If your organization or department involves
volunteers, or wants to involve volunteers, there are
certain things your organization or department must have
on its web site, in my opinion, and there are no excuses for not
having it. No government agency requires you to have this
information. No agency requires your nonprofit, NGO, charity or
community program to involve volunteers. But if your
organization DOES involve volunteers, this information
absolutely needs to be there - I consider it required
information. To not have this information says that your
organization or department takes volunteers for granted, does
not value volunteers beyond money saved in salaries, or is not
really ready to involve volunteers.
Here is what absolutely should be on your web site regarding
volunteers, to make your web site as volunteer-friendly as it
can be and to show how much your organization values
volunteers. And, quite frankly, if you don't have this on your
web site because you "don't have time", then you do not have
time to involve volunteers, period:
- the word volunteers and volunteering
MUST appear on the home page of your web site, within the
permanent text of the page. If someone goes to the
home page and uses the text find function on a web
browser and types in volunteer, they should find
that word on your web site (and it should link to further
information!). That means having the word in a pull-down
menu or a graphic is NOT enough!
- the link support us or get involved
on your home page or any other pages should not go to a
page that is focused only on donating money. Instead,
that link should go to a page that talks about the RANGE of
ways someone could support your organization or cause, which
includes cash donations, in-kind donations and volunteering.
That page can then link to a page only about cash donations,
a section or page only about volunteering, etc. If you don't
do this, if you the support us or get involved
link goes to a page only about donating money, then you are
saying that donors of time and expertise are not as valuable
to your organization as donors of cash.
- a page or a section of your web site that is
dedicated to information about volunteering at your
organization. This page or section should include:
- photos, or links to photos, of your volunteers in
action (NO CLIP ART)
- a mission statement about
why your organization involves volunteers, why
your organization reserves certain assignments for
volunteers, why your organization believes volunteers
(as opposed to paid employees or paid consultants) are
the best people for certain tasks, etc.
- detailed information on how to apply to be a
volunteer
- your volunteer application to fill out and submit
online, or to download to fill out and send back to your
organization as an attachment to email (or even to print
out and send via postal mail)
- exactly what the steps are after person applies to
volunteer (how long can applicants expect to wait to be
contacted by the organization once they've submitted an
application? do applicants have to attend an online or
onsite orientation/training? do applicants have to
undergo a criminal background check, and do applicants
have to pay for that themselves? are applicants required
to join an online discussion group?)
- a summary of the kinds of tasks volunteers can do
(would you welcome a volunteer to assist in helping your
organization with social media? with onsite computer and
networking needs? to serve on your board of
directors? to staff the receptionist desk and answer
phones? to mentor young people? to transport items from
one location to another? to work from home or a remote
location translating text from one language to another,
designing logos, tagging photos, moderating an online
discussion group or engaging in any other virtual
volunteering activities? to assist your professional
staff, like your HR manager, your marketing manager,
etc.?)
- full disclosure about any fees a volunteer is
expected to pay, if these are one-time or annual, and
information on what these fees pay for.
One thing your web site should NOT include: any
statement that ever implies your organization saves money
with volunteers (no dollar value for volunteer hours),
involves volunteers so they don't have to pay staff, etc.
Be careful of any statement like, "We couldn't exist
without volunteers!" unless it includes narrative that
shows volunteers are not involved in order to not have to
pay staff.
Also, if you are in the UK, be very careful about your
statements regarding expectations of how long volunteers
should commit to an assignment. Laws in the UK regarding
volunteering are quite complicated, and such
wording can be construed as an employment contract with
the volunteer.
Those are just the basics, the minimum an
organization that involves volunteers, or wants to, should have
on its web site! An organization should also consider having
on its web site:
- links to your available volunteer assignments on VolunteerMatch, AllforGood.org, or
whatever you use to recruit onsite or online volunteers.
- any volunteering activities you have specifically for
individual teen volunteers under 18, family volunteers,
groups of adult volunteers, groups of teen volunteers under
18, groups of volunteers under 14 (or even younger), senior
volunteers, professionals, etc.
- the complete volunteer policies and procedures, so a
potential volunteer knows exactly what he or she is getting
into (and current volunteers can have them for easy
reference anytime)
- links to a photo sharing site like Flickr, where volunteers
can upload photos of themselves in action to a group you
create there, or tag their photos with certain keywords so
anyone searching regarding your organization can find them
- testimonials from volunteers about their experience
- testimonials from employees and clients about their
experience with your volunteers
- a short recruitment video (or link to such on YouTube that shows what
volunteers do at your organization and why they are so
awesome)
- blog entries from volunteers (or links to such)
- links to or live feeds from any social media your
organization uses with regard to volunteers (a dedicated
Facebook profile, a dedicated Twitter feed, etc.)
- online material that clearly recognizes
and thanks volunteers for their contributions
Also see:
- Mission statements for your
volunteer engagement
(Saying WHY your organization or department involves
volunteers!)
In addition to carefully crafting the way you talk about the
value of volunteers, your
organization should also consider creating a mission
statement for your organization's volunteer engagement, to
guide employees in how they think about volunteers, to guide
current volunteers in thinking about their role and value at
the organization, and to show potential volunteers the kind
of culture they can expect at your organization regarding
volunteers.
- Ethics of Paying to Volunteer
Online
Reviews information a program should have available to
distinguish themselves as credible organizations.
- Diagnosing
the causes of volunteer recruitment problems
Before you hire a consultant, even
me, to see what the problem is regarding why you don’t
have enough volunteers, or the kinds of volunteers you want
most, you might be able to diagnosis the problem yourself -
this blog is meant to help you do that. The only catch is
that you MUST be honest as you answer the questions listed
here. Also, answering these questions is rarely a one-person
exercise; you may think you know the answer, but you need to
ask other staff members, including volunteers themselves,
what their answers are to these assessment questions. This
is one of the most popular blogs I've ever written.
- Using the Internet to Honor
Volunteers (and Recognizing Online Volunteers)
Recognition of a volunteer, no matter where he or she
performs service, is the act of acknowledging a person's
contribution to a nonprofit/civil society organization and
those it serves. Recognition contributes to volunteers
staying committed to an organization, and gets the attention
of potential volunteers -- and donors -- as well. In
addition, organizations should also incorporate use of the
Internet to recognize the efforts of ALL volunteers, both
those who perform most of their service from home, work,
school or other remote computers, and those who perform
their service onsite, face-to-face. With cyberspace,
incuding social media, it's never been easier to show
volunteers -- and the world -- that volunteer contributions
play a key part in an organization's successes.
- Internet discussion
groups for volunteers
Many agencies use email-based or web-based discussion
groups, bulletin boards, online social networking or even
"old-fashioned" newsgroups (USENET) to communicate regularly
with their volunteers. This resource chronicles the benefits
of such groups, and offers tips for set up, management and
growth.
- Using Real-Time
Communications With Volunteers
A growing number of organizations are using real-time
communications -- including video conferencing, online phone
calls, chats and instant messaging -- to hold online
meetings with volunteers, to allow volunteers to interact
with staff, clients, or each other, or to involve volunteers
in a live, online, real-time event. This resource provides
more information on real-time communications with volunteers
-- what the various tools are, how agencies are using them
to interact with volunteers, and tips to encourage and
maintain participation in synchronous communications.
- Screening Volunteers for
Attitude
When an organization involves volunteers in
high-responsibility, long-term roles, volunteer turnover can
be a program killer. Screening is vital to finding the right
people for high-responsibility, long-term volunteer roles,
particularly those where the volunteer will work with
clients and the general public, and to screen out people who
may be better in shorter-term assignments or assignments
where they would not work with clients or the general
public, or who would not be appropriate in any role at the
organization.
- Recruiting Local
Volunteers To Increase Diversity Among the Ranks
Having plenty of volunteers usually isn't enough to say a
volunteering program is successful. Another indicator of
success is if your volunteers represent a variety of ages,
education-levels, economic levels and other demographics, or
are a reflection of your local community. Most organizations
don't want volunteers to be a homogeneous group; they want
to reach a variety of people as volunteers (and donors and
other supporters, for that matter). This resource will help
you think about how to recruit for diversity, or to reach a
specific demographic.
- Letting
Fear Prevent Volunteer Involvement is Too Risky
This is a blog I wrote for Susan Ellis and Energize, Inc. -
you leave my web site if you click on that link.
- Virtual Volunteering
Myths
Common misconceptions about virtual volunteering versus the
reality of the practice.
- Research on online
volunteering
All of the academic research and journal articles about
online volunteering and online community engagement.
- Online culture
What is it like to work with people -- volunteers, donors,
remote staff -- you seldom or never see onsite,
face-to-face? Can you build trust among a remote group
online? Can a person learn to work with others
online successfully, or does one have to have an instinct
for it? Does the Internet take the human element out of
volunteering and community? Does online civil society
exist? This is a portal into all of my resources related to
working with and supporting others online.
There are even more suggestions about what needs to be on your
web site for potential and current volunteers, as well as ABOUT
current volunteers, in The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook.
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