Volunteer Policies

[Tip Sheet]

Avoiding Development Office Horrors Tips

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Development offices have faced a lot of “horrors,” not just at Halloween. Anything from the CEO leaving in the middle of a capital campaign, to naming a building for a convicted felon, to having their major fundraising event of the year “snowed out.”  Read more


[Recommended Book]

Nonprofit Essentials: Recruiting and Training Fundraising Volunteers

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Average: 5 (1 vote)
By Linda Lysakowski, ACFRE
Publisher's Description:

Nonprofit Essentials: Recruiting and Training Fundraising Volunteers examines methods for recruiting volunteers and the materials needed to implement a successful recruitment strategy. Particular emphasis is placed on the role of the campaign chair as the leader of the capital campaign effort.   Read more


[Tip Sheet]

Recruiting Fundraising Volunteers Tips

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Do you struggle with how to find, recruit and retain good fundraising volunteers? Here are a few helpful hints:  Read more


[Tutorial]

Small Development Shop? Stretch Your Staff Resources by Involving Volunteers

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By Linda Lysakowski, ACFRE
CAPITAL VENTURE CEO/President

You're in a small development shop, trying to manage grant seeking, coordinate special events, build your major giving program and start a planned giving program, all while maintaining a strong annual fund. So, how do you keep all the balls in the air and show the results your executive director and board are asking for (or maybe demanding!)? You'd love to hire more staff but your budget does not allow for any staff increases. Wouldn't it be great to have some "unpaid staff?"

Building a good volunteer base is one way to meet the growing demands of your development office. No, volunteers will not replace staff but they can be a terrific source of added "person-power." There are also some distinct advantages of having volunteers involved with your development program even if you have an adequate staff. Volunteers are often the best source of identifying, cultivating and soliciting donors. Volunteers will be more likely to have the connections to businesses and individuals that have affluence than your staff has. A volunteer can approach the "ask" from the standpoint of not being a paid employee and should always tell the prospect about their own commitment to the organization. Volunteers can also be asked to help with specific areas of expertise, such as planned giving, public relations or strategic planning. Board members, of course, are the chief volunteers for your organization, but I would invite you to think about other volunteers you can enlist to work alongside board and staff members in your development program.  Read more


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