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The Kidmin Podcast

Author: Kenny Conley

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The Kidmin Podcast is for children’s and family ministry leaders who want to lead with clarity, confidence, and health—without feeling overwhelmed. Each episode delivers practical ideas, honest conversations, and real-world strategies to help you build strong volunteer teams, create meaningful environments for kids, partner well with parents, and lead ministry that actually lasts.

Hosted by Kenny Conley, the Kidmin Podcast blends experience, encouragement, and actionable insight—whether you’re leading a large team, a small ministry, or doing everything yourself. Expect episodes that are thoughtful, useful, and grounded in what’s actually happening in churches today.

If you’re passionate about helping kids know Jesus and want to lead your ministry well, this podcast is for you.

7 Episodes
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VBS is coming, and most of the stress is not about the theme, it is about the systems.In this episode of the Kidmin Podcast, Kenny Conley welcomes his guest, Allegra Collins, former kidmin leader at Mariners Church and current preschool curriculum developer at Awana. Together, they unpack what it really takes to plan and execute a great VBS from an operations perspective, whether you have 50 kids or 2,000.You will hear practical ideas like building a single master spreadsheet, color-coding tasks by urgency, delegating to key leaders early (think January and February), creating volunteer roles for the weeks before and after VBS, and preparing a “VBS binder” so everything lives in one place during event week. They also talk budget basics, registration timing, schedule planning, and why the weekend after VBS matters for connecting families and recruiting ongoing volunteers.00:00 Intro and first guest: Allegra Collins01:10 Allegra’s background: campuses, Awana, two under two01:23 Mariners connection and launching five campuses post-COVID02:50 Why VBS operations matters (and how big it can get)03:19 Allegra’s VBS memories and what changed behind the scenes07:24 If you do nothing else: one spreadsheet and start early09:01 Turning VBS into a task list you can reuse every year10:40 Prioritizing prep work and color-coding urgency12:21 Staffing beyond kidmin: security, first aid, photo, tech13:16 Recruiting pre-week and post-week volunteers15:31 Delegation and building a coach team (even for small churches)16:36 When to start meeting: January and February vision + roles18:05 Why empowering leaders makes VBS better (and backup coverage)22:29 Budget basics: attendance goals, charge vs free, per-kid costs26:18 Donation lists, gift cards, and scholarships28:15 Designing schedules: space, backups, travel time, flexibility31:05 Quick-fire hacks: margin on day one, easiest rotations first32:31 The VBS binder: central playbook for leaders and rotations33:35 Registration timing: open early, close 2 to 4 weeks out34:58 Incentives for early registration and culture change35:02 Connect VBS to the weekend: celebration, next steps, retention36:34 VBS as a volunteer recruitment tool teaser37:16 Wrap-up and what is coming next (articles and future bundle)
In episode 6 of the Kidmin Podcast, Kenny Conley talks about something most kids ministry leaders rarely plan for but deal with every single week: subs.Too often, volunteer recruiting is treated as a simple yes-or-no question. When someone says no to weekly serving, we take the loss and move on. But what if a no to weekly serving could become a yes to something else?In this episode, Kenny introduces the idea of building the bench and explains why a healthy, intentional sub strategy is essential for sustainable kids ministry. From predictable call-outs to protecting your weekends, this conversation reframes how leaders think about subs, flexibility, and playing the long game with volunteers.🎯 In this episode:Why volunteer recruiting should not be a binary yes-or-no askHow to turn “no” into a different kind of yesWhy subs are not uncommitted volunteersThe difference between a full roster and full coverageWhy overstaffing is not the best solutionHow to predict call-outs and plan aheadBuilding a healthy bench that supports your startersCreating margin, longevity, and joy for your volunteer teamIf you are tired of scrambling every weekend and want a more intentional approach to volunteer leadership, this episode is for you.
In this episode of the Kidmin Podcast, Kenny Conley tackles one of the most overlooked problems in volunteer recruiting: vagueness.Many kids ministry leaders feel desperate for volunteers but struggle to answer a simple question: How many do we actually need? When the need is unclear, recruiting feels overwhelming, progress feels invisible, and every “no” feels personal.In this episode, Kenny walks through a simple, practical exercise that helps you clarify your real volunteer need, turn vague frustration into measurable goals, and build a realistic plan to get fully staffed without burning out.🎯 In this episode:Why vague volunteer needs create discouragementHow clarity builds confidence in recruitingA simple 10–15 minute exercise to calculate your real needHow to count weekly, every-other-week, and monthly volunteers accuratelyTurning a big volunteer gap into achievable stepsWhy knowing your number changes everythingIf volunteer recruiting feels overwhelming, this episode will help you regain clarity, confidence, and momentum.
Episode 4 builds on the ongoing conversation about volunteer scheduling by shifting from philosophy to practical execution. Kenny Conley shares three big ideas designed to help Kidmin leaders reduce stress, save time, and bring clarity to one of the most demanding parts of ministry leadership.This episode focuses on moving away from reactive, week-to-week scheduling and toward healthier systems that serve both leaders and volunteers. It’s about creating margin, setting better expectations, and building structures that make consistency possible over the long haul.Key Topics CoveredWhy week-to-week scheduling creates unnecessary pressureThe benefits of scheduling volunteers a month at a timeHow monthly scheduling prevents volunteers from falling through the cracksUsing templates to build predictable, repeatable schedulesWhy consistency in rooms and age groups mattersThe hidden cost of constantly moving reliable volunteersThe problem with chasing confirmationsSetting new expectations around auto-confirming consistent volunteersHow reminders replace confirmationsWhy scheduling feels heavy—and how to give it awayEmpowering trusted volunteers to help manage the scheduleCreating systems that free leaders to focus on what matters mostPractical TakeawaysSchedule at least one month ahead instead of week to weekBuild templates around weekly and every-other-week volunteersAuto-confirm consistent volunteers and stop chasing green check marksCommunicate clear expectations around availability and blackout datesProtect volunteer consistency by keeping them in the same roomsIdentify trusted volunteers who can help carry the scheduling loadUse systems that create margin, not stressFinal EncouragementVolunteer scheduling doesn’t have to be a weekly crisis. When Kidmin leaders move further ahead, set clearer expectations, and share the load, scheduling becomes a tool for health rather than a source of burnout. Small system changes can unlock hours of time—and create better experiences for kids and volunteers alike.HELPFUL LINKS:Kidmin Websitehttps://kidmin.comSubscribe to the Kidmin Weekly emailhttps://kidmin.comEmail us your topic ideasmailto:hello@kidmin.comCHAPTERS:00:00 Welcome & why scheduling feels overwhelming04:30 Big Idea #1: Stop scheduling week to week12:30 Why consistency and monthly planning matter18:30 Big Idea #2: Stop chasing confirmations26:30 Big Idea #3: Give your schedule away35:30 Final encouragement & next steps
Episode 3 builds on the previous conversation about volunteer schedules and discipleship by offering practical, real-world strategies to help kids ministry leaders move volunteers toward higher consistency and deeper ownership.Kenny and Nick address common barriers—like one-service churches and Sunday school structures—and share ideas that have worked in real ministries, even in difficult contexts. This episode is about leadership courage, vision casting, and doing what’s best for kids over what’s easiest for systems.Key Topics CoveredRecap: Why volunteer schedules reflect discipleship philosophyIdentifying real vs. perceived “immovable” obstaclesCreative solutions for churches with one serviceUsing a volunteer service as a pathway to growthNavigating Sunday school and adult group conflictsWhy consistency increases relational discipleshipMoving from once-a-month or every-other-week to weeklySetting weekly service as the new standardHow to talk to existing volunteers about changeWhy losing volunteers isn’t always a lossBuilding momentum one room or service at a timeCelebrating stories that reinforce weekly commitmentPractical TakeawaysDecide what the new standard is before offering optionsRecruit new volunteers directly into weekly rolesMove existing volunteers through personal conversationsStart small: one room, one service, one age groupTell stories that highlight the impact of consistencyCreate meaningful roles for those who can’t serve weeklyFinal EncouragementIncreased frequency and consistency create more opportunities for discipleship, trust, and life change. Moving volunteers toward weekly service takes effort—but the fruit is worth it.Connect With UsQuestions or want help thinking through your volunteer strategy?Email Kenny@kidmin.com or Nick@kidmin.comMore Kidmin Podcast episodes coming soon.
In episode 2 of the Kidmin Podcast, Kenny Conley and Nick Blevins dive into a topic every kids ministry leader wrestles with: volunteer scheduling.From once-a-month rotations to complicated multi-week schedules, Kenny and Nick explore why the way we schedule volunteers may say more about our philosophy of ministry and discipleship than we realize. Drawing from real conversations at the Children’s Pastors Conference, they discuss the tension between making volunteering “easier” and creating the most effective discipleship environment for kids.This episode isn’t about quick fixes—it’s about mindset, leadership conviction, and asking better questions that lead to healthier ministry long-term.🎯 Topics include:Weekly vs. monthly volunteer schedulesWhy consistency matters for discipleshipThe real reasons churches choose complex rotationsHow attendance trends affect kids ministry strategyA challenge for leaders heading into a new ministry yearIf you’re a kids ministry leader who wants to build something healthier, stronger, and more sustainable—this conversation is for you.HELPFUL LINKS:Kidmin Websitehttps://kidmin.comSubscribe to the Kidmin Weekly emailhttps://kidmin.comEmail us your topic ideasmailto:hello@kidmin.comCHAPTERS:00:00 – Welcome & CPC Recap02:05 – Ministry Boost Coaching & Why It Matters04:18 – Why Volunteer Schedules Are So Complicated06:49 – The Craziest Scheduling Models We See09:56 – What Scheduling Reveals About Discipleship12:38 – Real Church Constraints That Shape Schedules15:10 – Why Weekly Volunteers Create Better Discipleship19:05 – Changing the Mindset Before Changing the System22:19 – Practical Next Steps for Ministry Leaders23:52 – Closing & What’s Coming Next
Welcome to the very first episode of the Kidmin Podcast 🎉In this inaugural conversation, Kenny Conley and Nick Blevins kick off the Kidmin Podcast by sharing the story behind Kidmin, why this podcast exists, and what children’s ministry leaders can expect going forward. From the origins of the Kidmin community to the launch of Kidmin.com, this episode sets the foundation for a podcast designed to serve, equip, and connect kids ministry leaders everywhere.The Kidmin Podcast is built around short, focused conversations on real kids ministry topics—volunteers, systems, events, leadership, resources, and everything in between. The goal is simple: make it easy to find helpful conversations for the challenges you’re facing right now in kids ministry.If you lead in children’s ministry, family ministry, or Next Gen ministry, this podcast is for you.In this episode, we talk about:• Where the word “Kidmin” came from• Why Kidmin.com exists• What makes the Kidmin Podcast different• The vision for short, topic-driven conversations• How Kidmin is becoming a shared space for the kids ministry communityHELPFUL LINKS:Kidmin Websitehttps://kidmin.comSubscribe to the Kidmin Weekly emailhttps://kidmin.comEmail us your topic ideashello@kidmin.comCHAPTERS:* 00:00 The Launch of Kidmin.com* 07:21 The Kidmin Podcast* 14:09 Kidmin Weekly* 20:23 Free Resources and Store
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