A
resource for corporations & other businesses
that want to make a commitment
to social responsibility
by Jayne Cravens
via coyotecommunications.com
& coyoteboard.com
(same web site)
Employee Volunteering Initiatives:
Different Approaches & Keys to Success
- as a group or individually, or a mix of both, for one
nonprofit or school or several different ones
- just once or on an ongoing basis at one program over
several weeks or months
- during work hours (if the company allows for such) or
outside of work hours (evenings, weekends and lunch hours)
- onsite at an organization
- online, remotely, either from their office (if the company
allows such) or from home (virtual volunteering)
- under the auspices of the company, reporting their
volunteering hours to the company's human resources office
or whichever company department is in charge of employee
volunteering
- entirely on their own, outside of work hours, without any
reporting back to the company about their activities
Here's what all these different ways of
employee volunteering can look like:
- The staff of the facilities department spending six hours
on one Friday doing minor repairs and other work at a space
that is or will be used for homeless families
- The staff of the marketing department spending 20 hours
over four weeks during regular work hours putting together
the annual report for a local nonprofit theater
- An administrative assistant helping at a Saturday
community farmer's market
- The web manager redesigning a website for a local
nonprofit so that it's accessible for people with
disabilities / differently abled users
- A corporate Vice President serving on the board of
directors of a local nonprofit
- A company nurse serving on the county government's public
health advisory board
- An employee in your human resources department designing
and leading a staff retreat for a nonprofit
- A senior manager spending his or her last six months while
employed at the company, before retirement, working at a
nonprofit
- The IT staff building a new, fully accessible web site for
a school
- A group of employees participating in a Habitat for
Humanity build or helping with National Night Out
Which of these activities happen during
work hours? That's up to your company's policies.
Which of these activities happen during
work hours, and employees still get paid for these hours?
That's up to your company's policies.
Which of these activities does the
company get to take credit for ("our company's employees
contributed 500 hours of volunteering to local nonprofits!")?
That depends on your discussions and agreements with your
employees.
Companies and businesses can support
volunteering by employees at nonprofits, charities, NGOs,
schools, etc., by:
- Educating employees about volunteering opportunities in
the community, but leaving it entirely up to employees
themselves as to whether or not they contact an organization
to participate in such; no volunteer signups are done
through the employer but, rather, employees express interest
in volunteering directly to the agency that hosts volunteers
(the nonprofit, the charity, the school, etc.).
- Officially partnering with a mission-based organization
regarding a volunteering activity, appointing an employee as
the main contact and asking employees to sign up with that
main contact person at their company - that contact person
liaisons with volunteer host organizations.
- Creating a policy that allows employees to volunteer
during work hours and creating a process that approves
organizations supported by such employee volunteering,
tracks projects, hours and impact, etc. - this can be paid
time or unpaid time, depending on the policy.
To encourage employees to volunteer at
nonprofits, charities, NGOs, schools, etc., companies don't
have
to create a formal employee volunteering program, one that
happens during work hours or that requires employees to
volunteer together or even to get approval for volunteering.
Some companies choose, instead, to just encourage employees to
volunteer, on their own time, and provide links to
volunteer matching
web sites and apps (volunteer opportunity databases), or
let employees know about specific one-day events, like a
Habitat for Humanity build or a beach cleanup. Companies may
invite employees to write about their volunteering activities
in the employee newsletter, but not organize employee
volunteering tasks. The company can still brag about how its
employees are about the communities in which they live, but
has to be careful about what it, the company, takes credit for
in terms of what volunteers do and what they accomplish.
Your company may create a policy that, if
employees are going to volunteer during work hours, or if
employees are going to volunteer as employees of your company,
that they must get prior approval from your company for the
organization they want to help. If so, you need to have a
written policy for what criteria you will use to determine the
which organizations are and are not acceptable. For most
companies that have a written policy, the limitation is
volunteering for organizations that are registered as
(c)(3) nonprofits with the state and
federal government, and with community programs coordinated
and hosted by government agencies (state parks, a police
department's National Night Out event, etc.). With this
limitation, volunteering with religious organizations
(churches, temples, mosques, etc.) or political groups as an
employee volunteer is prohibited under the auspices of the
official company CSR program - but an employee volunteering
with these groups on their own time is perfectly acceptable
and appropriate.
If a company has a a written policy
regarding official employee volunteering, the company needs to
remind staff that employees are absolutely free to volunteer
on their own time, in any way they choose, with any
organization they choose, and are not required at all to
report that volunteering to the company. The company also
needs to remind employees that they are absolutely free to
opt-out of a volunteering activity organizations for their
office or department. No one should ever be required to
participate in an employee volunteering program.
The company may want employees to report their hours and may
want the hosting organization to evaluate the impact of the
volunteers' contributions. Some employees are happy to do
their volunteering under the official banner of their
employer, with their employer counting their volunteering
hours and issuing a press release about it. Some are not at
all - they see their volunteering as something entirely
separate from their employee identity, and if they do it
outside of work hours, see no reason to tell their employer
about it. Keep these range of preferences in mind as your
company creates activities that encourage employees to
volunteer and strategizes about how it will talk about it -
and
I would love to help your
company create these activities at your company.
Writing your official employee
volunteering policies
Finding examples of employee volunteering
policies from a range of businesses is oh-so-easy: simply go
to
Google
or
Bing and
search for
examples corporate volunteer policy
(no quotes)
What your policy will be depends on a
great many things, such as whether or not you want employees
volunteering under the auspices of your company, as employees
of the company and whether or not you want employees to
volunteering on company time.
One policy you absolutely must have: you must have a
policy about using photos employees take during their
volunteering service that you want to use your own
publications, including your web site. Your company must get
permission from every person in any photo that your
employees take while volunteering and that you want to use
on your web site or in any online or paper publication.
I
offer a range consulting and administrative services
regarding employee volunteering programs, including
developing your official volunteering policies.
How to find volunteering projects
for employees
Believe it or not, the vast majority of nonprofit
organizations are not saying, "Gosh, we have all this work
laying around that just anyone could do if they would simply
walk through the door..." Nonprofits, charities, schools and
other organizations, more often-than not, need volunteers
with specific skills, experience and availability. In fact,
even if one of your executives is going to take a six month
sabbatical and wants to spend it working at a nonprofit,
that agency may not need his or her specific expertise and
skills - just as your company many not need someone with
expertise in directing dance productions, in child
psychology, in animal behavior, in farming cooperatives, or
in a range of other expertise areas that staff at a
nonprofit, charity or school may have.
Volunteers are not
free: the staff at a volunteer hosting organization
need to create volunteering opportunities, to supervise
and support volunteers, to trouble-shoot and to evaluate
and report on the experience. If you ask an agency to
create volunteering opportunities specifically for your
employees, you are asking them to spend money and
resources they may not be able to afford - so be ready to
make an appropriate financial - CASH - donation to a
nonprofit or school if you want a customized volunteering
gig for your employees at that nonprofit or school.
Otherwise, you can find volunteering opportunities
through a range of channels:
- Via third-party web sites and apps that various
agencies use to promote their volunteering opportunities.
Here is a list of such sites third party sites
worldwide.
- By contacting your local United Way agency, if you
have such, and asking if they have a database of
volunteering opportunities.
- By sending an email to various nonprofit organizations
in your area to ask them to contact you when they have
volunteering opportunities available (and specify what
kind you are looking for - IT projects? Group
volunteering?).
- By monitoring keywords on social media, like the word
volunteer and the name of your city and state on
BlueSky or Mastodon to see if local organizations are
publicizing their volunteering needs.
- By monitoring online groups on Facebook,
Reddit
or other social media that are focused specifically on
your region, to see if local organizations are
publicizing their volunteering needs.
You can also write organizations and propose a specific
volunteering idea. For instance, you could contact your
local historical society and coordinate a
Wikipedia edit-a-thon. Or you could
contact area nonprofits and request proposals for your
marketing department to design their annual report.
Virtual volunteering - volunteers
providing service via a computer, smart phone,
tablet or other networked advice - presents a great
opportunity for companies to expand their employee
philanthropic offerings. Through virtual
volunteering, some employees will choose to help
organizations online that they are already helping
onsite. Other employees who are unable to volunteer
onsite at a nonprofit or school will choose to
volunteer online because of the convenience. Detailed advice for mobilizing
employees to engage in virtual volunteering is
here.
You could also contact a school and talk about creating
an
online mentoring program, where
employees mentor young people online during the employees
work hours. HOWEVER, this is much more involved than just
trading emails: this is one of the most labor and
resource-intensive
virtual
volunteering programs there are. Before you embark
on this, you should have at least two employees onboard
who have already participated in an
onsite
mentoring program of some kind (and being currently
involved in such would be even better), and you should
read
The Last
Virtual Volunteering Guidebook - there
is an entire chapter devoted to this type of
volunteering.
Taking on a Pro Bono Project
When a department or employee at a corporation or
business wants to take on an entire projects for a
nonprofit, school, etc., like revamping the agency's
promotional materials, creating a video, training staff in
using various online tools, creating a new web site,
surveying clients, etc., there are some things to keep in
mind to ensure success and avoid negative public
relations:
- These kinds of volunteer activities are often
fulfilling a critical need for that agency. A
company's employees' contributions may be vital to the
group's mission and perception by the public. When
employees commit to a volunteer project, the agency
becomes dependent on those employees. Unlike paying
customers, they usually cannot move the project to
another company if agreed-to goals are not met. So if
a company's employees agree to create an accessible
web site for a nonprofit, but then don't create that
web site, that nonprofit is left in the lurch: they
not only don't have a web site, they may now have to
have a very uncomfortable conversation with their
board, clients or supporters.
- Designate one person at a company or department as
the coordinator of any group project. This person will
be the contact for both the agency being helped and
the employees donating time to the project. This
person will document the time spent on the project,
communicate its progress to the agency, etc.
- Create a written document that outlines exactly what
the project will accomplish, includes a timeline for
completion, and details the corporation or business's
commitments (just as the company would with a paying
customer).
- Communicate to both employees and the agency WHY
this company is donating this service.
- Clearly outline with both employees and the agency
how a company's donated services will be recognized.
- Evaluate the time the project will take, just as
that company would a paid-for job.
- Budget time for employees to participate in the
volunteer project/donated services. Don't assume
employees will work on the project "when they have
time" or only when other projects are completed. The
group employees have volunteered for is counting on
those employees, just as groups that pay for a
company's services are. Their deadlines and needs are
just as real, and just as critical.
- Estimate how much time a day or a week employees
will spend on this donated project, and record the
time each employee actually does spend on the project.
- If employees can't donate enough time for a desired
project, it's okay to say so, but BEFORE work begins.
Avoid frustration on everyone's part by only agreeing
to what employees really can commit to.
- Don't force any employee to work on a donated
project. Employees should feel enthusiastic about the
assignment. Their buy-in is important. Most agencies
are happy to take employees on a tour of their
facilities, or come to the employer's office and make
a presentation about the organization and its mission.
This can help employees understand the importance of
the agency and how their work will further its
mission.
- Communicate regularly with the beneficiary agency
about how work is progressing and how many hours your
employees have spent to date.
- When employees are finished with the volunteer
project, talk to the agency staff involved and find
out how they felt about the experience. Were their
expectations met? What do they think went best about
the project? What do they wish had gone differently?
What was the primary benefit they have experiences as
a result of your work?
- Celebrate successes! Coordinate a way for
participating employees and the group that helped to
meet.
Also see
Dos & don'ts for technical
assistance volunteers / volunteers donating expertise
There are many people that want to donate
- to volunteer - their professional skills or
expertise to a nonprofit, NGO, charity, school or a
community or environmental project. They are sometimes
called "skilled volunteers." These volunteers might
build a web site, or build an app, or build a garden,
or design a building, or provide legal assistance, and
on and on, for a nonprofit, or even a government
program that engages volunteers and supports a
particular community, like a women's shelter or a home
for people with addicted issues. These are volunteers
that are going to work primarily with a program's
staff, including other volunteers, rather than
directly with clients, but the result of their service
may directly affect clients. But these type of
volunteering gigs don't always work out, leaving both
volunteers and programs frustrated and disappointed.
The advice on this page will help everyone involved have
a more worthwhile experience.
Group volunteering
There is probably very little at a corporation that
could be accomplished in one day by a group of outsiders
who show up at the company's door and say, "We'd love to
work for you for an entire day - without pay!"
The same is true for nonprofits. A great deal of time
and effort goes into creating activities that a group of
volunteers can do in one day. Even a beach cleanup
requires a lot of preparation so that volunteers can
show up, get to work quickly, accomplish a lot and leave
quickly. A staff person from a
nonprofit, or more than one, may have to spend a lot
of time coordinating a group volunteering event for
one company's employees (and even more time if
employees want to involve their families). Who is
going to pay for that person's time to do all of the
coordination needed? There may be equipment needs as
well: bags, tools, gloves, trucks, gas for those
trucks, etc. Who is going to pay for all that
equipment and materials?
Talk with the organization about how
many hours they will spend coordinating a group
activity for your company, and what equipment and
materials will be needed, and consider how your group
could cover some or all of these costs. And don't be
offended if a nonprofit tells you upfront that you
have to pay for these costs - just as your employees
would balk at the idea of working for free for your
company, the staff time of employees at nonprofits
needs to also be funded.
Other preparations for your employee
volunteering event:
- One person from the group will need to be the
primary group contact and deliverer of information.
This person will receive all communications on behalf
of the group regarding volunteering, and will be
responsible for communicating with all group members.
This person will also attend any orientations required
before volunteering, and communicate information from
this orientation to other members.
- The group's leadership needs to take an assessment
of all group members' availability for, interests in
and goals for a group volunteering activity. This will
help you in choosing a group assignment, and ensure
that everyone has a positive experience and that their
expectations will be met. For instance, the group may
interested in environmental issues and members may be
available to volunteer only on Saturdays after 8 a.m.
- Does your employee group want to be engaged in the
same activities during the entire group volunteering
endeavor? Or, would your group be willing to separate
at the event or location to engage in a variety of
tasks; for instance, at a community center, one person
reads to an elderly person while others help at an
activity for youth and others help re-organize the
center's stock room.
- What talents and experiences are volunteers
interested in sharing in this group effort? For
instance, the marketing director may not want to help
with marketing efforts as a volunteer but, rather,
share her talents at basic home repair.
- Do members of your employee volunteering group want
to bring family members along to volunteer? The
nonprofit you assist will tell you if this is
acceptable - but in most cases, it probably will NOT
be. Also, you may need volunteers to provide childcare
for other volunteers so that group volunteering is
possible for some employees.
- Someone in the group needs to have the
responsibility to fill out application forms, and
ensure all individuals in the group have filled out
appropriate forms; often, volunteer hosting
organizations require the completion of such forms not
only for the group as a whole, but for every
individual that will participate. A representative of
the group or just one member may be asked to complete
a Waiver of Liability form.
- Do not wait until the last minute to try to
volunteer in a group! You will probably need to call
many, many, many places just to get an appointment for
an interview! It may take a few months before you get
your group booked for a volunteering activity even if
you start calling right away!
- Do NOT show up unannounced to engage in any of these
activities. Do NOT call a day or a week or even just
one month in advance and ask to volunteer as a group
-- you need to call months in advance. And any
activity you do, even at someone's home, at school,
your own meeting site, etc., should be with permission
of the nonprofit, NGO or other institution you are
trying to assist, or the local government in charge of
the site where you plan on engaging in a group
volunteering activity.
- Make sure all team members understand that they must
be on time for a volunteering event, and that they
understand that they must follow the policies of the
organization.
Advice regarding executives on
loan & board service
As noted earlier, if one of your
executives is going to take a six month sabbatical and
wants to spend it working at a nonprofit, there may not
be an agency that needs his or her specific expertise
and skills - just as your company many not need someone
with expertise in directing dance productions, in child
psychology, in animal behavior, in farming cooperatives,
or in a range of other areas that staff at a nonprofit,
charity or school may have. I've put my advice regarding
executives on loan and board service on a
separate page.
Talking about the impact of your
employee volunteering
Spoiler alert: the number of hours your
employees gave as volunteers is not impressive. It's just
a number. Do you measure your employees' and business
success by the number of hours your employees work? Of
course not. So why in the world do you think that's a good
measure of volunteer achievement?
If you want to talk about employee volunteer success
and impact, then you need to know:
- what employees did as volunteers (what activities they
undertook)
- what those activities achieved toward's the
organization's bottom line or its mission
- what the organization's staff and clients think of
those volunteer contributions
Want organization's to track and provide
this information to you? Great: consider making an
appropriate financial (CASH!) contribution to cover the
costs of making this happen.
Your Attitude Matters
In 2015, a post on the question-and-answer site Quora
caught my eye:
Why
are many charities full of stuck-up people?
I have built an
association/network of professionals willing to
help charities in the form of skills-based
volunteering – i.e. consulting charities with our
skills, for free.
But with a very few exceptions, most charities
response was to just shrug us off, don’t reply to
us or when they reply sound either skeptical or
ask for all sorts of background check information.
Worst, some of the people I got in touch with in
person would look away at events (or ignore
immediately), not accept my invitation on LinkedIn
and other little behaviors that make me feel these
are some of the worst people I have met in my
life. Which sometimes makes me wonder: are they
afraid of “competition”? Or have some kind of
deep-rooted prejudice against people from the
corporate world?
...many of the charities we approached are doing
pretty poorly and could do much better with help
of “corporate” professionals who can offer a
different perspective. Our purpose is to consult,
not to join their ranks. Frankly we have seen
charities with the most awful and off-putting
websites and advertising material. No offense, but
sometimes low resources and lack of corporate
experience DOES lead to low quality – that’s what
I have seen.
The problem is, of course, right there in his
approach to nonprofits and the language he uses, and
sadly, it’s the approach so many corporations have
regarding donating their expertise to nonprofits: we
know so much more than you, you should be grateful
we're here and not question us.
Nonprofits are businesses.
And just as a business cannot hire every marketing
manager that shows up to work, a nonprofit cannot
involve every volunteer that wants to help with
marketing, no matter how experienced that person is.
In addition,
nonprofits have
procedures and policies and strategies that must be
respected - if your employees cannot do that,
they should not be volunteering. Employees that are
volunteering should understand that the nonprofit they
are assisting is a client that deserves respect, to be
listened to, to receive quality work and to have their
staff's expertise honored.
NOTE:
Coming soon
Employees volunteering abroad
Some corporations cover the costs of employees going
abroad to work on short-term assignments. I will have a
page of advice on this later in 2019.
Also see:
- Virtual
volunteering - a corporate guide for involving
employees
Virtual volunteering - volunteers providing service
via a computer, smart phone, tablet or other
networked advice - presents a great opportunity for
companies to expand their employee philanthropic
offerings. Through virtual volunteering, some
employees will choose to help organizations online
that they are already helping onsite. Other
employees who are unable to volunteer onsite at a
nonprofit or school will choose to volunteer online
because of the convenience. Advice
for employees engaging in virtual volunteering is
here.
- Short-term
Assignments for Tech Volunteers
There are a variety of ways for mission-based
organizations to involve volunteers to help with short-term
projects relating to computers and the
Internet, and short-term assignments are what are
sought after most by potential "tech" volunteers.
But there is a disconnect: most organizations have
trouble identifying such short-term projects. This
is a list of short-term projects for "tech"
volunteers -- assignments that might takes days,
weeks or just a couple of months to complete.
- One(-ish)
Day "Tech" Activities for Volunteers
Volunteers are getting together for intense, one-day
events, or events of just a few days, to build web
pages, to write code, to edit Wikipedia pages, and
more. These are gatherings of onsite volunteers,
where everyone is in one location, together, to do
an online-related project in one day, or a few days.
It's a form of episodic volunteering, because
volunteers don't have to make an ongoing commitment
- they can come to the event, contribute their
services, and then leave and never volunteer again.
Because computers are involved, these events are
sometimes called hackathons, even if coding isn't
involved. This page provides advice on how to put
together a one-day event, or just-a-few-days-of
activity, for a group of tech volunteers onsite,
working together, for a nonprofit, non-governmental
organization (NGO), community-focused government
program, school or other mission-based organization
- or association of such.
Discuss
this
web page, or comment on it, here.
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