Outreach
One Post a Day: The Small-Church Path to Being Known Online
100 Strong · July 10, 2026
Here is a truth that stings a little: most of the people God is sending your way have already looked you up before they ever consider walking in. Four out of five people check out a church online before they visit. And they are spending roughly three times more time on social media than they will ever spend inside your building. So while you are pouring your heart into Sunday, the first impression is often happening quietly, on a phone, days before.
That can feel discouraging for a 60-person church with no media team and no budget. But it is actually good news. You do not have a message problem. You have a distribution problem. And distribution is the one thing a small church can do at the same scale as a megachurch. This is your engine room.
Why organic social matters right now
Only about 20% of Americans attend church regularly, and just 2 in 10 Millennials say attendance even matters to them. The younger crowd is barely in the room. Yet every month, more than 100,000 people type "Is God real?" into Google. The hunger is there. The question is whether a familiar, trustworthy face shows up when they go looking.
Organic social is how strangers who discovered you become people who feel they know you. That familiarity is what a personal invitation, or a later ad, actually converts. Think of it as the cultivation season between planting and harvest.
A quick note on scope: your website, your "I'm new" page, SEO, and email all belong to the larger Impact Growth Engine, and paid ads are their own skill. This article is only about the organic social work. Before you lean into social, make sure your website front door is solid, because social only pays off when it feeds a strong "I'm new" page (/tools can help you check that).
Pick one or two platforms, not seven
The most common mistake is trying to be everywhere. If you try to reach everyone all the time, you will end up reaching no one. A one-person volunteer team cannot run seven channels well.
So choose where your people, and especially your young adults, actually are. For the 18 to 24 crowd, YouTube is nearly universal (94% use it) and it doubles as the number two search engine, which makes it the highest-leverage single bet. Instagram rewards daily posts and Stories. If you have teenagers who love TikTok, empower them to own it and ride the trends. Pick one you can sustain, and add a second only when you are ready.
Start the 180-day, one-post-a-day habit
Here is the core discipline, and I want you to protect it above everything else: one simple post a day for 180 days.
Growth does not come from a viral video. It comes from daily visibility. Short, single-idea, feed-friendly micro-content: a quote, a stat, a short video, a mission reminder, a question. Repetition builds recognition, trains the algorithm to surface you, and compounds momentum without burning you out. Consistency beats creativity every time. Nobody needs it to be perfect. They need to keep seeing you.
NetMinistry publishes a 180-Day Authority-Building Social Media Prompt Plan built to run exactly this habit, so you are never staring at a blank screen wondering what to post.
Create your free 100 Strong account to turn ideas like these into a clear plan. Track your weekly numbers, get a personalized next step, and walk the proven path to 100+ members. No cost, ever.
Create my free accountSet a sustainable cadence and keep promotion light
Start at one to two posts a day and build from there. Instagram wants daily posts plus Stories. Aim for at least one YouTube video a week, and if you podcast, at least one episode a week. Keep blogs between 800 and 1,200 words and videos to three to five minutes or less.
And please, go easy on the promotion. Keep it to about one promotional post a day at the very most, and honestly one or two a week is better. When every post is a plug for Sunday, engagement drops fast. Most of what you share should serve, not sell.
Repurpose one thing into ten
This is how a tiny team keeps up. Take one sermon or blog and turn it into roughly ten assets: social teasers, an infographic, a slide, an email, a short video, a podcast clip, a transcript. The goal is not more content, it is connected content that keeps pointing people back toward your website.
A simple weekly rhythm keeps you from guessing: Sunday in-the-moment, Monday a verse, Tuesday a quote, Wednesday a question, Thursday a throwback, Friday a this-Sunday reminder, Saturday a meet-someone-new post. Treat your content as ministry, not filler. Remember the Rule of 7 (people need about seven exposures before they act) and lead with ACT+E: Authority, Credibility, Trustworthiness, and Empathy.
Be human, and protect people
Reply to comments within a few hours, and handle prayer or crisis comments within one business day. Keep a written comment policy and a Facebook admin-role plan so responses stay consistent and safe. And always get signed photo consent, which is non-negotiable for children, so lean toward crowd shots when in doubt.
Keep a simple weekly doc tracking followers, your top five clicked posts, and reach and engagement, and run a full social-media audit every six months.
Where you go from here
Do not try to overhaul everything. Confirm your front door works, choose one platform where your young adults already are, and start the 180-day habit this week. That single act of daily faithfulness is the small-church superpower. See where you stand on the milestone map at /milestones and take the /assessment to find your next step.
Your challenge this week
Pick ONE platform and publish one simple post a day for the next seven days, repurposed from last Sunday's sermon. Seven posts, seven days. That is the first week of your 180.
