If your role on a church or ministry staff involves any sort of volunteer coordination or event planning, you’ve probably experienced the frustrating lack of email responses or asked yourself, “Why won’t people read my emails?!”
If you're emailing volunteers, effective email communication is especially important. Every church and ministry needs more volunteers, and having an effective communication plan in place that respects your volunteers’ time and encourages them to action will help you retain your volunteer base more successfully.
If your church doesn’t have a clear email communication plan in place, you’re likely not engaging your church community effectively.
Aren’t receiving the responses you’d like from your church-wide emails? Ask yourself these thirteen questions before you send your next email and see what happens.
Am I being sensitive to how these email will be received emotionally, spiritually, and professionally?
Have I said too much or too little? Am I respecting the time of the volunteer or church staff member reading this email by saying only what I need to say?
Is it clear what I am asking people to do and is it easy for them to do it (i.e. Sign up, reply, RSVP, etc…)
Is it also consistent in language with the other emails I have sent about this topic previously? Will I confuse people or add clarity upon sending this email?
Subject lines that are too long or unclear discourage people from opening the email.
Look into the past data from your email system. Analyze why people may not be opening or replying to your emails to see what the missing link might be.
Will detail-oriented people feel like they have what they need to know and will quick readers be able to get what they need through skimming the email? Use bullet points and include more details under them.
Make sure your email is easy to read and includes pictures, videos, or graphics. Dont make people wade through long paragraphs to get the relevant info.
Most people check personal email on their phone, so if it's not mobile friendly, it's not helpful.
If not, don't send it.
Is it easy for people to invite their friends with the click of a button from this email? Can they share it on twitter or facebook?
When people open this email, will they be able to tell it came from our church? Make sure everything you send is branded.
Do a regular clean up of your church email database.