Written by Smartech Daily Team
This article has been originally published on Smartech Daily and republished at Dataconomy with permission.
Over the years, conversations about digital transformation have focused primarily on businesses. It’s about how retailers embraced e-commerce, banks launched mobile apps, or healthcare providers digitized patient experiences. The increasingly connected world has seen entire industries reimagine how they interact with customers.
While churches might never have been a big part of the conversation, they have been touched by the same forces. Church-goers have adopted technology as much as anyone else, and with it, their expectations have changed. Those shifting expectations have forced churches to face the same questions popping up across every sector. How should they communicate with members? How could they simplify administrative tasks? What role should technology play in engagement, giving, and community building?
The growth of church technology platform Tithely offers a useful window into how those questions have evolved. Today, the company serves more than 53,000 churches worldwide, and it shows just how big a role digital tools now play in supporting both ministry and day-to-day operations.
One of the most visible changes has occurred in giving. Traditional donations were tied to physical attendance. But as people moved toward digital payments, churches found themselves serving congregants who rarely carried cash and managed much of their finances through smartphones.
“If I can use my smartphone to order a coffee, why can’t I use my smartphone to give to church?”
— Dean Sweetman, Co-Founder & Co-CEO, Tithely
Online giving emerged as an answer to that challenge, but it quickly became clear that donations represented only one piece of a much larger transformation.
The same people who wanted the convenience of digital giving also expected easy access to information and communication. Church leaders, meanwhile, were looking for better ways to manage administrative responsibilities while maintaining meaningful connections with their communities. As a result, technology adoption within churches expanded well beyond payments.
Many organizations now rely on digital tools to manage their events, communicate with members, maintain websites, coordinate volunteers, and provide mobile access to important information. Rather than existing as separate functions, these activities form part of a connected digital experience that extends beyond Sunday services.
This same thing has happened in other industries, with organizations adopting technology to solve a specific problem only to discover that isolated solutions can create new challenges. This has caused many sectors to move toward integrated systems that bring related functions together. Churches are no exception.
Tithely’s own growth is the same. The company initially gained attention for digital giving, but it has since expanded into a broader platform that includes everything from church management tools to websites, apps, events, and communication.
Digital transformation is sometimes framed as a move away from personal interaction, but it can also strengthen engagement rather than replace it. Administrative efficiency can free up time for ministry, while better communication can help people stay connected between services. It also simplifies participation for people whose schedules or circumstances limit their ability to engage through traditional channels.
The idea is to create more opportunities for connection, not to digitize for the sake of it. The most successful platforms are not necessarily those that introduce the most features, but those that help organizations remove friction from activities that support their mission.
For churches, that mission remains fundamentally human. Technology cannot replace relationships, community, or spiritual leadership, but it can make it easier for churches to communicate, organize, and engage with those they serve.
More than a decade ago, digital giving was still a relatively new concept for many churches. Today, organizations are increasingly looking for technology that supports everything from communication and events to administration and engagement. Tithely’s growth from a giving platform into a broader church technology ecosystem mirrors that evolution, offering a glimpse into how churches are adapting to a world where digital interaction is no longer the exception, but the expectation.





