Home Youth Leaders Articles for Youth Leaders 4 Keys to Coaching Your Volunteers for Impact

4 Keys to Coaching Your Volunteers for Impact

For small groups to work in a youth ministry, small group leaders need to be coached. Too often, we say to our adult volunteers, “You’re in charge of this group. Best of luck.” We don’t give any training, and we don’t check in with them to see how it’s going. Often we do this because we don’t know how to coach a small group leader.

If that’s you, stop pretending and ask someone at your church or one nearby for help. Most youth workers don’t start in youth ministry understanding how to coach small group leaders. As odd as it sounds, you have to learn how to teach. It’s OK to ask for help.

Just so we are clear, giving the Bible lesson outline to group leaders is not the same as training them to teach its content. Most adult volunteers don’t know the first thing about teaching students. They don’t understand how to keep students’ attention, how to make measurable applications, or how to deal with behavior issues without losing students’ respect.

If you don’t take the time to teach and evaluate each small group leader, you’re setting them up for failure. They’ll grudgingly serve out the time they’ve committed to and leave as soon as they can.

Why not build a strong, resilient team? That’s the best use of your time. Just look at the math. Each of us has the ability to impact about three to five students. So if you develop 10 small group leaders, you can impact 50 students. That’s a lot better than five.

Youth workers, now is the time to turn your small group ministry around. Commit to coaching your small group leaders. Here are four keys to keep in mind when training adult volunteers:

1. Be sincere. You don’t have to pretend to be an expert. Just be yourself. Your leaders will know if you’re faking it, and they’ll appreciate you are being you.

2. Be consistent. Stay in regular contact with your leaders. If you allow large periods of time to go by without connecting with them, they won’t feel your support.

3. Be encouraging. Remember, leaders tend to be hard on themselves. So find things they’re doing well and encourage them.

4. Be honest. When you see a leader doing something that is negatively impacting their influence, let them know. Confront them in a loving way, with honesty. They’d rather hear a little constructive criticism than obliviously misdirect students.