Read This Before You Advertise on Facebook

I see it all the time. I’ve done it myself. And it’s incredibly ineffective. It looks like this …

Hi, this is Pastor So-and-so. I’m the Pastor of the First Fantastic Church. We meet on Sundays at 10:00 and we’d love to have you. Come check us out, worship with us and see what we’re all about!

Seems friendly enough, right?

A few years ago, after I wrote Rewired, I started getting a lot of questions about how to run Facebook ads to invite people to visit weekend services. I urged church leaders to put their money on social media advertising ten-to-one over print any day of the week.

Over time, I started getting somewhat negative feedback about the results.

We spent $X and got no return at all …

After examining some of the marketing efforts of various churches, I’ve become convinced they shouldn’t spend anything on advertising because they likely won’t see results and they’ll give up entirely.

So before you spend another dime on any kind of advertising, let’s talk about something incredibly important … messaging.

Here’s the problem with the script mentioned above …

It assumes people want to attend a church. And do you know who wants to attend a church?

Three groups of people:

1. Christians who aren’t happy at their current church. And trust me, in 97 percent of cases, you shouldn’t be trying to get them involved in yours.
2. Christians who just moved to town and don’t have a new church yet. But that’s a tiny percentage of the people you’re trying to reach.
3. Christians who go to church and like their church and aren’t interested in checking yours out.

So here’s my big advice about messaging: Start communicating to people who don’t yet know that they want to go to church.

Tailor your message toward people who aren’t believers or who don’t attend church at all right now.

In other words, your first job is to help people who don’t go to church understand why they might want to attend any church, especially yours.

So instead of, Hey! Come check out our church!, try this instead:

Ever wonder what life is really supposed to be all about? God has spoken about that, and we’re a community of people exploring what God has said about his purposes for us. Come explore with us.

Or …

Ever struggle to keep the flame alive in your marriage? God has given us some great wisdom about how to have a healthy marriage and we’re talking about that this weekend. Join us as we figure out how to have healthier marriages together.

Here’s another …

Ever feel depressed and you aren’t sure why? Jesus taught something pretty radical. He said that the pathway to happiness is through brokenness. What??? We’re talking about that this Sunday—come explore with us.

Whether you’re scripting a three- or four-minute promotional video or a two- or three-sentence text promo piece, you can put this template to work for you. It doesn’t have anything to do with your preaching approach or your worship style. It’s effective because it starts with them and not with you.

Here’s the template:

1. Ask a question that taps into a deep need people are experiencing.
2. Raise curiosity by mentioning how God has addressed that question.
3. Invite people to come for answers.
4. Reassure people that they won’t be outsiders—we’re all exploring this together.

In other words, start with why anyone should even want to go through all the work of getting up on their day off, getting the family all dressed and ready, walking into a strange building full of strange people and listening to a half-hour-long sermon.

Remember, people come for content and then stay for relationships.

So in your messaging, share content that hints that there is even more helpful content available.

Your advertising dollars are going to be far more effective!

Read more from Brandon Cox »

Brandon Cox is the lead pastor of Grace Hills Church in Rogers, Arkansas, the editor and online community facilitator of Pastors.com and a coach to leaders, pastors and church planters. This post was originally published on BrandonACox.com.

Brandon A. Cox
Brandon A. Coxhttps://brandonacox.com

Brandon A. Cox is the lead pastor of Grace Hills Church in Rogers, Arkansas.

Fit for the Kingdom

The Lord prompted Reardon to think about combining Christian fellowship with fitness in order to create a new small group for men.

4 Reminders for Discouraged Parents

Parenting can be hard, so let these truths encourage you.

Lessons From the Early Church

The early church can show us that through patience and careful cultural discernment, we can navigate the torrents of modern culture.