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How to Deal with Negative Feedback
Now that I’ve coached over 1,000 pastors through my Senior Pastor Coaching Networks, you can probably imagine that I get a lot of emails from week to week.
In fact, most of the time, it serves as a huge encouragement to me – hearing the stories of growing churches, radically changed lives and greater Kingdom impact in communities all over the U.S. and beyond!
Occasionally, however, I receive emails from pastors who are hurting. Just recently I got an email from one of my coaching alums who was feeling the sting of some negative feedback.
He had invited some of his church’s First Time Guests to complete a survey about their experience at the weekend service (something I recommend in my Assimilation System).
It’s a great tactic for gathering feedback from new people and reinforcing a positive experience.
In this instance, though, one of his church’s guests replied to the survey with an apparently honest, but negative impression of the “friendliness” of the people in his church.
And that hurts – it’s one thing to see the flaws and shortcomings of your own church, but it’s something else entirely when someone else points them out!
The sad thing is that just one negative survey response like this can steal the joy of even the biggest and most powerful Sundays if you let it….
Maybe you can relate -
- A dozen people commit their lives to Christ on Sunday, but the thing that sticks with you is the critical comment about your sermon.
- Everyone raves about your special worship service, but the only thing you remember on Sunday night is the person who complained about it being too loud.
- Your inbox is full of encouraging stories of how Jesus is changing people’s lives, but you just keep reading and re-reading that one email from the family who’s leaving your church.
I could go on and on (I’m sure you could too), but the point is this:
Negative feedback is a fact of life for church leaders and it will ruin your day (or week/month/year) if you let it!
So here are a few tips I shared with him for dealing with negative feedback (because we all get it from time to time):
- Don’t let it get you down – it happens to the best of us
- Reply to the sender (if appropriate) and thank them for their feedback
- Let them know that their feedback will help your church do better in the future
- Ask for grace and offer your prayers as they search for the right church home
- If the feedback is constructive, use it as a teachable moment with your leaders (but only if you can use it in a positive manner)
- Above all else – don’t get discouraged and don’t give up…
Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.
Galatians 6:9
P.S. For more helpful insights on dealing with the hurt of people leaving your church, check out my newest resource, Why People Leave Your Church (And What You Can Do About It).
Comments
When I received a negative comment on a connection card, it kept me up all night. I cried out to God about the hostile comment. It was like I heard God's voice, "Roger, you're making this about you. This is my church. When things go well, give Me the glory, when you get an unjust criticism, give that to Me too!"
By Roger Haber on December 13th, 2010
I get the war is real. I even am ready when the attack comes from those on the outside but when it comes from those we are loving on OUCH!
By James Shade on December 13th, 2010
Jerry, Mike and Dave- thanks for the helpful comments! Good stuff! Keep'm coming guys - I love your comments! Nelson
By Nelson Searcy on December 13th, 2010
Thanks for your always helpful insight. ;) You're so right. Our desire for 100% positive response so often keeps us from seeing the blessing of God right under our noses. Just got to learn what we can from the response, change what we need to and move on!
By David H Peterson on December 13th, 2010
Excellent timing. Evaluations when you do them weekly as Nelson recommends helps toughen you up and straighten things up. Even seasonal multiple service do allow for mid-course adjustments. One question to toss out to you. When do you evaluate seasonal events? It will be a year before improvements can be made. You are right on with this piece! I love it!
By Mike Tracy on December 13th, 2010
Great comments. If I might add one that is always helpful to me personally... I give it back to the Father. Often there is more going on in the situation than I know about. I ask Him what, if anything I need to do with it, and leave it there. Jesus said this would happen and he says what to do about it.
By jerry Conner on December 13th, 2010
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