Research from Thom Rainer found that a first-time visitor who is contacted within 36 hours is significantly more likely to return than one who is not contacted at all (Rainer, 2014). Most small churches know this. Most small churches still do not have a consistent follow-up system.
The reason is usually not indifference. It is the absence of a clear, simple process that anyone can execute without thinking too hard about it. This guide gives you that process.
Step 1: Capture Visitor Information
You cannot follow up with someone whose name you do not know. Create a simple, low-friction way to collect visitor information on Sunday.
Options that work for small churches:
- Connection card — a simple card in the bulletin or seat pocket asking for name, email, and phone. Keep it to five fields maximum.
- Digital check-in — a tablet or QR code linking to a simple form. Works well for tech-comfortable visitors.
- Personal greeting — a designated greeter who introduces themselves, learns the visitor’s name, and passes it to the pastor or follow-up coordinator after the service.
A connection card that asks for name, address, phone, email, marital status, and children’s ages will get fewer completions than one that asks for name and email only. Start simple. You can learn more later.
Step 2: The 36-Hour Contact
Within 36 hours of a visitor’s first Sunday, someone from your church should make personal contact. This is the most important step in the entire system.
Who makes the contact matters. A personal call or text from a congregation member — not a staff member — is more effective than a form letter from the pastor. It signals that real people noticed and cared.
What to say:
Step 3: The Pastoral Note
The same day as the service, the pastor should send a handwritten note to every first-time visitor. This takes five minutes per visitor and has an outsized impact. A handwritten note from the pastor communicates that you are a church where people are known, not just counted.
Keep it brief:
Step 4: The Week-Two Invitation
If the visitor returns for a second Sunday, they are seriously considering your church. This is the moment to extend a personal invitation to something low-pressure and relational — a small group, a Sunday lunch, a ministry event.
Do not invite them to join a committee. Invite them to belong.
Step 5: The One-Month Check-In
For visitors who have attended two or more times but have not yet connected formally, a one-month check-in is appropriate. This can be a brief conversation after church, a text, or a coffee invitation. The goal is to understand where they are in their process and remove any barriers to connection.
Building the System
A follow-up system only works if it runs without depending on any one person’s memory. Build it into your weekly rhythm:
- Sunday during service: Greeter collects visitor names and passes to coordinator
- Sunday afternoon: Pastor writes handwritten notes
- Monday morning: Coordinator assigns follow-up calls to congregation members
- Monday–Tuesday: Assigned members make personal contact
- Following Sunday: Coordinator checks who returned and flags for week-two invitation
the window for first contact that significantly increases return rate (Rainer, 2014)
time required for a pastor to write a handwritten note
when a visitor is most open to a personal invitation to connect
Tracking Visitors
Keep a simple visitor log — a spreadsheet is fine. Record name, contact information, date of first visit, follow-up actions taken, and subsequent visits. Review it weekly. This prevents visitors from falling through the cracks.
What Not to Do
Multiple contacts in the first week, home visits without invitation, or aggressive follow-up will drive people away. The goal is warmth, not pursuit. One personal contact in the first 36 hours is enough for the first week.
Designate one person to collect visitor names this week. Have the pastor write one handwritten note. Assign one congregation member to make one follow-up call. That is your system. Build from there.