Outreach
Why Your Church's Digital Efforts Keep Fizzling (And the One System That Fixes It)
100 Strong · July 1, 2026
Photo by Samantha Borges on Unsplash
Let me name something you already feel. You have a website (a little dated, if we're honest). You post on social media when you remember. You send an email blast before a big Sunday. And none of it seems to add up to much. You're working hard, but the pieces aren't pulling in the same direction.
Here's the good news, friend: your problem probably isn't effort or a missing tool. It's fragmentation. Small churches rarely fail digitally because they lack a Facebook page. They fail because their efforts are scattered: a stale website here, sporadic posts there, an email blast now and then, none of it connected. When nothing feeds anything else, you get one-off spikes instead of steady growth.
The fix is to stop thinking in scattered tasks and start thinking in one connected system. NetMinistry calls it The Impact Growth Engine, and it's the spine every other digital skill hangs on. Best of all, it scales with you. A church of 40 runs the same engine as a church of 400, just at a different intensity.
The three phases that make it an engine
The Engine turns strangers into visitors, members, givers, and advocates through three simple phases. The magic is that each phase feeds the next.
1. Engagement: Get Discovered. This is about being findable when someone searches for hope. It means an optimized website, local SEO and AEO (more on that below), your Google Business Profile claimed and updated, and search or paid ads. Consider this: search initiates roughly 53% of the journeys that end in a visit or a gift. If people can't find you, nothing else matters.
2. Cultivation: Build Relationships. Discovery becomes familiarity and trust here. This is your content and social media, quietly nurturing people toward a real relationship. You're not shouting; you're showing up consistently so people come to know and trust you before they ever walk in.
3. Activation: Convert to Action. Now relationship becomes a step: plan a visit, give, serve, join. This is your email welcome series and your website's conversion hub, the prominent "Plan Your Visit" and "Give" buttons on every page.
Here's what makes it an actual engine, not just a list. Someone searches, lands on your site, signs up or follows or plans a visit, becomes part of your church, and then invites the next person. Activated people become advocates who bring the next people, and the loop starts over. That's the digital twin of personal invitation, and it compounds.
Design your website around 5 pillars
Your site is the hub of all this, so make five things unmistakable:
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- Problem: the real need you meet.
- Prescription: your ministries and answer.
- Participation: how people actually get involved.
- People: who you are.
- Platform: the easy interface to act (visit, give, connect).
And please make it mobile-first with clear calls to action. Right now about 96% of visitors leave a site without doing anything. A clear next step and a little social proof (a testimony, a count, a photo) recover some of that.
The big 2026 shift: from rankings to being the answer
Here's the change I don't want you to miss. Search is moving from "ranking" to "being the answer AI assistants give." This is called AEO, Answer Engine Optimization. People aren't just typing keywords; they're asking questions like "Where can I find a church near me?" If an AI can't understand your church, it can't recommend it.
What this means practically: write pages that answer real questions in plain language, tell true human stories, and build a solid reputation. It's not complicated, but it does require intention.
Start with an honest audit
Before you build anything, take stock. NetMinistry's Growth Audit scores you red, yellow, or green across your website, SEO, Google Business Profile, paid search, social, lead follow-up, and tracking. This single diagnostic is the best place to begin, because it tells you where you're bleeding leads and where you're already strong. You can find it alongside our tools at /assessment.
A few numbers worth designing around:
- Aim for 8 to 12% of annual income as a marketing budget (the nonprofit norm).
- Email returns roughly $36 for every $1 spent, so own your audience.
- The Google Ad Grant offers $10,000 a month in free search ads.
- Follow up every new lead within 5 minutes (it makes them 21 times more likely to engage) and stay with them across 5 to 7 touches by phone, text, or email.
Run it in order
A church under 100 starts at the top and adds as capacity grows: audit first, then fix Engagement (website, SEO, AEO, Google Business Profile, the Ad Grant), then build Cultivation (a steady content rhythm, one small post a day), then Activation (email welcome series, conversion hub, fast follow-up), then measure quarterly and repeat. As you climb the milestones toward 100 (see /milestones), the engine grows with you.
And hear me on this: you don't have to build all of it alone. NetMinistry offers this as a done-for-you service so you can focus on people while the Engine runs. That's often the wiser path for a small team.
Your challenge this week
Run the Growth Audit and score just one channel honestly, red, yellow, or green: your website. Look at it on your phone. Is your "Plan Your Visit" button obvious? Are the five pillars clear? Write down the single weakest spot, and fix that one thing before next Sunday. Start the engine with one turn.
