![]() There are some staples that should stay in your newsletters, such as: In an effort to get creative and create a must-read church newsletter, some churches leave out the basics. If someone gave you 100 words to read versus 1000, which would you be more likely to check out on a regular basis? As a busy person, you’d probably choose the shorter, especially if can be just as useful. Divide each one into short, but useful segments.įor email, use links to send readers to extra resources, such as events (just list the next upcoming event in the newsletter itself), a blog post Bible study, interesting Christian articles and a video of your last sermon. Keep your newsletters as short as possible. ![]() Of course, they don’t want to scroll forever either when it comes to email. Most members aren’t going to want you to hand them a book for a print newsletter. Adding a short Bible study, links to suggested blog posts (your own and others), family-friendly area events (not just church), prayer requests and so on are all useful things to include. Think about things that would actually help your members. Overall, it’s just not an overly useful newsletter. If you have a church website, all the events should be listed there too. There are likely flyers up at the church about upcoming events. Many church newsletters follow the same format:įor the most part, all of this is information they already know. Your newsletter has to stand out and be something that’s useful to your members. ![]() People have information overload on a daily, sometimes even hourly, basis. ![]()
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