Recruiting and inducting Volunteers - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 56
About This Presentation
Title:

Recruiting and inducting Volunteers

Description:

... . Develop and evaluate strategies and policies that support volunteering B. Promote volunteering C. Recruit and induct ... Staff and volunteers work ... Select ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:174
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 57
Provided by: lisab188
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Recruiting and inducting Volunteers


1
  • Recruiting and inducting Volunteers

2
Aims and Objectives
  • To enable staff to create fulfilling volunteer
    roles and recruit the right people to those posts

3
Objectives
  • Describe a range of roles that volunteers can
    carry out
  • Explain what makes volunteer roles fulfilling
  • Create motivating role descriptions
  • Produce enticing advertisements
  • Create a plan for selecting the right
    volunteer(s)
  • Plan an effective induction
  • Describe TCVs policy on payment of expenses

4
Volunteer Management Standards
  • Created by the Voluntary Sector National Training
    Organisation.
  • Now called Voluntary Sector Skills Council.
  • Involved many organisations including TCV in the
    project to draw up these standards

5
Volunteer Management Standards
  • A. Develop and evaluate strategies and
    policies that support volunteering
  • B. Promote volunteering
  • C. Recruit and induct volunteers
  • D. Manage and develop volunteers
  • E. Manage yourself, your relationships and
    your responsibilities
  • F. Provide support to volunteering

6
(No Transcript)
7
  • Each volunteer needs to understand what TCV
    expects from them and what they can expect from
    TCV.

8
  • Start with purpose and vision
  • Galvanises volunteers and staff
  • Gives meaning to daily activities
  • A living declaration of whar we are trying to
    accomplish
  • A statement of the difference we intend to make
    in the world

9
  • TCV purpose
  • To protect our green places

10
  • Local strategy to achieve that purpose?
  • What are the obstacles?
  • How will you overcome them?
  • What goals will you implement?

11
  • Strategy example
  • Purpose to stop teen drug abuse
  • Obstacle peer pressure
  • How to overcome separate environment
  • Goals start an alternative school
  • mobilise resources (e.g. media)
  • Not enough resources? How can volunteers help?

12
  • Create a VISION
  • Who do we need to influence?
  • What do we want them to do?

13
  • Local government
  • Local media
  • Chamber of commerce
  • Local business
  • Local faith communities
  • Local land owners
  • Schools

14
  • VISION FOR TCV
  • In the year 2018
  • and include volunteer involvement
  • In organizations where volunteers were most
    effective there was a widely understood, well
    articulated vision of the role of volunteers

15
  • Vision for volunteer involvement
  • If you were to cross the street and set up
    another organisation, what would you do to make
    TCV obsolete as far as attracting and involving
    volunteers are concerned?

16
  • A vision of volunteer involvement
  • Staff and volunteers work together as equals
  • Staff are empowered to create any volunteer job
  • TCV learns from the experience of volunteers
  • The value of volunteers in purpose-critical
    activities is recognised
  • There is a central point for volunteer management
  • All staff play a role in developing jobs for and
    supervising volunteers

17
  • Where are we now?
  • Why do we involve volunteers? You / TCV?
  • What jobs do volunteers do with you?
  • What are the pros and cons of the current
    situation?

18
Definitions
  • Volunteer A volunteer is anyone who gives their
    time working with TCV for no financial reward.
  • Key volunteers
  • Volunteer Officer (VO)Fulfils a specific role,
    agreed with Volunteer Manager
  • Project LeadersLead projects
  • Board members committee membersSupport TCV
    using skills and experience guiding or supporting
    staff.

19
Words
  • Volunteer
  • Someone who offers their time and effort, of
    their own free will and unpaid.
  • Someone who offers their time and effort, of
    their own free will, unpaid on a casual basis and
    at times of their own choosing. (A practical
    project volunteer, commonly referred to as
    volunteers or the volunteers.)
  • Key Volunteer
  • A generic term for someone who fulfils a specific
    role for The Conservation Volunteers of their own
    free will and unpaid that requires an agreed
    commitment of time to a programme of work managed
    or directed by a member of staff or other key
    volunteer(s) with the authority to do so. There
    is normally a written role agreement

20
More words
  • Volunteer Officer
  • A Volunteer Officer is a particular type of Key
    Volunteer. They are managed by a member of staff
    and have a written role agreement.
  • Project Leader
  • Another type of Key Volunteer. The Project Leader
    is frequently also a Volunteer Officer but this
    is not a requirement.

21
(No Transcript)
22
  • Creating motivating volunteer jobs
  • Placing volunteers in jobs they look forward to
    is the key to success
  • Games are voluntary activities designed to be
    interesting, exciting and motivating
  • Aspects of games
  • Ownership
  • Authority to think
  • Responsibility for results or outcomes
  • Keeping score

23
  • Role description
  • Title
  • Purpose the result the job is to accomplish
  • Suggested activities
  • Measures How will you tell if the result is
    being achieved
  • Qualifications Skills, knowledge, attitudes and
    conduct or presentation requirements
  • Time Hours, lengths of commitment, flexibility
  • Site
  • Supervision relationships with staff and other
    volunteers, reporting, monitoring, dealing with
    problems
  • Benefits

24
  • Room for manoeuvre
  • Paid staff are expected to fit in with the
    requirements of the job
  • With volunteers you need to accommodate the job
    to the individual

25
  • Recruitment
  • A process of showing people they can do something
    they already want to do.
  • A process of attracting just enough of the right
    volunteers

26
  • Three methods of recruitment
  • Warm body
  • Distribute brochures or posters
  • Media adverts or publicity
  • Speaking to community groups
  • Targeting
  • Concentric circle (Ask a friend)
  • Current volunteers, friends and relatives of
    volunteers, clients, friends and relatives of
    clients, alumni, staff, donors, people in the
    neighbourhood, retired people in the field

27
Speak to motivational needs
Men wanted for hazardous journey Small wages,
bitter cold, long months of complete darkness,
constant danger, safe return doubtful. Honour and
recognition in case of success
28
  • An effective recruitment message has four parts
  • Need
  • Job
  • Fears
  • Benefits

29
Need
PEOPLE ARE HUNGRY Somebody should do something
about that. BE SOMEBODY Call
30
The job
How can the volunteer solve the problem? Create
a vivid picture of the person doing the job, be
honest or they will probably leave.
31
Fears
  • These can be
  • a client that is viewed as dangerous
  • a type of work at which the volunteer has
    little experience
  • a part of the town that is unfamiliar

32
Fears
  • Can be dispelled as
  • no previous experience is needed
  • full training given
  • fully insured and safe working practices
  • we welcome all sections of the community
  • each volunteer has full management support

33
Benefits
be part of our team free certified
training many of our volunteers get
jobs visit special wildlife places
34
Need - hooks people by presenting the need for
volunteers Job - describes how they can
help Fears - reassures Benefits - sells the
position to them by describing how they will
benefit from volunteering
35
  • Screening and interviewing

36
  • Why Hold an Induction?
  • It defines a clear relationship with the
    organisation
  • Its a quick and effective way of getting the
    volunteer working
  • It helps the volunteers feel more comfortable in
    a new situation
  • It answers the volunteers questions...
  • What work will I be doing?
  • What are my colleagues like?
  • Will I fit in?
  • How can I contribute to the organisations aims?
  • Will I be safe?
  • Will I be valued?

37
  • Characteristics of an Effective Induction
  • Introduce the group
  • The groups values
  • A bit of history
  • The groups activities
  • Who does the group work with?

38
  • Introduce the systems of work
  • What will the volunteer be doing?
  • What are the volunteer management procedures?
  • What facilities do they have access to?
  • What training and benefits will they get?
  • Fill in all relevant forms
  • Who will the volunteer report to?
  • What are the safety arrangements

39
  • Introduce the people
  • Introduce the leadership structures
  • Introduce colleagues they will be working with
  • Discuss the culture and etiquette of the group.
  • Get them started quickly on some work.

40
Prompts to help you focus
Who would want to do the job? Who currently does
it? Who would like to be doing it but is in a job
where it is not now possible? Who was educated to
do it but cant at present? Who can learn to? Who
is learning to do it? What schools and colleges
teach it? Peer recommendation? Who does something
totally different and would see it as exciting
and new
41
  • Environmental Education Volunteer Officer
  • Role Description - BTCV
  • Responsibilities include
  • Running environmental education activities for
    groups of primary school children up to 3 days a
    week
  • Helping to keep the activity days and resources
    up to date
  • Supporting the site team in maintaining the
    wildlife area for educational use
  • Helping with the general running of the Centre
  • You will attend a range of useful training
    courses, gain first hand practical experience,
    and have real responsibility in a supportive
    environment.
  • You will be given specialist experience in
    working in a particular area of the Centre's work
  • BTCV is committed to safeguarding and promoting
    the welfare of children and young people, and
    expects all staff and volunteers to share this
    commitment. An enhanced Criminal Records Bureau
    (CRB) check will be carried out before placements
    begin. Only relevant convictions will be taken
    into account, and the process will be strictly
    confidential.
  • A comprehensive induction process will include
    training in how to work safely and appropriately
    with vulnerable groups.
  • Agreed days 4 days a week, Tuesday to Thursday
  • Agreed times 9am 5pm
  • Agreed expenses Travel and lunch expenses.
  • This does not constitute an employment contract.
    It is a note of a flexible, informal arrangement
    for the benefit of both the Volunteer Officer and
    BTCV, the intention being clarity.
  • Please refer to the BTCV Volunteers Policy for
    full information regarding the relationship
    between BTCV and Volunteer Officers.

42
  • Recruitment Routes
  • Active recruitment
  • Word of mouth
  • Media interviews
  • Presentations to community groups
  • Manning a stand at a community fair

43
  • Passive Recruitment
  • Posters
  • News releases
  • Leaflets
  • Web ads
  • Local newspaper listings
  • Ads at volunteer centres

44
  • Why does The Conservation Volunteers involve
    volunteers?

45
  • Why does TCV involve volunteers?
  • Determines the types of jobs and responsibilities
    that TCV creates for volunteers
  • Enables TCV to better explain to volunteers how
    and why they are contributing to the work of the
    organisation
  • Enables TCV to better explain to staff why
    volunteers are being sought
  • Enables TCV to develop a plan for evaluating how
    effective our use of volunteers has been.

46
  • What do they do?
  • What do volunteers do for you?
  • What skills do volunteers bring with them?
  • Do you know? Do you use them?

47
  • PEOPLE ENGAGEMENT POLICY
  • TCV will treat all people involved in its
    activities with respect and value them as
    individuals contributing to TCVs aims.
  • TCV will provide a safe working environment for
    all people involved, and have appropriate
    insurance cover.
  • TCV will seek to train and educate people to
    levels suitable to their role whilst involved, as
    well as providing learning opportunities so that
    they can progress into new roles and greater
    involvement in TCV and beyond.
  • TCV recognises that involvement in planning,
    delivery and evaluation can build confidence,
    develop skills and help people to realise their
    potential.

48
  • PEOPLE ENGAGEMENT POLICY
  • TCV will provide opportunities for people to
    engage with us in a variety of different ways to
    promote inclusiveness, accessibility and choice.
  • TCV will provide relevant information to people
    so that they can make informed choices about
    their involvement. We will strive to present the
    information in a format that meets the
    individuals needs.
  • TCV will provide opportunities for people to
    express their views, provide feedback and
    influence decision making.
  • TCV will provide training in how we deal with
    people, including those with extra support needs.

49
  • Principles
  • Volunteers shall be allowed to carry out any role
    in TCV given
  • the role fulfils a specified need,
  • that the volunteer has the required skills and
    experience and
  • there are sufficient resources to support the
    volunteer.
  • When the volunteer has been accepted into a role
    they should have all reasonable expenses covered.
  • travel, personal protective clothing, training
    and learning materials)
  • TCV expects that staff at all levels will work
    positively with volunteers and, where
    appropriate, will actively seek to involve them
    in their work.

50
  • All volunteers and employees have a
    responsibility to comply with this policy.

51
  • Sue Hilder
  • A trained environmental sculptor, Sue has worked
    in countryside access with a variety of
    organisations
  • including North Yorkshire County Council, the
    Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority and East
    Dunbartonshire Council. She is currently Access
    Officer for the National Farmers' Union Scotland,
    advising land managers across Scotland on access
    management issues. She started life with BTCV as
    a Volunteer Officer in Hull and became a Trustee
    in 1993. She is also an active member of the BTCV
    Scotland committee, the Nominations Committee and
    a Trustee/Director of Glasgow and the Clyde
    Valley Greenspace Trust. She combines her ongoing
    involvement in environmental art with interests
    including birdwatching and karate and currently
    resides in Glasgow.

52
  • Creating Volunteer Roles.
  • What sort of things would you want if you were to
    volunteer

53
  • Ownership
  • Sense of personal responsibility this is mine
  • Can be a team ownership
  • Being in charge of something, being proud of
    something

54
  • The authority to think
  • Manager does not abdicate responsibility for
    ensuring the good results
  • Work out what you would have to think about to
    tell them what to do. Give those thinking tasks
    to the volunteer.

55
  • Responsibility for the results
  • Achieve specific results
  • Not just carry out a process what is the result
    of the process
  • Allows volunteers to be successful

56
  • Keeping score
  • May sound like a measuring volunteer performance,
    which may demotivate - opposite
  • What information would tell us if you are
    succeeding in achieving the result?
  • How can we collect this information?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com