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Essentials of Hiring Great Staff

Orginally published on Monday, July 24, 2006 at 7:00 AM
by Todd Rhoades

To hire great staff, you have to know what you’re looking for. This requires an “opportunity profile” where you describe the church, community, culture and ministry. You need to put in print what may seem obvious: “We are 1,000 in worship each Sunday, have men and women on the governing board, and are building a new worship center.” You will also want to describe the kind of person that you are looking for. Are you seeking a “visionary leader,” an “implementer of the vision,” or a “shepherd to a certain age group?” The best opportunity profiles can run about seven single-spaced pages.

Executive Pastor David Fletcher of XPastor.org shares the following tips in an article recently featured at ChurchExecutive.com.  Here’s some of what David recommends…

Using the opportunity profile you have prepared, follow these ten steps to making great hires:

1. Obtain resumes. When you post your opening on a job board, it is best to require that all resumes come by e-mail. Later you will thank yourself for doing this, as you can easily send a resume to others in the church for their review. My preference is for the resumes to come to the leader of the search process, not to an administrative assistant.  Some of your best candidates will need absolute confidentiality in the early stages. Their churches may be unreasonable if they know someone is looking for a new position, often giving people two weeks notice on the spot.

Another essential element is to determine who will do the interviewing. Some churches take a team approach, while others have one individual lead the search and incorporate various other people at stages. If you choose to have a search team, generally all the team members receive every resume. This can be a waste of time, as 80 percent of the submitted resumes may not fit your opportunity profile.

2. Respond to each applicant. A short e-mail is all that is necessary. A simple, “Thanks for your resume. We will get back to you within 10 days.” This treats each applicant with dignity, telling him or her that you have received the resume. One person wrote to me recently: “I sent resumes and didn’t hear anything for months, if ever.” Too often applicants receive that kind of disrespect.

3. Give the “Ten Day Traffic Signal.” From experience, about 80 to 90 percent of applicants don’t fit the opportunity profile. One or two key leaders can review all resumes and respond within 10 days. Why 10 days? This sets an internal clock that will require that you process the mounds of resumes. You won’t get backlogged and bludgeoned by the sheer numbers of applicants.

Don’t be flexible with your opportunity profile. If you state that you are a charismatic church, then you don’t need to consider someone who is opposed to sign gifts. If you are a highly doctrinal church, then you won’t want to consider someone who does not agree with your doctrinal statement. If you are a seeker church, then you won’t want to consider someone who only values worship services for believers.

Have one or two people to review all the resumes and you will save yourself time and energy with those people who obviously don’t fit your organization. Write each applicant an e-mail that says, “Thanks, but no thanks.” You don’t need to give a reason for the decline. I prefer to say, “Our needs are different from your gifts and abilities — and this is much more a statement about us than about you. God’s best to you.”

4. Making the initial phone call.  When you find a resume that stands out to you, then it is time to make a phone call.  Call and talk through the resume. Ask the person what they find interesting about your church and why they are leaving their current position. Have the person comment on the opportunity profile and what interests them in the job. If you like the response from the initial phone call, pray about the person. Ask God to give you insight into what you have learned about the person.

5. Conduct a second round of phone calls. Generally I do the initial phone call and have others do this round of calls. What you want to see is whether or not the candidate can connect with others.

6. Hold the initial in-person interview. This is generally a one-day interview at your church. I like to have a small group of people interview the candidate all day long. At my church in Austin, all seven elders like to meet each candidate, so I have a lunch with half of them on this first interview. The key players of the organization need to meet with the candidate. Often, the senior pastor will meet with the candidate for 30 to 60 minutes. Subordinates and peers in the department will also have a group meeting for about the same time.

7. Have the candidate write their interaction with the opportunity profile. Also attempt to do an interview at the candidate’s church. If you like the candidate so far, then have them commit their thoughts to paper after having seen your church. They should be able to articulate the vision, scope and nature of the job. If they can’t, then they are not the right person for you. For some positions, you may need to send people to evaluate the candidate on his/her home turf. This is especially true when hiring youth workers. You need to go and see the candidate’s youth program.

8. This is a big one — it’s the second interview. When you’re inviting someone for the second interview, you are saying, “we are really interested in hiring you.” You should have the feeling that this is the right person for you — and that the only thing keeping you from hiring him/her is the second interview.

For this reason, I structure the second interview quite differently. The first interview had a small group of decision-makers that met with the candidate for one day. The second interview should involve many groups of people over several days — and for some positions this may include a Sunday with teaching responsibilities.

You want to see how the candidate will interact with groups of five, 10 or 20 people. Can he or she communicate vision within the context of the ministry position? People on your staff and in the church may ask some tough questions; can the candidate gently handle those questions?

Since the second interview encom-passes many people, there is a threat level for the candidate. The candidate may need to tell their existing church that you are interviewing them; the Christian world can be quite connected. All it takes is one person in your church to know one person in the candidate’s church and then the “cat is out of the bag.” For this reason, you need to be “almost sure” that this is the candidate that you are going to hire. 

9. Prepare for decision-making time.
You need to assemble your key leaders and decide if this is the right person for your church. If you have had many people involved in the second interview stage, then have someone collect the responses from those individuals. Determine the salary based on the person’s experience as it fits within your salary guidelines.

10. Make the offer phone call and send the letter. It is best to offer the position first by phone, or in person if possible. A warm voice can let the person feel the excitement and emotion that you have for the individual. Follow up the phone call with an e-mailed offer letter that explains salary and benefits. One of the most important areas for executive pastors is to hire great staff.

Pray at every step and seek God’s advice in hiring your staff. Hiring is an art and a science. You may even desire to consult a search firm for higher-level positions to do the legwork for you. Remember that if you do know what you are looking for, then you will hit your target every time. Firing a person is much tougher than taking the time to hire the right person the first time.

You can read all of David’s article here...


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  There are 5 Comments:

  • Posted by Brian

    Great advice.

    We’re just now going through the process of even THINKING of hiring a staff person (part-time pastor), and I love the thoughts in this article.

    It seems to make sure that all the applicants are treated ethically even if they are not hired, and goes through the process very thoroughly to ensure a good match with the church.

    Brian

  • Posted by

    Now this is one of those times when I’m glad I read the whole article before responding. LOL!

    This is great advice. How many churches out there never respond to their applicants even once? How many applicants spend countless months, possbily even a year or more, wondering about the great “what-if” to find out the position was filled without even a word? How many applicants disengaged from where they are at anticipating a move to then get booted out without another place of service in sight? Okay.... I’ll step down now.

    Again, great advice. I pray many more churches would heed it. Hopefully many more churches will actually pray at every step and not be so quick just to fill the spot with any warm body that may soon turn cold.

  • Posted by

    I think a church should do more interviewing before booking a person a ticket and flying them down.  Spending the money on a candidate and getting them down should be thought through more, on both parties part.  If a candidate does not think they will take the job they should not go.  Just my opinion.  If a Senior Pastor brings a guys in for the interview they should be atleast considering hiring the guy.  I heard of a pastor flying nine different candidates over 6 months to interview then when they got down there, turning them down.  You think he was just being picky.  Then when the pastor finally decided on the candidate he fired him in 6 months saying he was not a good fit.  Is that not something they should have found out at the interview.
    Often churches marry themselves to a pastor after only one date.  It should be more thought out than that.

  • Posted by

    A pastor requested that I send him my resume and worship service dvd.  I received a very warm note from the pastor, highly complimentary of my information.  He then sent my info to a head hunter firm.  After 10 days, I contacted the head hunter firm by email, to find out if my info had been received.  The next day I received a two word response - “packet arrived.” That was several weeks ago, and I have had no furhter contact from the pastor, or the head hunter. 

    The frustrating thing is that the pastor and I seemed to be on the same page, but the head hunter came across as abrupt and unprofessional.  What’s a person to think?

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