
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
I was talking with someone recently and it felt like I needed to draw a flowchart in order to understand his conversation. He gave me so much detail that I got lost in it.
We run into those people; they can answer a simple question with a very complex discussion. I feel like interrupting by asking if they can bottom-line it please!
If I’m in a hurry I quickly realize I shouldn’t have asked the question to that person at all.
The Church has a lot of complex answers for the world’s seemingly simple questions. Studies of attention-span and time spent on webpages demonstrates that most people only want short answers from us.
Pastors and Church Communicators love to give long answers.
How does the church communicator do that?
Church communications is about balancing the answer with being relevant, understandable, and short. Get excited when someone asks the question (or clicks on a page in your website) and make it enjoyable for them to discover the answer. Your doctrine, history, and biographical pages on your church website can (and should) be short and interesting!
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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