THE MINISTRY MBA

10 Practical Courses to Lead a Thriving Church

How to Execute a Strategic Plan at Your Church – Crafting the Plan

GET EVERY NEW POST IN YOUR INBOX!

THE MINISTRY MBA

10 Practical Courses to
Lead a Thriving Church

When most leaders work on strategic plans and initiatives, they tend to jump headfirst into creation mode.

I get that temptation. As a strategic planner who’s conducted countless planning workshops, I understand the desire to start with our future hopes and dreams. Unfortunately, developing a new strategy before determining the current reality is a recipe for problems.

In the past several posts, I’ve outlined the importance of evaluating our current reality as the first step in the strategic planning process.

The best strategic plans have four distinct segments:

  1. Determine position and reality
  2. Develop a strategy
  3. Design the tactics
  4. Measure the progress

The first step is the most critical step. No strategy that ignores the current reality can succeed in totality.

Determining position and reality looks like this:

  1. Establishing success (Mission and Vision),
  2. Clarifying aspirational behaviors and values (How do we do things around here?),
  3. Understanding our points of differentiation (What makes us, us?), and
  4. Asking our one unifying question (What must be true in a year?).
  5. Evaluating our reality in light of success.

After this strategic planning phase, you and your team should have a complete and honest understanding of who you are and where you are. This understanding is our starting point from which we’ll build our strategic bridge to our desired destination.

We turn to the second segment after concluding the evaluative portion of planning.

Develop a strategy

If you say, “It’s about time,” I get it. The evaluative process is long yet fundamental to our process. The better we define our position and reality, the better prepared we are to develop our strategy.

The second portion of our strategic planning process follows a similar plan as our first segment.

The steps to develop your new strategy proceeds in this fashion through a series of questions:

1. How will we succeed?

Our first step in the strategic planning process defined success (mission and vision). This segment answered the “what” of success. Now we turn our planning to the “hows” of success. How will we succeed?

As you already know, church success is defined by life change through the love and power of Jesus. To simplify our strategy to the irrefutable minimum, we are trying to Great Commission our community.

How can we do that best? I believe the answer is through steps, not programs. We must build ministry models of movement, not moments. Just as the “renewing of our mind” is a process, we should build ministry models to facilitate movement. That’s what spiritual formation and discipleship pathways attempt to do.

How will we succeed? By creating a model that moves people through a discipleship process.

2. What specific areas need addressing? How should they be prioritized?

After redefining the “how” of success, we focus on the specific areas that are working and not working on our discipleship pathway. After evaluating everything we do in light of success, we can decide:

    1. What should we keep doing in its current form?
    2. What should be retained, but needs some revitalization to work within our model?
    3. What should we add along the continuum to help people move through the process?
    4. What should we quit doing altogether?
3. What is our specific plan of action?

With the how’s of success defined and our current reality evaluated against our “how,” we can make specific plans to move our organization from where we are to where we hope to be. These particular plans are the building materials for our bridge to the other side.

Perhaps you’ve heard of S.M.A.R.T. goals. Our plans of action follow a similar path:

S) Make the plan Specific and Sequential.
M) Decide how you’ll Measure the plan as it’s placed in action.
A) Ensure the plan is Attainable.
R) Consider how your plans align to your values as to keep your steps Relevant, and finally
T) While the timeline may shift during the process, it’s essential to begin with an agreed-upon Timeline for accountability and expectations.

4. What are our departmental plans?

The final piece of this strategy development section is to include everyone by outlining departmental plans. Excellent strategic planning touches almost every person and process in an organization. Therefore, it’s essential to include everyone in the process.

And there you have it: Step two of the strategic planning process.

From this point, all that is left is a more granular look at tactics and actions and measurement considerations. We’ll get to these in a following post.

How can I help?

Most of my clients consider me their CSO (Chief Strategy Officer). I created Transformation Solutions to help ministry and marketplace leaders progress from innovation through implementation. I’m dedicating my time to helping leaders discover potential problems, design strategic solutions, and deliver the preferable future. That includes you.

Growing CHURCHES need growing LEADERS.

Take our CHURCH LEADERSHIP ASSESSMENT and receive a FREE MINISTRY MBA COURSE WORKBOOK.