Part 1 of 4 - How To Create an Effective Church Ministry
Marketing Plan
Does your church or ministry have an Evangelism plan? How
effective are you at reaching prospective worshippers and
members? Here are the four steps you MUST follow if you want to
kick-start your growth for the next 12 months ...
"Evangelism" vs. "Church Ministry Marketing" To a great number
of pastors and other leaders in the church, the terms "church"
and "marketing" hardly belong in the same article, much less in
the same sentence, and never NEVER together. To many people, the
term "marketing" instantly brings to mind slick, expensive
corporate advertising campaigns, with sleazy, fast-talking
salesmen, manipulating honest, hard-working consumers into
buying things they don't want, don't need, and can't afford.
While it is certainly true that there are some secular marketers
like that, it is also true that there are some ministers,
churches and "religious" movements like that as well - though
they are thankfully, by-and-large, the exception and not the
rule. In fact, in the minds of many people, the term
"Evangelist" itself often means precisely what the term
"Salesman" means: a slick, fast-talking huckster manipulating
weak-minded people with high-pressure tactics and mesmerizing
language, calling upon them to "donate generously" to his
"ministry", a ministry that is little more than a
elaborately-veiled scam. Secular Evangelism and Church Ministry
Marketing When you examine the issue carefully and objectively,
you will note that at their root, church or ministry evangelism
and secular marketing have much the same purpose and intent -
that is, to literally "get the word out" to the people, to
create an awareness of a product or service in the minds of
potential customers (or in the case of churches, of worshippers
and members), and to encourage in them a motivating desire to
buy or participate. By definition, "Evangelism" is "the
preaching or zealous spreading [of Christianity], especially
through the activities of evangelists". It also refers to "a
crusading zeal, great enthusiasm, or fervor for a particular
cause [i.e. Christianity]". [source: Websters College
Dictionary, Encarta English Dictionary). The term "evangelism"
itself is revealing. The root, "evangel" is derived from the
Latin "evangelium" and the Greek "euangelos", which means, quite
literally, "well messenger" ("eu" meaning "well", and "angelos"
meaning "messenger"), or - the "bringer of good news". Church
Ministry Marketing and the "Great Commission" The "Great
Commission" of Christianity, according to the Gospel writer
Matthew, is to "go ye therefore, and make disciples of all the
nations, baptizing them into the name of the Father and of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit: teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I commanded you ..." (Matthew 28:18-20) Thus in a
sense, the biblical imperative asserted by Matthew, is to "go
forth and spread the Good News of Christianity to as many people
as possible". What is this, if not a form of marketing?
"Marketing", in the secular world, is defined as "the business
activity of presenting products or services to potential
customers in such a way as to make them eager to buy ..."
[source: Encarta English Dictionary] or alternately "all
business activity involved in the moving of goods and/or
services from the producer to the consumer, including selling,
advertising, packaging, etc..." [source: Websters College
Dictionary]. Marketing means, basically, matching a product or
service with a human need or desire. In the words of one
successful secular marketer, marketing is simply the process of
"finding the people who need what you are selling, and making
sure they buy it!" Evangelism, Church Ministry Marketing, and
The Art of Persuasion All marketing involves an element of
persuasion ... of convincing those who are not our customers to
become our customers by buying our product or service. It also
involves persuading current customers to continue to purchase
our service or product, in the face of a world of possible
alternatives. Evangelism involves persuasion as well . . .
namely, persuading those who are not followers or believers of
Christian faith to become disciples, and to accept and practice
a Christian paradigm. It may also mean persuading those who are
nominally Christian by way of culture and/or family, to
pro-actively commit (or re-commit) themselves to the Christian
faith journey. And like marketing, evangelism seeks to persuade
current disciples and believers to continue upon that path, in
the face of a world of possible alternatives. So, in combining
the two seemingly unrelated concepts, we can define "church
ministry marketing" as "all activities of [the church] involved
with the presentation of [the faith or denominational paradigm]
in such a way as to make people eager to participate and to
become disciples and believers, or to continue to be active
participants in [the church] ... including activities such as
"outreach evangelism" (selling), advertising, public relations,
facilities and program (packaging), etc ..." Does your pastor's
mind balk and choke a little at the melding of these two
reputedly disparate concepts of the secular and religious
worlds? You are not alone. Yet why shouldn't religious leaders
look to and emulate the most successful methods of the secular
business world, as long as those methods are congruent with the
spiritual and moral values of the church? Church Ministry
Marketing and the Art of Communication At its root, marketing is
all about communication. So is evangelism. Communication occurs
in many ways, from the words that we write or speak, to how we
package ourselves and our church; the clothes that we wear, our
haircut, our grooming, the facilities we build, the program we
develop, and how we maintain them. Today's modern age provides a
WEALTH of potential communication tools and resources, from
newspapers and magazines, radio, television, direct mail,
printed materials, voice and video recordings, telephone,
personal contact facilitated by our modern transportation
conveyances, to the rapidly-expanding cyber-resource of the
Internet, email, websites, RSS, and more! Along with these
developments of course come many challenges. People are much
more educated, sophisticated, and media-savvy, and are much more
aware of the wide, wide world of options and possibilities
available to them. The days when you could roll into town and
set up a wagon or tent, and have people come in for miles around
just to hear you speak, are mostly gone. People now expect
clean, modern, well-maintained facilities, with good heating,
air-conditioning, good lighting, handicap elevators, a
professional staff, professional-looking materials, and a
well-developed program. Most people will no longer sit still for
the "hard sell" or the spiritual guilt-trip. Nor will they
participate in church "just because" the church is there, or
because they grew up there, or because their mothers and fathers
did. People today want options, and they want spiritual
experiences that "speak" to them in clear and personally
relevant ways.
Next: What People Want From Their Church ...