NCOC Featured Discussion
Corporate Citizenship Highlight: Employee Volunteer ProgramsJune 14, 2010
![]() One way corporations are serving communities is by creating volunteer programs that engage employees in direct service and create partnership opportunities with nonprofit organizations. In a recent survey by the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy (CECP) in Giving in Numbers (2009), 94 percent of survey respondents have at least one formal domestic volunteer program and 49 percent of the respondents have at least one formal international volunteer program. These volunteer programs allow companies to devote their time toward fostering a culture of service. The Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship (BCCCC) wrote a report called The State of Corporate Citizenship 2009: Weathering the Storm and found that 83 percent of large companies support employee volunteering because of its positive community impact. BCCCC also found 62 percent of employees said they would rather work in companies that allow them volunteer opportunities with nonprofit organizations than those that don't offer civic engagement programs. There are different ways in which these programs are organized. Some companies create volunteer programs based on their employee's interest—do employees want to work with the environment, children, elder, homeless? Others choose causes and issues directly related to business operations. Once companies have come up with a collaborative concern within their community, they then team up with specific nonprofits to try to help solve community problems. A couple examples of Employee Volunteer Programs in action are: •Employee Volunteer Programs : These business–organized initiatives help recruit and match employees with volunteer opportunities in the community, sometimes during the workday (paid–release time), and sometimes on weekends (off–company time). •Days of Service : Corporations sometimes sponsor and organize teams of employees to participate in national service days in partnership with local nonprofits. These include events such as Join Hands Day, MyGoodDeed, Make a Difference Day, and the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service. •Signature service events : Corporations can create their own service days for employees. For example, in Partnership with the National Education Association, Target helped create Read Across America Day. Each year Read Across America Day is celebrated on Dr. Seuss's Birthday and allows Target employees to volunteer at local schools or host in–store events during the first week of March to celebrate the importance of K–12 education. •“Dollars for Doers” : To incentivize employee volunteerism outside work hours, some companies have “Dollars for Doers” programs that match employee's time contributions with a cash contribution from their employer. These programs are employer–sponsored, but employee–driven, and CECP Giving in Numbers (2009) report shows about 67 percent of companies have integrated a “Dollars for Doers” program as part of their domestic engagement portfolio. To institutionalize a culture of civic responsibility in business operations, some corporations form strategic partnerships with their local Volunteer Centers to build collaborative programs and partnerships with different nonprofits, schools, and social causes across the community. VolunteerMatch says employee volunteering allows employees to gain personal benefits, such as increased understanding of a community's needs and issues, a chance to test workplace skills, learn new skills, develop teamwork and leadership abilities, and make professional and business contacts. These programs benefit corporations by building brand awareness and affinity, strengthens consumer loyalty, improving employee retention, productivity, and loyalty, as well as providing a vehicle to reach strategic goals. Next in our Corporate Citizenship series: Pro bono service and skills–based volunteering. If you like this kind of content, sign up for an NCoC.net account and we'll customize your homepage recommendations based on your interests..
|
Recently Popular Tags
Baby Boomers
Business
Charitable Donations
Citizenship
Civic Engagement
Civic Health
Civic Learning
Deliberative Democracy
eCitizenship
Economy
Education
Elections
Expressing Political Views
Family & Friends
Gender
Generations
GenX
Government
Military
Millennials
Participating in Politics
Philanthropy
Policy
Political Involvement
Politics
Public Policy
Race
Religion
Service
Service-Learning
Social Entrepreneurship
Staying Informed
Trust
Understanding Politics & Government
Volunteering
Voting
|
||
| 202.955.6183 | conference@ncoc.net 1201 15th Street NW • Suite 420 • Washington, DC 20005 Copyright © 2000-2013 The National Conference on Citizenship. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy | Glossary of Terms |
Follow Us on: |
||
No Comments