It probably won’t surprise you to know that I don’t think there’s a magic formula for finding that right person to fill this type of role at every church. The “right” person at one church may be completely the wrong person at another church.
For example, if your multi-site strategy includes trying to replicate everything exactly the same at every campus, you probably don’t want a strong visionary leader. Instead, you need more of a manager. If, on the other hand, you need someone to act more like a church planter to help shape the ministry in a different community than your current campus, then you probably need someone who is more entrepreneurial. You don’t want primarily a person who is always waiting for specific instructions from the top leadership team on what to do next.
That said, I think there are a handful of common characteristics you need to prioritize when when looking to add a campus pastor to you church staff. The right campus pastor will:
- Embrace the DNA of your church staff. Every church staff is unique. Your campus pastor needs to both embrace and champion your mission, vision and values. That’s why it’s best if whoever you’re sending out to lead your next campus has had some time to learn who you are as a church.
- Communicate well. It doesn’t matter if your teaching is on video. The ability to communicate is still essential to this role. Two big things the campus pastor has to talk about are vision and money. If they can’t do that well, they are the wrong person to add to your church staff.
- Relate well with people. This is especially true for churches using video teaching. No matter who is teaching content, someone needs to pastor people. A purely theologian-type or administrative-type, as an example, will not succeed as a campus pastor. Ideally you will find someone with the “Woo” or “Relator” strengths to connect with people.
- Lead through volunteers. There are only a handful of churches in the country that can afford to hire a staff to make ministry happen at a new campus. The rest of us have to find a strong leader who can build teams of volunteer and empower lay leaders. The most common theme I hear among multi-site churches is that the lack of success at a campus is a direct reflection of a lack of leadership.
- Make it happen. Good campus pastors are driven. You don’t have to kick them in the pants to motivate them. If anything, you’ll need to encourage them to take a break and slow down. Good campus pastors know that multi-site comes with unique challenges, and they’re motivated by that. You need someone who can look problems in the face and trust that they’re going to do whatever it takes to deliver results.
Read the rest of the story, and find a sample Campus Pastor Job Description by visiting Tony's site.