5 Reasons You Shouldn’t Rely on YouTube (or Facebook) to Stream and Host Your Content

YouTube is free. It’s familiar. And for a lot of churches, it became the default for livestreaming and video hosting almost by accident — especially during 2020, when getting online fast mattered more than getting it right. But here’s the thing: what works in an emergency doesn’t always hold up as a long-term strategy. And …

Live Player in Media Sites: More Than a Video Library

For years, churches have relied on a patchwork of platforms to reach people online. A live stream goes out on Sunday morning. A playlist gets updated on YouTube sometime during the week. Clips end up scattered across social feeds. And the full messages? They’re archived somewhere—eventually—if someone on the team remembers to upload them. It …

Elevating the Fan Experience with Multi-Angle and On-Demand Replay

When someone tunes into your live stream—whether it’s a worship service, a Friday night football game, or a community concert—they’re not just looking for content. They’re looking for connection. And the truth is, a single static camera doesn’t always cut it. Not when people are used to fast-paced, dynamic, and fully immersive experiences across every …

7 Tasks Resi On Demand Can (Finally) Free Up Time For

With so many details going into every Sunday, live production for churches is a weekend sprint. Let’s be honest, church services can be exhausting (as evidenced by your coma-like nap on Sunday afternoon). But, more than a sprint, it’s a marathon… with church services coming every Sunday at 9 am, it can be overwhelming knowing …