Title: Volunteer Management Capacity Study: Summary Results
1Volunteer Management Capacity Study Summary
Results
Mark A. Hager, Urban Institute
mhager_at_ui.urban.org Jeffrey L. Brudney,
University of Georgia
jbrudney_at_uga.edu
2004 National Conference on Community
Volunteering and National Service
2Sponsors
- Corporation for National and Community Service
- UPS Foundation
- USA Freedom Corps
- Research conducted by the Urban Institute (Hager,
PI)
3Government Promotion of Volunteerism
- 1989 Points of Light Foundation awards
- 1991 VOLUNTEER National Network
- 1993 National and Community Service Trust Act
- 1997 Presidents Summit for Americas Future
Volunteer Protection Act - 2001 USA Freedom Corps Citizen Corps
- 2002 Presidents Call to Service
4Supply and Demand for Volunteers
- Most efforts have focused on expanding the number
and diversity of volunteers. - Research suggests that organizations do not
always manage their volunteers well. - Observers question whether organizations have the
capacity to properly accommodate more volunteers. - Apprehensions heightened by Presidents Call to
Service.
5Impetus for Study of Volunteer Management
- No systematic knowledge of extent of volunteer
involvement in charities and congregations. - No systematic knowledge of the adoption of
recommended practices in volunteer management. - No systematic knowledge of capability of
organizations to accommodate additional
volunteers.
6Methodology
- Data collected from organizational
representatives by phone in Fall 2003 - Sampled charities from Form 990 filers
- N1,753 charities, 69 response rate
- Sampled congregations from American Church Lists
- N541 congregations, 69 response rate
7Our Definition of a Volunteer
- Works on regular, short term, or occasional
basis - Provides services to charity or those charity
serves - Not paid as a staff member or a consultant
- Excludes members of board of directors -- unless
they provide volunteer services to the charity
beyond traditional governance duties - Excludes special events participants -- unless
they are volunteer planners or workers at these
events.
8Broad Scope of Volunteer Use
- Four in five charities have volunteers.
- More than half use volunteers primarily in direct
service roles. - Four in five congregations have social service
outreach activities. - About one in three congregations manage
volunteers in these activities.
9Low Investments in Volunteer Management
- 3 in 5 charities (with volunteers) and 1 in 3
congregations (that manage volunteers in social
service outreach activities) have a paid staff
person responsible for management of volunteers. - The typical such staffer spends only 30 percent
of time on volunteer management.
10Challenges in Volunteer Management
Percent of Charities
11Key Findings About Challenges
- Charities with recruiting challenges are more
likely to try a range of recruiting methods, such
as speaking before groups, Internet, printed
materials, and special events. - The more time that paid staff member spends on
volunteer management, the less likely the charity
reports problems in recruiting.
12Adoption of Management Practices
Percent of Charities
13Adoption Linked to Charities
- With larger budgets
- With greater scope of volunteer use
- That use volunteers primarily in direct service
roles - That operate in the health field
- With paid staff members who spend greater amounts
of time on volunteer management.
14Retention of Volunteers Associated With
- Recognition, training, and screening
- Less supervision and communication
- Funding, institutional support
- Engaged, productive volunteers
- Older volunteers
15Benefits of Volunteers to Charities
Percent of Charities
16Investments and Benefits Feed Each Other
- Adoption of management strategies and
investment in paid staff coordinators linked to
greater benefits from volunteers.
17Taking on More Volunteers
- 91 of charities and 96 of congregations said
they could currently take on at least some
additional volunteers at current capacity. - The typical organization says that it currently
can take on 20 new volunteers. - The more time that paid staff members spend on
volunteer management, the more new volunteers
charities say they can accommodate.
18Congregations and Religious Charities
- Spring and Grimm, CNCS
- Most congregations operate social service
out-reach activities, but few do so on their own. - Congregations tend to utilize volunteers to
manage other volunteers. - Charities with a religious mission more likely to
have a paid coordinator than charities with a
secular mission. - The majority of charities with a secular mission
do not have partnerships with religious
organizations.
19A Few Conclusions
- A broad array of charities and congregations
engage volunteers on a broad array of tasks. - Volunteer management practices have not made
universal inroads nonetheless, prevailing
reported level of problems in managing volunteers
is low. - Investments in volunteer management returns
benefits, including retention of volunteers. - Future work should focus on characteristics and
practices of volunteer managers and
organizational supports.
20Contacts
- Reports and other study details available at
www.volunteerinput.org.
Mark A. Hager, Ph.D. Senior Research
Associate Center on Nonprofits and
Philanthropy The Urban Institute 2100 M Street,
NW Washington, DC 20037 Phone (202)
261-5345 Fax (202) 833-6231
Jeffrey L. Brudney, Ph.D. University of
Georgia School of Public and Intl Affairs Dept.
of Public Admin. and Policy 104 Baldwin
Hall Athens, GA 30602-1615 Phone (706)
542-2977 Fax (706) 583-0610