By Brent Lacy
You made the announcement from the pulpit. You put it in the bulletin. You posted it on Facebook. You mentioned it again the following Sunday. Nobody signed up.
This is not a volunteer shortage. It is an ask problem.
People do not respond to announcements. They respond to personal invitations from someone who believes they are the right person for the job. The announcement says: we need someone. The personal invitation says: I need you specifically, and here is why.
The Difference Between an Announcement and an Ask
An announcement is passive. It puts the burden on the listener to self-identify, self-motivate, and self-initiate. Most people will not do that, not because they do not care, but because they are not sure they are the right person, they are not sure what the commitment involves, and they are waiting for someone to tell them they are needed.
A personal ask removes all of those barriers. It tells the person they are the right one. It tells them exactly what is involved. It tells them someone is counting on them.
The Five-Part Ask
1. Name the person specifically
Do not ask for anyone who might be interested. Ask this person. Say: I have been thinking about you specifically for this. That sentence alone changes the entire dynamic of the conversation.
2. Name what you see in them
Tell them why you are asking them. What gift or quality do you see? Say: You are patient with kids and they respond to you. Or: You have a gift for organization and this ministry needs that. People rise to what is named in them.
3. Describe the role specifically
Vague roles produce vague commitments. Be exact about what you are asking. Say: I am asking you to teach the 3rd and 4th grade class on Sunday mornings. Not: I am looking for someone to help with children’s ministry.
4. Name the time commitment exactly
People say no to open-ended commitments. Give them a specific window. Say: It is about 45 minutes on Sunday morning. I am asking for one year. A defined commitment is far easier to say yes to than an undefined one.
5. Give them time to think
Do not pressure for an immediate answer. Say: You do not have to decide right now. Can you let me know by Sunday? This respects their process and gives them time to pray about it.
When Someone Says No
Thank them. Do not guilt them. Do not ask why. Say: I appreciate you being honest with me. If something changes, let me know.
Then ask: Is there something else you would like to be involved in? Sometimes the no is to the specific role, not to serving. A person who says no to teaching Sunday school might say yes to greeting, or to helping with setup, or to being part of a prayer team.
When Someone Says Yes
Confirm the role, the start date, and the time commitment in writing. Introduce them to anyone they will be working with. Give them everything they need before their first day. Check in after their first week. Thank them publicly and privately.
The way you treat a volunteer in their first month determines whether they stay for a year or a decade.
Free: How to Ask People to Serve
A printable volunteer recruitment guide with the five-part ask, sample scripts for four common roles, and what to do when someone says no or yes.