The Cluetrain Manifesto, published in 1999, was a call to action for businesses to reckon with a new marketplace influenced by the Internet and Web 2.0. In 2010, we need a new call to action, a New Volunteer Manifesto, for associations. I’ll be diving deeper into this manifesto for the 21st century volunteer in my upcoming weekly guest column, New Insights from a New CAE, on SmartBlog Insights. I hope that you will join me there to wrestle with new perspectives on volunteering and associating.
The Big Picture
Members are strategic assets whose talents can be shared with the association. Invest in the infrastructure necessary to effectively recruit, develop, place, recognize and retain volunteer talent.
Beware the leadership bubble. Leadership can often develop an insular perspective and won’t always see what members really need and value. Cultivate multiple perspectives in your leadership.
Slay sacred cows. Get rid of committees, programs or pet projects that aren’t moving your association toward achieving its goals.
Find new jobs for your deadwood leaders. If they’re not open to innovation and new perspectives, ease them out.
Choose the right chairs. They must be leaders, managers, influencers and recruiters who are willing to share the benefit of leadership, and are forward thinking and receptive to new ideas and perspectives.
Appoint a community officer, perhaps your incoming president, as part of your leadership team whose main responsibility is to develop and retain a huge corps of volunteers.
Don’t just be an association for Boomers. Learn how to be an association for younger generations too. Be willing to experiment and change because you will have to.
Survey all members (new and current) at least once a year to find out their professional development needs, leadership experience, interests, talents and the number of hours they can give to the association per month (or quarter) so you can match them to volunteer opportunities.
Publicize all volunteer opportunities, particularly those requiring a minimal time commitment. Get creative — project them at meetings, include in correspondence, feature a few in each e-newsletter and on your web site, Facebook page, LinkedIn group or Twitter stream.
Demonstrate the value of volunteering. Answer the question, “what’s in it for me?”
Regularly make an obvious connection between what volunteers do and the success of the association’s mission.
Committee involvement may be too demanding for personal schedules. Encourage ad hoc or episodic volunteering — an hour or less here and there.
Cultivate evangelical leaders and volunteers, those with social capital, who will personally ask others to get involved.
Keeping Volunteers
Volunteering is a benefit of membership. Make it easy for your members to find ways to get involved. Eliminate perceived barriers. Open up your committee meetings.
Break down projects and committee work into smaller tasks that volunteers can take on. Tell your chairs to look outside your committee members for help with these. Share the benefit of volunteering.
Chairs must always share the benefit of leadership — delegate delegate delegate. Train many others to do your job.
Make meetings matter. Use a consent agenda. Build in time for strategic thinking and discussion. Don’t waste time on minutia that can be handled offline.
Make meetings enjoyable. Aim to be the highlight of someone’s day.
Encourage committees to explore new ways of meeting and working – new venues, online collaboration.
Thank every volunteer who helps in even the tiniest way.
Create a culture of learning, not only through your educational programs, but also within your leadership and your committees.
Deepen the reach of your leadership development programs. Include any member who leads up a team or project. Partner with other organizations to offer more programs.
Teach your leaders to build learning moments into committee agendas. Conduct ongoing training for leaders on how to recruit and work with volunteers.
Recognize those leaders who have led well by delegating and involving others.
New Ways of Associating
Build social networks that connect members with one another and with your association.
Give members the encouragement and tools to self-organize informal member meet-ups.
Make it easy for members to organize working groups to explore new ideas and projects.
Give younger members the means to contribute their talents and their voice.
Keep a spirit of entrepreneurial innovation alive in your leadership.
This Manifesto is my work in progress. I hope you’ll join me in sharing it with our colleagues in the association world. Let’s help our associations truly be 21st century associations.
Update: I expanded on this post in a series that I wrote for SmartBlog Insights. You can find those posts here as well — Part 1: The Big Picture, Part 2: Finding Volunteers, Part 3: Keeping Volunteers, Part 4: Creating a Learning Culture and Part 5: New Ways of Associating.
March 16, 2010 at 1:19 pm
There are so many great points in this post!
Some are just a dose of good ole common sense (which many of us brush aside when we’re overwhelmed) like “Demonstrate the value of volunteering. Answer the question, “what’s in it for me?” and others explore a new way of thinking about our roles like “Make meetings enjoyable. Aim to be the highlight of someone’s day.” So many see meetings as drudgery. Why shouldn’t they be enjoyable?
Great observations and suggestions. This post is one I will refer to over and over again as it’s one of those you garner new perspective from with each read. Thanks Deirdre.
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March 16, 2010 at 1:24 pm
Thanks so much for saying that! I see such resistance to new perspectives, more so in leadership than in staff. The other day I actually heard someone say about their governance, “if it’s working, why mess with it.” Ack! Take the blinders off! Working for whom? That’s the rub. Thanks again for commenting.
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March 16, 2010 at 1:41 pm
Right on, Deirdre. I am so change-oriented, it’s scary–but members and their needs are constantly changing–we have to ride the crest..that’s what makes our jobs fun and positive.
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March 16, 2010 at 1:51 pm
Hi there, nothing scary about being change-oriented. Good for you, that’s exactly the mindset we all need. You’re right, the association industry is endlessly fascinating because of change. Thanks for visiting and commenting!
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March 16, 2010 at 5:03 pm
Awe.some.sauce. Can I mention this in my next #Beyondrevelance webcast? 🙂
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March 16, 2010 at 5:19 pm
Heck yeah! Let’s start a movement! Thank Maddie. You have always been a generous and supportive friend.
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March 16, 2010 at 6:23 pm
These are all great points. I’m really excited about how social networks will change the ways we reach out to, connect with and mobilize volunteers – and the ways they do that with each other as well.
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March 16, 2010 at 6:26 pm
Me too, I love the potential to build more meaningful and deeper communities with and between our members. Thanks for reading and commenting!
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March 16, 2010 at 6:51 pm
Deidre, Great points, all of them! One bad year of experience on a business association board certainly turned me off from participating again for a while!
One thing I’d add is you can’t just rely on surveys. For all types of surveys, people will tell you what they think you want to hear or what they would like to think they’d be interested in. But in the end, they vote with their dollars and their feet.
For volunteering surveys again, I think they’d like to think they could put time into this or that.
But inviting people one-on-one to participate (which, being shy, wasn’t my strong suit!) was still the most effective way I saw of recruiting volunteers because something abstract becomes more personal–they feel that they specifically are wanted and their skills will be valued.
And for the bigger picture, I think associations really have to have someone dedicated to regularly looking at ways to increase membership value. There are so many things associations can do that don’t have to cost much but can move them from the “Well, should I renew? category to the “There’s no way I’m NOT renewing!” category. And these days, it’s all about value.
Good job and congrats on the new column!
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March 16, 2010 at 7:14 pm
Thanks Tracy for these good comments and insights. The personal ask has been proven (by research – Decision to Join from ASAE) to be the most effective method for recruiting volunteers. Somehow we have to get across to folks that an hour per quarter is fine, or even 30 minutes. Everyone starts somewhere and any effort is appreciated.
Also, we’re long overdue for a beer!
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March 31, 2010 at 8:02 am
[…] 2010 Just a quick pointer, in case you haven’t seen it yet, to Deirdre Reid’s post the New Volunteer Manifesto. It’s a Cluetrain-inspired call to action for associations, to define and develop the 21st […]
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March 31, 2010 at 8:26 am
Deidre, this is great. I am working on a volunteer training piece for one of our components. This is fabulous. I plan on sharing the link to this post with our leaders. Sometimes it takes a voice from outside our sphere of influence to drive a point home. Thanks!
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March 31, 2010 at 8:28 am
I’m so glad you liked it. I hope it does inspire staff and leaders to try some new things. I’ll be digging deeper into each section on a series of posts for SmartBlog Insights in a few weeks.
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April 2, 2010 at 9:17 am
I think I’ve found a new mentor, ha! Deirdre, on so many levels, “The New Volunteer Manifesto” resonates within my heart and soul. I am a newly elected president of a 25 year old association that has not operating within the guidelines of it’s organizing and governing documents. I was obviously very disheartened by this discovery and immediately thought about resigning. I am now completing my third month of enduring increased resistance and the question I am currently asking myself is “am I the one to do this or should I just go with the flow and let someone else fix these mounting problems on their watch?” A lot of my questions were answered reading this post, I am the one and I can be the change agent who steps up fixes as much as I am able to during my tour of duty. I care and the board cares about this association, but change is extremely difficult for some. Our members, however, deserve more than what is currently being offered andI believe we owe them better leadership as members of the board. Thanks so much for writing this and encouraging me to continue doing what needs to be done.
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April 2, 2010 at 11:15 am
Oh, Theo, you have made my day, heck, my week. I am so happy to have given you inspiration to be the leader you are meant to be. I’ll be digging deeper into each section of this manifesto on SmartBlog Insights in a few weeks. I hope that will give you continued inspiration and ideas. Lead on!
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April 15, 2010 at 11:00 am
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