Emphasizing the Personal and Professional Benefits of Service: Encouraging Volunteers to Ask, "What’s in It for Me?"
As practitioners in the field of volunteer engagement, we all know the extraordinary impact volunteers have on creating real change in diverse communities. We are also familiar with the multitude of altruistic motivations that inspire individuals to step up and lend a hand. At the same time, we also know that volunteering can be a terrific way for individuals to gain benefits both personal and professional. We’ve seen volunteers translate their service into dynamic career paths and make new friends through shared volunteer experiences. Whether they are driven to engage primarily by a motivation to do good in the world or simply to stay busy while they look for paid employment, the end result can be a volunteer experience that is life-changing for both the volunteer and the community.
As volunteer managers, we know all of this. But do our volunteers?
This article by Erin L. Barnhart provides an overview of how volunteer management professionals can play a more active role in encouraging volunteers – both current and new – to explore and identify the multitude of motivations they might have for getting involved. Barnhart explores how leaders of volunteers can help individuals better understand a key element of service: because altruistic and personal motivations and goals are not mutually exclusive, both types of motivations can often lead to more satisfying, meaningful and effective volunteer placements.
Stephen Moreton, Attend. UK
Wed, 08/22/2012Lorraine Rytz-Thériault, Community Agency, in Switzerland
Fri, 08/31/2012Erin Barnhart, Effective Altruism, LLC
Wed, 10/03/2012Lorraine Rytz-Thériault, Community Agency, Switzerland
Sun, 10/07/2012Hi Lorraine, I would suggest
Mon, 10/08/2012Hi Lorraine, I would suggest that transactional volunteering and transformational volunteering represent points along a spectrum of self-interest to non-self-interest – so involving less or more elements of ‘true altruism’. To give some background on the emergence of transactional volunteering I would refer to the concept of ‘reciprocity’, currently being researched, promoted and funded by NESTA in the UK. Reciprocity is explained as follows: http://www.nesta.org.uk/library/documents/MorethanMoneyv11.pdf A) Social exchange: designed primarily to motivate people’s behaviour, to meet social objectives. Credits can be issued for volunteering and simply deleted when they are spent. B) Economic exchange: designed primarily to circulate and to meet economic objectives. Credits from volunteering need to circulate like money does and have a continuing existence once they are issued. Examples of initiatives: Timebanks, service credits and similar systems provide a means by which people can make their time and ability to care more available in the community, and also a way to measure and reward what they do – normally on the very simple basis of an hour for an hour. Reward points are simple systems, private currencies which are used to motivate members, customers, citizens or users to shift their behaviour in some way. Example initiative: http://www.justaddspice.org/about-us. As an aside, one person's journey of moving from transactional to a transformational volunteering experience is described by Elaine Cohen in her book CSR for HR:
CSR for HR link
One useful quote that helps to differentiate is from Maribel Gaite. “The act of volunteering is not only transactional in that is engages volunteers to join an activity or a cause,” http://loqal.ph/nation-and-world/2012/03/22/how-csr-projects-can-transform-volunteers-communities/ It appears the challenge for transactional volunteering initiatives is to nurture a desire within volunteers to join 'the cause'. This could potentially be broken down into: a) Clarifying what the underlying 'cause' of a transactional volunteering initiative is, and b) Developing processes that help the volunteer to relate to the cause.American Red Cross Midway-Kansas Chapter, Wichita, KS
Mon, 11/05/2012