Kevin's Blog

This is my personal blog. I regularly write about church leadership and infrastructure development, including specifics on

leadership techniques and the details of implementing systems, processes, and methods that enable the church to succeed.

Planning Center vs. TouchPoint

Planning Center vs. TouchPoint

April 07, 20264 min read

Choosing the Right System for Your Church

From “People Driven Software” to Today—What I’ve Learned Along the Way

If you’ve been around church leadership as long as I have, you’ve seen the evolution.

I remember when we first started using People Driven Software. It was PC-based. Stand-alone. And honestly? It was a huge step forward simply because it was better than nothing.

From there, many of us moved to Fellowship One. Then came Church Community Builder. Each step along the way felt like progress—more capability, more connection, more insight.

And then came Planning Center.

At some point, it seemed like everyone was using it. And for good reason.

Now, more recently, I’ve found myself in conversations with churches exploring (or already using) TouchPoint Church Management Software. And the question comes up:

How do these two systems compare—and which one should we choose?

Let me answer that from the perspective of someone who’s worked with a lot of Executive Pastors, in a lot of churches, over a lot of years.

It’s Not Just Software—It’s Infrastructure

Before we compare features, let’s be clear about something.

This isn’t really a software decision.

It’s an infrastructure decision.

As Executive Pastors, we’re not just trying to “manage data.” We’re trying to:

  • Create clarity

  • Support ministry at scale

  • Enable better decision-making

  • Build systems that actually work

So the real question isn’t, “Which software is better?”

It’s:

Which system best supports the level of clarity and infrastructure your church is ready for?

Why Planning Center Took Over

Let’s start with what most of us know.

Planning Center is, without question, the most widely adopted church management platform I see today.

And it’s easy to understand why.

It’s intuitive

You can hand it to a volunteer and they’ll figure it out.

It’s modular

Need check-in? Add it.
Need giving? Turn it on.
Need service planning? It’s excellent.

It helps ministry happen

This is the big one.

Planning Center doesn’t get in the way. It actually accelerates ministry execution:

  • Scheduling volunteers

  • Planning services

  • Managing registrations

  • Communicating with teams

And for many churches, that’s exactly what they need.

Where Planning Center Starts to Strain

But here’s what I’ve observed over time.

As churches grow—especially into that 400, 500, 700+ range—the questions begin to change.

It’s no longer just:

  • “Who’s serving this Sunday?”

Now it’s:

  • “Who’s actually connected?”

  • “Who’s drifting?”

  • “Where is discipleship really happening?”

  • “What does engagement look like across our church?”

And this is where Planning Center can start to feel… a little limited.

Not because it’s bad. It’s not.

But because it was designed primarily to run ministry, not necessarily to analyze and interpret it at a deeper level.

Enter TouchPoint

This is where TouchPoint Church Management Software enters the conversation.

And it’s a very different animal.

TouchPoint is not primarily about helping you schedule a volunteer.

It’s about helping you understand your church.

It’s database-driven

Everything flows through a central system.

It’s highly customizable

You can track just about anything you want.

It’s built for reporting and insight

This is where it separates itself.

You can begin to answer questions like:

  • Who hasn’t attended in the last 6 weeks?

  • Which first-time guests are now connected to groups?

  • Where are people stalling in the assimilation process?

In other words:

TouchPoint helps you see what’s actually happening beneath the surface.

But Let Me Be Clear…

TouchPoint is not for everyone.

In fact, for some churches, it would be a mistake.

Why?

Because it requires something many churches don’t yet have:

Ownership

You need someone who:

  • Understands systems

  • Thinks in terms of process

  • Values clean, consistent data

  • Is willing to invest time in setup and maintenance

In your world (and mine), that’s often the Executive Pastor.

Without that?

TouchPoint becomes frustrating quickly.

The Real Comparison

Let me simplify this as much as I can.

Planning Center helps you:

Run ministry

  • Plan services

  • Schedule people

  • Communicate efficiently

  • Stay organized week to week

TouchPoint helps you:

Understand and scale ministry

  • Track engagement over time

  • Identify gaps in discipleship

  • Analyze trends

  • Make better strategic decisions

So… Which One Should You Choose?

Here’s the answer I typically give in coaching conversations.

If your church is:

  • Under 400–500

  • Volunteer-driven

  • Focused on execution and simplicity

Go with Planning Center. You’ll get quick adoption and immediate value.

If your church is:

  • Growing and feeling complexity

  • Asking deeper questions about engagement

  • Ready to invest in systems and structure

Take a serious look at TouchPoint. But only if you’re ready to own it.

My Recommendation (From Experience)

After all these years—from People Driven Software to today—here’s where I’ve landed:

Start with simplicity. Move toward clarity.

Planning Center is often the right starting point.

But there may come a time when your church needs more than tools.

It needs a system.

It needs visibility.

It needs clarity.

And when that time comes, TouchPoint is worth serious consideration.

One Final Thought for Executive Pastors

This isn’t about software.

This is about your role.

You are the:

  • Infrastructure Champion

  • Clarity Champion

Whatever system you choose…

Make sure it helps you do both.

Because at the end of the day, the goal isn’t better data.

It’s better ministry.

Founder of Executive Pastor Online, passionate about what Jesus calls us to do through the local church.

Kevin Stone

Founder of Executive Pastor Online, passionate about what Jesus calls us to do through the local church.

Back to Blog

© 2026 Executive Pastor Online. All Rights Reserved.