Tag Archive - church

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You Just Made a Great Hire…Now What?

So you’ve just made what you believe is a great hire. The new Staff Member is talented, experienced, and they fit the culture of your church. They’re really going to help you get where you believe God wants you to go. They’re hired! What’s next?

Churches are notorious for racing to the finish line of a hiring process, getting the newly hired candidate in the room and breathing a collective sigh of relief. The typical church basically says, “Congratulations, you’re hired! Here are your keys. Now go figure it out.” Once the new hire is made you’re not done. If you don’t intentionally think through the first days of their employment it can leave a sour taste for the remainder of their employment relationship with you. While they may love working at your church in 5 years, they’ll always remember their first impression as being negative. Below are 5 steps you can take to set your new hire up for success!

1. The First Day in the Office

The dating is over. Now you’re married. But just like marriages fall apart due to a lack of dating, employment relationships go south when employers stop pursuing their employees. Intentionally think through what you want their first experience and day in the office to be like. There is definitely standard first day orientation stuff like keys, security codes, computer, introductions, etc. A welcome basket, lunch with the team, Starbucks, and a personal card are all simple things that anyone can do. What can you do to make it positive and memorable? If you don’t plan for it to go well, then it won’t. You want them going home saying, “This is going to be a great place to work. I’m so glad I took this job!”

2. Public Communication Plan

How are you going to communicate the hire, when are you going to communicate it, and whom are you going to communicate it to? Does your church announce each new hire from the stage? Is it a simple verbal announcement, a printed piece, does it go on the website or social media, do you do a video? If you’re trying to figure out how to communicate the hire, a general rule of thumb to go by is, “The more public the role, the more public the communication.”

3. Manage Expectations

There are always expectations associated with a new hire; in a Church setting some of those expectations are realistic, many are not. Unfortunately most are unspoken, and usually have to do with growth and an extraordinary move of God. Having a clear conversation about realistic expectations over the first 90 days and the first year is critical for long-term success. By the way getting their family settled and acculturated to the church and the community should be at the top of the list if you want them on the team for the long run.

4. Opportunities for Wins

Identifying opportunities for wins is essential during the first 12 months of employment. Although your new staff member is incredible (that’s why you hired them), they don’t know what you know about your people and your context. So while they have “fresh eyes” that you need to leverage you also have knowledge that you need to use to set them up for success. To have your new team member experiencing wins in their first 12 months puts credit in their pocket and makes you look like you made a great hire. Which you did!

5. Build Leadership and Relational Equity

For the typical new church staff member there are 3 circles of influence that they need to build leadership and relational equity with. The church staff, their volunteer team, and the audience their particular ministry affects. Your job is to help them by putting them in the right situation with the right people to set them up for long-term success.

I’d love to hear about some other things you’ve done or have seen employers do to set new hires up for success over the first 90 days and first 12 months! Leave a comment!


Posted in Staffing

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Taking Steps to Make Vision Real

Typically churches aren’t stuck when it comes to the mission. Fortunately we don’t have to search very far in the Scriptures to discover God’s intent for the church to reach the nations. However where churches are notorious for being stuck is what comes next. Understanding and developing the steps that are necessary to take in order to make that vision reality. This is where strong leadership is needed. The task of leadership is to break a complicated process of moving from where you are to where God wants you to be into clear, simple, easy, natural steps that make vision real.

Clear:

If what you’re asking people to do is confusing, chances are they’ll move in a different direction than you intend for them to, or worse they won’t move at all. Your idea and message may seem obvious and clear to you, but it doesn’t matter how clear it is in your mind. You’ve got to figure out a way to make it clear to the people you want to take the step.

Simple:

If you want people to take a step that will move them and the organization in a preferred direction then it can’t be complicated. If you’ve ever put together IKEA furniture then you understand what I mean. It’s amazing how they can fit a 6×6 entertainment center in a box the size of a Rubix Cube, and for some reason there always seems to be parts left over! The best and quickest process is always a one step process.

Easy:

Let me be clear. By no means am I saying that helping people take steps towards making vision real is easy in the sense that it is painless, peaceful, or comfortable. Moving people towards a preferred future vision of reality (change) by its very nature is difficult and painful. Rather I’m asserting that easy solutions to complex problems lead to movement.

Natural:

If you are intentional in forming the culture of the organization then you will be creating an environment that tells people where they should naturally move towards and how they should behave. People should begin to see it as the natural obvious step they should move towards.


Posted in Leadership

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Leadership Network One Day

I’m pleased to announce that Sun Valley Community Church is partnering with Leadership Network to host a Leadership Network One Day Experience. These regional events are a unique gathering designed specifically for Senior Pastor and Executive Pastor teams. At this fast paced one-day offering, participants will experience Leadership Network’s “Peer Protocol Process” by:

  1. Having the opportunity to network with other leadership teams from similar sized churches
  2. Learning from experienced and effective Senior Pastor/Executive Pastor Teams
  3. Addressing some of the challenges and opportunities facing growing congregations
  4. Exploring some creative ways of discovering the “What’s Next” for your church

Details:

Who: Senior Pastor/Executive Pastor teams of churches with Weekend Worship Attendance of 1,500 or more

Cost: Regular Fee $199/person.

Where and When: Southwest Regional One Day December 6, 2012 Sun Valley Community Church, Gilbert, AZ

More Information / Request Contact / To Register

 


Posted in Leadership

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take the lid off your church

I recently caught up with Tony Morgan to talk about his new book, “Take the Lid Off Your Church, 6 Steps to Building a Healthy Senior Leadership Team.” It just released on Amazon! Click here to get your hands on a copy and check out the interview below.

Paul: You recently released the book “Take the Lid Off Your Church, 6 Steps to Building a Healthy Senior Leadership Team.” Why does every church need a Senior Leadership Team?

Tony: Because God designed ministry, including leadership, to be accomplished through teams. He modeled it with the disciples. It was the system he used for for the early church beginning with sending out the disciples in teams of two. In America and even in churches, we tend to think of leadership as an individual. That’s not the way God designed leadership especially within the context of the church. If ministry is supposed to happen in teams, it better be modeled at the top of the organization.

Paul: What is the connection between the Senior Leadership Team of a church and barriers or lids that keep the church from growing?

Continue Reading…


Posted in Leadership, Staffing

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church planting in arizona

If God is calling you to plant a church but you’re not sure where, then you need to consider Vision Arizona. Vision Arizona is a movement of Arizona churches that strategically envision, establish, equip, and empower church planters in the church planting movement of Converge Worldwide.

We are church planters who, together, plant church planting churches. We remain open to current church planting models, for example, missional, attractional, cultural, urban and suburban, as well as other multiplication methods, for example, parenting, partnering, pioneering, multi-site, satellite, franchising and network churches. All of our church planters are recruited, pre-assessed, approved, assessed, trained (including internships), coached and funded.

Why church plant with Vision Arizona?

1. A proven track record of planting successful churches will allow you to learn from the mistakes and success of others who have gone before you.

2. Effective assessment and training will prepare you for the future.

3. Funding will help give you the resources and tools you need to turn vision into reality.

4. Ongoing coaching and development so you won’t be alone.

Proven Population Growth

Among the 50 states and District of Columbia, Arizona’s percentage of population gain from 1990 to 2000 is approximately 40 percent, and has grown approximately 14 percent from 2000 to 2005.

Expected Population Growth

Arizona had a population of 5.13 million people in 2000. The state ranked as the 20th most populous that year. By 2015, Arizona is projected to be the 13th most populous state with 7.5 million people and by 2030 it is projected to be the 10th most populous state with 10.7 million people.

Think the Lord may be leading you to plant a church with Vision Arizona? Contact me so I can help you take your next steps!


Posted in Leadership
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