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  • Ministry with a Lasting Impact: Unleashing God's Word in Youth Ministry
    Barry Shafer
    What are you doing in your student ministry that will outlast you? I remember the first time that question occurred to me. I can’t...
  • Sticking Around: Lasting in Youth Work (part 3)
    Syler Thomas
    U2 is arguably the greatest rock band in the world. In my opinion, no band in history has been able to stay at the cutting edge of...
  • God's Song for Ukraine
    Debbie Meroff
    Saron’s name is in the Bible and means “His Song,” or “God’s Song.” Born to committed Christian parents in Jarrettsville, Md., Saron...
  • A New Movement
    I wrote my first article for YouthWorker Journal in the fall of 1999. It was about an outreach youth ministry I had developed in Ginghamsburg...
  • Deprogramming Our Programming
    Mark Oestreicher
    I’ve been doing a lot of thinking (and writing, and a bit of speaking) in the last few years about needed change in youth ministry....
  • The Trouble with Girls
    Jennifer Bradbury
    Being a teenage girl today is tough. Every day, girls encounter a multitude of conflicting messages about their identity, sexuality...
  • Samaritan's Feet Sponsoring World Walk
    It's an amazingly ambitious, tremendously compelling humanitarian event that's calling America to "walk barefoot" this October to benefit...

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Getting More to Go: Effective Strategies for Recruiting...
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Getting More to Go: Effective Strategies for Recruiting International Ministry Teams
By Frank Banfill
President of MaxPoint Ministries as well as a former missions executive and pastor.

Summer is approaching quickly, which means the busy season is here for most international ministry coordinators. In addition to arranging travel, scheduling in-country programs, and the myriad other responsibilities that go with leading teams, there is the issue of recruiting. If you are like many team leaders, mobilizing enough people for your trips is a struggle. It is tough getting people to volunteer half way around the world. You can overcome this hurdle if you utilize your current team as a recruiting force for future trips. Here are five tips to get you started.

1. Expand your prayer team. Besides the obvious benefits of more prayer, each prayer warrior becomes a prospective team member. As these people pray for your work, their hearts are stirred for your mission. Grow your prayer team by asking people to sign a prayer commitment. It may be a piece of paper distributed by team members, or it may be a form on a website, but signing encourages follow-through. Plus, it gives you the opportunity to capture names and email addresses. These should be some of the first people you contact for your next trip.
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2. Engage your donors. Just like your prayer team, those who financially support your team members have a connection to your work. They demonstrated interest by parting with their cash. Encourage these folks not only to give, but actually go. For years, one man supported his wife and children as they did missions work. He said, “I pray and pay so they can go.” Finally, he realized as good as it was to help his family, he was robbing himself of a greater blessing by not going with them. He didn’t think going was for him, but after one trip, that all changed!

3. Capture stories. Nothing raises vision or mobilizes people more than stories. Statistics may impact some, but stories move everyone. You can talk about the millions of people in spiritual darkness, the high percentage of people without clean drinking water, or the mortality rate among your targeted people group, but those numbers don’t connect like a story. Find a personal story that illustrates the need and shows the benefit of your work. Stories are powerful tools for casting vision. Here are some ideas to help you capture more stories.

First, at the end of the trip, ask each team member to write down their most memorable moment. Half joking, I told my teams they had to give me their “most memorable” before I would give them their airplane ticket home. If you wait until after the team gets back to collect these, you will be lucky to get any. Get the stories on your way to the airport or even during the flight home, but get those stories!

Besides written testimonies, you may also want to consider sending a video camera along with each group during your trip so they can record events as they happen. Also, if you will have Internet access overseas, set up a blog site for team members to post articles and photos during the trip. You not only will capture stories, but you will cast vision to those back home following your progress. Make it your goal to capture as many stories as possible, then pick out the best three or four and use them to report on your trip.

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