
Why No One’s Listening to Your Church (4 Steps to Fix It)
You’re leading. You’re preaching. You’re promoting. But still… it feels like no one’s really listening. That’s not just frustrating; it’s
There are many communication channels for your church. You can talk from the stage, in your bulletin, through text or email messaging, on one or all social media channels, and your church websites.
What matters most? That you communicate where most in your congregation have access to — and where your community can discover you. Print can’t do that economically.
Your church website is the easiest way. It doesn’t require special downloads; just internet accessibility. And most American’s have that. In fact, 3 states (WA, UT, and CO) have 90+% of their households with high speed internet (statista.com). Mississippi ranks lowest with 76%.
Your church needs a digital communication hub that’s trusted and known. Everything points there. If your congregation or community wants info, they know they can find it at your web URL address. Here are the initial 4 steps to creating a successful website.
You’re leading. You’re preaching. You’re promoting. But still… it feels like no one’s really listening. That’s not just frustrating; it’s
Julie Andrews sang it well in The Sound of Music: “Let’s start at the very beginning, a very good place
Excuse me, but who are you? Few questions strike deeper than this one: “Who are you?” It can feel affirming
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