9 Questions to Build a Volunteer Team

Here are 9 questions to consider as you build a volunteer team:

  1. How do you GET people to volunteer? You cannot lead with guilt – manipulation does not cultivate healthy volunteers. You cannot lead by desperation – making people think you need them in order to survive. Get people volunteering with vision – the goal is not more people doing more things; the goal is people becoming more like Jesus

  2. How do you RECRUIT people to volunteer? Simply put you have to ask people, and you cannot shy away from “the ask.” Good people are busy and not often looking for more things to do. That does not mean they are unwilling to volunteer, it means you have to be bold and ask – and empower your volunteers to do the same.

  3. How do you IDENTIFY volunteer leaders? Look for people who have influence among you. You need more than the busiest or most productive person in the room. Find potential leaders that care more about who people are becoming rather than what they are doing. 

  4. How do you PREVENT volunteer burnout? Continually grow your circle, avoid asking the same few people to do everything. That will help you to continue to tap new people. Add into that mix a habit of consistent conversations with the people you lead. Keep your finger on the pulse of the health of team members.

  5. How do you TRAIN volunteers? Training volunteers starts at a very simple place – you have to explain the role and give room to ask questions. After explaining it you move into modeling it – let volunteers watch you and see how you do it. Then let them do it and you hang back to support, and eventually they volunteer and you keep yourself busy elsewhere.

  6. How do you COMMUNICATE to volunteers? Communicate with clarity while being concise and consistent. Be clear so they understand the expectations. Be concise as to treat their time as valuable. Finally be consistent by having a regular schedule of when you reach out to them.

  7. How do you APPRECIATE volunteers? Leverage things such as a personal hand written note, a quick 30 second “thank you” when you see them volunteer or even appreciation style gatherings. Find ways to highlight the results of their efforts and thank them for contributing to the results.

  8. How LONG do you ask a volunteer to COMMIT to serve? When someone finds their ideal spot to volunteer they no longer think about questions like, “how long do you need me here?” The ultimate goal is to get people to their sweet spot. When they begin volunteering ask them to start with a shorter length commitment.

  9. What can only staff members do that would be considered off limits to a volunteer? The short answer – almost nothing! Don’t fall into the trap of thinking some things should only be handled by staff. You would be surprise how many things would actually be extremely well cared for and grown under volunteer leadership.


    *Thoughts adapted from the Healthy Volunteer Culture Conference*

Previous
Previous

How to Grow a Volunteer Team

Next
Next

Sideways Energy