Outreach
The One Audience You Actually Own (And How to Grow It)
100 Strong · July 4, 2026
Photo by Alex Knight on Unsplash
Here is a truth that stings a little: almost every place you show up online is rented. Your reach on social media, your ranking in search results, all of it lives at the mercy of algorithms that change overnight without asking your permission. You can pour hours into a platform and wake up to find the rules have shifted underneath you.
But there is one channel you genuinely own: your email and SMS list. When someone hands you their email address, they are giving you permission to keep the conversation going. That permission is the asset. And for a small church with no marketing budget and no spare hands, it is exactly the kind of leverage you need.
Why email matters most for the small church
Email is the highest-return digital channel there is, returning roughly $36 for every $1 spent. Beyond the numbers, email scales through automation rather than labor. You set up a welcome series once, and it keeps warmly greeting new people while you stay focused on the folks already sitting in your pews.
Think about your assimilation funnel. Broadly speaking, only about 12% of first-time guests return, and only around 4% become fully connected. Automation keeps the top of that funnel warm so fewer people quietly slip away. (A quick honesty note: these figures come from nonprofit-general and church data, so treat them as direction, not promises, and measure your own baseline.)
What has actually changed about email
The old "blast everyone the same thing" model is dead. Modern email that works looks like this:
- Fewer emails, more relevance. Aim for 2 to 4 mission-driven emails per month, not a flood.
- Segmented, not one-size-fits-all. Different people, different messages.
- Content-driven, not promotional. Tell stories, not just announcements.
- Integrated with your website, social, and any ads.
- Combined with SMS for a "1-2 punch" on time-sensitive moments.
The playbook, built in order
Don't try to build everything at once. Add pieces as your capacity grows.
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 downloadable guide. One church turned on a single automated welcome email triggered by site signups and saw three new subscribers become recurring givers in a month. Even one automated email produces measurable results.
2. Turn on the core automations. Build the welcome series first (3 to 5 emails: welcome, who we are and what to expect, a story, then a clear next step). Next add an automatic thank-you plus impact story so a giver hears from you immediately. Then a visitor journey (plan-a-visit, reminder, first-Sunday welcome, next-step invite) and a recurring-giving prompt for one-time givers.
3. Wire up the 5-minute, 5-to-7-touch follow-up. When a new lead comes in through a form, chat, or plan-a-visit request, follow up within 5 minutes by phone, SMS, and email. Then run a conversion campaign that persists across 5 to 7 touches until they take a step. Speed and persistence, not a single lonely email, drive conversion. This is where most small churches leak the most people.
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 account4. Segment by motivation. Tag subscribers by why they connected and where they are in the journey (new subscriber, visitor, member, giver). Then send fewer, more relevant messages. Tailor by motivation, not by age or income.
5. Add the SMS 1-2 punch. Layer text into time-sensitive moments: event reminders, "we saved you a seat," and giving prompts, right alongside email.
6. Measure and tune. If you can't measure it, you can't manage it. Watch your open rate (around 30% or higher is healthy), your click-through rate, and your conversions. A/B test subject lines and gently prune disengaged contacts to protect deliverability. Data strengthens your intuition, it doesn't replace it.
A few numbers to steer by
- Typical nonprofit open rates run around 28.6%, with strong programs reaching 30 to 35%.
- Automation powers roughly 31% of online giving revenue.
- About 75% of donors cite privacy concerns before giving, which is why transparency matters so much.
Never skip consent
Permission is non-negotiable. Get a clear opt-in, tell people exactly how you'll use their email, and always honor unsubscribes. This is both a trust-builder and a legal baseline. One church found that simply stating how emails would be used actually raised their open rates and their credibility.
You don't have to run this alone
Honestly, most small-church pastors won't have the time to build and manage all of this by hand. That is normal, and it is okay. NetMinistry offers done-for-you email automation as part of the growth engine, setting up and managing your inbound and outbound flows so you can stay with your people while the sequences quietly do their work.
Where this fits your milestones
On the road to 25 and 50, just start owning the audience: pick one low-cost tool, capture emails on your site and connect card, turn on a single welcome email and an automatic thank-you, and send one or two story-driven emails a month. Between 75 and 100, build the full layer: segmented emails, welcome and visitor and giving automations, the 5-minute follow-up, and the SMS punch. Not sure where you stand? Take a look at /assessment and /milestones to find your next step.
Your challenge this week
Write and turn on one automated welcome email triggered when someone signs up on your site or connect card. Just one. Make it warm, tell them who you are, and end with a clear invitation to plan a visit. That single email will start working for you today and keep working long after you've moved on to the people in front of you.
