Outreach
Why Your Digital Efforts Feel Scattered (And the One System That Fixes It)
100 Strong · June 24, 2026
If you are a pastor of a church under 100, you have probably tried a little of everything online. You set up the website (which is now a bit stale). You post on social media when you remember. You send an email blast every few weeks. And yet none of it seems to add up to anything.
Here is the truth that should take some weight off your shoulders: your church is not failing online because you lack a Facebook page. You are struggling because your efforts are fragmented. A website here, a post there, an email now and then, none of it connected. Each thing you do is a one-off spike that fades by the weekend.
There is a better way, and it does not require you to work harder. It requires you to connect what you are already doing into a single, self-reinforcing system. NetMinistry calls it The Impact Growth Engine, and it has been refined over 25+ years of serving more than 60,000 churches and nonprofits. A church of 40 runs the very same engine as a church of 400, just at a different intensity.
What an "engine" actually means
The word engine matters. An engine is not a list of tasks. It is a machine where every part feeds the next. People get discovered, then built into relationship, then activated into visitors, members, givers, and advocates. And those advocates bring the next people, which feeds the whole thing all over again.
That is the difference between exhausting yourself and getting compounding results. Let me walk you through the three phases.
Phase 1: Engagement (get discovered)
This is about being findable by people who are searching for hope. They are typing "church near me" or "Sunday services in [your city]" right now. In fact, search initiates about 53% of giving and visit journeys.
The core moves here:
- Fix your website around the 5 Pillars: make clear the Problem you meet, your Prescription (ministries), how people Participate, who your People are, and the Platform to act (visit, give, connect).
- Optimize for local SEO and the newer AEO (Answer Engine Optimization). More on that below.
- Claim and optimize your Google Business Profile with consistent name, address, and phone, plus weekly posts.
- Apply for the Google Ad Grant, which gives qualifying churches $10,000 per month ($120k a year) in free search ads.
Phase 2: Cultivation (build relationships)
Discovery is not enough. You have to turn a stranger into someone who feels familiar with you and trusts you. This is where content and social media live.
The practical habit here is the 180-day, one-post-a-day rhythm of simple micro-content. Make it connected: one message, many formats. A web article becomes a reel, becomes an email, becomes an answer an AI assistant can read. You are not creating five things, you are spreading one thing across five places.
Phase 3: Activation (convert to a step)
Now you turn relationship into action: plan a visit, attend, give, serve, join. Two components carry this phase: email and your Website Conversion Hub.
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 your site so every page has a clear call to action ("Plan Your Visit" or "Give"), a hero that states your mission, real social proof like testimonies, trust signals, mobile-first design, and easy giving options. Then add an email welcome series, because email returns roughly $36 for every $1 spent and lets you own your audience instead of renting space on social platforms.
Two numbers to take seriously: 96% of people leave a site without acting, so retargeting is your second chance. And when a lead does come in, follow up within 5 minutes (which can make them 21 times more likely to qualify) and persist across 5 to 7 touches until they act.
The loop that makes it run
Here is the whole thing in one breath: Search leads to a website visit, which leads to a sign-up, follow, planned visit, gift, or volunteer step, which turns people into advocates who bring the next people, which sends them back to the start. NetMinistry runs this on a simple operating cycle called CLIMB: Content and Website, Lead Generation, Intelligent Distribution, Measure and Optimize, Build and Repeat.
Don't miss the AEO shift
The biggest change coming in 2026 is the move from rankings to being the answer that AI assistants give. People ask questions, not keywords. So publish question-based content in plain language with real human stories and strong reputation signals. If AI cannot understand your church, it cannot recommend it.
Where to begin
A church under 100 starts at the top and adds as capacity grows. The single best starting point is a Growth Audit: score yourself red, yellow, or green across your website, SEO, Google Business Profile, paid search, social, lead follow-up, and tracking. You cannot fix what you have not honestly measured.
And hear me on this: most small-church pastors will not build and run all of this alone, and you do not have to. There is a done-for-you path where the engine runs while you focus on people. That is the recommended route for most of us. Your calling is shepherding, not managing ad campaigns.
A good budget target, by the way, is 8 to 12% of annual income for marketing, which is the nonprofit norm.
Your challenge this week
Do one honest audit of your front door. Open your church website on your phone and ask: within five seconds, can a stranger see who you are and find one clear button to plan a visit or give? If not, that is your first fix. Score yourself red, yellow, or green, and start there.
