Do My Numbers Really Matter?
How Can I Make My Numbers Grow
One of the most frequent questions I am e-mailed is “How can my
youth group grow and reach more people?”
1. P R A Y I N G: Start by praying. . . and pray hard.
Ask God to increase your group size. Sure we all say we pray . . . but do we really pray? Take a time out each day to specifically
pray for individual students and the friends they’ll reach. Pray for God’s direction in your programming
and teaching. Pray for the students
that drive you nuts. Pray that God will
lay compassion on your heart, a compassion for lost students that you wouldn’t
normally reach out to. Be careful . . .
God will answer those prayers.
2. K E E P I N G the kids you got!
Give the students you have something to bring their friends
to. This means coming up with creative
programming that students enjoy. Meet
the needs of the students attending.
A lot of people take this one for granted. Why?
Because it takes a lot of work.
It takes a lot more work to arrange a bunch of vehicles for a video
scavenger hunt. It takes a lot more
work to find a video clip and set up all the media stuff to kick off a video
discussion. It takes a lot of work to
arrange an all nighter with laser tag, skating, a gym, etc. It takes a lot of work to prepare dynamic
talks or put together a budget that brings in dynamic speakers. BUT IT’S WORTH IT!
That’s what I’ve dedicated my web site to: providing you cutting
edge games, video clips, activities, discussions and programming ideas for
free. Can’t beat that with a stick!
3. C O N T A C T I N G: Find students that need Christ
Definition: meeting kids “where they are at” &
getting to know them (discovering their physical, emotional, social &
spiritual needs)
Guess what- your students aren’t the only ones who should be
bringing students to youth group- you can meet students where they are at and
build relationships with them. This
doesn’t mean walk up to a kid for the first time with a flyer in your hand,
this means hanging out with students because you love students. If you like basketball, find where students
play basketball and play with them. If
you know students like to skateboard, provide a place for them to
skateboard. If your ministry reaches a
certain campus, go to those sports games and meet students.
Once you contact students and get to know them, then you’ll find
opportunities to invite them to youth group or church. A few ideas of where to contact:
- On Campus- during lunch
- School sports games
- The local teen hang-out
- Taco Bell across the street from the school
Contacting doesn’t stop outside of youth group. When students come to your weekly program,
studies or events, use this as an opportunity to get to know them better.
- being on their team during games
-
shooting hoops, ping pong, whatever you have in your facility
- learning
names, noticing their interests, asking them about their week
4. B U I L D I N G a relationship with them
Definition:
Hanging out with them, now that we know them (meeting their physical, emotional, social & spiritual needs)
Building relationships with students is one of the best time you
and your staff can spend. My weekly
staff meeting always included my staff reporting about their time with students
that week. As we build relationships
with them, we’ll find opportunities to share the Gospel, disciple them, and
equip them to reach out.
Here’s some great “Building” activities:
- Have them over to your house for movies, spa, games, etc.
- Take them shopping.
- Use small groups as part of your program to get to know students better
and open doors to deeper conversation.
- Take them to a “Kings” basketball game (I’m from Sacramento- give me a
break!)
- Laser Tag
- Local mini-golf/video game places
- Go to their house- meet parents/siblings
5. C R E A T I N G a momentum of growth in your
group.
Notice the definition: “Creating a momentum of growth in your
group.” Many of us don’t even talk
about this- we talk about “advertising.”
We make the mistake of thinking that advertising is simply handing out
flyers or putting up posters. Cool
fliers and posters and a big draw (food, activities, etc.) will not guarantee a
good event. We need to strategically plan our year with programs or events that
give opportunities for your group to build up.
For example: if you’re going to do a big pizza event to bring out
a bunch of kids to your Tuesday night program . . . don’t just start the year
off with THAT event. Some of us start
the year out cold turkey with our big event, putting everything we’ve got into
that event like a baby rattlesnake injecting all his venom in one bite. Build a momentum. Start the year off bringing out as many students as you can,
maybe that’s only eight students. Have
them start bringing their friends.
Build up the group’s size using events like “Manhunts” (see my EVENTS
page ) and let them know the “pizza
bash” is coming. Finally use the
students, your most effective marketing tool, to bring back as many of their
friends for that event. You can always
offer incentives, like prizes for the person that brings the most friends, etc.
DOES THIS REALLY WORK?
Yes this really works. I’ve used this same process with a group of 7 students meeting in a home
each week. This ministry built to over 200 students weekly.Your group has
the potential to grow and reach your community for Christ. If you’re ready to let God have the reigns,
he can do incredible things in your ministry.
Jonathan McKee is president of TheSourceForYouthMinistry.com
and author of the new book "Do They Run When They See You Coming? Reaching Out to Unchurched
Teenagers."
(CLICK HERE FOR THE BOOK) Jonathan
speaks and trains across the country
and provides free online resources, training, & ideas for youth workers at
www.TheSource4YM.com
|