Mission Fog is a topic of conversation within your organization.
< Strongly Disagree
Strongly Agree >
The verbal sharing of Christ is actively and intentionally being discussed/encouraged on a consistent basis (even if methods for doing so are less clear because of context limitations).
Your organization has a statement of belief, mission statement, and core documents that explicitly describe its full mission.
Staff members know and believe the core tenets of your full mission.
Supporters are in alignment with the core tenets of your full mission.
Your key donors are vocal and engaged in keeping you accountable to remaining on mission. (For example, they speak up and chal- lenge leadership if something does not clearly articulate or embody your values.)
Board members and staff sign a statement of faith before joining the board/ organization.
You have consistency in your messaging and there is clarity in communicating your full mission.
Board meetings are focused on culture, mission, and impact, and the board is aware of its role as guardians of the full mission.
You measure metrics capturing the entirety of your mission, not just inputs.
Prayer is fully integrated in decision making, in meeting structure, and as a weekly or daily discipline for staff.
You have hiring practices that go beyond technical abilities and assess a candidate’s full mission fit.
Prospective board members are interviewed by multiple board members and formally assessed for their personal faith and full missional alignment.
Compared to a year ago, staff and board members are showing increasing fruit in their lives (e.g., love, patience, kindness, etc., Galatians 5: 22– 23) as evidence of the Holy Spirit at work in them.
Church partnerships are a constant source of consideration for your organization.
There is a clearly articulated plan to create a culture that reinforc- es your identity, and you have daily or weekly rituals that reinforce your organization’s values and mission.
If your leader suddenly left, you would not be concerned about the mission continuing.
A large percentage of your staff would leave the organization if you experienced Mission Fog.
You have said no to a “good opportunity” in the last two years because it did not fit with your identity and full mission.
You have a succession plan in place that is actively cultivating internal candidates for leadership, and there are known, potential future Mission True leaders.
Email:
Outward-Focused Network PO Box 1062 Duvall, WA 98019
E: info@outwardfocusednetwork.com