4 Simple Rules for Working with and Hiring Creatives

I’m privileged to have Darrel Girardier guest blog for me today. Darrel serves Brentwood Baptist Church as the Digital Strategy Director. If you’re like me, you’re not crazy creative, but you work with those who are. And Darrel gets how to bridge the gap. I think today’s post will help you as you consider finding, hiring, and working well with your creatives.

 

I’ve had the privilege for the last 15 years to work with creative teams in both the corporate and church setting. While each setting is slightly different, there are some rules that I think can be applied to each situation.

If you work with, or are in the process of hiring creative people for church, I’ve outlined four simple rules that help you along in the process. Here they are…

1. Hire creatives who can take the abstract and make it concrete.

I’ve worked with some very talented people. However, what separated the good ones from the great ones was the ability to take what was either technical or abstract, and explain it in a way that anyone could understand what they’re saying.

Now why is this important? If you’re going to manage, evaluate, or coach someone for whose skill-sets you don’t have, you need to have some sense of the scope of their work and what it entails. Often this leads to conversations where you want to be informed, but you don’t need to know all the details.

If you hire the right creative person for your team, they can make the process easier for you. By making the abstract become concrete, they can provide the information you need to make better decisions.

2. Hire creatives who understand the difference between design and art.

It’s easy to become enamored with people who create visually stunning work. Whether it’s videos, logos, or stage design, visual creative work is something that everyone wants to show off. However, the best creatives understand the difference between stunning visuals and stunning visuals that solve a problem.

In other words, you should hire creative people who understand that their challenge when creating a video or design is not to wow you, but instead, solve your problem. These types of creative people will help you move beyond questions like, “What colors or fonts do you like?” to more important questions like, “Who is your primary audience?” and “How do we measure success?”

If you can hire a creative person who instinctively knows to answer those questions first, then you’ve found someone who will be more results driven, which will have a greater impact for your church.

3. When you talk to a creative staff member, talk about your design problem and not the solution.

One of the things you can easily do to frustrate a creative person is to bring them a problem, and then bring them what you think the solution should be. It’s the equivalent of describing a canyon to an engineer and then telling them how to build the bridge.

The more effectively you can describe what you’re trying to accomplish along with the challenges your facing, the higher chance you have of engaging your creative staff. The problem is that most of us come to the creative person with a problem and what we have our idea of what the solution should be (but we can’t do ourselves). This solution-based approach eventually frustrates the creative person and creates a feeling that they’re simply a widget maker.
4. Be wary of confusing roles.

A lot of church leadership staff try to find some mental model so they can categorize how creative people will work with the rest of the (non-creative) staff. Often this leads to using the “client/service” model.

In this model, the ministry is the “client” and the creative person (designer, video producer, etc…) is the service department. You can find this model in most large corporations that have in-house creative departments.

While this model has its advantages, it can lead to de-emphasizing the partnership ministries and creative teams should have, and instead, focuses on simply making the client happy. And yes, creative people do want make ministries happy, but they don’t want to do at the cost of violating basic creative and design principles (Comic sans font anyone?).

To remedy this situation, you need to clarify roles. Not in the sense of who’s in charge, but rather what each party is responsible for. In other words, find a way to let the creative people do what they do best (design, produce, etc.) and still meet the needs of the ministry. This can be a bit of balancing act, however, if you clarify these roles on the front end, the creation process will go much smoother.

As I stated in the beginning, every situation is a bit different. However, most creative people I know want to be respected, trusted and encouraged. If you follow the four rules above, you’ll be one step closer to getting attracting, keeping, and allowing them to feel respected, trusted, and encouraged.

Darrel is effectively collaborating and coaching other church leaders, particularly in the church communications space. Check out his blog and his “Ask Darrel” podcast on iTunes

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Leadership Pipeline: In one? Should You Have One?

In your educational experience, it’s likely you’ve participated in a group project – specifically, the much debated and mainly loathed kind where you don’t get to choose who’s in your group. Most group participants seem to have one thing in mind: How can I get the best grade while contributing the least amount of effort?

Although I won’t admit that I might’ve been that guy in some of my educational experiences, I’ll admit that I’ve been that guy recently.

Despite my lackluster contribution, I recently participated in a group with LifeWay Leadership that created a new tool with you in mind: leadership pipeline. Leadership pipeline is a practical tool to implement in your church. You may or may not have even known you needed it, but you do.

For each role in your church, both paid and volunteer, do you know the competencies required to do that role well? If you thought someone needed to take on a more substantial leadership position, would you know which new skills they’d need to succeed? What training would be required? What are the non-negotiables for spiritual maturity to serve in any given role?

Along with some pretty fine leaders at LifeWay and some church practitioners, this group determined four roles of leadership within the church: volunteer, leader, ministry director, and senior leadership. They also established six core competencies essential for leadership development: discipleship, vision, strategy, collaboration, people development, and stewardship. The team then created specific learning objectives related to each competency, for each role.

I think the following leadership pipeline resources would be worth your investigation…

  • Developing Your Leadership Pipeline is a free, short e-booklet that covers the basics of leadership pipeline. Todd Adkins wrote this to-the-point, helpful overview. Download your free copy here.
  • LifeWay Leadership has launched a free app packed full of content from Christian leaders. Download the app here.
  • Video content for each learning objective is available on Ministry Grid, an online training tool. Get a free 30-day trial. Likely, you’ll be convinced that the people you serve alongside need to hear this practical training, and you’ll consider a church subscription. Ministry Grid also offers a digital pass version of leadership pipeline videos here. Digital pass is a one-time purchase. If you purchase more than one level, go ahead and get a Ministry Grid subscription.
  • Several free webinars also explore how to develop a leadership pipeline in your church to develop people. Webinars will be held May 17th, July 21st, and September 20th. Find more details and register for webinars here.
  • Last, but not least, come visit me in Nashville. Or, come and visit me and a whole bunch of people whose books sit on your shelves (such as like Carey Nieuwhof, Will Mancini, Jenni Catron, Brad Lomenick, Paul Tripp, and more) at the first-ever Pipeline Conference. Day 1 will cover what developing leaders in the church looks like, and Day 2 will provide coaching and consulting to implement leadership pipeline at your church. Early-bird pricing is available through August 1st. LifeWay Leadership secured a cool venue, and I can say from experience, Nashville in October is a good place to visit. See details and a short promo here. LifeWay is offering a 15% discount to speakers who bring their friends. Use the code “speaker16” when you register.

I write about self-development quite a bit, and the LifeWay Leadership team has provided accessible content to help you be a better leader in your church.

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Being Outside the Information Loop

Everyone likes to be included.

Most people want to be informed.

You’ve likely been left outside an information loop you would’ve liked to be in. And you’ve likely had to make a decision about who’s in and who’s out with information you had to share.

Those who are left out of the loop can feel hurt. Your choice of intentionally leaving someone out of the loop can be absolutely correct, but you must be aware that being left out may make people vulnerable. If it happens repetitively or without reason, they may distrust you or possibly even leave your team.  Your decision to bring someone in or leave them out is an important decision.

Since it’s important, here are a few reminders for the loop-makers and also a few for those feeling hurt or vulnerable who are outside of the loop.

Before you get too upset you’re being left out of the loop — consider:

  1. Don’t assume or presume on those making the information-sharing decisions.
  2. Ask yourself: Does this person who’s leaving me out have a habit of keeping me in the dark or deceiving me?
  3. Check your motives. Why are you bothered you’re not in the loop?
  4. Have you told your boss or those you work with that you’re busy or overwhelmed? If so, they may be trying to protect your time.
  5. When you have been in the loop before, have you ever shared the information with those who it wasn’t meant for?
  6. Remember, the loop-makers may be trying to limit collateral damage to others, or there even may be legal issues at stake. The choice to share or withhold information could be out of their control.

When determining who’s in your information loop — consider:

  1. Be consistently trustworthy and transparent. That way, when you do have to withhold information from a person(s), they’ll assume the best about your reasoning.
  2. Be willing to talk about the process for decision-making, even if not the details.
  3. Give people a heads up… “You may hear about some things going on, and while I can’t talk about the details, I know it’s a big deal – and as it impacts you, I’ll make sure you’re in the know as I can.”
  4. Be consistent. People will be okay with certain informational boundaries, as long as you’re consistent about level of leadership who gets it. If you choose to share information based on who sits near you at lunch or who has favor with you lately, that inconsistency may be meet with a lack of trust.
  5. Have a philosophy and method that dictates your communication groupings that makes sense to onlookers. Each time you have to limit the sharing of information, the determination of those persons or groups should have an objective pathway of determination.
  6. When you can, throw out some substantive “inside information.” Maybe it doesn’t totally relate to directly to them, but giving your team an inside look at information will go a long way. The information must still be appropriate, and it may not impact their job at all – but hearing it will make them feel more involved.

 

In a moment of frustration, I once quipped to a person who was feeling left out of the loop, “This information is above your pay grade.” (Since I still feel guilty, public exposure on this incident via my blog makes me feel better.) I shouldn’t have said that. True, the information was beyond what the person’s role warranted – but I didn’t follow my suggested steps for how to communicate that well. So, don’t be that me. Be better than me. Whether in or out of the information loop, be considerate of how the other may feel, and act accordingly.

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