Does Your
Chapter Have a Website?
By Dennis Holland
Actually, there are several reasons. First, it is a
tool to find new members, or more to the point, to help them find you. My
chapter, the Loveland Colorado Chapter, has gained members and inquiries from
the website I created. In fact, as a result of having our website, we gained a
member who lives several thousand miles away in
In addition to its value in
seeking new members, a website is another tool for communicating with your
existing membership. Like a newsletter, it can have much basic information that
members might need. It can contain contact information, membership rosters,
meeting places and schedules, and tour schedules. It can also contain
photographs of members and their cars, as well as tour and event photos. Unlike
a newsletter, which has a short life and often disappears soon after it has
been read once, the information on the website is
always available when needed.
Now you need someone to
create the site. In most any club these days, there are usually many computer
users, and at least one or two who are pretty knowledgeable. You know the ones
– the ones everyone calls when they need help with their own computer. They are
your best bet to create a website.
Next you will need software.
In my case, I use Microsoft Publisher. I use it because I already own it. It
comes as a part of Microsoft Office Professional. It is not a part of Office
Standard nor of Office, Small Business Edition.
Publisher is also available separately. But there are many other options. Web
pages can be created in Microsoft Word, in Microsoft Front Page or in dozens of
other programs available wherever you buy software.
I mention Microsoft products
only because they are so widely used. But many other software companies make
excellent products for this purpose. Virtually any desktop publishing program
is suitable such as ones from Adobe, Quark, Corel, Serif and others. The
chances are good you own something already to do the job.
As I am familiar with Publisher,
I’ll give you some detail about using it but a very similar process is involved
with any other program. Basically, you just follow the “wizards”.
Open the program, select File
and then New from the drop-down menu. You will be presented with
a long list of potential projects such as newsletters, brochures,
calendars, business cards and, of course, websites. Select
websites. Now you will be given a choice of many basic designs.
The designs will provide a consistent theme, color scheme and a set of fonts
for your site. I chose one named Accent Box. You can also choose a different
colors and fonts from the ones normally a part of your chosen design or even
create a design from scratch. But unless you have graphic design experience, it
may be best to go with the layouts, colors and fonts the program recommends.
You can then choose a layout based upon one, two or three columns.
Once the design is selected, a page will appear using
that design. It will have sample text and pictures in a basic layout and all
you need do is select a piece of their text and replace it with your own.
Similarly, you can highlight their picture and paste in your own. You can then
add sounds and background textures. You continue this process until the page is
as you want it and then you have the option of adding another page. You
continue to add pages until you have as many as needed.
This is probably a good
place to mention that it makes sense to have a plan before beginning. Decide
what you want the site to say, how many pages you will need, and what pictures
to use. For example, the first page, known as your home page, will likely be a welcome
page that explains who you are and what you do. Your last page will usually be
a links page that connects to other websites that would be of interest to
visitors to your site. What content you want between your home page and your
links page is up to you. Be sure to use Veteran Motor Car Club of America
prominently and use the VMCCA logo.
I should also mention that
there are tradeoffs to be made. A site that uses a lot of pictures may look pretty
but it will load slowly in the browsers of dial-up users. If you want a fast
loading, efficient site, minimize the number and size of the photographs. If
your members are prepared to wait a few moments for pages to load, or if many
use a broadband connection like cable, satellite, or DSL, then a graphics-heavy
site is great.
Now there is another step
needed. You want your website to be easily found. That means that when someone
is searching for old car club related material you want them to see your site.
On the Internet that means accommodating search engines such as Google, Lycos, or Alta Vista. The way they work is that
they have “bots”, a kind of automated browser, constantly combing the Internet
and cataloging what they find. More specifically, they catalog the words they
find. In order to accommodate that, most programs let you add words that are
not visible but will be cataloged by the search engines.
So, click on File
and then select Web Properties from the drop down menu. Now you
will see a dialog box with two tabs, one for Site and one for Page.
Select Site. Enter words like antique, classic, VMCCA, Glidden,
tour, and touring into the keywords box and Veteran Motor Car Club of America,
Classic car, old car, etc. into the description box. Use any words that you
think a potential visitor might type into a search engine when looking for the
kind of material you offer. Now, hopefully, when someone searches using those
terms, your site will be among the sites found.

When you have your website finished
again select File, and then Save as Web Page from
the menu. It will prompt you for a place on your hard drive to save the files
and will select Publish under My Documents as a default. Save your website.
When it saves as a web page it will greatly compress the files to make them
small and manageable for uploading and to fit in the space provided. For
example, when I save my layout as I am making changes, the size of the file is
over 120 megabytes. But when I save it as a Web Page it compresses to 2.5
megabytes, well within the 10 megabytes allowed.
You have created your
website. The next step is to upload it to your ISP’s server. Most ISP’s provide
tools to do that for you. My ISP is ATTBI (AT& T Broadband Internet), which
is a cable Internet provider. So you go to the home page of your ISP and follow
links until you reach a sign-in page for their upload tool. Give them your log
on name and password. Now you browse to the location on your hard drive where
you saved your site – c:\My Documents\Publish, select a file and click upload.
Repeat until all your files are uploaded. Now use your browser, probably
Internet Explorer, to visit and admire your new site. Congratulations. You are
officially a Webmaster.
We have already made some
efforts to make it easy to find your site. There is just one more step in that
process. We want to send an e-mail to the VMCCA National Website Webmaster,
Bill Johnson, and ask that he list your website on his links page. He will be
happy to do so assuming that you have used the VMCCA name and logo correctly
and that your site is old car related and does not contain or link to any
inappropriate material. In turn, your links page should link to the national
site and you should consider linking to other chapter websites. If you drop an
e-mail to the other chapter webmasters, mentioning your intent to link to them,
they will likely reciprocate. The more links the better as it makes it easier
for people to find your website
As previously mentioned,
these instructions are what worked for me. There will be some procedural
variations with different programs and different ISP’s but most will work very
similarly. Just follow the instructions and take it step by step. For advanced
users, there are more efficient upload tools such as FTP. If you are
sufficiently advanced to be aware of these tools, you probably know better than
I how to use them.
There are roughly seventy
chapters in VMCCA. There are only four chapter links on the national site.
There might be a couple more sites that have not asked the national site to
link to them. We should have a lot more. It is easy and it is free. Why not
start the ball rolling for your chapter at your next meeting?
* Webmaster Note: Once your VMCCA
Region, Chapter or Tour website is up, you can notify the vmcca
webmaster and a link to your site will
be place on the VMCCA.org web site. In
addition, domain registration services that support “web forwarding” can be
used as well. For instance, you can register
a domain such as “mycarclubchapter.com” and then have this domain registration
point to a personal web space. The
benefit of this is that if the member changes Internet Service Providers or no
longer wishes to host the site, the web site can be moved to another location
and the “mycarclubchapter.com” domain can be changed to point to the new server
location.