
4 Practical Ways To Get Close To Your Audience
The other day I pulled up to a drive-thru speaker, paused to decide on my order, and heard a garbled
Church communication is easy if you can get people to pay attention. Except we live in a world that only half-listens because they have so much noise around them!
We’re all bombarded with messages, promotions, and information in a multi-level, continuous track so that we end up with 1000’s of communications available to us. The problem? We don’t have the time or attention to process them all. Therefore, we live on “ignore” until something breaks through.
Often, it’s not the tool (social media, email, website, etc.) that makes something breakthrough though; it’s the content or the time its received that elevates it into our consciousness.
Our goal? Make our church messages so relevant and so important that when someone pays attention to them, they are rewarded with the information.
BONUS TIP: Stop wasting people’s time with irrelevant content!
When it comes to tools, we know certain ones breakthrough (with your amazing content) better than others. Add something to your website? It’ll take a long time for people to realize it. Send them a text message? Probably the best way to breakthrough (but be careful of abusing a text message). A letter, surprisingly gets peoples attention if it’s handwritten, personal, and brief. But they’re expensive.
This is why email tends to get used by churches. And it works; if the content and subject lines are correct. But don’t forget about the other part of the recipe: the timing of the email. And that’s controlled by a scheduling program. Here are 3 tips:
Lock down when to send your emails based on how well they breakthrough and make sure you’re utilizing email the best way possible. That way more people will discover your relevant content and you’re not wasting your time communicating to someone not interested.
The other day I pulled up to a drive-thru speaker, paused to decide on my order, and heard a garbled
Almost everyone checks email—the younger you are, and the older you are, the less you’ll rely on it. The challenge?
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
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