barrier
Articles

Does Your Church Have These Barriers to Visitors?

Recently I visited a church where I had to jump over a few unnecessary hurdles before I finally took my seat in their worship service. Does your church have any of these barriers to visitors?

Ineffective website. Right off the bat, I almost couldn’t find this church’s website – it showed up as the 160th listing on a Google search for local churches (I access a marketing statistic website that tells me such things – how does your church rank?) That’s several pages into the search, and studies show people don’t usually click past the first page of results.

A good website is a VITAL first contact for a potential visitor! I want to get to know the pastor, staff and get a taste of the service. This church’s website had no pictures of the staff, building or auditorium (the only way I could see where I was going was to find the building on Google Street View.) A church logo was non-existent – the website was a plain, generic WordPress page with a Times New Roman font for the name of the church.

The website did had a few podcasts from recent sermons. A blog or welcome by the pastor would also go a long way to helping me feel a connection.

No sign out front. I drove to the church’s location and was surprised to not see a sign. Was I in the right place? I’ve probably driven by the church building 100 times, and since it’s in an old warehouse, I never knew it was a church! I suspected I was in the right place because of all the cars in the adjacent parking lot. Then as I parked my car I saw a sign on the side of the building facing a side road (but no sign BY the road.)

No greeters. I walked into the church and stood in the lobby, spinning around with a blank look on my face as I tried to figure out which door led to the sanctuary. It was like the old game show “Let’s Make a Deal” where you pick one of three mystery doors. Nobody was around to help me find my way, no signs, nothing. A bunch of kids were entering door #1 so I guessed that wasn’t right… then I saw adults going in door #2 so I followed them down a hallway to the sanctuary entrance.

Afer all this I expected to enter a room with 10 people sitting in a circle on folding chairs. To my complete shock I entered a large auditorium that was literally packed with about 500 people and experienced a wonderful service filled with life (500 attendees in a town like Greenville, SC with a church literally on every corner is quite an accomplishment for a young church.) I felt like I was on a treasure hunt! You really have to want to go to this place since they put so many obstacles in your way. If this church had a descriptive website, a sign out front and somebody to welcome you as you walked in the front door, I bet they’d be running 2,000 people by now.

Bottom Line: It’s the little foxes that spoil the vine – don’t do dumb things that put obstacles in the way of people who want to attend your church.

Share this article:
Don Chapman Worshipideas
Don Chapman

A prolific arranger and songwriter, Don has had songs published by Word, Integrity Music, G3worship and Worship Today, and has orchestrated music for several Christian artists. He serves as the arranger for Hymncharts.com and Worshiphymns.com. He’s been featured on the 700 Club, has been quoted in USAToday and has been a guest lecturer at Liberty University.

You Might Also Like

Seacoast
Articles

The Next Big Thing

What would happen if Rick Warren started a church in your town? Would it suck the life out of other…
Seacoast
Articles

The Next Big Thing Part 2

Last week we talked about the new multi-site church movement that’s happening all over the country, and specifically about Seacoast…

worshipideas:

Essential reading for worship leaders since 2002.

 

Get the latest worship news, ideas and a list

of the top CCLI songs delivered every Tuesday... for FREE!