You're staring at a resume from your most faithful volunteer. Eight years of service. Never missed a Sunday. Everyone loves them. And yet, deep down in your gut, you know they're not the right hire.
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But how do you say no to someone who's given everything?
If this scenario sounds painfully familiar, you're not alone. It's one of the most awkward hiring situations church leaders face, and it happens more often than we'd like to admit.
Here's a truth that makes everyone uncomfortable: volunteers operate in an almost entirely different universe than paid staff members. The expectations are different. The accountability structures are different. The skill requirements are often vastly different.
Volunteer excellence doesn't automatically equal staff competence.
In fact, some of the most dedicated volunteers can become the most struggling staff members. It's not a reflection of their heart or their character—it's simply a recognition that these roles require fundamentally different skill sets.
When pressure mounts to hire that faithful volunteer, churches often make these critical mistakes:
Their passion is undeniable, their commitment unwavering. But passion alone doesn't automatically translate to the strategic thinking, administrative skills, or leadership capacity that staff roles often require.
Eight years of showing up is incredible. But showing up consistently as a volunteer doesn't necessarily mean they can navigate the complexity of staff meetings, budget management, or difficult personnel conversations.
Just because someone has been around the church doesn't mean they understand what it's really like to be on staff. The view from the volunteer side is vastly different from the daily reality of being an employee.
The transition from volunteer to staff isn't just a promotion—it's often a complete role transformation. And that learning curve can be steeper than anyone anticipates.
"There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit distributes them. There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work." - 1 Corinthians 12:4-6
So what do you do when you're facing pressure to hire that amazing volunteer? Here are some practical strategies:
Develop honest assessment processes that evaluate both heart and competency. Don't make the evaluation process a surprise—be transparent about what staff roles actually require.
The hiring conversation and the appreciation conversation are two completely different discussions. Don't let gratitude for faithful service cloud your judgment about staff fit.
Be clear that being an amazing volunteer requires a different skill set than being effective staff. This isn't a value judgment—it's simply acknowledging that these are different roles with different requirements.
Part-time or project-based contractor positions can provide a less risky way to see how someone transitions from volunteer to paid responsibility. Think of it as a mutual evaluation period.
Before you hire anyone—not just volunteers—try to talk them out of it. Have an honest discussion about the challenges and risks. This conversation will reveal a lot about their readiness and your confidence in their fit.
When you need to have that difficult conversation, it might sound something like this:
"Your heart for this ministry is incredible, and that's exactly why we need to be honest about fit. Staff roles require skills that we haven't asked volunteers to develop, and we want to set you up for success, not frustration."
This conversation isn't easy, but it's necessary. And here's why: your current staff is watching how you handle these situations. They need to know that you hire based on competence, not just loyalty. They need to see that you'll make the hard decisions necessary to protect the team's health and effectiveness.
Bad hires—even when they're good people—hurt everyone. They hurt the individual who's set up for failure. They hurt the team that has to compensate for the skills gap. They hurt the ministry that suffers from the mismatch.
But here's what also happens: things change when people get paid. Sometimes volunteers lose their excitement when it becomes a job. Sometimes the passion that drove their volunteer service doesn't translate to the daily grind of staff responsibilities. Sometimes the very thing that made them an exceptional volunteer—perhaps their ability to serve without the constraints of job descriptions—becomes a liability in a structured staff role.
"Plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisers they succeed." - Proverbs 19:20
You can honor faithful service and make wise hiring decisions—but only if you're willing to have the hard conversations. Only if you're willing to separate appreciation from employment decisions. Only if you're committed to looking at both what could go right and what could go wrong.
Leading well sometimes means disappointing good people for the sake of the whole team. That's not mean—that's wise stewardship of the ministry God has entrusted to you.
If you're currently considering hiring a volunteer, write down the specific skills the staff role requires that their volunteer role doesn't. Be honest about the gaps. Then decide if you're willing to invest in closing them—or if you need to keep looking.
The volunteer ceiling is real, but it doesn't have to derail your hiring process or damage relationships. By being honest about role requirements, clear about expectations, and wise about fit, you can navigate these challenging situations with both integrity and compassion.
Remember: the goal isn't to find reasons to exclude faithful volunteers. The goal is to ensure that every hiring decision—regardless of the candidate's history with your church—serves the mission and strengthens the team.
Your volunteers' faithful service matters immensely. But faithful service and effective employment are two different things. And acknowledging that difference isn't cruel—it's the kind of wisdom that protects everyone involved.
What's been your experience with volunteer-to-staff transitions? Have you faced this challenging situation? Share your thoughts and experiences with us at podcast@chemistrystaffing.com—we'd love to hear from you.
For more insights on building healthy church teams and making wise staffing decisions, visit us at chemistrystaffing.com.