Kevin D. Hendricks

When Kevin isn't busy as the editor of Church Marketing Sucks, he runs his own writing and editing company, Monkey Outta Nowhere. Kevin has been blogging since 1998, runs the hyperlocal site West St. Paul Reader, and has published several books, including 137 Books in One Year: How to Fall in Love With Reading, The Stephanies and all of our church communication books.

Kevin D. Hendricks's Posts:

news-updates Article
September 6, 2006

Free T-shirts

While I usually work more hours on Church Marketing Sucks then I’m compensated for (one of the things you can learn from the ‘heart and soul’ series–OK, I’ll stop flogging ...

Read More...

news-updates Article

We’re Pioneers: Final ‘Heart & Soul’ Post

Yesterday we posted the final entry in our ‘heart and soul’ series over at the Center for Church Communication blog. Guest blogger Kem Meyer stepped up to give her thoughts ...

Read More...

poll-results Article
September 5, 2006

Heart and Soul Poll

Last week we asked if people are checking out the ‘heart and soul’ series we’re doing over on the Center for Church Communication blog. The results aren’t exactly encouraging. 62% aren’t ...

Read More...

news-updates Article
August 31, 2006

Reality Sets In

We’ve been doing a ‘heart and soul’ series over at the Center for Church Communication blog (in case you haven’t caught on yet), and today Brad Abare talks about some ...

Read More...

public-relations Article

Hiring a Sex Offender

Here’s a public relations nightmare in the works: A church hires a registered sex offender to do janitorial work. The local paper covers the story with some bias. A ...

Read More...

reviews Article
August 30, 2006

Good to Great

Can a good company become a great company? And if so, how? That’s the premise of Jim Collins’ Good to Great, and he answers that question with five years worth ...

Read More...

link-round-up Article
August 28, 2006

Whoring Pastors, Church Name Changes & More

This Guys is Angry at Pastors – Eugene Peterson says pastors have “gone whoring after other gods.” It’s the epitome of church marketing that sucks: “The marketing strategies of the ...

Read More...

news-updates Article

DJ Chuang on CMS

The ‘heart and soul’ series marches on. This week we have special guest blogger DJ Chuang, stepping in to offer his perspective on Church Marketing Sucks: Communicating Any and Every ...

Read More...

poll-results Article

The Importance of Church Bulletins

Last week we asked about the importance of the old standby in church communication, the bulletin. Half said the bulletin is helpful, but it’s not everything. 28% said it was ...

Read More...

news-updates Article
August 22, 2006

Dreaming Big Dreams

The ‘heart and soul’ series continues this week over at the Center for Church Communication blog with Brad Abare sharing our dreams and big ideas for the future of CFCC. I ...

Read More...

poll-results Article
August 21, 2006

What’s Broken Poll

Last week we asked what’s broken in your church. The responses varied, though the poor church web site got the most votes with 21%. The lack of outreach came in ...

Read More...

public-relations Article
August 16, 2006

My Church is in the Newspaper

You know what’s weird? Seeing your own church mentioned in the newspaper. My church landed in the St. Paul Pioneer Press on Monday, and I stumbled across it today thanks ...

Read More...

technology Article

Churches use Technology!

Yet another story appeared this week on how churches are utilizing technology. “‘Godcasts’ Spread the Gospel” appeared in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review on Sunday. I’m amazed that this continues to be ...

Read More...

news-updates Article
August 14, 2006

How Far We’ve Come

We’re in the midst of our ‘heart and soul’ series over at the Center for Church Communication, exploring our vision and dreams for how we can help the church matter. This ...

Read More...

poll-results Article

How Often Poll Results

Last week we asked how often you visit Church Marketing Sucks. The most common response was ‘whenever I think of it’ with 28%. Those first timers came in next at ...

Read More...