Four Principles to Help Your Organization’s Church Engagement Strategy Thrive
You believe the Church is a huge part of the solution to the problem your organization is trying to solve, but you’re struggling to get the ear of a busy pastor, navigate through the complicated structures of church ministry departments or are just having a hard time helping churches see how they can truly make an impact through the work you are doing.
We get it!
This 40-page guide is outlined with all of that in mind and is designed specifically to help you engage church partnerships more efficiently and equip their ministries more effectively.
Paperback Version Available
For Agencies, Organizations, Etc.
This booklet is for leaders and advocates working to engage and equip churches.
It unpacks questions about your current church partnerships and the results you are getting and offers four practical principles to consider to help your church engagement strategy thrive. They include…
BE A GOOD GUIDE: Position the Church as the main character in the story; you are there to support.
SHRINK YOUR PROBLEM: Make the problem feel less paralyzing and more solvable for them.
INCREASE CLARITY: Paint a clear picture of what “success” looks like in partnership with you.
TIER YOUR ON-RAMPS: Meet them where they are and help them take their next best steps forward.
What to Expect:
Practical principles to help you approach potential church partners with clarity and confidence.
Insights for cultivating long-term, trust-based partnerships with churches.
Tools for resourcing, equipping and activating churches to see their role in your work.
Clarity on how to be a good guide that helps churches fulfill their unique vision and mission.
Of course there’s more than four ways to approach churches and certainly more than four principles to consider when forming relationships with them.
But based on our work with organizations around the country, we believe if you at least start with the four outlined in this booklet you’ll see a shift – not only in how churches are responding to your organization but perhaps more importantly, how your organization is approaching them in the first place.
As a result, doors will open, conversations will happen, partnerships will form, trust will build and impact will be multiplied over time.
Questions?
Email us at info@jasonjohnsonblog.com.