that make it ideal for a small organisation like a parish.

Here's a tiny example which took less than half an hour to build. But expect to spend many hours on a project like this if it is to be seriously useful to your parish and organisation.

Go to Google Sites to find out more.

Guidelines for parish and organisation websites

Questions, advice, help...!

Ask Peter Jerrim.

If you already have a website...

If your parish or organisation already has a website then please bear in mind the spirit of these guidelines when building or updating your site, especially with regard to content and copyright.

If you already have a number of pages especially for your parish or organisation on the diocesan website (this site you're viewing now) then you are at liberty to leave things as they are. Or, if you wish to develop an independent website then when it's ready your old pages can be removed from the diocesan site and a link placed to your new site.

What do these words mean?

content - text, images and anything else placed on the site

domain name - the part of a web address that comes after the www. and before the next forward slash, e.g. the domain name for the Diocese of Tasmania which is used for this site is anglicantas.org.au

home page - the top level document of a set of web pages. Usually it's the first web page that appears in your browser when you visit a website. All other web pages in the site should be linked to the home page.

A home page is not a website, it's one page in a website, usually the most important one.

hosting - placing a site in a computer that is linked to the Internet so people can view the site using a web browser, e.g. Explorer. This service is usually supplied by an ISP (Internet Service Provider).

redelegation - setting things up so when someone enters a domain name in a browser's address box they are taken to another domain. Click on this link for an example: www.apok.org The person who has registered your domain name or your ISP can set this up for you.

redirection - arranging for messages to one email address to be delivered to another email address, e.g. secretary@anglicanparishofmarshtown.org to go to myspecialname@bigpond.com Note that if you do this you need to create an appropriate 'personality' with your email software so you can reply to messages using the appropriate email address. Someone who uses email a lot can show you how to do this.

publish - place on the site

website - more correctly Web site - a collection of web pages which standalone and have common navigation

Representative's duties

Content

Confidentiality, safety and privacy

Updating

Copyright

Links

Domain name

Hosting

Listing on search engines

You don't have to do this, but...

Because your site will be linked from the diocesan site then eventually it will be able to be found on most major free search engines and directories.

 

guidelines