Archive for July, 2007
How would Toyota, one of the top car manufacturers, run a church?
While we will probably never have a definite answer, we can look at five principles that have shaped their success in the automobile industry and learn how those same principles can be applied to create a better church. These five principles published by Business 2.0 are:
- Know the limits of your brand.
Toyota launched Scion because it recognized the limitations of its existing brands. The average Toyota driver is 50, and buyers of the company’s big Lexus sedans are even older. But Scion is attracting an entirely new cadre of customers with a median age of only 35, extending Toyota’s reach to the 63 million-strong “echo boomer” generation. “You have to be who you are,” says marketing consultant John Winsor, author of Beyond the Brand. “If you’re going to switch directions, you’d better start fresh.”
For Churches: You can’t be something you are not. Your church will not appeal to everyone. Know who you appeal to, and if you need to reach an additional audience, know what must be done in order to reach them. For instance, some churches have discovered that they can appeal to a broader scope of audiences by offering multiple venues each with its own unique worship style while delivering the same message via video feed. - Making great products mean going the extra mile (or 53,000).
An old Toyota proverb goes something like this: To make a better product, get off your rear end and experience the marketplace. Charged with revamping the Sienna minivan for 2004, Toyota chief engineer Yuji Yokoya did just that. To improve on the previous Sienna—small and underpowered—Yokoya embarked on a 53,000-mile North American minivan road trip that included five cross-continent treks, visits to every Mexican state and Canadian province, and loops around Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and the Virgin Islands.
For Churches: The church experience for the staff is quite different than the church experience for the congregation and especially for first-time guests. Experience your church like someone would for the first time. Test drive it. Forget all of your familiarities with your church and its culture, and simply ask the “why” behind everything you experience. - Study their mistakes - and your own.
Mining niches pioneered by others is a Toyota specialty. In 1989, Toyota introduced its high-end Lexus line, which within three years outsold BMW and Mercedes-Benz to become the No. 1 luxury import. The company’s family-oriented Camry sedan out-Taurused the Taurus in quality and function and is still a perennial chart topper.
For Churches: You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Learn from other churches’ mistakes and successes. Learn what works and what doesn’t and build upon it. And of course, don’t stop there! Always learn from yourself. - To export quality, first export company values.
Toyota has long manufactured cars outside Japan. But to do so for Lexus, the company had to export the brand’s culture of perfection—a level of expectation that surpasses even that of the exacting mother brand. On a Toyota, for instance, a 1-millimeter gap between hood and grille is acceptable; on a Lexus, the separation can’t be thicker than an eyelash.
For Churches: Communicating your church’s vision, mission, and values will increase the quality of your workers. It will also help you better reach your goals. Purpose unifies and directs. - Act. Improve. Repeat.
Toyota president, Fujio Cho, shares the following wisdom:
- “Rather than dealing with problems neatly in our heads, we execute. If our solutions don’t work, we try something else.”
- “It’s a focus on results, where action is key.”
- “Good managers never say, ‘Do what you’re told,’ because that tells subordinates that it’s OK not to use their heads.”
- “Some people think that if they just implement our techniques, they can be as successful as we are. But those that try often fail. That’s because no mere process can turn a poor performer into a star. Rather, you have to address employees’ fundamental way of thinking. At Toyota we start with two questions: ‘Where are we wasting resources like time, people, or material?’ and ‘How can we be less wasteful?’”
For Churches: The best ideas are worthless without action. Learn to think while acting. And as you do, strive to become more efficient at it.
Those are the principles that have brought Toyota success. It’s nothing revolutionary. They simply need dedication and consistency to work.
Taken from churchrelevance.com
So maybe I should retitle this blog….I mean I am going to kind of go against that statement, “How can we find the answers, if we never ask the questions,” by the statements I am going to post next.I’m reading Velvet Elvis by Rob Bell. AWESOME book. I only have one chapter done, and I nearly wore out my little yellow highlighter.
Read on…
Let’s talk about questions. You know those little things we aren’t supposed to ask? At least I grew up thinking I should NOT ask THOSE kinds of questions, a good little church girl does as she is supposed to, right? Not think for myself, not ask hard questions, because then it would mean I was rebellious, or trying to cause trouble right? Wow, this chapter made me rethink all of that. Here are some parts of Rob Bell’s book I’d like to talk about.
“A Christian doesn’t avoid the questions, a Christian embraces them. In fact, to truly pursue the living God, we have to see the need for questions.”
“Questions are not scary.”
“What is scary is when people don’t have any.”
“What is tragic is faith that has no room for them.” (Can I maybe say religion in place of the word faith here??)
“This is why questions are so central to faith. A question by its very nature acknowledges that the person asking the question does not have all the answers. And because the person does not have all of the answers, they are looking outside of themselves for guidance.
Questions, no matter how shocking or blasphemous or arrogant or ignorant, or raw, are rooted in humility. A humility that understands that I am not God. And there is more to know.
Questions bring freedom. Freedom that I don’t have to be God and I don’t have to pretend that I have it all figured out. I can let God be
God.”
The book continues to talk about Abraham’s conversation with God when he thought God was wrong in destroying Sodom and Gomorrah. Notice God doesn’t come down on Abraham with an iron fist demanding how he could be so bold as to QUESTION GOD? (Have we ever heard this in our lives before?) God doesn’t become angry though, he actually ENGAGES Abraham.
“Maybe that is what God is looking for - people who don’t just sit there and mindlessly accept whatever comes their way.”
Even Jesus questioned God on the cross - “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Mary questioned the angel when the angel told her she would bear a son. “But how can this be! I’m a virgin!”
“Not belligerent, arrogant questions that have no respect for our maker, but naked, honest, vulnerable, raw questions, arising out of the awe that comes from engaging the living God.”
When you think of mystery, you probably think of a tv show or movie, when all is answered at the end of the show. “The Bible has an entirely different understanding of mystery. True mystery…..gives us answers that actually plunge us into even more…..questions.”

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