Solutions August 2018 | Page 29

seem like a nitpicky change to make. But there are larger changes to make using this psychographic data. Some possibilities might include these: the service. (Distracting them with a reassuring picture might actually be less disruptive than the tears they’re imagining.) • You provide large windows looking into the children’s rooms so parents can feel like there’s more security and accountability. • Your small group is filled with health nuts, so serving pizza is a bad idea. • Membership classes are filled with people ready to sign on the dotted line from the get-go, so only one class is necessary. Or maybe your people are more apprehensive, so you ease them into it more slowly. • Youth aren’t getting connected to the youth group after attending the service. You start integrating more young people into the greeting team so the invitation becomes more organic. • You realize parents of infants are nervous about leaving their kids in the nursery, so you get their cell phone number and text them a picture of their smiling little one during the middle of Once you know your guest, make changes that reflect them. Taken from The Come Back Effect by Jason Young & Jonathan Malm. Copyright © 2018. Used by permission of Baker Books, a division of Baker Publishing Group (www.bakerpublishinggroup. com). Jason Young Jason Young is a hospitality, leadership, and emotional intelligence coach and communicator. He is director of guest experience at Buckhead Church and North Point Ministries, a nationally known network of churches with 36,000 people in average weekly attendance. He has also worked with numerous organizations, including Ford Motor Company, Life.Church, and Chick-fil-A. Jason has written for numerous publications and enjoys posting helpful content at jasonyounglive.com. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia Solutions • 29