Seven
Keys to Leading a Successful Volunteer Venture
Have you ever wanted to make a difference in your community, but haven't known
how to make it really work? Whether you want to start a mentoring program, a soup kitchen,
a library drive, or a clean up project, these keys will give you guidance as to how to
enroll voluteers and get the job done!
7 Keys
1) be willing to do the activity alone, if need be, and enjoy it
2) make the time, place and duration explicitly clear
to everyone you tell about your project
3) INVITE people. Don't coerce, try to sell it to
them, or overly control their participation. When invited, most people will bring
something to the "party" that really makes it fun.
4) keep it simple. Cleaning up trash is particularly
easy. All you need are garbage bags, places to put the trash, and gloves if you want to
look really official! Tell potential helpers about the raw materials (but bring enough
yourself to cover half-a-dozen who come without)
5) have fun doing what you want to do. After all, you
and everyone else will be actively making the world a better place... really. MAKING
THE WORLD A BETTER PLACE! (this is what inspires me, and probably you, and
probably many people who volunteer in community projects)
6) tell lots of people, including the press. Just call
them up and tell them what, when, where,and
how you are doing what you are doing. Even if you wind up alone out
there, you will still peak lots of interest, and people may want to join you next time.
You can always find online a resource/organizing principal that clearly articulates the
"why" you are doing what you are doing.
finally--and probably most important--
7) remind people that what they are doing matters by
telling incidents and specifics about how volunteering/mentoring/cleaning up/etc.
matters to you. Just the simple truth will inspire others. Talk about what you
have done to date, and the people you met along the way, and the "happy
callouses." Once people experience their own ability to make a difference, they will
probably keep it up on their own---and maybe do even more... Be sure to thank them for
what they do.
Oh yes, and if it is easy enough for you, bring some food treats for
your volunteers as a surprise. Maybe cookies or little chocolates or
something-- cheap and easy is my motto on this.
brought to you by: 
Copyright 2001, 2002 by Elizabeth Mullen. All
rights reserved. May be duplicated without permission for not-for-profit use only with
complete copyright information intact. All other uses, please contact the author at
www.elizabethmullen.com
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