Archive for the ‘News & Links’ Category

Fully Clothed: Why Corporate Support is Vital to Volunteering

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

Today’s post originally appeared on Chicago Cares‘ daily blog site on July 20, 2012.

“Is Volunteering the Emperor’s New Clothes,” was a title that we could not resist when visiting Realized Worth on Wednesday morning. In her Hot Topic article, Susan Ellis wonders what, if anything was really accomplished at the 2012 National Conference on Volunteering and Service (NCVS). Concerned about the role of corporate sponsorship on service, Ms. Ellis asks, “Why is volunteerism up for sale and up for grabs like summer’s most popular fashion?”

In 2011, Chicago Cares engaged nearly 14,000 corporate employees in service to our city. At the 2012 National Conference on Volunteering and Service, we worked with Points of Light and Chase to create the Seeds for Change project models that Ms. Ellis calls into question. We’ve taken a few points directly from the article to share some of our thoughts with nonprofits and corporations.

For Our Corporate Partners:

Cause Marketing is NOT volunteering

“It’s good news that high-ranking people are talking about volunteering in all sorts of public forums. The bad news, however, is that each corporation and national organization wants to ‘wear’ volunteerism…for only a moment.”

The vast majority of examples provided in Ms. Ellis’ article are focused on cause marketing, not on actual corporate service.

We will be the first to agree that cause marketing and “Dollars for Doers” types of programs are not ideal for the corporation, the nonprofit or the volunteer. As Realized Worth has already discussed, corporations trying to incentivize service face dwindling employee engagement and minimal measurable impact. Our research has shown that people who volunteer through these types of marketing programs generally don’t return to serve again, which results in sporadic support for the nonprofit.

Philanthropy is not a single act, it is a way of life. Volunteers serve because they have a personal connection to the cause or community they are serving, they don’t come for a cup of coffee. Nonprofits that recruit and train volunteers must embrace this responsibility and provide corporations the expertise to create successful and meaningful service opportunities.

Unfortunately, for many nonprofits, the time and effort needed to build and maintain high-impact volunteer programming remains a struggle due to tight budgets and employees already spread too thin by more pressing needs. This is why organizations like Chicago Cares and other HandsOn affiliates are so important. If a company really wants to make a difference, we can ensure that their actions translate into impact, balancing the interests of the company with the needs of the nonprofit organization. We are already in the community, managing ongoing relationships with organizations, listening to their needs and responding with appropriate project planning, supplies, logistics and curriculum that can best meet those needs.

Real Corporate Service is alive and well…and making an impact!

“Maybe it’s because service is an easy platform for corporations and institutions to gain a halo effect merely by stating a commitment to community involvement – with no risk of being held to promises made or even having to report back any activity at all.”

Every year we work with hundreds of companies of all sorts and sizes. Whether it’s an international conglomerate or a local business, the reason they return year after year has little to do with getting good press. They come back because they appreciate the opportunity to do hands-on work at local schools and social service agencies, they discover their employees are happier and more engaged when they learn to work together through volunteering and they’re inspired by what they can achieve outside of their day-to-day business goals.

The unique benefit that corporate volunteers offer through service is the ability to provide substantial budget relief to local service agencies which allows those organizations to focus their efforts on achieving their mission goals. In the words of Ms. Ellis, “examples abound.”

  • Over the course of a single month, Discover’s BT Division was able to mobilize enough volunteers to repaint every client’s bedroom at Little City, a project that would have taken years for the organization to accomplish on their own. Because of Discover’s financial investment, those volunteers also constructed a “Safety Town,” where the Little City community can practice safe behaviors in a controlled environment, creating a greater sense of independence for residents.
  • When our partners at the American Indian Center were awarded a grant from the Chicago Blackhawks to build an auditorium for their students, the staff was overwhelmed at the prospect of removing decades of stored items from their third floor space. Hyatt was able to provide enough volunteers to completely clean out the space in a single day, allowing the staff at the American Indian Center to utilize their grant funds more quickly.
  • What started as a painting project at a Southside school for Grosvenor employees a few years ago, has grown into a unique relationship between the company and the school. Grosvenor employees continue to help with facilities improvements but they have also started tutoring programs, job skills training, sports camps and museum field trips at a school where over 99% of the students live at or below the poverty level.

Companies are doing more than coming up with slogans, through Corporate Volunteer Programs they are making a real difference in the lives of thousands of Chicagoans.

To Our Nonprofit Community:

If you aren’t reporting, you’re doing it wrong.

“Shouldn’t high profile volunteer promotions be held accountable by someone?”

YES. At Chicago Cares we know that reporting is key to ensuring a quality experience for the volunteer and a lasting impact for the community. Before a project can even begin, it is imperative to have information on the actual needs of the community and an understanding of the obstacles that your project will face. Throughout the entire life cycle of the service initiative, organizations must be keeping track of basic metrics like volunteer show rates, projects completed and cost analysis. Surveys need to be collected that measure the personal experience of the volunteer and the impact perceived by the community. We must include long-range data that asks questions like, “Did the volunteer return, why or why not?” and “Is there any measurable improvement in the community, why or why not?”

Take, for instance, the Seeds for Change program sponsored by Chase which was a central campaign at NCVS this year. We love to share the impact that volunteers had at the hands-on projects which served 3 under-resourced schools in Chicago. At Schmid Elementary in the Pullman neighborhood, volunteers built a learning garden that is part of the principal’s push to encourage healthy living and introduce her students to fresh foods that aren’t always available in this food desert.  We started this project by sitting down with the principal and outlining her vision for the school.  The community need always comes first.

Thanks to Chase’s support, conference participants had the opportunity to spend the morning volunteering at CPS schools in located in food deserts. Back at the conference center, thousands more helped build garden kits that will be delivered to almost 100 schools so that they can finally use their gardens as learning tools.

We measure the impact of these projects in several ways, including: what was accomplished, how many students will benefit, what will volunteers take away from this experience? We use this data to help improve our programs, to communicate impact to our corporate partners, and to share with the community we are serving.  We believe measuring impact is critical to an effective volunteer project, whether volunteers are from community groups or corporations.

We can’t speak to what sort of data was provided to most of the companies that Ms. Ellis mentions in her article. However, if a company is not being provided with accurate and informed reporting after their service initiatives are complete, they need to find a new partner.

Be better than the hype

“…if our goal in the volunteer community is to increase and sustain volunteering over time, promotional campaigns must go beyond hoopla to legitimacy.”

We believe that if the volunteer community wants to increase and sustain volunteering over time, they need to stop focusing on finding the next promotional campaign and start focusing on quality volunteer experiences.

Real volunteers, the people who will become invested in the community and continue to serve, aren’t there to receive a prize, they’re there to make a difference. Whether a volunteer is walking into a project for the first time or the 100th time, it is our responsibility to make sure that when they leave, they know that their time was well-spent. Of course, there are times when we fail but it is exactly those failed experiences that allow us to collaborate with volunteers and partners in finding innovative ways to improve upon the work that we’re doing.

By relying on national ad campaigns to bring volunteers through our doors, we’re selling ourselves and our community short. In a recent survey, nearly all of our volunteer respondents mentioned how much personal fulfillment they receive by donating their time. Being an active part of building stronger communities is a truly transformational experience and that is the story that volunteer service organizations need to do a better job of telling.

If you really don’t believe that the act of giving your time in service to help others is far more powerful than a trip to a theme park or a coupon for free gas, than you are in the wrong business.

So What Do We Do Now?

“There is nothing wrong – and actually quite a bit of good – in many voices repeating the invitation to get involved.”

If you’re a company, don’t settle for a mediocre volunteer program. Chicago Cares, or other volunteer service organizations like us can help you meet your goals in a way that will have a deep impact on you and your community. If you aren’t receiving adequate reporting, start asking for it. If you aren’t being given a quality experience, find a better option. You have the power and the capacity to create a lasting impact in your community, so make sure you’re partnering with people who can help you make it happen.

If you’re a nonprofit organization, take charge. It doesn’t take a lot of money to tell a volunteer’s story or to research the ways that your organization is reaching your community. Improving your volunteer programs can often start with something as simple as running a quick survey to get ideas from the people who are supporting your work through service on a regular basis. Learn from their comments and don’t be afraid to try new things. Every school and agency has a story to tell. If it seems too overwhelming, then find a HandsOn Affiliate to help you recruit and organize volunteers for your programs. Don’t wait for a corporation to inspire your volunteers to serve, go out and do it yourself!

For all of us, the most important thing that we can do is serve. Serve without cynicism. Serve with awe at what we can accomplish when we all work together.

iHubs: Strengthening Our Civic Network

Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

Today’s post originally appeared on the Points of Light blog site on June 18, 2012.

HandsOn Network is engaged in a focused field investment strategy called Innovation Hubs (iHubs), designed to dramatically accelerate the growth, effectiveness and impact of our network. Through iHubs we are engaging a cohort of our strongest, most progressive market leaders to formulate innovative approaches and pilot best-in-class initiatives with the intent of scaling the most impactful opportunities to benefit the entire network, and ultimately, the communities we serve.

In 2011, through a competitive application process, 10 affiliates were selected to comprise the initial iHub cohort. Leveraging resources provided by Points of Light’s Service Generation Campaign, these affiliates also received leadership development training, coaching and $30,000 in seed funding to launch and learn from their own concepts of innovation. By 2014, we plan to expand to 30 iHubs.

Our strategy compels a conversation that teams with possibility. Imagine the potential of a learning cohort of nonprofit executive leaders and funders who are committed to identifying, testing, implementing and evaluating replicable models for 21st century volunteer engagement. Imagine the power of 30 iHubs to change local communities and to influence, guide and mentor an additional 230 HandsOn Network affiliates. As a result, we have the opportunity to lift up the work of the entire network and test cutting-edge strategies for engaging more than 70,000 nonprofit partners and millions of volunteers.

Current HandsOn Network affiliate iHubs include:

  • Volunteer Center of Bergen County
  • Boston Cares
  • New York Cares
  • HandsOn Twin Cities
  • Chicago Cares
  • HandsOn Central Ohio
  • Volunteer Center of Santa Cruz County
  • Seattle Works
  • Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership
  • HandsOn Greater Portland

Below are a few examples of the innovative work from iHubs:

Boston Cares believes their future and the future of HandsOn Network depends more than just telling stories, but requires showing them. They use new tools including info graphics, data animation and visual statistics to reveal volunteerism for what it is – our nation’s most untapped resource.

Seattle Works is building on the concepts of collective giving and team-based volunteering to break down the silos between donors, volunteers and causes. Their innovative concept is to develop an integrated service model that brings together groups of investors and creates unified teams to seed, lead, staff and support projects from concept to evaluation.

One of the more provocative iHubs projects comes to us from HandsOn Greater Portland. As a way to lessen their dependence on more traditional funding sources, this affiliate seeks to test market the feasibility of offering tailor-made service learning experiences and issue-based service opportunities to individuals and groups for a fee.

By investing in iHubs, there is an opportunity to significantly expand and transform the nation’s long-standing civic infrastructure. We can help reimagine a network of service and civic geographically based hubs that have been vital to local communities for 100 years. The iHubs initiative can ensure the vitality and efficacy of this network for a new generation of engagement for the next century.

For more information please contact Paul Hollahan at , or .

Why “Slacktivists” Are More Active Than You Think [Infographic]

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

This awesome infographic originally appeared on Mashable.

What do you think about slacktivism, is it an effective tool or not?

We Are Superstars!

Sunday, April 1st, 2012

Breaking news! We have just been informed that the United Nations finally MET its top eight Millennium Development Goals as of last night!

This is a call for celebration!

The United Nations announced their Development Programme at their Millennium Summit in 2000. They hoped to have all goals met by all 193 United Nations member states by 2015.

Well guess what these goals were met early!!!

  • Everyone has enough to eat!
  • Everyone can access primary education no matter where they live!
  • Women are treated the same as men!

Infant mortality is nearly zero!

  • Every mother has the prenatal care they need to have a healthy baby!
  • HIV/AIDS and malaria are gone!
  • The environment is great!
  • There’s a development plan in place for the third world!

While you were busy watching Dancing with the Stars, HandsOn Network, Points of Light, generationOn, and AmeriCorps Alums were working with our affiliates and partners for months to come to an answer for these problems.

Last night, we came to our final conclusion and all eight goals were met, thanks to our awesome volunteers. (Unless you actually mean superman)

So what does this mean?

Well of course we are about to receive many awards from across the world because we basically saved it through our volunteer work. After the hype is over, we will not need any more volunteers.

We’re developing a new path to promote social good after we relax from saving the world, of course  Soo sit tight, we will be hibernating for spring and winter, sorry if you are inconvenienced from our world saving aftermath!

Think twice…..HAPPY APRIL FOOLS EVERYONE!!!!!!!

Don’t worry we still need volunteers and we are still working on these goals, but we thought it was a good joke, right?!

Join the AmeriCorps Book Club

Monday, January 30th, 2012

Today’s post originally appeared on the AmeriCorps Alums blog site January 23, 2012. The post was written by Ken Tran the External Relations Coordinator at AmeriCorps Alums.

January is Book Blitz Month – an opportunity for authors to promote with media to get their books into the best sellers list and into the hands of readers like us! As an AmeriCorps Alum, I’d like to see some of our next New York Times Bestselling Authors to be ones that are passionate about National Service and care about  Millennials leading in that movement.

After a great twitter conversation with (Arizona’s CNCS State Director) and (Seattle AmeriCorps Alums Chapter Leader) about starting an , I put together a list of recommended books that would be great to read as we all continue our Lifetime of Service. All the books on this list feature stories of AmeriCorps or National Service; helping us understand where Service has been and where it is going, especially as we continue to advocate to Save Service and why it is essential to fostering a stronger future for America.

See what we’ll be reading on our AmeriCorps Book Club Reading List:

The Time of Our Lives – Tom Brokaw

Why you should read it: Brokaw, former anchor of NBC’s Nightly News, looks at some of the prevalent issues affecting our Millennial generation and offers insight into how we can revitalize the American Dream through civic engagement and community. Weaving stories from his family’s upbringing in South Dakota and reflections from Americans who are change agents in their communities, he provides a hopeful vision of what our country can be, even in these hard times.

The Bill – Steven Waldman

Why you should read it: In recent years, many cuts to National Service and AmeriCorps have been debated in Congress. To understand the public policies and legislative processes at work, we’ll need to take a trip down memory lane and look at how the National Service Bill was initially passed under the Clinton administration. For those of us who aren’t as knowledgeable in the workings at the Hill, this will be a great read to help us understand what’s in motion and at stake as we continuing to Save Service.

A Call to Civic Service – Charles Moskos

Why you should read it: Moskos calls for all young Americans, between the ages of 18 – 23, to serve in some capacity in National Service to their country. Whether it be serving in day care, correctional facilities, with the poor in health, etc or in the All-Volunteer Military Force, he believes that young Americans should be giving back to strengthen their country. Sounds like something we all can relate too…

Of Kennedys and Kings – Harris Wofford

Why you should read it: Wofford, one of the founders of Peace Corps and former CEO of the Corporation of National and Community Service, recounts what can be accomplished with leaders, like the Kennedys and Martin Luther King, JR, who committed to public service and being responsible with their political powers. As the 2012 elections are coming up, we as alumni of National Service, we want to make sure that we elect a leader that will reflect, support, and implement our values.

This is just a short list and I’m positive there are other books you’d love to see on this growing list. What books would you recommend to be added in the AmeriCorps Book Club?

 

How The Top 50 Nonprofits Do Social Media

Friday, October 28th, 2011

 

Check out this great infographic about how the top 50 nonprofits use social media from craigconnects! You can , and for more great info about nonprofits!

Coming Together To Save Service

Monday, August 8th, 2011

Today’s post comes from Michelle Nunn, CEO of Points of Light Institute and co-founder of the HandsOn Network.

Last week, the president signed into law the Budget Control Act of 2011. The compromise calls for $917 billion in cuts over the next 10 years, and another $1.5 trillion in cuts could be identified through a 12-member bipartisan committee.

It is now apparent that many federal programs will be threatened with either significant spending reductions or elimination.

The Corporation for National and Community Service and the programs it administers – AmeriCorps, the Volunteer Generation Fund, Senior Corps and RSVP, VISTA and others – will be vulnerable in this environment.

Now is the time to act.

On Wednesday, Aug. 10, supporters of national service programs are once again visiting their elected representatives’ home offices to let them know the importance of national service in their communities and across the nation.

You can find and join a District Day event at the office of your member of Congress on the Save Service website. Along with District Day events near you, you’ll find information that you can share with your member of Congress about the impact of national service programs in your state.

If you’re not able to participate in a District Day event, please take the time to write or call your member of Congress and let them know why national service is important to you. You can find your representatives’ contact information here and your senators’ contact information here.

National service enables people to make meaningful contributions to their communities, build organizational capacity, generate community-based social capital and leverage more than 1.4 million additional adult volunteers to tackle some of America’s toughest social, environmental, educational and economic challenges.

Please join me in highlighting the importance of national service programs on August 10 by visiting, calling or writing your representatives.

 

In Service,

 

 

Michelle Nunn

CEO, Points of Light Institute

Co-founder, HandsOn Network

What’s Your Heart & Soul?

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Heart and Soul 2011 Grant Award

How often does your organization step back and remember your mission?

Sure, you know what your mission is, but how often do you refine the sense of mission that exists in the hearts of your staff, board members and supporters?

This year’s Heart & Soul grant program, put on by the CTK Foundation, is designed to do just that.

To win, you have to channel your creativity to write an original four- to eight-line poem or stanza that reflects the work or mission of your nonprofit.

No poets on staff?

Why not ask your supporters to write a poem for you?

The 1st place winner will receive $10,000 and will have their submission turned into a song to be used in public education or awareness.

The song will be written and recorded by songwriter Bill Dillon — who was recently exonerated after 27 years in prison thanks to Innocence Project of Florida — and produced by Jim Tullio of Butcher Boy Studios.

The contest is open to all nonprofits in the United States, Canada and the UK.

The winning nonprofits will receive one of the following awards:

  • 1st place award is the song, plus a cash grant of $10,000 (US) or it’s value in foreign currency
  • 2nd place award is a cash grant of $5,000 (US) or it’s value in foreign currency
  • The 2011 Blogger’s Choice Award, where a randomly selected blogger participating in spreading the word among nonprofits about the H&S Grant Award Program will choose a nonprofit applicant to receive a $1,000 cash grant or it’s value in foreign currency
  • 2 steel-stringed guitars, signed by all members of Los Lonely Boys (which you can auction for fund-raising)
  • Up to 20 technology grants, valued at $10,000, to nonprofits that indicate an interest

There is a quick turnaround on these grants. You must submit an application by midnight on March 28, 2011, and you’ll be notified if you’ve won on April 10. Visit www.communitytech.net to apply.

Follow the effort on Twitter at .

Time to wax poetic!

Who Do You Know That’s Moving A Mountain?

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

Today’s post was written by Laura Gonzo, President, Gonzo Media Strategies.  She is also a self-professed dogganista, blogger, corporate marketing refugee and excitable advocate for social good.

Each year on Presidents Day we are reminded of iconic moments from our nation’s leaders: Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address; Kennedy’s  “Ask Not What You Can Do For Your Country” inauguration speech.

One of my favorites will always be George H. W. Bush’s 1989 inaugural address in which he spoke of “Points of Light” – an electrifying reminder of our power as individuals to engage, mobilize and make significant and lasting change in our communities, both local and global.

Who is a Point of Light in your world?

For Ashley Cannady of Gainesville, Georgia, it’s Vicki Moore of Rahab’s Rope, who offers refuge and rehabilitation to women who have escaped from the human trafficking industry in India.

Her inspiring story and many more are being posted at this very moment on the Points of Light Tribute Wall as part of a larger event that will include a tribute to President George H.W. Bush and his legacy of public service at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC.

Personally, I am profoundly energized by the amazing work, innovative ideas, passion, and indefatigable dedication of those people – those Points of Light – who have decided that they can and will change things for the better.  They aren’t looking for recognition but they deserve it, and the act of telling their stories can inspire others, igniting new Points of Light and providing fuel for those who continue to shine despite the most unimaginable challenges.

In addition to the Tribute Wall, Points of Light Institute is holding a as another way to celebrate volunteer heroes and to inspire others. Winners are eligible to win an expenses-paid trip to attend the star-studded tribute event in at the Kennedy Center in DC.

Go! Now! “Like”! Write!

Not only do volunteer heroes deserve a little online love, in the bigger picture your participation can help draw attention to the Service Generation Campaign, which seeks to recruit and activate 500,000 (yes, five-hundred thousand) service leaders and to help design and execute 2,000,000 (yes, two MILLION) impact-driven volunteer projects.  That’s all kinds of amazing and it starts with Y-O-U!

So give a shout out to your favorite Point of Light already. Who has inspired you? Who do you know that is moving a mountain, even if it’s one pebble at a time? Who is it that just knocks your socks off?

I knew immediately who I wanted to recognize.  As soon as I finish this blog, I’m going to put on some lipstick and fire up the video camera. It’s going to be good. Be sure to look for it on the Tribute Wall!

Can’t wait to see yours.

Volunteerism Breaks Out in Egypt

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Something amazing is going on in Egypt.

People are spontaneously coming together and providing and supporting state services.  People are escorting ambulances, cleaning streets, and maintaining security – all as spontaneous volunteers.

Yesterday’s New York Times ran an article about that started a group to protect utilities and help alleviate traffic problems.

The Atlantic ran the video above about people coming together to clean streets in the wake of protests.

People are organizing to protect cultural institutions from looting.

What lessons can be learned from this?  How can a group of people coming together spontaneously help to make their community – and their country – better? Does large-scale spontaneous volunteering require some kind of civic upheaval? Let us know what you think in the comments!

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