Tag Archive - tony morgan

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Apply Today! Deadline Approaching for Fall Leadership Coaching Networks

We’re very excited about the response to the new coaching networks that are launching this fall at TonyMorganLive. We are offering three different coaching networks in Atlanta, Phoenix and online.

This experience will provide you with focused training on a variety of ministry strategy topics including staffing, leadership development, communications, financial stewardship, volunteer team development, weekend services, ministry structure, discipleship, multi-site and much more.

In case you’re curious, the applicants include leaders from places like Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Nebraska, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, and Virginia. They include senior pastors, executive pastors and ministry directors representing churches from a few hundred to a few thousand.

Leadership Coaching Network Details

Locations — Atlanta, Phoenix and Online

Dates — Phoenix starts in September; Atlanta and online start in October

Cost — $1,500

Application Deadline — Wednesday, July 31

Here are the full details including the exact dates of the coaching network gatherings.

If you’re interested in participating… APPLY NOW!


Posted in Leadership

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New Leadership Coaching Network Starting Soon!

A couple of weeks ago, we opened applications for the new leadership coaching networks that will begin early this fall through TonyMorganLive. The deadline for applications is July 31, but applications have already been coming in and these new coaching networks will probably fill up before then.

Still on the fence about whether or not to participate? Here’s what others have said:

Paul Alexander is a natural leader and a great coach. He’s strategic, constantly learning, and has been very helpful to me in my ministry leadership and management.”
– Mike Work, Vice President of Operations at Youth Specialties

“When I have a leadership question Paul is always one of my first calls. He is a gifted leader and strategist. Paul knows how to ask the right questions to properly diagnosis current systems, and the unique capacity to help teams formulate a plan that is both practical and attainable. Working with Paul has been an encouragement and has stirred in me the desire to be a better leader.”
– Aaron McRae, Senior Pastor of Hillside Community Church in Alta Loma, CA

“Paul Alexander is simply brilliant when it comes to helping pastors and churches get laser-focused on their purpose, process and values. I believe he is one of the top strategic thinkers in the church today. After connecting with him, you will be encouraged, inspired and equipped.”
– Kyle Wall, Senior Pastor of Atlantic Shores Baptist Church in Virginia Beach, VA

“Paul is a very talented leader who knows how to form and implement strategic plans, while encouraging and building leaders in the process. He is methodical in planning his approach, and builds his processes to include appropriate goals, steps, budgets, and measurement for completion. During my time working with Paul, he demonstrated how to focus on projects and refocus when scope changed or obstacles rose up. While learning from Paul, he made things “reproducible” which has allowed me to keep my teams on task and lead them to do the same.”
– Kerry Dodd, CFO of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, WA

You can get more details about the next Coaching Network on my website.

What’s next?

Complete the Coaching Network Application. The Phoenix Leadership Coaching Network that I’m leading will be limited to no more than 10 leaders and begins in September 2013. I’d like you to consider joining us. The deadline for applications is July 31, 2013.

Questions? Contact me


Posted in Leadership

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Bringing Clarity to Organizational Culture

In at interview with Tony Morgan last week I was asked how I would define organizational culture for his readers. It’s a tough question. Even the most experienced leaders I’ve been around have trouble offering a clear explanation about what organizational culture is…much less, how to go about intentionally building a desired culture in the organization they’re leading. It’s tough because culture is the “squishy” stuff or “soft” stuff in an organization that’s hard to measure on a chart, map, or graph.

The hard truth, like it or not, is that every organization has a culture. And the leaders of the organization are the cultural architects. And by intention or neglect every organization will eventually take on the cultural characteristics of its leaders.

The culture of an organization is the context in which everything else happens. If the culture isn’t healthy it doesn’t matter how sophisticated your strategy is or how talented your team is. You’re on a road to organizational mediocrity, or worse failure. Patrick Lencioni puts it this way in his book The Advantage:

“The health of an organization provides the context for strategy, finances, marketing, technology, and everything else that happens in it, which is why it is the single greatest factor determining an organizations success. More than talent. More than knowledge. More than innovation.” Patrick Lencioni

Here are four ways you can begin intentionally building the culture in the organization you’re leading.

1. Attitudes that are Adopted

What attitude or posture do you want the people in your organization to adopt? If this became reality what would change in the way you go about your work? Are you demonstrating this attitude as the leader?

2. Values that are Championed

What organizational or team values are already being championed? What needs to shift and begin being put center stage? What would happen if these values weren’t just on some piece of paper tucked away in some desk drawer or simply printed in the boardroom, but actually lived out in the way your organization went about its work?

3. Beliefs that are Instilled

What do you fundamentally believe about the work you’re doing? Is this belief held throughout the entire organization? Is the work you’re doing worth doing?

4. Behaviors that are Reproduced

What behaviors do you celebrate and reward in your organization? If everyone in your organization behaved this way would it be a better place? Would the organization naturally take ground?


Posted in Leadership

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New Leadership Coaching Network Opening Up

This coaching experience is built around simple and practical systems and tools to help you take your next steps as a leader. We’ll take a look at best practices in growing, healthy churches. Together, we’ll press into tough conversations to help you get unstuck in your leadership and ministry impact.

At TonyMorganLive you’ve probably heard us say before, “Your message has the potential to shift thinking. Your systems have the potential to shift behaviors.” This coaching network is focused on helping you discover the shifts that need to happen in your leadership and your ministry strategies and systems. You can’t continue to use the same systems and strategies and hope to experience different results. The only way to get different results is to engage different systems. This coaching network will challenge you to take those next steps.

If you’re considering joining us here are some things to keep in mind…

This is not an opportunity for someone who is looking for inspiration: This coaching network involves work. You can’t just show up. You will have to commit to six months of reading and engaging exercises with the ministry team at your church.

This experience isn’t for people looking for leadership theory: Yes, you’ll learn some leadership skills, but this experience is designed for you to put those skills into action. Every month you will leave with new tools to implement in your ministry environment.

This is not a conference experience: In a conference, you can sit and soak in the teaching without engaging anyone else. In this coaching experience, you will be encouraged and challenged by other leaders who will be counting on you to participate fully.

Here’s what others have said:

“Paul is a very talented leader who knows how to form and implement strategic plans, while encouraging and building leaders in the process. He is methodical in planning his approach, and builds his processes to include appropriate goals, steps, budgets, and measurement for completion. During my time working with Paul, he demonstrated how to focus on projects and refocus when scope changed or obstacles rose up. While learning from Paul, he made things “reproducible” which has allowed me to keep my teams on task and lead them to do the same.”
– Kerry Dodd, CFO of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, WA

“When I have a leadership question Paul is always one of my first calls. He is a gifted leader and strategist. Paul knows how to ask the right questions to properly diagnosis current systems, and the unique capacity to help teams formulate a plan that is both practical and attainable. Working with Paul has been an encouragement and has stirred in me the desire to be a better leader.”
– Aaron McRae, Senior Pastor of Hillside Community Church in Alta Loma, CA

“Paul Alexander is simply brilliant when it comes to helping pastors and churches get laser-focused on their purpose, process and values. I believe he is one of the top strategic thinkers in the church today. After connecting with him, you will be encouraged, inspired and equipped.”
– Kyle Wall, Senior Pastor of Atlantic Shores Baptist Church in Virginia Beach, VA

Paul Alexander is a natural leader and a great coach. He’s strategic, constantly learning, and has been very helpful to me in my ministry leadership and management.”
– Mike Work, Vice President of Operations of Youth Specialties

This Coaching Network will be limited to no more than 10 leaders, and I’d like you to consider joining us. To get all of the details for the next Coaching Network click here On that page, you’ll see the link to the online application Please only complete the application if you are fully committed. The deadline to apply is Tuesday, July 31. Follow this link to check out all of the Leadership Coaching Networks opportunities available through TonyMorganLive!


Posted in Leadership

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Avoiding the Multisite Mothership Syndrome

In August, 2012, Leadership Network released a report stating that over 5,000 churches are now multisite churches (churches that meet in more than one location for worship). It’s a growing trend that first began with mega-churches, but has now expanded to churches of all sizes. One of the natural tendencies in a multisite church setting is to drift towards having one “main campus” that is driving the ship. It makes sense, because at some point there was an original campus and it is strategic to minimize redundancy and the duplication of efforts when possible. But, if not careful, the original campus can quickly be seen as the “Mothership,” a corporate headquarters making policies and calling all the shots. This can lead to a breakdown in unity through unhealthy competition, frustration and even resentment. At Sun Valley Community Church, we’re just coming up on the one-year mark of moving from one campus to three. And while we are still in the learning process, here are some of the lessons that we’ve been learning over the past year about avoiding the “Multisite Mothership Syndrome.”

Multisite doesn’t mean making a Xerox copy of the original campus

When many people hear the term “multi-site,” their initial thought is that they’re making a “Xerox copy.” And copies are never as good as the original right? Don’t fall into the trap of making clones or exact replicas of the original campus. There are thousands of little idiosyncrasies that make the church you’re at unique, and those simply can’t be reproduced. Instead invest your time, energy and resources into reproducing values, culture (best done through people), ministry principles and best practices.

Headquarters never understands what’s going on in the field

Just like in the “real world,” headquarters never seems to understand what’s going on in the field. That’s because they are “there,” while you’re the one actually on the field doing the work of implementing the plan. That’s why it’s important to create clear, broad guardrails for your teams and then turn them loose to make decisions and implement the game plan.

Clear lines of reporting and responsibility are essential

The staff at the original campus will feel responsible for the “brand” of your church. Their initial tendancy will be to influence the new campus more than they should. The staff at the new campus will feel a tendency to defer to the experience of the original campus, this will slow down decision-making. A clear reporting and job responsibility structure is key to freeing everyone up to play their unique role on their unique campus.

One size doesn’t fit all

A church of 250 looks and acts differently than a church of 2,500. A church of 2,500 looks and acts differently than a church of 5,000. In a church of 250, the pastor can pretty much know everyone. A church of 5,000 has the resources to pull off things that a church of 250 never could. Don’t expect each campus to look and act the same. Instead, leverage the unique systems of each campus to reach its unique community.

Don’t advertise your original campus at your new campus location

If what’s going on over “there” looks better than what’s going on “here,” then why stay “here?” If the content for the weekend worship services is coming from the original campus, be cautious about language, messaging, branding and even what “bells and whistles” are put on display that other campuses may not have access to utilize. The goal of the new campus is not to get people interested in your church so they’ll make the commute to the original campus. The new campus is a unique, thriving Gospel centered church for that particular community.

This post originally appeared as a guest post I wrote last year for TonyMorganLive


Posted in Leadership
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