
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
Everyone is known for something once they’ve had interactions with a community. Who you “are” in their minds is an inadvertent brand. Your perception becomes their reality.
Churches today have a perception that isn’t so glowing in the unchurched community. If you don’t create something that counteracts that perception, you’ll be painted with this inadvertent brand. If you look like a church, talk like a church, open on Sundays like a church, and have a sign with “church” on it; you are branded with the inadvertent perception of “church”.
This article is not about inadvertent branding; it’s about having a controlled brand that dispels wrong perceptions and tells your community who you actually are. If you haven’t researched, met and discussed, and decided this, you don’t have a brand. You just have an inadvertent perception.
Create and control boundaries of what your church communicates about regularly.
These fences allow your communication staff to “play” freely within a predefined area. You simply control the fences and know when people jump them.
Not controlling anything? Sorry, you don’t have an effective brand. Start working on developing one (and controlling something) now.
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,
We'll never spam you. Unsubscribe anytime.