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Talking About Staff Team Health

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / November 14, 2011 / 0 Comments

What words would you use to describe the ideal staff team? I frequently pose this question to church leaders and the two words most frequently offered are collaborative and accountable.  We want our staff teams to be cooperative, to demonstrate an ease and naturalness in working together that capitalizes on the strength and ingenuity of […]

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The Village Elders

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / March 22, 2011 / 0 Comments

All congregations are faced with decisions that can be made by a small leadership body (the governing board, the staff team, a committee) and decisions that must be taken on by the collective body. In the small to medium sized congregation, when full congregational decision making is required, a church-wide meeting is scheduled and a […]

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Admin Staff & Mission Ownership

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / February 10, 2011 / 0 Comments

Most of us expect our clergy staff to demonstrate a strong sense of commitment to the mission of the congregation. We use the language of “called, not hired” to describe the over the top commitment we seek. We also expect our non-ordained program staff to embrace the mission of the congregation.  Most program staff are members of […]

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A Word of Thanks

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / February 5, 2011 / 0 Comments

I began this blog a year and a half ago, in part to help give birth to a book I had in mind about the large congregation. My hope was that the blog would allow me to actively try out ideas and find my voice about life in the large congregation. This week I finished […]

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The Ultimatum

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / February 3, 2011 / 0 Comments

Put yourself in this senior pastor’s shoes. You’ve had some supervisory challenges with your Minister of Music over the past two years, but she’s a person that you value having on your team. Let’s call this employee Connie.  Connie is a brilliantly gifted musician and widely respected within the local musical community. She is liked […]

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The Invisible Family

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / January 20, 2011 / 0 Comments

Recently, after speaking to a group of pastors about clergy roles in the large church, I was approached by a senior minister who said, “I’m surprised that you didn’t talk about the unique family dynamics that occur for clergy leaders of very large congregations, you know … the invisibility factor.”  I stood there looking rather […]

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Too Few Women

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / January 2, 2011 / 0 Comments

In this video Facebook COO, Sheryl Sandberg, talks about why such a small percentage of women make it to the top of their professions.  I believe that the lessons she shares are applicable to, and prophetic for the world of congregations. The pulpit in the large congregation, for better or worse, represents the top of the […]

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Too Few Women

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / January 2, 2011 / 0 Comments

In this video Facebook COO, Sheryl Sandberg, talks about why such a small percentage of women make it to the top of their professions.  I believe that the lessons she shares are applicable to, and prophetic for the world of congregations. The pulpit in the large congregation, for better or worse, represents the top of the […]

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Administration and Ministry

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / December 20, 2010 / 0 Comments

Clergy leaders in the large church must come to terms with the idea that administration is a form of ministry. Those who cannot understand administration as ministry quickly burn out in the role, always frustrated as they try to get administration “out of the way” so that they can get back to the real tasks […]

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Program Evaluation

By Susan Beaumont & Associates / December 6, 2010 / 0 Comments

The large church never met a program that it didn’t like.  The leadership default position in the large congregation is to add programming every time someone wants to enhance impact or pursue excellence. Every new strategic planning process results in the layering on of new programs without winnowing out the old. The hint that any small […]

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