
Change: When It Helps and When It Hurts Your Church
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
It’s that time of year. A lot of churches are establishing budgets for next year and most want to do more with the limited funds that are budgeted.
When it comes to a church communications budget, there’s usually two goals for your church: 1) Engagement: Let your congregation know what’s going on and 2) Evangelism: Let your extended unchurched community know that there’s something for them at your church (or with God).
It sounds so easy, except there are so many tools to communicate and each one takes time to create the appropriate content. Plus we all don’t use the same method of retrieving information and don’t find the same content interesting. If you’re trying to reach everyone in the ways they all like, it becomes very expensive.
These two focus points set a foundation for a communication strategy that will keep your congregation engaged while reaching the community for Christ. All within your budget! If these are established properly, everything builds on them and you’ll keep saving money in future budgets as well.
IMPORTANT: Think we can be part of your church communications budget (to ensure it’s done correctly)? We’d love to help. Here’s the process we recommend for most churches (and the costs/deliverables): Download now
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
Every week families arrive at church. They walk through the main doors and head down familiar paths toward “their” seat.
When a legal expert asked Jesus, “Who is my neighbor?” it followed the command to “love your neighbor as yourself.”
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