The Nonprofit FAQ
Can we recruit volunteers via the Internet? |
Jayne Cravens answers: Yes, you can, and recruiting volunteers on the Internet offers a number of benefits: - It's an effective, fast, no-extra-cost way to find volunteers. - It's an excellent way to target non-traditional volunteers, and people that are under-represented on your volunteer ranks -- seniors, ethnic minorities, people with disabilities, etc. - You can reach a very targeted group, such as a particular kind of professional (a lawyer focused on the arts, a human resource professional in a particular region, an accountant with expertise in a particular kind of software, etc.) Online marketing should not replace your offline recruitment methods. It will, however, augment those efforts, by reaching new audiences and reminding people how they can support your organization. Before you post volunteer information in cyberspace, however, some words of caution: - DO NOT recruit volunteers online (or offline, for that matter) until you have well-defined, written opportunity descriptions, and you have an immediate next step for people who call or email about these opportunities (a date for a face-to-face meeting or orientation, for instance). Asking for volunteers but not having a method to immediately place them into your volunteer program is like advertising a product you don't really have, and it can cause hard feelings about your agency on the part of potential supporters. - Make sure those who answer your agency's phone know you are posting information to the Internet, in case there is an increase in phone calls regarding volunteer opportunities or people call and reference "that e-mail you posted." Use a combination of BOTH online databases (Action Without Borders, ServeNet, VolunteerMatch/Impact Online, etc.), your own web site, and online discussion groups (e-mail lists, USENET newsgroups, etc.). Lisa Orr, from volunteerfrederick.org, suggested this addition in November of 2005: The Points of Light Foundation and Volunteer Center National Network link to more than 300 volunteer centers that have on-line volunteer recruitment and can be accessed through a centralized portal 1-800-VOLUNTEER (online at http://www.1-800-volunteer.org/). Users can also find the local volunteer center in their area through this portal. The Points of Light Foundation itself is at http://www.pointsoflight.org/ Jayne Cravens suggested these sites as useful on August 26, 2003:
For a list of more volunteer-related sites and links, see http://www.serviceleader.org/vv/vonline2.html For information on how to use online discussion groups (e-mail lists, USENET newsgroups, etc.) to target market volunteer opportunities, see: Marketing Volunteer Opportunities Online http://www.serviceleader.org/new/managers/2003/04/000065.php Other Resources: - Outreach Netiquette -- the Do's and Don'ts of Outreach http://www.glikbarg.com/internet/outnet.html by Steve Glikbarg, a co-founder of Impact Online - Virtual Volunteering Project http://www.serviceleader.org/vv/ How to Use the Internet to Involve Volunteers The Free Management Library discusses online recruiting at http://www.mapnp.org/library/staffing/recruit/recruit.htm#anchor542602 Revised 11/12/99 by Jayne Cravens; revised, additional information added 8/26/03; 2/10/04, 3/24/05; 12/1/05 -- PB |