As noted inTheLastVirtual
Volunteering Guidebook, people engaged
in virtual volunteering undertake a variety of activities, long
and short (micro volunteering) and everything in between, from
locations remote to the organization or people they are
assisting, via a computer or other Internet-connected device.
And they're having a big impact. It's impossible to come up with
absolutely everything a volunteer can do online, but tasks and
roles for online volunteers include the following (which is now
even longer than what's available in the book):
translating documents (and
proofreading translations by others).
researching topics and
gathering information for a newsletter article, a new web site
section, a grant application, an upcoming software purchase, a
program or project, and on and on.
designing web pages and
developing entire web sites.
editing or writing
proposals, press releases, newsletter articles, video scripts,
web pages, etc.
designing any publication,
for print or for online.
developing material for a
curriculum.
transcribing scanned
documents.
designing a database.
adapting a purchased
database software to meet the needs of a nonprofit, charity,
community program, etc.
designing graphics.
providing legal, business,
medical, agricultural, financial or any other donated
professional expertise (answering questions, creating a
strategy, commenting on a strategy, reviewing or evaluating
data, evaluating a policy, etc.).
serving on a committee or
advisory board. An example is theWikipedia Arbitration
Committee, a panel of online volunteer editors
responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process.
It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes
between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the
community has been unable to resolve. But it could also be a
citizens committee - an arts commission, a public safety
advisory group, and on and on.
having video chats with home
bound people. Or eels.
counseling people.
tutoringormentoringstudents, young
or adult, regarding homework, writing assignments, online
safety, professional development.
training people.
moderating or facilitatingonline discussiongroups
or live online events, to answer questions, to refer people to
FAQs, to facilitate disagreements, to address harassment and
cyber bullying, to counter fake news/misinformation, offer
technical assistance, etc., or to provide technical support
during live events.
writing songs.
performing songs.
writing and performing
original theater pieces, even musicals, something done as
early as the 1990s (Theatre
as Digital Activity - TADA) and a recently as 2020 with
Ratatouille, the musical.
populating a database with
information, such as recipes for people with diabetes, or
recycling ideas, or information about access points into a
mass transit system accessible for people with mobility
issues, or wheelchair-accessible music venues, and on and on.
A database can be used for mapping, such as via Open
Street Map.
helping with with
sight-impairments organize their record or CD collection, pick
out an outfit, tell them what store they are standing outside
of, etc., via Be My Eyes.
interviewing and recording
clients or community members for a history or art project.
interviewing people for a
survey.
interviewing new candidates
for a program, class, volunteering, employment...
creating apodcast(writing
the script, editing the audio, adding in intro and exit music,
reading text, etc.).
creating a video - either
recording it from home or creating such from video clips,
photos, etc.
transcribing a podcast so
that people can read it (not everyone can listen to such -
some prefer to read it as well).
putting in short
descriptions of images on a web site or community, or
transcribe images of text that is on a web site or online
community, so that people that rely on text-to-speech or other
assistive software (mostly these are people with disabilities)
can access the information as well. This makes a web site or
online community more accessible.An example is this Reddit
initiative.
getting rid of all "read
more" and "click here" links on a web site, replacing them
with descriptive links, so that the web site is more
accessible for people with disabilities.
adding alt texts to all
images and graphics on a web site, so that the web site is
more accessible for people with disabilities.
making
all PDFs on a web site accessible for different screen
readers (and therefore for people with disabilities), or
converting key information in PDF files to HTML to be shared
as web pages.
evaluating a web site and
offering advice on text changes that can improve its search
engine optimization or improve its accessibility.
monitoring the news to look
for specific subjects or mentions of a person or organization.
monitoring Quora, Reddit or
other popular online communities, to answer questions on a
particular subject or about a particular organization, to
refer people to a web site that will answer their questions,
to counter fake news/misinformation on a particular subject,
etc.
answering questions as part
of an Ask Me Anything session, to help build staff expertise
on a subject, to be on call as needed, etc.
taggingphotos and
files with keywords (so that they can be more easily found by
internal staff, search engines, the press, etc.).
screening new applicants who
want to volunteer (asking them questions, checking references,
reviewing their qualifications, etc.).
managing other online
volunteers in projects.
staffing an organization or
program's incoming email box, answering simple questions,
referring emails to appropriate staff, as appropriate, making
sure inquiries from the press, complaints, comments from
funders, questions from government officials and other
important emails get attended to by senior staff immediately.
Ideas
for High Impact Virtual Volunteering Activities
This resource is for people seeking ideas for an online project
that will mobilize online volunteers in activities that lead to
a sustainable, lasting benefit to a community or cause,
particularly for a community or audience that is at-risk or
under-served. It was created especially for programs looking for
ways to engage online volunteers in high-responsibility,
high-impact tasks focused on communities in the developing
world, because onsite volunteering abroad is not an option -
which is the reality in 2020, and probably 2021, because of
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), an infectious disease
caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
(SARS-CoV-2). These ideas - more than 30 - can be adapted for
remote volunteering within the same country where the online
volunteers live as well - "remote" could mean across town rather
than around the world.
Note that online assignments come in a
variety of forms: some require a particular expertise, some
don't; some require screening and a long-term commitment, while
others could be done just once, in a few minutes or hours, by a
volunteer who may or may not ever help again (micro
volunteering). TheLastVirtual
Volunteering Guidebook offers detailed
information on how to identify and create various virtual
volunteering opportunities, including micro volunteering. The
wiki supplements and compliments the book, providing a space for
ongoing discussions and for updates about new tech tools and new
developments related to virtual volunteering. However, the wiki
is NOT a substitute for reading theTheLastVirtual
Volunteering Guidebook, which has
hundreds of pages of information that are not on this wiki.
It's worth noting that online
micro-volunteering was originally called "byte-sized
volunteering" by theVirtual Volunteering Project, and has
always been a part of the more than 30-year-old practice of
online volunteering. An early example of both micro-volunteering
and crowdsourcing isClickWorkers, a small NASA project begun in
2001 that engaged online volunteers in scientific-related tasks
that required just a person's perception and common sense, but
not scientific training, such as identifying craters on Mars in
photos the project posted online; volunteers were not trained or
screened before participating. The phrase micro-volunteering is
usually credited to a San Francisco-based nonprofit called The
Extraordinaries.
Detailed information about how to use the Internet to support and involve
volunteers - virtual volunteering - can be found in The
Last
Virtual
Volunteering Guidebook. This wiki is a supplement to the
book - but no substitution for it.
If
you tweet aboutTheLastVirtual
Volunteering Guidebookplease use
the tag#vvbook
Please note: this wiki project is entirely unfunded - and
I'm struggling to keep it going. If you would like to see this page
continue to be updated, here's how to support this work.
The most comprehensive guide
available on virtual volunteering, including online mentoring,
micro-volunteeirng, virtual teams, high-responsibility roles,
crowd sourcing to benefit nonprofits and other mission-based
organizations, and much more.
Published January 2014, based on
more than 30 years of research. Available as both a print
book and an ebook.