Insights
Vanderbloemen Prioritizes Leadership Check In as Key to Church Staff Onboarding
The best way to have your new hire love their environment and their job quickly is make them feel welcome on your church staff. If your new hire walks into their first day on the job and they don’t feel like you are prepared for them, there will be a lot of confusion and uncertainty.
If you do not have an onboarding process for your incoming employees or you are looking for ways to improve your current process, check out the following ideas to help your church staff be ready and excited to welcome new staff members.
1. Introduce them to the culture of the church & staff.
A phrase we believe whole-heartedly at Vanderbloemen Search Group is that "culture trumps competency every time." What are you doing to ensure your new team member successfully onboards into the church staff culture?
Here are a couple of ideas:
Team Page - Make sure that you have some form of team page on your website. Whether it’s an internal or external page, have every person’s picture, their role, their job description, and fun facts about them like how many kids they have, where they are from, their hobbies, or what they do day-to-day at the church. The sooner your new hire can get to know the team, the sooner they will feel comfortable.
Mission & Vision – If your church does not have a clear mission and vision, stop reading this blog post and get started on it now. At our office, each of our team members has a wooden block of our staff's core values on their desk, so we are reminded daily of what we are striving for. We also integrate our values into every staff meeting so that a team member gets to express how he or she saw our values lived out each week. As part of your onboarding, sit down with your new team member and walk through the purpose of each of your values and give them a deadline for memorizing the values. When every member of your team knows and lives out your values, your church will be steered in the right direction toward your vision.
2. Schedule regular check-ins with leadership.
In the first ninety days of the new team member’s arrival, set up consistent meetings with his or her leader. One of the worst feelings for a new employee is not knowing if they are meeting expectations. Insecurity can lead to greater mistakes, so make it a priority to provide constructive and consistent feedback for your new team member.
To view the full article, visit www.vanderbloemen.com/blog/church-staff-onboarding-process