Church communications is not an easy task. Many people think it's as simple as telling everyone what's going on in your church — which isn't always simple — but it's more than that.

Effective church communicators are leaders who intently love, know and understand the people who come to your church. But it doesn't stop there. They also fully understand the needs of the greater unchurched community. They have a wonderful way of connecting (through communications) the ministries that deliver appropriate solutions to the people with needs.

Church communicators don't just know how to use the tools (website, bulletin, social media, email) — they also help shape and filter the messages so a church congregation feels engaged.

If you found yourself this week saying, "Oh yeah, it's Mother's Day so we better do something for the moms," you've started to think like a church communicator.

It seems so obvious, the world knows we honor moms this Sunday. It happens every year. So the church must do or say something so that the moms feel honored. If you don't do something, they'd miss it. They're expecting it.

Church communication is about anticipating every Sunday (and other ministry days) and identifying the "groups" of people who are coming and looking forward to receiving something from your church.

Here are three ways effective church communicators think about every Sunday:

1. They consider your audience. They can identify them and group them into similarities of needs and concerns. Inside and outside of the church (wherever the reach of your church is).

2. They know their anticipated needs. Each person (or group) approaches the church with their baskets of needs, wants, goals, etc. Through surveys, studies and research, the church communicator understands and seeks to deliver solutions to those needs and paths to their goals.

3. They know what would be missed if your ministries vanished. The true test of a church is to know what people rely on from you. If it's more easily found elsewhere, the church communicator looks at those choices and determines how they are uniquely different. They help your church to be known for those differences.

Hey, this Sunday is Mother's Day! Think about what your church can deliver that a mother needs or wants. Something that she's relying on your church to uniquely deliver. Connect her on that level, and you've done the job of a good church communicator.