Your announcements used to live in five different tools. Now they live in one. bltn takes what you write for the bulletin and prepares it for email, text, social, and print — perfectly formatted for each. One source of truth. Zero duplication. Visit: https://t.co/yuUvmPVasM
"Can you get me that announcement by Thursday?"
*Thursday comes. Nothing.*
Sound familiar? Here's how to collect announcements from ministry leaders without herding cats: https://t.co/VIoyVW9om2
You're writing the same announcement four times. Once for the bulletin. Once for email. Once for Facebook. Once for the website.
There's a better way: https://t.co/jx1j9JMF7G
Church bulletin tip: Write announcements like texts, not essays.
❌ "We cordially invite you to join us for our annual fellowship gathering..."
✅ "Potluck Sunday! Bring a dish, 12pm in the gym."
Most first-time visitors don't come back. And most of them decided by Tuesday.
The first 48 hours is your window. Here's the plan: https://t.co/k2MXweHQbV
You sent the email. Open rates tanked. What gives?
It's probably not your content. It's the competition in their inbox.
Here's why church emails get ignored (and how to fix it): https://t.co/1wcQwblWyj
One post won't fill your event. The algorithm means any single post reaches 1-5% of followers.
Here's a 5-post sequence that actually works: https://t.co/H6ywDfTUC1
If you're putting the same content on every channel, you're training people to ignore all of them.
Each channel has a job. Here's the breakdown: https://t.co/S60lWW0D7R
Your bulletin isn't a newsletter. It's a quick reference for someone with 60 seconds of attention.
Here's how to write one people actually read: https://t.co/0ly80NLf7q
Participate in our 2020 State of the Bulletin church survey and you could win a $50 amazon gift card. The survey closes Sept 14th - so fill it out today! https://t.co/hISEHVY6qD