Outreach
The One Audience You Actually Own (And How to Email It Well)
100 Strong · June 21, 2026
Photo by Alex Knight on Unsplash
Here is a quiet truth most of us never stop to consider: nearly every way you reach people online is borrowed. Your social media reach depends on an algorithm that can change overnight. Your search rankings can shift without warning. You are renting all of it, and the landlord makes the rules.
There is exactly one exception. When someone hands you their email address, they are giving you permission to keep the conversation going. That list, your email and text contacts, is the single audience you truly own. No algorithm stands between you and them. For a small church with no budget and no marketing team, that is not a small thing. It is leverage.
Let me show you how to treat that asset the way it deserves.
Why email is the workhorse for a church under 100
Email is the highest-return digital channel there is, returning roughly $36 for every $1 spent in nonprofit settings. That is the kind of leverage a tired pastor with a tiny team needs most.
Better still, email scales through automation, not labor. You set up a welcome series once, and it keeps warmly greeting every new person while you stay focused on the people already in the room. That is the heart of it: a system that nurtures without overwhelming you or them.
A quick honesty note on the numbers below. These are nonprofit-general figures, not church-specific, so read "donor" as giver or visitor and treat them as direction, not promises. Measure your own baseline and tune from there.
What good email actually looks like now
The old "blast everyone the same thing" model is dead. Modern email that works is built on a few shifts:
- Fewer emails, more relevance. Aim for 2 to 4 mission-driven emails a month, not a flood.
- Segmented, not one-size-fits-all. Tailor the message to why someone connected.
- Content-driven, not promotional. Tell stories of what God is doing rather than sending constant asks.
- Combined with SMS for a one-two punch. Text is for time-sensitive moments.
Industry open rates hover around 28.6%, with strong programs reaching 30 to 35%. Use that as a rough horizon, not a verdict.
The playbook, in order
Build this gradually, adding pieces as your capacity grows. Do not try to do all six at once.
1. Capture the list. Put a signup everywhere: your site footer, your plan-a-visit form, your connect card, and a simple lead magnet like a short guide people can download. One church set up a single Mailchimp welcome email triggered by site signups and turned three new subscribers into recurring givers in a month. Even one automated welcome email produces measurable results, so start free or low-cost and start now.
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 account2. Turn on the core automations. Build these in order: a welcome series first, then a thank-you plus impact story for givers and visitors, then a visitor journey, then a recurring-giving prompt for one-time givers. A giver should get a thank-you immediately. An event attendee should be invited to the next one. These flows are the digital twin of your in-person assimilation funnel, where roughly 12% of first-time guests return and about 4% become fully connected. Automation keeps the top of that funnel warm while you do the relational work.
3. Wire up the 5-minute follow-up. When a new lead comes in through a form, chat, or plan-a-visit, follow up within 5 minutes by phone, text, and email. Then run a conversion campaign that persists across 5 to 7 touches until they take a step. Speed and persistence drive conversion, not a single polite email. This is where most small churches leak the most people, so do not skip it.
4. Segment by motivation. Tag people by why they connected and where they are in the journey: new subscriber, visitor, member, giver. Then send fewer, more relevant messages. Personalize by motivation, not by age or income.
5. Add the SMS one-two punch. Layer text into time-sensitive moments: event reminders, a "we saved you a seat" note, a giving prompt alongside the email.
6. Measure and tune. If you cannot measure it, you cannot manage it. Watch your open rate (around 30% is healthy), your click-through, and your conversions. Test subject lines. Prune disengaged contacts to protect your deliverability. Let the data sharpen your intuition; it should never replace it.
A word on consent
Permission is the whole asset, so guard it. Get clear opt-in, tell people plainly how you will use their email, and honor every unsubscribe. This is both a trust-builder and a legal baseline. In one church's case, simply stating how emails would be used raised their open rates because it raised trust. Remember too that 75% of donors cite privacy concerns before giving, so transparency is not red tape. It is ministry.
You do not have to build this alone
Let me be honest, pastor. Most small-church leaders will not set up and run all of this themselves, and that is okay. NetMinistry offers done-for-you email automation, with the inbound and outbound flows set up and managed for you, so you can stay with people while the sequences run quietly in the background.
If you are working toward 25 or 50, start small: pick one low-cost tool, capture emails on your site and connect card, and turn on a single welcome email and an automatic thank-you. As you press toward 75 and 100, build out the full layer: segmented emails, visitor and giving automations, the 5-minute follow-up, and the SMS punch.
Your challenge this week
Write and turn on one welcome email triggered by a signup on your site or connect card. Just one. State clearly how you will use their email, point them to a single next step, and let it start working for you. You can see where this fits in your bigger picture at /milestones.
