When a potential visitor or staff member clicks on a church website, they want to get a sense of the church’s identity. The values, ministries, and staff are probably a few clicks away, but what about your church’s personality, strengths, and heartbeat? The best way to convey the core of who your church family is, is to provide a welcoming message that puts it all in one spot. After reading a welcome message, someone makes the decision, “Yes, I want to visit this church.”
If you don’t already have a welcome message, you’ll quickly find you need one when conducting a thorough executive search. Potential candidates will look first at who you are as a church to consider if they might make a good fit for your team. All the thought and direction you put into your church’s introduction will transfer over to save you time in the interview and narrowing-down process. Candidates want to fit into the church as much as you want them to fit.
Here are the key points to focus on when writing your introduction:
Take these key points and expand them with a little bit of your church’s personality and history (but save the names, dates, and specifics for the History tab on your website). No two churches are the same. When anyone reads your introduction, they want to know why yours is unique and to see evidence of your church’s faith. That being said, keep your introduction concise. Those 1-2 paragraphs should be packed with the most insightful information about your church. Don’t make your readers work for it.
If you are writing your first welcome message for a search, take this opportunity to paste it into the About tab on your website, or on the opening page. Seeing the summarized heart of your church strung together in a friendly message will convey your church’s warm personality to all who are considering joining your faith family.
If you are struggling with the costly intricacies of conducting a search, seek help from a search firm like Vanderbloemen. We match churches and organizations with the best candidates on the market, carefully considering how candidates could fit into your team’s culture and mission. Avoid a costly bad hire by running a thorough search with help from our team.