// The format
Learn.
Do.
Help.
Repeat until everything ships. Nobody watches. Everybody works.
Twenty minutes. Expert level. No warm-up act.
One practitioner takes the room through exactly one problem: what changed, what works now, how to ship it. No slides that could have been an email. No preamble about their journey.
Laptops open. Everyone implements it live on their own church, at the same time.
You don't take notes. You do the thing. The person next to you is doing the same thing on their church. Twenty-nine other capable people are within arm's reach when you get stuck.
A real church on the big screen. Thirty marketers fix it together. Yours can be next.
One church submits a page, a listing, a campaign. The room takes it apart and puts it back together. Then someone else's church. Then yours, if you want it.
Two days in the room
Day One
- 01.Welcome
- 02.The Future of Church Marketing
- 03.Marketing Basics for the Above Average Communications Team
- 04.Communication (it's not what you've been told)
- 05.AI Search & Church Discovery
- 06.SEO, AEO & GEO for LLM's
- 07.Prompts
- 08.Content Strategy
- 09.Local SEO and Google My Business
- 10.Analytics & Attribution — Google Search Console, GA4, SEMrush, Profound and More
- 11.Executive Marketing Leadership (how to get leadership on your side for support and money)
- 12.Building a High-Performance Marketing Team
- 13.Nice photo. Now what? Social Media Strategy — Every feed is missing a matrix. We built it.
- 14.PR / Websites / Email and Paid Strategies
Phase 02 / Collaborative
Day Two: The Lab
The Shark Tank
2–3 minutes each, slides and all. Pitch your biggest marketing problem. Then the whole room works on the fix with you. Iron sharpens iron. Everyone goes home with answers to their biggest challenge.
THE FORMAT
- [1] 2–3 min pitch
- [2] Room builds the fix
- [3] Everyone leaves with answers
Closing Quick Fire Questions
No slide decks. No prep time. Just real questions, real answers, and the thing you actually came to fix.
If that sounds like a conference to you, we haven't described it well enough.