Making the Most of Your Church Database

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Segmenting your general population keeps you from sending general information. The more targeted your information is, the greater the inspiration will be.

If you’re thinking ahead, you’ve probably noted that this can be done for nearly every type of participation. You can segment your giving communications and group participation. The possibilities are endless if you have good data.

In my Funding Funnel that Funds Your Church Masterclasses and Course, we talk a lot about segmentation. I even provide a year-end segmentation approach with seven unique emails. If that’s helpful for you, check it out.

Let’s take it up a notch!

Not only can you segment your overall population, but with good data, you can also nurture connections and participation as new data emerges. For instance, when a person gives to your church for the first time, this data moment can trigger a thank you note or an email nurture sequence. Again, the possibilities are endless, but it begins with good data.

STEP TWO: Monitor Progress

I know you have metrics or a dashboard at your church. Most churches do, and most of these dashboards tell us what happened through lag metrics.

How many people attendED, how much money was givEN, and how many people servED are all important, but they are historical, not predictive. These metrics let us know how we did but not how we are doing.

With good data, we can now begin analyzing percent change over time (Current month vs. the same month last year, This quarter vs. the same quarter last year, and Rolling 12-month averages vs. the previous year rolling 12). With good data, we can evaluate more than history; we can evaluate steps and trends.

Let me show you how this can work. Let’s look at giving this time. With good data, we can now evaluate the following:

  • Percentage of our active database giving to our church.
  • Percentage of households not giving, giving regularly, or giving extravagantly. In my Funding Funnel system, we use five categories of givers. 
  • Total giving growth.
  • Average gift size.
  • First-, Second, and Fouth-time givers (for Thank You system triggers).
  • New Recurring Givers.
  • Recurring Givers dropping off.

Now, let’s not go crazy. The above might be a tad much. We only want to measure actionable data. Metrics that are interesting but not actionable are not helpful. But steps and trends are immensely valuable, especially compared to lag metrics.

Get Started

Just start. That’s my best recommendation. As I mentioned, cleaning your data is the first step toward data organization.

If you need help or want to consider how to best use your data, I offer coaching, masterclasses, and courses on church funding and models. I’d love to help you better understand what data is available and how you can use it to inspire discipleship. After all, that’s why your church exists.

 

This article on using your church database originally appeared here, and is used by permission.

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gavinadams@churchleaders.com'
Gavin Adamshttp://gavinadams.com
Gavin Adams believes the local church is the most important organization on the planet and he is helping to transform them into places unchurched people love to attend. As the Lead Pastor of Watermarke Church, (a campus of North Point Ministries), Watermarke has grown from 400 to 4000 attendees in five years. A student of leadership, communication, church, and faith, Gavin shares his discoveries through speaking and consulting. Follow him at @Gavin_Adams and at gavinadams.com.

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