Faith & Service
Choose your type — every one is free forever.
Your congregation — prayer wall, ministry duties, potluck recipes, church calendar.
Bible study or life group — shared resources, prayer requests, schedule.
Mission or outreach team — trip planning, volunteer coordination, updates.
How to choose the right Faith & Service setup
Create a private hub for your church, small group, or mission team. The reason these choices are separated is that every site type should lead to a different setup experience. A site for a household, classroom, club, ministry, creator, or business does not need the same onboarding prompts or the same default modules. The questions should match the way people will use the site, and the private tools should support the real work happening behind the public page.
Use the cards above as the plain-language starting point. If a choice sounds close but not perfect, start with the one that matches the main audience and adjust later. LuperIQ can keep improving the setup from there by using the selected type to shape the content, module defaults, internal links, onboarding notes, and example-site guidance. That keeps the first experience friendly while still giving the site enough structure to become useful after launch.
What should be different by site type
- The onboarding questions should ask for the details that matter to this kind of group or business, not a generic business-only form.
- The public page should speak to the people who will visit the site, not to the person configuring it unless the page is intentionally for admins.
- The private tools should match the expected work: schedules, messages, files, events, portals, bookings, payments, announcements, or shared resources.
- The admin area should make it clear where submitted information goes and how the owner or organizer can review it later.
- The example-site link should show what a real visitor experience could look like when that site type is fully built.
What LuperIQ is trying to simplify
The goal is not to make you learn a complicated platform before you can start. The goal is to translate the type of site you need into a practical setup path. For search, trust, and usability, that matters because pages should be written to the right audience, links should guide people to the next helpful step, and modules should support the job the site promised to do. When those pieces line up, the site feels less like a template and more like a working system.
Why Faith & Service needs its own path
Faith and service sites should respect the community behind them. Prayer requests, volunteer needs, meeting times, mission updates, and member communication need a calmer tone than commercial marketing pages, with permissions and clarity around who can see sensitive details.
What to check before choosing
- Pick the site type that matches the community rhythm, such as worship, small groups, mission work, prayer requests, volunteer service, or resource sharing.
- The setup should make sensitive communication feel protected while still helping members find dates, service opportunities, updates, and shared materials quickly.
How this category should keep improving
Each Faith & Service type should be reviewed as its own vertical over time. That means the setup questions, default modules, example content, media, calls to action, and admin notes should all be able to differ by type. A sports team should not inherit the same prompts as a wedding site. A classroom should not inherit the same prompts as a band. A family hub should not inherit business-only questions about services, license numbers, and pricing unless that particular setup actually needs them. Keeping those differences visible makes the product easier for people to trust because the site feels like it understands their situation.
This page is also part of the internal linking path. If a visitor lands here from search, they should be able to understand the category, choose a specific type, preview an example when one exists, and move into setup without hunting through the rest of the site. That is better for usability and better for SEO because the page has a clear purpose, helpful context, and links that match the visitor’s next decision.
The category page should stay broad enough to help a visitor choose, but specific enough to prove that the choices are not cosmetic. If two types in this category need different questions, modules, privacy rules, or public pages, the setup flow should preserve that difference.
That is how the first click becomes a better first setup instead of a generic form with a different label.
Start with the closest match now, then tune the details once the site has real content and real people using it.
