EP 296 – Turning Inspiration into Implementation — Turning Conference Insights into Action
Conferences can inspire, but without next steps, they often stall out as notes in a notebook. In this episode, JimBo unpacks a post-conference process used at the Replant Summit to help leaders convert big ideas into concrete action. Drawing from guidance by Andy Addis and wisdom from mentors, the episode outlines practical frameworks you can use with your team and church to go from learning to living: capture insights, choose the right priorities, start small, build accountability, and multiply impact through others.
Key Scriptures
– James 1:22 — Be doers of the word, not hearers only
– 2 Timothy 2:2 — Entrust to faithful people who will teach others
– Matthew 7:24 — Hear and do; build on the rock
– Mark 4:26–29 — Seeds start small; God gives the growth
– Exodus 18:21–22 — Jethro principle: empower capable leaders
– Psalm 127:1 — Unless the Lord builds the house
– Ephesians 4:11–12 — Equip the saints for the work of ministry
– 2 Corinthians 9:6 — Sow bountifully to reap bountifully
Big Idea: Inspiration is a gift, but transformation requires a pathway. Most people need help turning abstract ideas into concrete steps. Build rhythms that move your church, team, and discipleship relationships from information to implementation.
The Four I’s: A Pathway to Implementation
– Inspiration: “This matters.”
– Information: “Here’s what it is.”
– Invitation: “Join in. This is for you.”
– Implementation: “Here are the first steps and how we’ll do them.”
Three Phases to Move Ideas into Action
1) Inspiration to Integration
– Capture everything while it’s fresh
– Write a one-page summary of top ideas
– Filter: Does this align with our mission and people?
– File good-but-not-now ideas for later
2) Idea to Action
– Pick 1–3 priorities, not 10
– Define the “first next steps” with who, what, and when
– Shoot bullets before cannons: pilot small, then scale
– Accept God’s pace; start small and let it grow
3) Action to Multiplication
– Share what you’re learning
– Equip and empower others to carry the work
– Seek field-validated needs, not personal pet projects
– Build accountability and celebrate progress to maintain momentum
Choosing the Right Priorities
Use a simple Venn approach:
– Biggest impact on the mission
– Least additional effort required
– Most needed by your people and context
Listen to the field; it will lead you to the future.
Team, Not Solo
– “Team” doesn’t mean paid staff only; build a core of committed partners
– Avoid the whiplash of returning from conferences with 10,000 urgent ideas
– Share the why, not just the what
– Guard against burnout by distributing the work
Backcasting Workshop (for Teams)
– 10-year dreams: If nothing were an obstacle, what would faithfulness look like?
– Rank-vote to narrow to 3–5 major aspirations
– 5-year goals: measurable, actionable
– 3-year habits: culture and rhythms to support the goals
– 1-year action items: concrete projects and milestones
– Start with low beams if you’re in the fog; extend the horizon over time
The Five P’s Framework
– Prayer: Seek the Lord’s direction first
– Priority: Focus on the one thing with greatest gospel impact
– Plan: Define who, what, and when with clear dates
– People: Ministry is never solo; equip saints for the work
– Persist: Accountability, regular check-ins, peer partners, and celebration
Practical Examples
– Example plan: “Start a monthly leaders’ lunch; John schedules the first by October 15.”
– Coaching tip: If someone stalls on action, set items and don’t meet again until completed
– Sermon application: End services with a simple, doable action step
– Family discipleship: Provide take-home handles that point families to one next step
Memorable Phrases and Images
– “Shoot bullets before cannons.” Pilot before you scale
– “You can only shoot a cannon from a canoe once.”
– “Every good idea degenerates into hard work.” Be ready to persist
– “Don’t let your notebook become a graveyard of good intentions.”
Suggested Next Steps for Listeners
– Pick one idea from your last conference or sermon and define the first next step
– Identify two people to share the load and set a check-in date
– Pilot a small version this month and evaluate before you scale
– Add one clear action step to the end of your next sermon or meeting
Resources Mentioned
– Replant Summit post-conference process facilitated by Andy Addis
– Mentors: Rick Wheeler and Bob Bumgarner
Episode Takeaway
Don’t just pack a pen for your next conference. Pack a plan. Choose the one thing with the biggest gospel impact, start small, share the work, and keep sowing. God brings the growth.
conference, implementation, Replant Summit