<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=2300026853549930&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Skip to content
Staff Hiring

The Real Cost of Putting the Wrong Person in the Right Role

Discover why hiring for fit is the crucial invisible key to fostering a healthy church culture and avoiding the pitfalls and costs of a bad hire in this insightful blog post.

Wrong Person, Bad Hire, Right Role, Church Staffing

Hiring for Fit: The Invisible Key to a Healthy Church Culture

In today's church staffing climate, hiring decisions carry a weight that goes far beyond experience and credentials. Every hire impacts both team dynamics and the pervasive church culture, which is why hiring for cultural fit is crucial.

The Resume Mirage: Credentials vs Culture

An excellent resume might scream superstar, listing remarkable past roles and responsibilities, but what may be missing is how an individual handles tension, gives feedback, or behaves when no one is looking. Credentials may shine on paper, but how will the individual mesh within the unique culture of your church?

Here's a testing question: Are we attempting to hire a portfolio or a person?

The High Stakes of A Bad Hire

The right role plus the wrong person often equals chaos. A bad hire does more than just disrupt the organizational chart – they wound people too. Over time, a single person out of sync with the culture can cause high-performing staff to disengage. Meetings can start to feel fake, vision loses traction, and trust within leadership and staff can dwindle.

Here's the sobering truth: repairing cracked trust is tricky and can be very costly. Often, complete restoration is a long, complex journey.

Navigating the Hiring Maze

So, how do you go about ensuring you hire for fit, not just doctrine and duties? Here are few pointers:

  • Get real cultural references – not just the ones listed on the resume.
  • Ask behavior-based questions during interviews. These could be scenarios about handling conflict or collaborating with a team.
  • Use team-based interviews to see how candidates interact across different roles.
  • Never ignore red flags during discernment. Your gut instinct is usually right.

Finally, if your staff have hesitations, pause and listen. They'll be the ones working with this person daily.

The bottom line is simple: when you find a potential hire with the right skills and a fitting resume, don't rush. Look past the resume and ask deeper questions – questions that will reveal how they will fit into the unique culture to your church staff.

By investing time upfront in finding the right fit, you can avoid the pitfalls and costs of a bad hire.

If you want deeper insights into this topic, today's Healthy Church Staff Podcast episode digs into the real cost of a bad hire, and how to prevent it from happening.

Todd Rhoades

Todd Rhoades

Todd has invested over 30 years in serving churches, having served as a worship pastor for over 15 years, a church elder for more than a decade, and in various ministry leadership roles in both the business and non-profit sectors. As the original founder and developer of ChurchStaffing.com, Todd fundamentally changed the way thousands of churches search for pastors and staff on the internet. Todd is a graduate of Cedarville University, and lives in Bryan, OH with his wife, Dawn.

Latest Resources

Your Ministry Team Isn't a Family... It's a Jazz Band

Your Ministry Team Isn't a Family... It's a Jazz Band

Transform your church staff culture by exploring the powerful analogy of being a family versus a jazz band, learning how a jazz band mental...

What the Enneagram Isn’t Telling You About Your Church Staff

What the Enneagram Isn’t Telling You About Your Church Staff

Unlock the key to building a vibrant, effective church staff dynamic by understanding the Enneagram as a valuable tool, not a definitive tr...

The Addiction to Momentum-Why Some Churches Can't Stop Running

The Addiction to Momentum-Why Some Churches Can't Stop Running

Discover the dangers of church momentum addiction and how intentional stillness can lead to deeper, healthier growth in ministry - learn mo...