Showing posts with label #guest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #guest. Show all posts

4 Questions Guests Are Asking Themselves When They Walk in Your Church Doors

Let’s enter the thought process of one of your guest families. What are they thinking as they approach your church for the very first time? Here are some questions guests are asking themselves when they walk into your church.

Question #1 – Where do I go?

Do you remember what it is was like to pull your car into a new church for the very first time? You don’t know where to go, where to drop off your kids, where to find the rest room or which way the auditorium is. 

Answer this question as quickly as possible:

Have clearly marked guest parking and make it the best parking on the lot.

Have parking lot attendants guide guests into this area. You can do this by having an entrance sign that says “Guests, turn on your hazard lights for reserved parking.”

Have clearly marked outside signage. 

Make the signage big and bold. The signage should point the way to the children’s area. Point the way to the worship center. Point the way to guest parking. Last year, I went to visit a church on a Sunday morning. When I pulled into the parking lot, I noticed that there was no outside signage telling us where to go. There were also no parking hosts helping people. I ended up parking as close as I could get to what appeared to be the main entrance to the church.

We made the walk to the big, grandiose front doors. We tried to enter the front doors but found they were locked. There were no greeters there to tell us otherwise. Finally, after walking a good distance, we found the outside entrance doors. They were at the back of the building. Apparently the big front doors we tried to enter were just there for looks. 

After finding the doors to enter in the back of the building, we walked in. No greeters. No one to tell us where to go. I heard the music coming from the auditorium so we followed the sound. We followed the sound to the end of a hallway. There was a door there, so I opened it, expecting to enter the auditorium. But it wasn’t an entrance door to the auditorium. Rather, it was a door to the baptistry area. I shut the door in frustration and continued our search for the auditorium. We finally found it after several attempts of opening unmarked doors. If you want to see guests return, don’t put them through such an ordeal.               

Have greeters at each door. 

Let me say this again. Signs are great. Signs are needed. Signs are important. But signs can’t smile and welcome guests into your church. It takes people to do this. Happy people. Positive people. Smiling people.

Have hosts walk guests to their rooms. 

Don’t try to give your guests directions. The last thing they need is to get stressed out listening to someone explain where they should go and then trying to remember what they were told. Walk them there. Always walk them there. They should feel important and special that you would take the time to walk with them.

Question #2 – Will they be friendly?

Will anyone talk with them? Will anyone welcome them? Will anyone notice them?

How to answer this question:

Have the right people greeting.  Make sure your greeters have a great personality, love people, and have the ability to make new people feel comfortable.

Make sure the friendliness factor is part of your church’s DNA. The friendliness factor should extend through their whole experience.

Show genuine interest in them. 

Move beyond the “welcome” and take time to talk with guests. Engage them in conversation and find out about their family.

Have the attitude “there you are” instead of “ here I am.”

Be just as friendly when they are leaving as when they were coming in.

Research shows the main two reasons why people decide to attend a church.

How friendly are you?

What do you have to offer my kids?

Stay tuned for questions 3 & 4. We will cover those next Monday.

This is an excerpt from my brand new book - "Be Our Church Guest."  You can get it at this link.


 

Double Your Children's Ministry With These 5 Tips

Growth in our children's ministry.  It's something we all want to see happen.

And we know Jesus wants it to happen as well.  He tells us this in Luke 14.

Go out to the roads and country lanes and compel them to come in, so that my house will be full.

The bottom line is this - you can't reach and disciple empty seats.

Over the years, I have seen God double many of the children's ministries that I have led. 

Here are 5 tips that you can use to double your children's ministry. 

Emphasize inviting.  Every single week talk about inviting your friends to church.  Have an empty chair up front and ask the kids who they know that should be in that chair. 

Have invite cards that kids can use to invite their friends.  Pass them out to everyone.  But there is another approach you can do at least once a month.  Instead of giving everyone an invite card, ask the kids to raise their hand if they have the name of a specific person they can invite.  

Pick out 5 kids who have their hand raised.  Bring them up front.  Hand them a single invite card and then have everyone pray with them for the person they are going to invite.  Each time I did this, at least one of the five kids would bring a guest with them to church the next weekend. 

I remember one Easter, we had a lady show up for church for the first time.  When asked who invited her, she told us she was a crossing guard for a local elementary school.  While waiting to cross, one of the children handed her an Easter invite card and asked her to come.

Kids can reach people if we will give them the tools and motivation to do so.  

Give guest families a great first experience.  If a family has a subpar experience on their first visit, the chances of them returning is slim to none.  Work hard to give them an experience that exceeds their expectations.  This includes providing them with great parking, a friendly welcome, an easy check-in experience and a great service. 

One thing you can do to enhance guests' first visit is to have a guest reception for guest kids and their families.  Invite them to a reception when they are checking in before service.  Then after service, have a private room where they can go to meet 2 to 3 of the key families in your ministry.  Spend a few minutes talking with the new families and getting to know them. Make it all about them. Then share with them how the ministry has helped your family and thank them for coming.  Provide snacks and drinks for them. 

Double your return rate.  The national average for seeing guest families return is about 7%.  A ministry that can do better than 7% will grow.   I was able to see our return rate climb to over 30%.  How did we accomplish this?  As stated above, it started by giving guests a great first experience.  But then we took one more step that helped us go way beyond just 7%.  

We offered a free-shirt for every guest who came back for a second visit.  It was a financial investment, but it was well worth it.  Each week, we saw guests come back and get a t-shirt.  The cool part was also this - many of them wore the t-shirts to school which was great publicity for the ministry. 

Intentional follow-up.  As I mentioned above, seeing guests return starts by giving them a great experience on their first visit.  But there are some things you can do to encourage guests to return. 

A handwritten postcard to the parents and to the child says a lot.  In a time of everything being digital, a handwritten postcard really stands out. And to take the impact of the postcard to a new level - mention something specific that you found out about the guest family.  An example would be a new family that just moved into your area from Oregon. In the handwritten note, mention their coming from Oregon - this lets the family know that you know something about them specifically and they are not just another number that you sent a quick email template to.

Ratios. If your ministry doubled in the next 6 months, would you have enough volunteers in place to accommodate the growth?  Growth cannot be sustained without a proper ratio of volunteers to children. It is crucial that you build your volunteer team if you want to see your ministry grow.   

Focus on these 5 areas and I believe you will see your ministry grow.  

One last thing.  The most important thing.  Take these 5 tips and make them matters of prayer.  God is the one who makes things grow.  Work like everything depends on you and pray like everything depends on God....because it does.  

It takes work and prayer to see a ministry grow. 

Praying with you for a great harvest.