Ep. 032 | Building Volunteer Teams That Stick
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Most churches rely on ineffective methods like stage announcements, program inserts, and mass emails. These approaches typically result in low commitment rates, with many volunteers saying yes but never following through. Nick's framework addresses this by creating a systematic process that treats volunteer recruitment like a well-designed pathway rather than random requests.
Step 1: Prospects - Building Your Church Volunteer Contact ListDo you have enough prospects in your pool? Think of names on a list to talk to in order to get the number of volunteers you need. This is the foundation - having specific people identified rather than making general appeals.
Step 2: Conversation - Initiating Meaningful Volunteer DiscussionsIf someone is a name on your list and you don't know them well, you need to get into a conversation with them. This might start over email, text, or in the lobby, but the goal is moving from prospect to actual dialogue about serving.
Step 3: Orientation - Helping Prospects Understand the Ministry VisionGetting them into orientation, which Nick approaches differently than most churches. This is where prospects learn about the ministry's purpose and impact.
Step 4: Onboarding - The Critical Process Where Churches Lose PeopleThis is where many churches lose volunteers even after they say yes. The onboarding process includes several sub-phases:
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Observation Phase: Letting prospects see the ministry in action
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Thorough Vetting: Applications, background checks, interviews
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Intentional Apprenticeship: Serving alongside experienced volunteers with checklists
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Follow-up and Placement: Six-week check-ins to ensure success
The volunteer is now actively serving in their assigned role with proper support and ongoing development.
Six-Week Follow-Up Strategy for Church Volunteer RetentionRetention depends heavily on early follow-up. At the six-week mark, ministry leaders should meet with new volunteers to discuss:
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What aspects of the role energize them
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What drains or frustrates them
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Process improvements from a fresh perspective
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Potential role adjustments if needed
The Nonprofit Security Grant Program provides up to $200,000 per physical address for facility hardening, including:
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Security cameras and monitoring systems
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Door access control and key card entry
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Alarms and emergency alert systems
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Fencing and bollards for vehicle barriers
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Blast-resistant glass and window coverings
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Security training (up to 5% of total grant)
Approximately 50% of organizations that apply receive funding, but success rates are much higher for properly prepared applications. Churches working with experienced consultants see success rates around 95% when applying consistently over 2-3 years.
The grant typically opens in May-June annually, with state-specific deadlines varying based on federal budget timing.
How Small Churches Can Benefit from Federal Security GrantsEven churches with limited budgets can effectively utilize the full $200,000 grant amount. Security upgrades often cost more than expected, and the improvements provide both enhanced sa...