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August 22, 2011 Posted by Mark Oestreicher

I believe in planning, so I try to plan my basic teaching and event calendar 9-12 months out. I’ll give you three reasons why.

1. It makes recruiting volunteers easier. I can wing it with the best of them and run a meeting or an outreach on the fly. But, while that might be a necessary skill on a mission trip when your bus breaks down or the teacher gets sick, my experience says it’s a lousy way to run a day-to-day ministry and a great way to burn out volunteers. When I wing it in my everyday ministry life, it usually becomes all about me. My volunteers quickly start feeling used instead of utilized. When I fail to plan ahead, I don’t know what I need and can’t effectively ask others to help, or when I do ask, I have to apologize for the last-minute emergency.

I love Google Maps. When you load the homepage, the default view is zoomed way out, showing you the whole United States. Type in an address and it zooms in quickly to show you a specific region. Click “street view” and BAM! you’re looking at things as if you were literally walking through the neighborhood on foot. Kinda creepy, since this means Google is stalking us, but kinda awesome at the same time. And a great example of how we typically plan our youth ministry calendar.

We first take a look at the big picture of our ministry then zoom in on the season ahead and finally get a street view all the way down to the current teaching series and events.

I’m a big planner and enjoy strategizing just how to maximize our time and ensure that the most students, families, volunteers, and leaders will be impacted. In general, we try to plan all of our big events, retreats, missions, and activities at least one year out. This is especially true about our summer calendar.

I try to involve as many people as possible in our planning process, so it’s helpful for me to roll out preliminary ideas early so I can run them by parents, volunteers, students, and other staff to see what we are missing.



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