Outreach
When Your Neighbor Searches for a Church, Do They Find You?
100 Strong · June 23, 2026
Photo by henry perks on Unsplash
Here's a sobering thought for any pastor leading a church under 100. Long before a curious neighbor walks through your doors, they've already pulled out their phone. They've typed "church near me" or "Sunday services in [city]" into a search bar. And in that quiet moment, one of two things happens: they find you, or they find someone else's church.
Research shows that search initiates around 53% of giving and visit journeys. That means the front door of your church isn't your physical entrance anymore. It's a search result. For a small church, this isn't a side project. Local search is often the single most powerful growth lever you have, because your earliest and most loyal people almost always come from your own backyard.
There's a deeper layer here, too. Every month, over 100,000 people Google "Is God Real?" The spiritually curious are out there searching right now. The only question is whether they can find you.
Start with a message both people and machines can understand
Before any technical tweak, your website has to say something clear. Think of it as five plain statements every site should 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.
When these five things are clear and structured, both a human visitor and a search engine can understand you. Muddle them, and everyone gets lost.
Do the classic SEO basics
You don't need to be a tech expert to handle the fundamentals. Here's a simple checklist:
- Put your main keyword in the Title Tag of every page, using a formula like "Church in [City] | Your Name."
- Build a page for each program or service you offer, and a page for each community you serve.
- Make sure every page has unique content. No copied-and-pasted filler.
- Design around "church near me" intent and phrases like "Sunday services in [city]."
- Publish fresh content and earn inbound links consistently (this is where simple blogging pays off over time).
These basics build authority slowly but surely, and they're the foundation everything else rests on.
Claim your spot on the map
If there is one move that delivers the most for the least effort, it's your Google Business Profile. This is how real neighbors find you in "near me" and Google Maps results, and roughly 78% of local searches lead to a visit, call, or action.
Work through this:
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 account- Claim and verify the listing, and keep the login yourself.
- Optimize it with photos, accurate hours, a clear description, and location keywords.
- Keep your NAP (name, address, phone) consistent across every major directory.
- Post weekly and answer the questions people ask.
Build a reviews engine
Reviews are the cheapest local-visibility lever there is. Each positive review can lift your local visibility by around 10 to 15%. Create a simple, ongoing plan to ask for fresh reviews and to respond to the ones you receive. This isn't a one-time push. It's a steady habit that compounds.
Prepare for the shift to AEO
Here's where things are changing fast. Search is moving from listing results to giving answers. AI assistants increasingly tell people the answer instead of handing them ten links. So the question is no longer just "do we rank?" but "are we the answer?"
The shift translates like this: keywords become questions, pages become clear answers, rankings become visibility in AI summaries, and traffic alone gives way to trust and authority. To get ahead of it:
- Publish question-based content that answers what people actually ask: "What's a church service like?", "Where can I find a church near me?", "Who helps with [need] locally?"
- Write in plain language with clear structure.
- Strengthen your authority and reputation signals.
- Keep real human stories at the center.
The rule of thumb is simple and worth remembering: if AI can't understand your message, it can't recommend you. AEO is still early, but it's cheap to start and it compounds. Get ahead of it now rather than waiting.
Let it all reinforce itself
When SEO, AEO, and your social presence work together, they create a self-reinforcing loop. Discovery starts to compound. Your website stops being a static brochure and becomes a real discovery engine that makes your mission easier to find, trust, and support.
A quick word of grace here: most pastors will not run technical SEO, manage a Google Business Profile, write AEO content, and lead a congregation all at once. That's not a failure on your part. NetMinistry can deliver this work for you so you get found while you stay focused on leading people.
Where to begin by milestone
If you're growing toward 25 or 50, get on the map first. Claim and optimize your Google Business Profile, fix your title tags and the five-pillar message, and target "church near me." The goal is simply to be findable by local seekers. As you push toward 75 and 100, add depth: a page per program and community, consistent fresh content, a running reviews engine, and your first question-based AEO pages. Curious where you stand? The assessment can help you see your next step.
Your challenge this week
Claim and verify your Google Business Profile. If you already have it, log in and check three things: that your hours are correct, that you have recent photos, and that your name, address, and phone match what's on your website. That single hour of work puts you on the map for the neighbors searching for you right now.
