You know the feeling. It’s Tuesday afternoon. You’re staring at a spreadsheet trying to remember who was missing Sunday. Was it the Rodriguez family? When’s the last time James was here? Did anyone follow up with Saturday’s visitors?
You spent 20 hours on Sunday’s sermon. By Tuesday, 148 of your 150 members have forgotten it. There are no devotionals from it. No discussion guides. No social posts. The sermon dies on Sunday.
Saturday, 4 volunteers knock 30 doors. 3 people are interested. Their names go on a sticky note. By Monday, the sticky note is lost.
This is what church operations look like when your only staff member is you. And the weight isn’t about time management. It’s about souls you’re losing because you can’t be everywhere.
You open your phone. Your operations briefing says:
You didn’t write a report. You didn’t check a spreadsheet. You didn’t wonder who’s missing. Your operations team tracked everything overnight. Now you can make the calls that matter — and show up fully present.
Multiplication
The Woman at the Well met Jesus once. She ran back to her village. The whole town came to see Him. That’s multiplication.
Your church is called to the same thing. But you’re one person wearing six hats, and you can’t be everywhere.
What if your operations team handled the logistics of multiplication — so you could focus on the encounters that change everything?
One sermon
56 personalized devotionals across 8 spiritual stages
One outreach
Every prospect tracked through to baptism
One alert
A family retained before they disappear
One member identified
The next small group leader developed
You preach. You counsel. You pray.
Your operations team handles everything between.
Built by pastors, for pastors
Operating.Church was born out of real pastoral pain — watching people slip through the cracks because no tool existed to see it happening. We built the operations team we wished we had.
operations assistants
spiritual stages tracked
platform fees on giving
less than human staff cost