Imagine a world in which your nonprofit organization has all the resources it needs to serve more clients, deliver more programs, strengthen its staff, spread its message more widely, and increase its financial stability. Envision a future in which nonprofits have a pool of talented, skilled, and passionate individuals on call to build organizational capacity by serving as consultants, strategists, marketing gurus, ambassadors, innovators, mentors, fund-raisers, and direct service teammates. If this vision attracts, excites—even inspires—you, read on, because this future is here, now. This abundant resource is a workforce 78.2 million strong; they are the Baby Boomers, the former flower children born between 1946 and 1964 and they are our strongest growing resource.
Boomers have led change in every phase of their lives—from the revolutionary social changes during their teens and young adulthood in the 1960s and 1970s to the unprecedented career mobility and the ongoing presence of women in the workforce that marked their professional lives in the 1980s and 1990s. Just as concern for society’s well-being was the root of the social movement of the 1960s and 1970s, a desire to take care of individuals, the community, and the earth will propel Boomers to revolutionize nonprofits in the twenty-first-century. They are redefining retirement and will demand changes in the very nature of volunteerism.
To prosper and to leverage this resource, nonprofits must reengineer volunteering to align Boomers’ skills with organizational vision, mission, and goals in a purposeful way. Gone forever are the gray-haired men and women who, after spending forty years at the same job, became reliable volunteer office assistants and crossing guards. Boomers want to be challenged. They want to leave a social legacy. They want a variety of community service options so they can choose the ones that best fit their interests and their busy lives. They want to know that they have an impact on the organization’s vision and mission. Nonprofits can capture the talents and skills of Boomers and the next generations when they transform volunteer management into volunteer engagement and grow their capacity beyond the limits of what staff alone can accomplish.
While nonprofits are beginning to feel the effects of this dramatic change in the demographics of their volunteer pools, most organizations are not yet equipped to adjust to the impending transition—let alone seize the opportunities the shift offers. Nonprofits have undergone many changes over the past several decades. Many have successfully implemented concrete performance measurements and adopted more sophisticated fund-raising and marketing strategies. However, the traditional model of volunteer recruitment, retention, and recognition has not changed significantly. Nor has the culture of limited resources and staff. We refer to this mindset as the “never enough” syndrome. How many times have we heard staff and leaders lament, “If only we had more staff, or, If we only had more resources!” The very challenge posed by potential Boomer volunteers is, in fact, the answer to the common perception of “never enough.”
The journey that we outline in this guidebook will take organizations to a new place. Through deep collaborations with Boomer volunteers, nonprofits will position themselves to meet the demands of the twenty-first-century work environment. Throughout the guidebook, we explore new language to advance volunteerism to a position that melds with present-day organizational realities. Current volunteer management language reflects a top-down philosophy: recruitment, interview, placement, retention, recognition, and performance evaluation; all these terms imply that staff is directing the action to or on behalf of the volunteer. The volunteer is the object of the action.
Transforming volunteer management into volunteer engagement requires the commitment, dedication, and patience of organizational leaders and volunteers. The process takes time and hard work—but the benefits are immeasurable.
This guidebook opens with “Understanding the World of Boomers,” an in-depth look at the unique nature of the Boomer generation. The next chapter, “Structuring for Innovation,” outlines the foundation for organizational transformation and the process for convening a task force to shepherd the change. The chapters that follow provide a step-by-step process for reengineering an organization’s relationship with volunteers and include tools and exercises that will concretely move the organization forward in volunteer engagement. Each chapter features the philosophical framework for the step, the implementation process, and exercises for staff and volunteers to complete and add to the organizational toolkit.
The Implementation Steps:
• Mapping the Initiative: Work Plan
• Creating the Opportunity: Position Descriptions
• Developing Connections: Networking & Cultivation
• Capitalizing on Boomer Resources: Motivational Analysis
• Creating the Collaboration: Interviewing & Finding the Fit
• Nurturing the Relationship: Support
• Sustaining the Collaboration: Ongoing Engagement