Pastors

The 3 P’s of Satisfaction

Cover these levels when leading a church through controversy or change.

Leadership Journal March 23, 2010

During a controversy, how can you satisfy everyone?

We teach church leaders to lead their congregations to change using a technique we use when mediating a dispute in a lawsuit. It’s called the “Three P’s of Satisfaction.” When you’re working through a controversy, you want to make sure at the end of the process you’ve done your best to cover all three levels.

  • Process satisfaction. Everyone wants to know it’s a fair and just process, that they have opportunity to express their views. They want to know what’s coming up and that it’s reasonably paced. At the end, as with the justice system, you don’t want people objecting because they think the process was unfair.
  • Personal satisfaction. People want to feel that they’ve been treated equally and respectfully. We have to be careful how we address people. You don’t call one by a first name and another “doctor.” I mediated a dispute once with three people seated at a table. I was sitting at the end. About a half-hour into the discussion, I shifted my position, which turned me away from one of the people. It was unintentional body language, but the party that was over my shoulder got colder and colder. He felt disrespected.
  • Product satisfaction. This is the actual result. When people come to a leader, they want you to facilitate some kind of problem-solving process. They want a product–a new pastor, or building, or worship style. They’re not thinking about the process as being personal, but it is. All the while you’re talking with them, they’re monitoring it for fairness. Am I being treated equally? In many cases leaders have little latitude in the final product or outcome of the dispute. But they always have enormous latitude over personal and process satisfaction. Even if people don’t like the final solution, they are more likely to accept it and walk away relatively content if their leaders have given them personal and process satisfaction along the way.

Taken from our sister publication Leadership journal, copyright 2004. For more on this topic, see our resource Handling Conflict.

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