Monday, September 3, 2012

5 Things My Worship Pastor Wants Me to Know.














If you haven't read the previous post in this series, 5 Things I Want My Worship Pastor to Know, go do that now and then come back.

We're picking up with the rest of the content that my worship pastor, Bryan, and I shared at the Gurus of Tech conference in May.  While there are things that every worship pastor should know about their technical directors/volunteers, there are just as many thing that technical directors need to know about worship pastors.  Here are the five things that Bryan shared:

#1.  I need to trust you.

Character trumps competence every time - but trust in both are important.  I need to be able to trust that your intentions are the best, trust your ability, and trust that you have my back.  It creates a situation where an answer of "No" can actually be an invitation to discuss and learn. This can lead to new ideas and initiatives that will lead people to new or deeper life in Christ.

#2.  I need to have healthy conflict.

I need to have healthy conflict.  Create a win-win.  Tell me what you don't want to say - and tell me in love.  Don't email me. Don't allow what you cannot do to get in the way of what you CAN do. This leads to a culture where you spend time on the right stuff.  If you have conflict, do it privately. If, and only if, the conflict spills into the public - make sure people see the resolution.


#3.  Function trumps friendship in the short run.  Friendship trumps function for the long term.


Functionality is expected.  Friendship is considered icing on the cake.  Don't get me wrong, you have to function, but that alone will only work in the short term.   Developing a friendship will help you survive difficult times in ministry that might have destroyed your "working relationship."  An African proverb says, "If you want to go fast, go alone.  If you want to go far, go together."  That's the situation we find ourselves in.  Worship and tech are completely interrelated and if we want to succeed in ministry in the long term, we need to start operating as friends, co-laborers, team mates, because we each have a stake in the success of the other.  Even if you work with a jerk, remember that you can only control your response and you will be held into account for how you respond in love.  You may win them over after all.

#4.  I need you to replace yourself.

This has everything to do with the success of your ministry in the long term and with enabling your ministry to achieve greater impact.  The fact is that you can't do everything alone.  There's just too much to do.  The ministry can't expand if you become the bottleneck to growth.  In different situations this may mean building into volunteers or training other staff members.  But its never a good thing when one person "holds the keys to the kingdom."  As a technical leader, there are times when you have to let go of control and enable others around you to step into the gap.



#5.  I'm intimidated by your world.

Many worship leaders may not admit it, but the world of tech arts can seem pretty daunting.  Shoot, it can seem daunting to techs.  I am intimidated by your world. I want to invite myself into your world more, but I won't unless you show me you're interested in mine first.  Be approachable and open about what you're working on and let me know about stuff that might pertain to what I do.  Strike up a conversation about a new piece of gear or ask me about something I'm working on.  When we each understand the each other's world, it allows us to collaborate more effectively and relate to the triumphs and struggles that we each experience.



Just like any good relationship, the Technical Director/Worship Leader relationship takes work and intentionality.  By thinking about the other person's needs and point of view, we can come alongside one another and achieve much more for the Kingdom together then we ever could alone.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

TBC Stage Design on CSDI


Check out TBC's latest set design at ChurchStageDesignIdeas.  Thanks to all the volunteers who made it happen! It seems like just yesterday that this set went up, but our next one is just around the corner! Make sure to check out the other great stage designs at ChurchStageDesignIdeas.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

5 Things I Want My Worship Pastor to Know.



A few months ago, my worship pastor and I had the privilege of speaking to a group of technical leaders at the Gurus of Tech conference in Chicago.  The title of our session was "Working Effectively with your Worship Pastor" and we shared just a little bit about how we've successfully structured our relationship in order to promote healthy interaction.  Unfortunately, the relationship between worship pastors and techs can be a strenuous one.   But with intentional relationship-building it can actually be one of the most effective collaborations in a church.  But in order to harness that potential, we need to work on understanding the other person.  Sounds simple, but its huge.

We organized our session into ten points:

5 Things Every Tech Director Wants Their Worship Pastor to Know

followed by

5 Things Every Worship Pastor Wants Their Tech Director to Know

See, its a two way street.  Effort is required on both sides.  Today we'll unpack the 5 topics from the Tech Directors side of things.

#1.  You can never share too much information when planning services.

This is important.  As technical artist, our job is to support whatever is happening on stage.  We amplify, clarify, and enhance.  In order to do that effectively we need to know what the goal is.  What is the mood, the message, impact?  Where are we going with this?  What is the next element and how do they tie together? What's the worship pastor's vision?  These details determine choices made in audio,  lighting, graphics, video, from what color palette to use to transition timings.  When the techs understand the end goal, effectiveness can increase exponentially.

#2.  I'm an artist too. Collaborate with me on more than just tech.

Some of you may be saying, "Yeah but I don't know anything about music."  Well guess what.  The congregation is filled with people just like you who don't "know" anything about music.  But they know what they like and they know what feels wrong to them.  They know what feels fluid and natural and they know what feels disjointed and incoherent.  The tech perspective is important.  The technical director is ideally positioned to be a part of the "art" conversation.  They are there every week, for every service, and also see the inner workings of the service.  What that conversation looks like will be different at every church, depending on your strengths, experiences, and (gasp) trust earned.  But more on that later.

#3.  The way you interact with me will be a model for the relationship between the music and tech volunteer teams.

Mutual respect and civility is imperative.  If you need to have a disagreement or discussion about something, do it when volunteers are not around.  Always present a unified front and demonstrate to volunteer musicians and techs that this is a team effort and everyone on the team is valued and respected. If the worship leader is berating or belittling or blaming with the tech director (or vice versa), that attitude will quickly spread.


#4.  I will do everything I can to serve you and your team.  That means that when I say "no",  its for a good reason.  

BUT, this is one that has to be earned.  As the technical director, its your job to support what the worship pastor is trying to accomplish.  That means finding solutions, thinking outside the box, getting creative, and getting it done!  If your first response is always no, then your no will never be respected.  You have to earn the right to say no.  If your worship pastor knows that you go out of your way, stay late, work overtime, and pretty much do whatever it takes to "make it happen", then he knows that when you say it can't be done or needs to be done a different way, you aren't just throwing in the towel.  At that point you've proven that you're a team player who is looking out for the best interests of the ministry.  Oh, and always bring a solution to the table...


#5.  Be up front with me about technical frustrations, needs, or dreams.  I want to help!

Since the goal is to serve, its important for me to know what the needs are.  If my worship pastor dreams of "X" stage configuration or "Y" hookup for his guitar, but he never tells me, I can't help him out.  Again, it seems simple but is often overlooked.  If an IEM mix is bad, I'd love to fix it!  But I have to know about it.  Don't just grin and bear it; that's not helpful to anyone.  Its important for the tech director to take the lead on this.  Go to your worship leader (and your band for that matter) and ask what you can do to improve their experience.  What else can you provide?  What can you change?  What would make their lives easier?  Sometimes its an easy fix and sometimes its something that has to be put in the budget for next year!  But the conversations must be had.


These are things that Bryan (my worship pastor) and I had to be intentional about from day 1.  And its always a work in progress.  But building that relationship and trust will open doors for your team to be more and more effective.

In my next post we'll look at 5 Things Every Worship Pastor Wants Their Tech Director to Know.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Video World: Before and After

It's been 4 months since we overhauled our video system at TBC and since then we've been firing on all cylinders!  Our volunteers have been rapidly gaining experience and confidence on the gear and the video all over our campus has never looked better.  I thought it would be fun to post some "before and after" photos of the video booth, as well as of our video capture quality. 

This is before - 




Here's the makeover in progress -


And here's what the finished product looks like -





Now for the results of this makeover...

This is footage from our old video system, taken in 2009.




This is footage shot in 2011 with the same old equipment as the first picture. However, with some improved techniques, we're able to end up with a better end product.

This is footage shot in the past month with our new gear.  Dramatic difference, right?






Monday, June 4, 2012

Sometimes you get what you pay for, but sometimes free is best


[by guest blogger Carrie Davidson]

At 9:00 am on a Tuesday, my normal routine is sitting in my climate-controlled cubicle and wrapping up my previous day’s work in the financial industry. Fortunately, my normal routine got a bit mixed up
on Tuesday, May 22nd at 9:00 am when I piled into a 15-passenger van/bus with 12 other tech-minded folks from Northeast Kansas. We were in for the long haul to Chicago to attend the 2012 Gurus of Tech conference at Willow Creek’s Crystal Lake campus. The mission of the Gurus conference is to give church tech staff and volunteers an opportunity to learn new skills, connect with Christian brothers and sisters who share skills and interests, relax, and return to our home churches feeling refreshed. Did I
mention that the conference is free?

Most of you have either been to a conference before or can imagine what one is like, so I won’t divulge
every single detail about the sessions, speakers, or schedule. In short, the conference was comprised of
three main sessions each day, featuring some superb keynote speakers, a time to worship, and last but
not least: games, nearly all of which resulted in some completely random prizes for the winners (i.e. an
alarm clock belt buckle, a bag of cotton candy). The main sessions were exciting, fun, and refreshing.
In addition to the main sessions, the conference featured a number of breakout sessions, which could
be attended at one’s leisure. In these sessions, speakers from various churches helped attendees build
upon their audio, video, lighting, and leadership skills. There were also a few product vendors on site to
highlight some of their super cool gear and rub shoulders with the conference attendees.

The conference filled my little nerdy brain with all sorts of great techy ideas and takeaways, but you
probably don’t want to hear about every single thing I learned or every geeky conversation I had. For
your reading pleasure, I’ll summarize my lessons learned by subject in the most concise manner I can.

Technical knowledge:

Being a light designer myself led me to attend every lighting class I could.
Personally, I am at a point where I aim to make my light programming faster and more efficient. The
lighting classes at Gurus of Tech emphasized that the purpose of lighting is visibility, composition of
form, revelation of select objects or areas of the stage, and to influence mood. If my primary aim is
to influence mood, then I am probably missing the most important part of lighting (and have perhaps
discovered the reason why lighting is so time consuming for me). Lesson learned: Go back to the basics; improve as a light designer by learning neighboring arts, reading trade magazines, and watching concert DVDs. Be more efficient by using tools that are perhaps a bit unorthodox, such as mannequin heads mounted on microphone stands. When it comes to designing sets, think outside the box. Use everyday materials like straws and plastic cups to help build an interesting set. And, oh yeah, pink foam might very well be the best friend of an engaging set design.

Spiritual applications:

One of the keynote speakers, Nancy Beach from the Sling Shot Group, touched
on a subject that I have rarely considered in my lifetime: honoring the Sabbath. For techies, this one’s
NOT easy. In addition to their responsibilities at church, many technical artists have full-time jobs and
families. But this doesn’t mean we should ignore the Sabbath altogether. It’s OK to start small. Perhaps
we can just set aside two or four hours on a Wednesday to stop doing all of the things on our to-do list
that we HAVE to do and spend time embracing that which gives us life. God rested after he created the
world so he could glory in His creation. Remember, techs are not the one-and-only exception to the 4 th
commandment!

Heart issues: 

1) Remember the job you signed up for and give as you have purposed in your heart, not
begrudgingly or under compulsion. Know that you will likely have some long nights working on projects or you will have some stuff go majorly wrong. When this happens, just brush it off and move on.

2) In ministry, relationships are of utmost importance. We serve so that we can bring Glory to God and grow His kingdom. There is no better way to do this than building genuine, Christ-like relationships with those around us.

3) Never underestimate the value of encouraging those we serve under. Be the first one to
reach out to your lead pastor and tell him that he’s doing a great job.

Refreshing/encouraging times: 

The best part of the main sessions was attending a big service and NOT being preoccupied with making the service run smoothly. Not one of the conference attendees thought
twice about making sure the slides appeared on the screen in the right order, making sure the keynote
speaker grabbed the correct microphone, or cuing the lighting sequences at just the right moment. Now
THAT was refreshing. The pinnacle of my conference experience occurred on the first evening when
I enjoyed a long acoustic worship time and communion. The only lights on in the auditorium were a
few simple face lights to accentuate the features of the three musicians on stage. It was an excellent
reminder that a big band illuminated by beautiful LEDs is not a prerequisite for genuine and meaningful
worship.

Fun:

It’s seriously fun to have the opportunity to get to know the people that you serve with every week
at church. Not to mention, it’s pretty cool to bond with tech people from other churches in your area.
How often can you start a conversation with “Screen sharing has eliminated the need for media servers”
or “The Jands is sooooooo much more intuitive than the SmartFade for novice light designers” and have someone actually listen to you? An eleven-hour car ride isn’t necessarily how anyone wants to spend a day, but with 8 laptops, 8 iPhones, and 3 wireless networks an eleven-hour car ride isn’t really a normal car ride. It’s a barrel of laughs, fellowship, and a whole lot of geeking out! And that’s OK when you’re going to and from a free tech conference. The adage “you get what you pay for” couldn’t be any further from the truth when referring to the Gurus of Tech conference.