20
04
2006
Why Your Employees Are Losing Motivation : HBS Working Knowledge
This is a great article from people who ought to know what they are talking about. It’s Harvard isn’t it? According to them, the key goals to keep people satisfied in their jobs can be limited to Equity, Achievement, and Camaraderie. People need to be treated fairly, they need to see achievement and be recognized for it, and they need a place where they like the people they work with (my summary).
They create a list that they think will keep people in their jobs longer and keep them more satisfied with their work and the company. The list looks like this:
1. Instill an inspiring purpose.
2. Provide recognition
3. Be an expediter for your employees
4. Coach employees for improvement
5. Communicate fully
6. Face up to poor performance
7. Promote teamwork
8. Listen and involve
It seems like a reasonable list and one that the church should take note of. How well do we do this? Are our back doors just as active as our front doors? Are they more active?
With a statistic like 43% of churches didn’t have a single profession of faith in the last year, I wonder if our front doors are even open sometimes. It begs the question of why people would even want to go to church if it isn’t like the list. And frankly, that is probably most people’s perception of the church.
So here is the checklist for keeping people in the church.
1. Instill an inspiring purpose. (check)
2. Provide recognition (How do we do this for everyone?)
3. Be an expediter for your congragants (How do we help Christians kick butt in their faith?)
4. Coach people for improvement (Discipleship?)
5. Communicate fully (What do we hide?)
6. Face up to poor performance (Uh… probably needs work)
7. Promote teamwork (Getting better, but still pretty far behind)
8. Listen and involve (Do churches really do this?)
How much work would it take to do this?
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Categories : Paul Martin, Youth Ministry, Tips, likeafire
20
04
2006
SquidBlog » Blog Archive » More on Recommendation
No, I don’t think Squids need to make it into the kingdom. But there is a great little article on recommendation on this site.
Tips:
1. First-person experience.
2. Enthusiasm.
3. Specificity.
4. Sincerity.
5. Clarity.
Not much more than that, but a good thought on evangelism. Hat tip to Seth
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Categories : Paul Martin, Youth Ministry, Tips, likeafire
20
04
2006
Decker Marketing: What the New “Marketing” Paradigm Means for Marketers
I just read this article from Decker Marketing and was really shifted in my view of the church. It really is true that we are just so far behind. In the article, the author discusses the “new marketing paradigm” that is taking the marketing field by storm. What is it?
What do you call this new paradigm? Choose your term or terms: customer empowerment, customer conversations, ‘open source’ marketing, consumer generated content, customer collaboration, user generated content (UGC), social networking, customer evangelism, word of mouth, community, customer centricity, or several other terms.
Wow, that’s a mouth full. Word of mouth? Customer evangelism? Consumer generated content? Those are the buzz words of todays marketing. Add to that purple cows and big moos and you start to get really confused. Unless you know what all of these things are. I have been very impressed with some of the terms though. Customer evangelism? Sounds like church, but in a cool new hip way.
My point in all of this is this. The secular world constantly figures out new ways to do what the church ought to be doing naturally. They figure out how to get people to love their community. They shift people’s perspective so that they love sacrificing for their goals and dreams. They get people to take huge social risks to sell a product for their favorite brands. They do all of that with very well thought out strategies they show people new things to be excited about. The church, for the most part, sits back on the most exciting thing that could ever be for anybody and waits for people to come to them. Even worse, they rely on really old ways of attracting people. If business did what the church does, then we wouldn’t have anyplace to go on Sunday mornings. Before you yell the big WOOT! for that, at least sigh and shake your head back and forth.
I’m so glad for the people who are trying to do different things. Guys like Dan Kimball and Andrew Jones. We need more of that happening.
But here is the other side of the coin for marketing. Were the terms you noticed before confusing? Sounds like some people’s first experience with the church. Phrases like “are you washed in the blood?” “are you born again” are wierd to people who don’t understand them. Could the “big moo” or “consumer generated content” be having the same impact?
Maybe the church is 20 years ahead. At least we are trying to move out of that paradigm.
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Categories : Paul Martin, Youth Ministry, Tips, likeafire
20
04
2006
How the Devil Wants to Run Our Churches - byFaith Online
I recently read this article on ByFaith online. It talks about how we have a mission in the church and how it is subverted my a wrong standard of success. The standard of numbers, money, programs, etc. actually subvert our understanding of success and cause confusion in the church. Instead of measuring success that way, the author, Philip Graham Ryken suggests we look at how Jesus valued his ministry. It’s a good thought. Here is a quote:
Jesus maintained this standard in His own earthly ministry. Rather than defining His success in terms of ends, Jesus defined it in terms of means. Today many Christians seem to think that as long as we seek godly results, it doesn’t matter all that much how we get them. Jesus thought differently.
This is similar to what I have been thinking in process ministry. Read the article for more.
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Categories : Paul Martin, Youth Ministry, Tips, likeafire, Process Ministry
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