Outreach
When Your Neighbor Asks Siri About Church, Does Your Name Come Up?
100 Strong · June 30, 2026
Photo by NordWood Themes on Unsplash
Here is a quiet truth that should reshape how we think about reaching our towns: most people have already searched before they ever step foot in your building. Roughly 53% of giving and visit journeys begin with a search. That means the front door of your church is not the one with the worn wooden handle on Sunday morning. It is a search bar.
And it is not only the curious churchgoer looking for service times. Over 100,000 people a month type "Is God Real?" into Google. Your neighbors are asking Siri what happens after death and what faith even is. They are not always asking a pastor first. They are asking a screen. The question for us is simple and a little humbling: when they search, do they find us?
Why search matters most for small churches
If you pastor a church under 100, local search may be your single most powerful growth lever. Your earliest and most loyal people almost always come from your own backyard. So when someone nearby types "church near me" or "Sunday services in [your city]," and you do not appear, that neighbor simply finds someone else's church. Not because they rejected you. Because they never saw you.
The encouraging part: about 78% of local searches lead to a real action, a visit, a call, a step. People who search locally are leaning in. Our job is to be there when they reach.
Start with a message both humans and machines can understand
Before tactics, get your message clear. Think of the five things every church site must make unmistakable:
- Problem: the real need you meet.
- Prescription: your ministries, your answer.
- Participation: how someone actually gets involved.
- People: who you are.
- Platform: an easy way to take the next step.
State these plainly and simply. Clear, structured language helps a confused visitor, and it helps the search engines and AI assistants that increasingly decide who gets recommended.
Cover the classic SEO basics
None of this requires a tech degree. Work through these in order:
- Put your main keyword in every page's title tag. A simple formula works well: "Church in [City] | Your Name."
- Build a page per program and a page per community you serve. One page for student ministry, one for recovery, one for the families you reach. Each one becomes a doorway.
- Write unique content on every page. No copy and paste. Search rewards pages that say something real.
- Design around local intent. Aim at "church near me" and "Sunday services in [city]," because that is how neighbors actually search.
Claim your Google Business Profile
For local visibility, this is the workhorse. If you do nothing else this month, do this.
- Claim and verify the listing, and keep the login. This is your church's identity on Google Maps.
- Optimize it with photos, accurate hours, a clear description, and location keywords.
- Keep your NAP consistent: the same name, address, and phone number across every major directory.
- Post weekly and answer the questions people ask.
Showing up in those "near me" and map results is how flesh-and-blood neighbors actually walk in.
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 accountBuild a reviews engine
Reviews are the cheapest local-visibility lever you have. Each positive review can lift your local visibility by roughly 10 to 15%. Make a simple, ongoing plan to invite reviews from your people and to respond to every one. This is not vanity. It is how a stranger decides whether to trust you with their Sunday morning.
Get ahead of the AEO shift
Here is the bigger change coming in 2026. Search is moving from listing pages to giving answers. AI assistants increasingly tell people the answer instead of handing them ten links. This is Answer Engine Optimization, or AEO, and the translations are worth memorizing:
- Keywords become questions.
- Pages become clear answers.
- Rankings become visibility inside AI summaries.
- Traffic alone becomes trust and authority.
To prepare, publish question-based content that answers what people actually ask: "What is a church service like?", "Where can I find a church near me?", "Who helps with [a local need]?" Write in plain, well-structured language, strengthen your reputation signals, and keep real human stories at the center. The rule of thumb is sobering and clarifying: if AI cannot understand your message, it cannot recommend you.
AEO is early, but it is cheap to start and it compounds. Get ahead of it now rather than waiting for it to settle.
Let it all reinforce itself
When classic SEO, your Google Business Profile, reviews, and AEO content work together, alongside your social presence, they create a self-reinforcing loop. Your website stops being a brochure and becomes a discovery engine that makes your mission easier to find, trust, and support.
If running technical SEO, profile management, and AEO content feels like too much to carry while you are also leading people, you are not alone. Most pastors do not run this themselves. NetMinistry delivers it as a done-for-you part of the growth engine, so the church gets found while you stay focused on shepherding.
What to do next
Work the playbook in order. Nail your message, cover the SEO basics, claim and optimize your profile, launch a reviews habit, then add question-based AEO pages. If you are pressing toward 25 or 50, your first goal is simply to be findable: profile claimed, title tags fixed, message clear, "church near me" targeted. As you grow toward 75 and 100, add a page per program, fresh content, and your first AEO pages. To see where you stand, take the assessment and check the milestones for your next step.
Your challenge this week
Claim and verify your Google Business Profile, then add accurate hours, a few good photos, and a short description with your city name in it. That one step puts you on the map for the neighbor searching tonight.
