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Effective Church Communications provides Timeless Strategy and Biblical Inspiration to help churches create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission

Effective Church Communications provides Timeless Strategy and a Biblical Perspective to help churches create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission. Our tools constantly change; our task doesn’t; Effective Church Communications can help.
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Church office professionals–Let’s Get Growing!

28 May, 2013 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Let's get growing as church office professionals.
Church Office Professionals need to be intentional about opportunities to grow and here are some challenges that will help.

Professional growth doesn’t just happen. Those who achieve expertise and maturity work at it.

One of the most attractive aspects of serving in the church office is that generally you have great freedom to make the job as significant as you want it to be. You can do only what the job demands or you can enhance your work by delivering over and above the norm.

Claim whatever freedom you have in your job. Put it to good use. Examine every day for opportunities to grow in ability, in knowledge, and in purpose. There is no limit to the good you can do.

Avoid pointless controversy

Are you ever amazed at the amount of time, effort, and energy eaten up by dissension in the church? The bad news is that the secretary often feels drawn into these conflicts. The good news is that you can be a positive influence and show your maturity by staying out of the fray.

• Examine your impulses.
What is your natural response to criticism? to a fuss reported to you? to rumors and gossip?

Before letting those reactions go public, ask yourself if they are responses you feel good about. In the past have you been pleased with the results of following those first impulses?

• Choose a wiser path.
To get better results from our actions, we need to choose better actions. Learn from the past. Next time others get tangled up in pettiness—issues having no real importance—you can choose to stay out of it.

• Focus on doing your job well.
While it is not your job to counsel others, you can lead by example. You grow in professionalism by concentrating your time and effort on doing good, productive things.

• Be a calming influence.
As you have opportunity, during the regular course of your work, be a peacemaker. Say and do positive things. Sincerely pray. Continue to love and minister to the people whom it is your job to serve.

Keep skills up to date

Like clothes and hairstyles, skills become dated and old-fashioned. Even the excellent typist doesn’t automatically become proficient at word processing. The prize-winning website of five years ago will take no ribbons today. The best records management of that era is less than adequate now. Staying in top form takes a commitment to change and growth.

• Evaluate your skills level.
Ideally, your church office has a yearly evaluation process in place—a means of measuring each staff member’s technical and interpersonal skills. But, do your own evaluation as well. Take an objective look at your progress over the past year. Pinpoint areas needing additional effort. Identify new skills you will acquire.

• Confer with your supervisor.
You can’t hit the bulls-eye if you’re not sure where it is. You need to know exactly what is expected of you, what skills your executive values. If you perceive it is your computer skills that need sharpening, and the pastor is most concerned about another matter entirely, you need to gain insight from one another and reach an agreement on priorities.

• Act on your assessment.
Once you know where you are, take action to get you where you want to be. Whatever your location, there are training resources within your reach via the Internet. Certainly, financial realities are a factor but every church can provide training opportunities of some sort. Realize, too, that personal funds spent on training are well spent. Pleasure gained by material things is soon past; pleasure gained by knowledge lasts a lifetime.

These are a few areas you can pursue in enhancing your job. You will think of others. Now is a great time to get growing!

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Filed Under: Church Communication Leadership, Church Communication Management, Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: church office skills, church secretary advice, growing as a church professional

A Boss Views Church Administrative Professionals

17 April, 2013 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

The opinion of our Boss is our most important evaluation.
The opinion of our Boss is very important and here are the most valued characteristics.

Administrative Professionals Week is a time when we celebrate the contributions of Administrative Professionals in the church office. But no matter what the celebration, the wise assistant knows what counts in the long run is not so much what you view as professional behavior, but what the boss sees as admirable.

As you access your skills and abilities, consider these attributes that supervisors consistently list as relevant.

  • dependability
    Some say the best “ability” is dependability. Even the most outstanding skills are diminished unless the assistant is consistently in the office on time and equipped to do the job. The boss wants to know his assistant is where she is supposed to be when she is supposed to be there, that she says what she means and means what she says, that she delivers what she promises.
  • competence
    A reasonable expectation is that the person at the desk can and will field well whatever the day brings. Competence is doing more and doing better than just enough to get by. A supervisor shared, “Our assistant learns something new about the job every day—a software technique, a time saver, a helpful website—and in staff meetings she often passes along tips the rest of us can use. I appreciate that.”
  • confidentiality
    Along with ministers and other church staff, the assistant must be a person who can be trusted to keep the information she handles to herself. Every person has a right to know that the private information coming into the church office is not randomly “shared.” The importance of this essential attribute cannot be overstated. Many would say that loose talk causes more discord in churches than any other behavior. Everyone appreciates those who are above reproach when it comes to confidentiality.
  • time sensibility
    Understanding the value of money, you would never tell a salesperson, “I’ll take that new Mac; I don’t care what it costs.”But sadly, we often do the equivalent with our time. Never spend more time on a project than it is worth! Determine the smart amount of minutes the results are worth to you; then don’t allow yourself to spend more. Keeping priorities straight in the church office is never a one-way street. While it is fair for the boss to expect the assistant to respect what is important to others on the staff, in the most effective offices the pastor and staff likewise respect the assistant’s priorities.
  • accountability
    “In this office, when we do well we all get the credit; when a mistake happens we all share the blame.” That was the often stated philosophy of one wise pastor. Still, his assistant noticed he appreciated when she took personal accountability for her errors. Mistakes happen. Owning up to them is the right thing to do.
  • positive attitude
    Having someone at your side who looks for and appreciates what is right with others adds to the effectiveness of any office. “I expect my assistant to give people the benefit of the doubt, to believe the best of them, to never gossip or bad-mouth, to never hold a grudge, and to look for the bright side in every situation.” You would have to believe a boss with these expectations is a positive person too.
  • calmness under pressure
    Schedules can fly out the church office door in a hurry. The assistant who can keep things in perspective and adapt to whatever crisis arises is a valuable asset to the staff. Not handled well, events quickly get out of hand; often the way an issue is handled is remembered far longer than the problem itself. Keeping one’s composure allows smarter decisions and sensible solutions.
  • testimony
    While a Christian is a witness wherever she works, working in a church office is different from working at a secular job. The excellent assistant sets a high bar for personal standards: thoughtful conversation, nonjudgmental listening, honest actions, gracious deeds, steadfast support, enthusiastic cooperation, conscientious service, respectful interactions. When the assistant sees herself as a Christian professional, when she thinks, acts, and looks like such, others tend to see her as a Christian professional too.An observation: No two pastors are alike. The wise assistant observes, asks questions, and discovers personal likes and dislikes. The insightful supervisor does the same. The result is an extraordinary team.

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Filed Under: Church Communication Leadership, Church Communication Management, Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: Church Administrative Assistants, church office professionalism, church office skills

A Salute to Administrative Assistants to celebrate their special week

16 April, 2013 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Administrative Assistants WeekCommemorated annually since 1952, when originated in the United States as National Secretaries Week, Administrative Professionals Week is now observed in several countries throughout the world. This is only one of the important changes in the profession the week reflects.

Typewriters have given way to computers; formal correspondence has been largely replaced by email; mimeographs are long forgotten. Technological progress continues to advance at warp speed. Even as you read, your office machines and software are becoming obsolete.

More than technology has changed. While the profession remains overwhelmingly a female one, secretaries have changed. So have pastors. More than ever, today’s ministers recognize assistants’ potential and provide opportunities for them to use current skills and develop new ones.

Consequently, while the work of the church office has always been important, today’s office professionals are reaching new levels of accomplishment. You are more involved than your colleagues of fifty years ago in the administrative process, in decision making, and in planning and implementing long-term goals. This change is not just a shift in terminology. Regardless of title, the ministry assistant of 2013 is, in fact, an administrative professional.

Reflecting on the profession today, it is appropriate to acknowledge that church secretaries have traditionally brought to the job something extra, an intangible element hard to define—something beyond technical competence, positive attitude, or even commitment. This attribute shows itself in meticulous attention to details, in thoughtful actions, in a Christ-centered spirit.

Simply, ministry assistants serve. And you do it well.

Now, with more churches eager to use all the skills of all their staff and with technology providing the means to explore innovative techniques, you have unprecedented opportunity to be involved in ministry in new and exciting ways from professional looking printed materials to interactive websites. As always, you add to your work that something extra which has long been the hallmark of Christian professionals. Good for you!

Administrative Professionals Week 2013 is April 21-27 in the United States with Wednesday, April 24 designated as Administrative Professionals Day. The purpose is to recognize the significant contributions of your profession.

Effective Church Communications wishes you a great week.

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Filed Under: Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: admin assistants, Administrative Professionals Week, Church Administratie Assistants, church secretaries

How to deal with rush and hurry

17 March, 2013 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

What to do when you have too much to do....hurry more...or take this wise advice?
What to do when you have too much to do....hurry more...or take this wise advice?

 ed. note: as we approach this holiday season with more tasks than we can possibly, Gayle's wise words will not only encourage you, but provide practical advice.

The hurrier I go, the behinder I get .. . . .

We have laughed at this old Deutsch saying. We know the feeling! But have you ever taken a hard look at the truth expressed here? It is absolutely on target. Hurrying usually does only get us further behind.

Still, the first thing we often do when faced with a packed schedule is to go to afterburners. To speed up. To rush. The result of this hurry? More times than not: miscalculations, misunderstandings, mistakes—putting us even more behind schedule. It has probably happened to you. Maybe this week. Maybe today.

Ready to try something better? [Read more...]

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Filed Under: Church Office Skills, Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: church office advice, make the most of your time, schedule help, time management advice

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