
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,
Has this ever happened to you? You need to talk to someone; you pick up your phone but something distracts you so you have to hang up before they answer. A few moments later (when you’re free), you pick up your phone and redial. The person answers.
And for the life of you, you can’t remember why you called.
In a strange way (almost in reverse), every business owner wants people to come to their website. SEO strategies are rampant with a lot of crazy “consultants” getting paid lots of money to “help” the SEO rankings of companies. (REMEMBER: there are basically only 3 “free” pillars of SEO: check them out here).
But what do the business owners forget? I’m amazed that people pay huge amounts of money (or a lot of time) to attract lots of people to their websites; but they forget what they’re bringing them for.
When people come to your website, what do you want them to do? Make sure you have a strategy.
Some possible things:
If you don’t know what you want people to do when they get to your website, then stop attracting them. It’s as awkward as the moment you have to say “I’m sorry, I forgot why I was calling you“.
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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