Church Leadership | Chemistry Staffing

The Crisis Hire That Broke Your Team

Written by Todd Rhoades | Nov 12, 2025 11:00:00 AM

Avoiding Panic Hires in Your Church Staff

Hiring under pressure, also known as a 'crisis hire' or 'panic hire', becomes tempting when church staff is overwhelmed and experiencing a shortage. However, such indiscriminate hiring usually comes fraught with consequences, which can hamper your overall church leadership credibility. Here, we explore how to identify and deter panic hires, ensuring your church maintains a well-balanced and effective team.

Recognizing the Warning Signs of a Crisis Hire

The urgency of being short-staffed often clouds clarity and incites hurried, ill-considered decisions. These hasty hires frequently bypass crucial considerations like qualifications, cultural alignment, and the potential for solely plugging the gap instead of adding long-term value. The result? A quick fix that leads to long-term problems.

Crisis hires can breed staff discontentment, especially when the hiring process lacks transparency. It may also create culture conflicts that are hard to amend and might instigate an exit-and-restart cycle. The hurting leadership credibility and wasted time, money, and emotional energy often last longer than the crisis hire's tenure.

Choosing Clarity Over Crisis in Church Staff Hiring

Steering clear of panic hires demands a measured approach, even amidst staff shortage and overwhelming workload. Slowing down, taking a deep breath, and prioritizing the 'right' hire over the 'fast' hire can make a significant difference. Using an intern or volunteer leadership to stabilize the ministry temporarily, while scouting for an appropriate full-time staff member, can be an effective strategy.

Ensure that you use clear role benchmarks and vet candidates for alignment with the church's culture and mission, rather than being swayed by charisma. Involving multiple voices in the decision could also provide diverse perspectives and form a more rounded picture of the potential hire.

If you are under pressure to hire, consider outsourcing tasks temporarily, restructuring roles, or redistributing workload internally within your current team while taking the time to find the right hire.

The Long-Term Benefit of Controlled Hiring

Ultimately, discernment should always take precedence over desperation in hiring decisions. Even if a crisis demands swift action, rushing into a hire could worsen the situation rather than resolving it.

The journey to build a balanced and effective church staff might be challenging, but realizing the risk of acting in panic and initiating preventive measures can guide the way, maintaining the integrity of your church staff and asserting your leadership credibility.

For more insights on avoiding panic hires in your church staff and sustaining a healthy team, listen in on today's Healthy Church Staff Podcast episode and explore how to handle staffing pressures the right way. Through considered decisions and strategic hires, we can foster a team that is equipped to fulfill the church's mission effectively.