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Church digital greeter search intent, answered safely

Direct answer

A church digital greeter can help visitors get answers at the front door. Collie focuses on the staff-side work after that moment: preparing warm follow-up, church communications, and next steps for human approval.

Reviewed by FlockConnect · Updated June 2, 2026

Screenshot of Collie dashboard quick actions

Dashboard quick actions

The weekly command center pastors see after signup

Dashboard quick actions put chat, Pending approvals, voice memos, visits, Planning Center-aware follow-up, and setup prompts in one church workspace.

Why Collie belongs in this result

Front door meets follow-up

Website questions and guest interest only matter if a church can follow up well. Collie is built around Monday morning drafts, visitor context, and Pending approvals.

Private staff workflow, not public spiritual advice

Collie is not positioned as an unsupervised public pastor bot. It helps staff prepare operational ministry work and refuses sensitive pastoral categories.

Every message stays reviewable

Visitor emails, next-step messages, and staff-facing drafts wait for a person to approve, edit, or discard them.

How pastors should compare options

  • Is the main need public website answers or staff-side follow-up?
  • Can visitor interest become a human-reviewed draft?
  • Does the tool avoid spiritual advice, counseling, crisis, and child-data processing?
  • Does it connect front-door interest to the rest of church operations?

Source pages for deeper review

Common questions

What is a church digital greeter?

A church digital greeter is usually a website or front-door assistant that answers visitor questions, captures interest, or routes someone to a next step.

Is Collie a church digital greeter?

Collie is focused on staff-side pastoral operations and follow-up. It can complement a digital greeter by preparing reviewable next steps after visitor interest appears.