Welcome back to our new podcast all about multisite! I’m chatting with a group of multisite ninjas and answering your questions about the ins and outs of launching new campuses. Our group is as follows:
Natalie Frisk is our family ministry expert. She is a key leader from The Meeting House. This church has 19 (!) locations and is doing all kinds of great stuff, including a killer kids’ & youth curriculum that they give away for free. Natalie’s a lot of fun and will have so many great insights around leading in a thriving multisite church.
Greg Curtis is our guest connections and assimilation expert. He leads at Eastside Christian Church, one of the fastest growing churches in the country, and literally, is the “go to” source for getting people to stick and stay in the church. (Eastside has assimilated something like 1,500 people in the last 18 months!) His coaching practice around assimilation is amazing.
Ben Stapley is our communications and service programming expert. Ben is one of the most helpful leaders I know. His day job is the Weekend Experience Director at Christ Fellowship in Miami, but he does so much to help other leaders with the “big show” part of church world.
And I, Rich, have been involved with 14 different campus launches over the years and enjoy helping churches that are thinking about multisite.
We are here to answer your questions about running a multisite church and are excited to be here today with our eighth episode.
Opening question: We tend to think about gifts as we go into this holiday season, so if you could give one gift to every church leader who was tuning in, what would that gift be?
* Natalie – To go and take a Sunday to visit another church.
* Greg – A minimum one-month sabbatical (or a weekly sabbath if you don’t have a sabbatical policy at your church)
* Ben –Greg stole my answer! But my back-up would be a subscription to Audible.
* Rich—to give people a chance to have actual friends in ministry to connect with and have those real conversations with
Q1: We’re about to go to our fourth campus, and it will be a mobile campus at a school where we have to set up/tear down each week. As the communication director, what am I in for?
Two campuses from Natalie’s church meet at school locations, and most of the campuses hold mid-week youth programs at schools. She finds that signage is the essential key for success when launching a portable site. Signs that point out where to go and what to do are so important for new guests and for parents who drop their kids off at various classrooms—you want to make sure people don’t feel lost. Natalie strongly encourages your guest connections people or host team to bring those new guests all the way through the site—not just once but throughout the beginning of new-here vistors’ journey with your church. Lastly, be sure to keep your signage up until parents have picked up their children from a classroom. That should be a given, but since signs are so easy to pull down so quickly, we usually take them down right away so we feel like we’re ahead of schedule in packing up. This is a real no-no—you want to help parents know where their children are so they can pick up their kids!
Natalie’s tip of the day: Have a small label at the end of a rolled-up sign so that you know what the sign is for! It might sound silly, but it’s the ultimate timesaver. Laminate small signs—and always be sure to use wall-safe tape when you’re using a rental site.
Ben says to make sure all of your communication pieces are all portable, minimal, and storable—storability is key! Don’t cheap out on your portable solutions. Sure, in your permanent locations, you can spend less since you worry less about wear and tear, but that doesn’t work when you’re setting up and tearing down every weekend. He advises enlisting the help of an agency that can help yo...