Home Administration The COMPLETE Church Communicator’s Toolkit

The COMPLETE Church Communicator’s Toolkit

The COMPLETE Church Communicator’s Toolkit

When I was a local church communicator, one of my biggest enemies was noise. I’m sure you can relate. As a church communicator, you’re surrounded by noise from other ministries, staff, and leaders. Noise from distractions online and in the workplace. Noise from having too much to do in too little time. I’ve been there. I get it. But leveraging the right set of tools can help you be more efficient and productive. So here’s a church communicator’s toolkit to help you ease or even cut through the noise.

Administrative Tools

Google Workplace

Google provides an integrated solution for email, calendars, documents, storage, and team collaboration. Google Workplace (formerly G Suite) helps keep everything I’m doing organized. Church Juice uses Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides for our content creation, collaboration, editing, preparing, and presenting.

Typeform

If you’re sending out surveys or creating registration forms, Typeform* may be a great fit. The forms look awesome, they’re easy to develop and straightforward to use. The completed forms are easy to analyze and export to Excel or wherever you need the data to go. I use Typeform when Church Juice sends surveys or if we’re doing any sort of registration.

Slack

My inbox is filled with noise, and I have trouble trying to stay on top of endless email threads. Slack is a great instant communication tool for teams—whether that’s staff or volunteers. I can interact when I want to, but I can also snooze Slack and focus on the task at hand when I need to silence the noise. You can also create channels, which are specific groups of people discussing a certain topic or genre of chatter.

Social Media Tools

Buffer

Buffer is great for scheduling out posts to several social platforms ahead of time. I love Buffer because it’s clean and intuitive. I also love the ability it gives me to keep a consistent calendar, schedule in advance, and also analyze recent posts.

Social Media Content Calendar

This is a free content calendar template in Google Sheets. I use this exact template in planning social media for myself, now that we have an awesome Social Media Specialist who manages Church Juice’s social content. In fact, here’s the spreadsheet she uses. You can copy and adapt either content calendar to help you plan ahead for all your social posts and campaigns.

Sunday Social

For just $9 a month, Sunday Social will provide you several social media images each day to use, complete with potential captions. The graphic design is top-notch, and it’s well worth the money. Sunday Social helps me save time, increase engagement, and keep a high standard of design for our content.

Email Tools

Mailchimp

I really love using Mailchimp. In fact, we’ve written about it on Church Juice’s website. My church uses Mailchimp for its email communication, and I encourage just about every church I interact with to utilize this tool as well. It’s easy to learn, easy to use, works well with other tools, and is free for the majority of churches.

Writing & Editing

Google Docs

One of the great tools available from Google Workplace is Google Docs. I mentioned Google Docs above when talking about Google Workplace, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t say a little more. Docs has transformed the way teams can work together on writing everything from sermons to ad copy and blog posts to bulletin announcements.

Grammarly

As a communicator, you’re both receiving (and editing) and creating content all the time. Grammarly is a great tool that can be used to help ensure all of your content is free from grammatical errors and other typos.

Hemingway Editor

In all the content we create, we want to be as concise and clear as possible. Ernest Hemingway was known for his short, pithy writing style. The Hemingway Editor is a free website that will check your work for readability and clarity.