by
Reba Collins and William Cowles
How
many visitors walk through your church doors looking for something more to do?
How many want another activity to fit into their already crammed schedules? How
many more “good” causes can they support? Do they come in looking for another group
to join? We’d guess, not many.
Most
visitors are looking for something they can’t already get outside your church’s
walls. They are looking for a vision, a mission, and a purpose for themselves
and for your church. They are looking to contribute to something bigger than
themselves through you, and they want to connect into a better way of life for
themselves
Visitors
want you to answer questions such as:
- What is the church’s purpose?
- What makes this one different from other churches?
- What is their vision for the future?
- What happens to me and others if I engage in this community?
- What’s it going to cost me to go with them on their journey?
These
are big picture questions. Deep discussion questions. Questions not easily
answered in 140-character Tweets or Facebook posts. And, these are important
questions that can make or break a visitor’s decision to actively engage – or
join – your church.
At
some point, a visitor wants a complete set of answers to their big picture
questions. And doesn’t it make sense that since you have visitors more than
once a year, you need to answer the big questions of vision, mission, purpose,
connection, and funding more than once a year? Well, you can. Every week. Multiple
times in multiple ways.
Answering
these big picture questions can easily be done through your weekly bulletin,
welcome center brochures and flyers, newsletter, and on-screen announcements. Here’s
how:
1.
WELCOME CENTER BROCHURES and FLYERS – This is primary pick-up material for church visitors, so
answer all of the questions you can in these flyers and brochures. Ministry
brochures should be vision focused, mission driven, and outcome inspired. If
you don’t state why and how a ministry helps fulfill the church’s vision, then
visitors won’t see the point of the program. If you don’t clearly tell who
benefits and what the benefits are for participating in an event or activity,
then visitors won’t see value in contributing.
2. WORSHIP BULLETIN – Be selective. The Bulletin’s purpose is to enhance the
worship experience, not to list every activity, post calendars, and beg for
volunteers. It should be very clear on the day’s message and how that message
relates to your church’s vision, mission, and purpose and to your visitor’s
experience. Also, Bulletins should
connect the message’s call-to-action with selected ministries that help members
and visitors best fulfill that call.
3. ON-SCREEN
ANNOUNCEMENTS – A great place to
reinforce basic points of culture and hospitality. If your services are casual,
for example, show people dressed and behaving casually. If your communion is
open, explain and reinforce it here. Also, each announcement is an opportunity
to cast a little piece of your vision, mission, purpose, sacrifices, and
accomplishments. Recap ministry
successes with numeric results and great photos. Consider your announcements as
opportunities to shine on “Did you know that…” successes, and not just as “Here’s
what’s coming up…” opportunities.
4. NEWSLETTER – This what your regular members read, and this is where
you equip them to be effective answer-givers for your vision, mission, purpose,
challenges and opportunities. Capture the heart with stories and capture the
head with stats. Again, every piece of “news” is another opportunity to tell
about where you’re going and what your church hopes to accomplish.
The
reality is that most churches already have at their disposal the communication
tools they need to answer big picture questions in a timely and frequent
manner. Start by considering the basic
question, “Who needs to know what?” What is it about your church’s big picture
that you want visitors to read all about? Go on the record with it in every printed
piece you offer and very soon, visitors, along with everyone else, will start
to see the big picture.
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