When a church reaches out to me to help them find their next youth minister a common concern emerges. The don’t want to hire someone who is going to get OVERWHELMED EASILY and LEAVE TOO SOON.
Honestly, I can’t blame them. A church needs stability with their youth ministry because the life of a teenager is not. If you want to find the right person you need a recruitment strategy. According to Monster.com your recruitment strategy should address the following 5 areas:
A potential candidate for the job is going to be attracted to your youth ministry position if they know exactly what’s expected of them. Don’t overcomplicate it with buzzwords and ambiguous terms.
Start with a clear job title and identify the age groups they’ll oversee. Indeed.com recommends that you keep your responsibilities detailed but concise. A big turnoff is a vague job description where the candidate is unsure of exactly what he or she needs to do.
This all depends on the current status of your youth ministry. The time to hire someone:
WITH EXPERIENCE
Is if you are looking for someone to build a youth ministry from the ground up or completely change the program. They will have confidence and wisdom with what works and what doesn’t. They should get you to your goals quicker.
WITH LITTLE TO NO EXPERIENCE
Is if you are looking for someone to take over a well-established program. While a veteran youth worker could do the job he or she might be inclined to make changes that could misalign with the church’s vision and strategy.
The ideal situation is to hire an assistant youth minister who will apprentice the current youth minister. When the current youth minister is set to move on you have their replacement ready to go.
Frisbee, guitar playing, and humor are nice but not necessary. While the makeup of your church or community might impact these skills (i.e. bilingual), a few non-negotiables should be:
Again, the makeup of your church is going to impact more of these skills; however, these three should not be overlooked.
The style, strategy, and values of your church will impact the answer to this question. You’ll want someone who thinks and operates the way the rest of the church thinks and operates. For example:
Your goal should be alignment and that only comes if you hire someone who’s work style compliments the rest of the organization.
This comes down to the type of staff culture you desire. Are you looking for someone who will challenge the status quo or mesh well with the current team? The best way to find out these answer is through the interview process.
Even if someone is highly skilled and has a lot of experienced it doesn’t mean he or she will be the right fit. Any type of misalignment in culture will slow your church down from reaching its goals. For more on this, I recommend reading The Advantage by Patrick Lencioni.
Don’t feel pressured to hire just anyone. Look for someone who matches the culture and give them a clear idea of what needs to be done. In the end, your prudence will pay off.
[reminder] What other questions should churches be asking when hiring their next youth minister? [/reminder]If you are looking for assistance in creating a job description or with hiring your next youth minister you can set up a consultation by clicking HERE.