It’s Worth Every Penny
Every Wednesday our entire staff meets together for 60 minutes. All 75 of us, from the interns to the pastors, from the worship team to the children’s staff, from the senior pastor to the accounting team. We all stop by the Connection Cafe on our way and pick up a free beverage of choice from a great group of volunteers.
Then we jump into a meeting that contains the same three parts each week:
- Stories — about God and about life-change. We start out the same way each week, “Where have you seen God at work in or through the church in the past seven days?” This is a great way to spread the vision. It would be easy to forget why we do what we do (sweep floors, answer phones, prepare lessons, set up the drums) without the constant stories about changed lives.
- Spotlight — Many times we spotlight a staff member, learning about their family, their past and pretty much anything else we want to know (of course, they don’t have to answer). Then we take time to speak into that person, telling them why we are so glad they are on the team. Other times we spotlight a ministry in the church, letting the leaders of that area give us information about what they do, and what excites them about the future.
- Stuff — the final portion of the meeting is to share inside information. It can be deflating for a staff member to hear about something big from the platform on Sunday morning. We try to make sure they hear about it well ahead of time and have a chance to have their questions answered. Another part of the “stuff” is teaching or training–like last week, when Mark pointed us to Acts 4 and talk about what God has been teaching him. Or like last fall, when we took several weeks to teach through The Forgotten Ways principles.
With offices that are spread out and ministries that are quite diverse–these weekly staff meetings keep us connected and keep the vision alive. I ran some numbers not too long ago, and figured out that this 60-minute meeting costs us $1,400 of staff-time (not including those fancy frou-frou drinks). In my opinion, it is worth every penny.
I personally think any organization, church, or business that has more than 20 employees should do some version of the same thing. Nothing can be replaced by flat-lining the org chart and letting everyone on the team hear the unfiltered thoughts of the lead pastor, director or CEO.
Posted by Tim Stevens | 5 comments









mattmetzger
As I was coming onto the staff team, I heard from a friend who was moving on to a different organization that SWAT was the thing he'd miss the most when not working here anymore. I quickly learned what he meant. Thank you for this investment in our team.
Phil S.
I think he meant SWOT
Which is a great exercise – strengths, weakenesses, opportunities, and threats.
Samihalik
Yes, I remember listening to other teams and staff members. It was so amazing to see God activate their hearts, minds, and bodies down similar paths. As they spoke their passions would come alive to all the rest of us. It always confirmed what God would lay on my own heart. And, this let me know that we worked as one body towards our Saviors' goal. That not one of us were there doing what we did alone. We were one team working for God.
I no longer work @ G.C.C., but, this is how it is still with the rest of us who are joining the New Normal Project. You know that God is laying this on your heart, as he is mine. This is our Saviors Plan and not just a church plan, or, a few folks plan. We are one in Christ Jesus and with Christ Jesus. He is asking YOU to be a part of it, no matter the size of that part.
Do you remember The story of the widow who gave but two small mites. ( Luke 21: 1-4 ) Jesus blessed her and said she gave more because she gave from what little she had.
This new chapel will be built by those who are more like this woman than by any one. You are the key to the success of Gods plan. Please, don't opt. out! You could be missing the opportunity of an eternity.
CRussell
I'm missing what SWAT stands for. Totally going to work on implementing something like this!
Matt
Staff Working As Team