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Home > NonProfit Charity Articles >Recognising Employee Volunteers
Recognition should fit with the organisation’s culture. A visit by a very senior member of management to a branch volunteer team could be a significant morale booster. Involve all the key players in the programme and your organisation.
Recognising Employee Volunteers
by Lisa Ramrayka
From Employee Volunteering: The Guide
Employers may want to follow these guidelines when considering how best to recognise and reward employee efforts:
Recognition should fit with the organisation’s culture. A visit by a very senior member of management to a branch volunteer team could be a significant morale booster. Involve all the key players in the programme and your organisation.
Respect
volunteers’ privacy. If recognition is public (for example,
a profile in the staff magazine or an award presentation) employees should
be asked in advance if they are willing to accept this form of publicity.
This is particularly the case if you are planning to recognise employees
who volunteer on their own, rather than through the company programme.
Keep in touch regularly with departmental co-ordinators
and committee members, to give them a chance to talk and to express your
appreciation of their efforts.
Choose who to recognise and why with care. The value
of recognition may be diminished if it is given out to too many people
for different levels of achievement. Write thank you letters or emails
to individuals and groups whose efforts are too small to warrant a substantial
recognition symbol.
The best rewards are often non-financial. If money is
offered, it could be given as a donation to the charity of the individual’s
or group’s choice.
Promote peer group recognition. This can be the greatest reward
of all and being asked to talk about their achievements to other branches
or public events can instil a great sense of pride.
Remember other employee volunteers. In the preamble to any award ceremony
or event, always refer to the volunteering efforts of individuals who
choose to volunteer outside the company programme.
Thank your volunteers promptly. Send thank you letters
or emails within two weeks of the event or project being completed, when
the experience is still fresh in their minds. It is impossible to say
thank you too much or too often.
Gaining recognition for all involved
secondees and others involved in longer-term volunteering
projects
line managers who have facilitated the volunteering to take place
branch volunteering co-ordinators who help to put together programmes
partner organisation contacts.
There are also ways to ensure that your organisation’s contribution
is highlighted and rewarded. These include:
national award schemes for volunteering (such as the
Whitbread Volunteer Action award)
local award schemes for community action (such as those run by the local
newspaper).
Interested in reading this book?
Employee
Volunteering: The Guide is available in the Online Bookstore.
Excerpted from Employee
Volunteering: The Guide, © 2001, National Centre for Volunteering.
Found in the Energize, Inc. website library at http://www.energizeinc.com/art.html.