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100+ Ideas for Membership Growth, January 2001
- Put nametags in a convenient location, and encourage everyone in your congregation
to wear one on Sunday.
- Provide different colored name tags for visitors.
- Provide coffee mugs of a special color for visitors and others who may
want to meet people. (Be sure to talk with those with mugs!)
- Hold special events for newcomers, such as an informal orientation dinner,
dessert, or a luncheon following the Sunday service. Plan to offer a tour
of your facilities and a description of Unitarian Universalism.
- Appoint someone to be responsible for following up on all visitors, including
children, youth and young adults. When a member calls on a newcomer within
72 hours after the visit, the chances for a return visit increase by more
than 50%.
- Assign "buddies" to every visitor. The buddy stays with the visitor to
answer questions, to introduce the visitor to others, and to follow-up during
the coming week.
- Hold regular "Invite-a-Friend" Sundays when active members are encouraged
to bring friends who are potential Unitarian Universalists to church.
- Make regular announcements regarding how one becomes a member.
- Encourage each committee to take time for orienting and training a new
member who joins them. It is helpful to provide new committee members with
materials that include the committee's mission statement and minutes from
past meetings.
- Invite promising new leaders to attend leadership school and/or GA.
- Have regular adult education programs to which newcomers can be invited.
One-time events or a discussion series should be planned throughout the year,
including summer months.
- Hold Sunday services all year long.
- Reserve several "choice" spaces in your parking lot for "visitors" and
mark them clearly.
- Put all visitors on your mailing list without requiring them to request
it. Never remove someone without first telephoning to confirm they are no
longer interested.
- Have a variety of pamphlets on Unitarian Universalism handy for visitors.
- Develop a brochure that describes your congregation and its history to
hand out to visitors and place in your brochure rack.
- Give an attractive "welcome bag" to all first time visitors. In might include
a pen with your congregation's name on it, RE offerings, a church newsletter,
a mission statement, a description of ways to get involved, a card listing
the UU Purposes and Principles, and introductory pamphlet on UU and ways to
contact the minister and Religious Educator. (One congregation even includes
four freshly baked muffins.)
- Take time in the service to joyfully welcome all visitors. Invite them
to raise their hands and have the ushers give each of them a "welcome bag."
- Develop a "new member's" packet. It might include your church directory,
bylaws, history, UU Purposes and Principles, religious education brochure,
and last annual report and a pledge card.
- Include a space for telephone numbers and email addresses in your visitors'
book so you can follow up with them later.
- Have specific breakfasts or luncheon pot lucks so newcomers can meet members
and leaders of the congregation.
- Make sure that your membership committee has a budget that enables it to
do the best possible job.
- Offer a pictorial directory. It will enable both newcomers and old-timers
to learn more easily the names of members.
- Make sure that your religious education facilities are attractive to children
and their parents. Pay special attention to the church nursery. Make sure
it appears safe and inviting.
- Provide Sunday morning greeters at each of your major entrance areas. (If
yours is a larger congregation with more than twenty visitors a week, station
your first group of welcoming greeters in the parking lots.)
- Have an 'unofficial' Young Adult greeter who identifies and connects with
visiting Young Adults.
- Identify 2 Young Adults who are committed to going out for brunch every
Sunday with any Young Adults who come to the 11:00 service. Same place, same
time.
- Have an attractive, user friendly web page which is updated regularly.
- Join with other area congregations to advertise Unitarian Universalism.
Welcome Wagon, the local media and the web are often the first places newcomers
to your community will hear about you.
- List the time and location of your services and a telephone number that
will always be answered, even if by a machine, in the yellow pages.
- On your answering machine message, include an option to listen to recorded
directions to your church. Read the directions a bit slower than normal.
- Evaluate the quality of your Sunday services. Regular participants sometimes
put up with situations that make visitors feel uncomfortable.
- Develop strategies to assimilate newcomers quickly into the life of the
congregation. New members who are not involved within 18 months after joining
frequently become inactive within 3 years.
- Expand the "ownership" of your congregation by including young adults in
their twenties and thirties in leadership positions.
- Hold religious education orientation sessions for parents.
- Provide child-care for your newcomer meetings and all other activities.
Give all committee chairs a sheet listing pre-approved sitters names' and
phone numbers and directions for getting them paid.
- Post flyers about your special events in key locations around your community.
- Print an eye-catching flyer about your church and put it on the windshields
of cars in major parking lots.
- When you are 80-85% of capacity on Sunday morning in the adult service
and/or RE program, you have three choices if you want to be growth oriented:
(a) expand your facilities, (b) add a second service and church school session,
(c) start a new congregation.
- If you choose to add a second service, consider using a different style
of worship.
- Involve a number of people in your Sunday services, such as chalice lighters,
readers, and moderators for announcements.
- Make announcements at a place in the service when they won't over-whelm
what comes before or after.
- Announcements should not exceed one-tenth of the total time of your Sunday
service. Encourage people to submit announcements in advance and print them
in the order of service.
- If you have five or fewer guests per Sunday, provide a time for them to
introduce themselves if they wish.
- Provide good music during your service. Even a recording played on a quality
sound system is better than nothing at all.
- Conclude every Sunday service with a note of hope. Visitors never forget
the "downers".
- Place occasional "testimonials" in your Sunday service and newsletters,
in which members share why they are Unitarian Universalist and what the church
means to them.
- Devote space in each of your newsletters for a personal/inspirational note.
The people who read it are your enlarged congregation.
- Look at your facilities from a visitor's eye. People feel friendlier in
a space that communicates warmth through its colors and décor.
- Keep your building clean and attractive. A sense of pride in your space
communicates a sense of pride in your faith.
- Designate specific individuals rather than committees to look for and attend
to visitors.
- Begin and end your services on time.
- Meet diverse needs by offering many choices in your programming. Smaller
groups permit sharing more than larger groups.
- Begin Covenant Groups in your church. (Small-group ministry is key to making
members feel they are part of the church.)
- One way we grow is by being welcoming, honoring and inclusive of diversity.
Do an audit of your space and programs, including Religious Education programs
and worship. Ask yourselves questions like these and then develop a plan to
make needed changes:
- Whose pictures are on the walls? The bulletin boards? What are the
messages?
In choosing stories for worship and sharing in other settings, who are
the characters? What do they do? Who describes their experience?
- What celebrations are part of your congregational life? What do you
learn about the "other"? How does this learning affect your life and the
life of your congregation?
- What are the themes and values of the curricula you use? Whose values
are they? What is implicit in them?
- Explore the environments for Religious Education programming. Look
at every thing in each room, in each space. What messages do the spaces
convey?
- What kind of diversity is present in your congregation? At worship?
In the Religious Education program? Age? Race? Ethnicity? Gender? Family
configuration? Sexual orientation? How is this diversity represented in
the life of the congregation? In Religious Education? On committees? In
Adult Religious Education? In decision making?
- What place does the diversity of your larger community have in the
life of your congregation? How do you approach your responsibilities for
justice? Out of entitlement? With a sense of accountability? Accountable
to whom and how?
- If your parking lot is always full, expand it, find other spaces, or add
a second service. People hesitate to walk more than a block to church.
- Keep your bulletin boards attractive and up-to-date.
- If your sanctuary is uncomfortably empty, set out 2% fewer chairs than
you'll need. Setting up more chairs provides a more positive note than looking
at empty ones.
- Remind members that welcoming newcomers is everybody's job, not just that
of the designated committee members.
- Organize a program of direct mail advertising. If your congregation can't
afford it all at once, divide the zip code(s) into thirds or fourths and target
one section per year.
- Do a demographic study of your community. See how your membership compares
with the community around you and make knowledgeable decisions about folks
that you might try to attract in the future.
- Allocate 5% of your budget to advertising. Web pages, direct mail, telephone,
ads in newspapers (including alternative papers), radio, and shopping "throw-aways"
are the most effective. Also, post flyers in laundromats, coffeehouses and
on the local college campus.
- Conduct a person-to-person canvass of your congregation every year. The
personal visits provide an opportunity for outreach and communication with
every member and friend. Direct solicitation will produce greater pledging
than any other method.
- Put up signs along well-traveled routes directing people to your building.
- If the main entrance to your building is not obvious, mark it with visible
signs.
- Make your building accessible to those who use mobility devices.
- Make sure ushers know how to welcome people with various disabilities in
a friendly way.
- If your building is accessible to those who are physically challenged,
include the symbol on your print advertising to let others know.
- Ask a local agency or member of your congregation who is physically challenged
to help you assess the accessibility of your congregation. People who do not
have disabilities frequently overlook such things as high counters, narrow
passageways, etc.
- Offer large-print hymnals. Enlarge orders of service with a copy machine.
- Help those who have difficulty hearing participate in your activities by
installing and using a good sound system, by asking all speakers to stand
in a place visible to the entire audience and by offering Sign Language interpreted
services consistently. In the Deaf press, advertise when interpreted services
are held.
- Put up signs directing people to offices, rest rooms, the sanctuary and
religious education areas.
- Ask a Young Adult to assess the Sunday morning worship service from Young
Adult eyes. Is the service participatory? What is the pace? What kinds of
music do you sing and play? Will Young Adults see themselves reflected in
the service?
- If your meeting room or sanctuary is crowded, encourage long-time members
to leave empty seats along the aisles. It is more comfortable for a newcomer
to slip into an aisle seat than a middle seat.
- Keep meeting areas free of clutter. Build storage cabinets for supplies
and equipment, and encourage folks to clear away leftovers from various activities
rather than letting them collect in the building.
- Allow other groups to rent your building, and put brochures about your
church near entrances where visitors will see them.
- Put a visible lighted sign on the building or property.
- If you do not have your own building, ask the owners for the right to put
up a sign as part of your rental agreement.
- Display multicultural artwork and symbols representing a diversity of ethnicities
and cultures.
- Start new groups with every 40 new members. It is easier for newcomers
to make friends in a newly formed group than to "break in" on established
groups with a shared history.
- Offer a variety of music and worship services to appeal to and learn more
about people of different cultures and age groups. (Examples of services include
Soulful Sundown, services in Spanish, American Sign Language, and other languages,
etc.)
- Host a few special speakers at your congregation each year, and publicize
them widely. At each event, publicize follow through programs on the same
theme.
- Provide quality activities for children during coffee hour and other times
when parents are busy with adult activities.
- Before the Christmas and Easter holidays, collaborate with other Unitarian
Universalist congregations in your area to do a special advertisement with
a UU message about the holiday in a local paper.
- Join the local community cable network and train someone in your congregation
to videotape special programs for cable. Include in these programs a tag line
about your congregation's program and a few testimonials from members, including
young adults.
- Send press releases regularly to community newspaper calendars or newsletters.
(African-American, Deaf, Parents Without Partners, gay and lesbian, campus,
etc.)
- Volunteer as a congregation for the telethon for the local public television
or radio stations. Purchase as a congregation one or more days of programming.
- Set up a booth about your congregation at a community fair.
- March in gay pride with a banner designating your congregation. Set up
a booth about your congregation.
- To become more visible in the area, make your building available to community
groups. Volunteer for joint projects with some of these groups so they get
to know you as more than a "landlord."
- Train the members of your congregation in listening skills, and have them
connect with members of your congregation who have stopped coming to church.
- Have someone call new members six months after they have joined your church
to explore ways they can be incorporated into the life and ministry of your
church.
- Plan committee meetings to include opportunities for a brief spiritual
reflection, personal sharing, and fellowship. Always evaluate your committee
meetings at the end. What went well? What do you hope to do differently in
the future?
- Have a committee fair once or twice a year so that new and long-term members
can become informed about your committees and find a place to invest their
talents.
- Nurture enthusiasm among your present membership. If the present members
are enthusiastic about the congregation, they will want to tell their friends
and neighbors about your church.
- Have a workshop in "witnessing" Unitarian Universalism, such as Sharing
(Y)our Faith. Help participants tell about their spiritual journey and how
Unitarian Universalism has supported them. Include role-plays.
- Invite newcomers to join you in doing a job at a Sunday service, such as
ushering or serving coffee hour refreshments.
- Gather a group of newcomers together for a feedback session. Ask them what
they found attractive about the congregation. Ask them what has been difficult
in becoming active.
- Hold a variety of events, such as retreats, family nights, and pilgrimage
trips that meet religious, educational and social needs. Include others besides
children and parents who want to take part.
- Ask newcomers/new members to sit on the Membership Committee to add their
experiences to the projects and planning sponsored by that group.
- Hold a special celebration for welcoming new members.
- Convene a meeting for committee chairs in which the names and interests
of newcomers can be passed on to the related committee.
- Record how visitors are hearing about the congregation.
- Publish an attractive RE prospectus each year, describing programs for
children, youth, Young Adults and older adults. Have copies to give away in
your pamphlet rack.
- Make sure the ushers know where to direct new families as they arrive at
the church door.
- Have good signs to the church school parts of the building and a clear
indication of where new children are registered.
- Display children's artwork attractively with signs to explain the themes
and program from which it came.
- Have a special RE greeter/registrar.
- Hold programs for parents to (1) get acquainted and (2) learn how to talk
about Unitarian Universalism with their children.
- Introduce each newcomer to yourself and one other person.
- Bring a visiting Young Adult over to meet another Young Adult member during
coffee hour.
- Consider changing 'coffee hour' to something like 'social hour'. Many Young
Adults do not drink coffee. Augment your 'coffee hour' with juice, seltzer,
herbal teas etc and have it available for everyone, not just for children.
- Have a Young Adult (18-35) category on the form your Membership Committee
asks visitors to complete. (It might ask, "Year-of-birth if Young Adult (18-35)?")
- Have a Young Adult tell you what they see, or don't see, as they arrive
on a Sunday morning.
- Complete the Welcoming Congregation Program. Afterwards, place the rainbow
flag icon on your sign.
- Tell your friends, coworkers, and others with whom you associate what you
love about your church.
- Leave a copy of UUWorld at your hairdresser's or barber shop
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