There are many people that want to donate - to volunteer - their professional skills or expertise to a nonprofit, NGO, charity, school or a community or environmental project. They are sometimes called "skilled volunteers." I've always called them technical assistance volunteers, but I seem to be the only person that calls them that. These volunteers might build a web site, or build an app, or build a garden, or design a building, or provide legal assistance, and on and on, for a nonprofit, or even a government program that engages volunteers and supports a particular community, like a women's shelter or a home for people with addicted issues. These are volunteers that are going to work primarily with a program's staff, including other volunteers, rather than directly with clients, but the result of their service may directly affect clients.
Some people, when they volunteer, don't want to do anything associated with their area of professional expertise: a lawyer may want to do something that is literally hands-on, like cleaning up a beach or trail. Or they may want to tutor a student in math. But others want to donate their expertise specifically - a web designer may want to design a web site for a nonprofit that is accessible for people with disabilities. A marketing director may want to design a volunteer recruitment campaign for a school. A construction worker may want to lead a construction project, like building a gazebo in a community garden. A motorcycle mechanic may want to teach young people the basics of motorcycle repair.
The most popular technical assistance assignments for volunteers, in my experience, are IT/ICT-related projects - just look at all of the many apps4good hackathons, where computer programmers work over a day or two to build an app to benefits some cause - helping people find food banks near them, helping people find shelters with available beds, etc. This page that you are reading now has a slant towards ICT volunteers building products or projects for nonprofits, but the advice is applicable to any volunteers donating their professional expertise.
Technical assistance-type volunteering are very popular with volunteers, and much sought-after, but problems can arise in such situations:
To keep a technical assistance volunteer experience
beneficial rather than frustrating for the person or program
you are trying to help, keep the following in mind:.
Here is a long list of what virtual volunteering looks like. And The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook, written by myself (Jayne Cravens) and volunteerism expert Susan Ellis and the result of MANY years of research and experience, can help you, as a volunteer, help a nonprofit, NGO, charity, school or community-focused government program to develop a more widespread virtual volunteering engagement scheme, one that isn't limited to technical assistance volunteers (such as an online mentoring programs where online volunteers help a nonprofit's clients). The book details what virtual volunteering is, all of the many, many different forms in which it is practiced, various ways to support and grow virtual volunteering, and how to address various challenges that might arise in creating roles and activities for online volunteers and supporting volunteers in those roles.
The book can help you, or even your entire company, work with nonprofits, NGOs, schools, etc. to help them develop virtual volunteering opportunities for your employees, for the local community, for a nearby university, or anyone, anywhere, who might want to help. Many traditional nonprofits are still struggling with the concept of virtual volunteering, despite it being a well-established, credible practice; corporate support in the form of training and funding could help greatly in getting volunteer centers to embrace virtual volunteering. The book can also help individuals who just want to provide the highest quality service possible as a volunteer, in technical assistance roles or otherwise.
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