On Sun, May 4, 2025 at 02:54 PM, Malcolm Austen wrote:
Also important ...Agree with all this. ?
A point I would make is that the top level 'main' group is a super-set of all the members of all the sub-groups: think who you would (or might) want to include (or not) - should it (just) be church 'members' (whatever that might mean for your church: ours has an 'electoral roll' to list them), or should it also include 'friends' - people who have some lesser link: infrequent worshippers, neighbours, hall users, etc. If it does, then (appropriate) sub-groups can include them.?
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How much you set up the main group to do is up to you (or maybe your church leaders): it need not 'do' any more than hold the overall membership (in groups.io sense) list, with perhaps an (infrequent) administrative announcement only role, with all the 'serious' stuff happening in the various sub-groups.
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Even if you just start with one small sub-group for your A/V team, be prepared for there to be many more - better that way than the opposite.
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The other thing I would say is to echo Christos's point, and read the groups.io manual thoroughly to have a good idea of how it works. Something you might want to do is set up your main, top-level group first, and then add a couple of test/dummy sub-groups so you can familiarise yourself with how it hangs together (you may want several spare e-mail addresses, too), before setting up anything for 'real'. You can delete them later (or not, as you wish)
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Jeremy? |