|
|||
Cultivation and CritiqueBy Claudia Kuric and Sharon Koll, with contributions by Myrl Weinberg Assume you have hired a great match to fill a position at your organization.
What can you now do to ensure success? Many times, failure in both
staff and volunteer management happens in the area of communication
about expectations. What measurement programs do you have that speak
to the growth and evaluation of employees and volunteers? What systems
do you have to help understand current abilities in necessary competencies,
and how can staff build on them?
At this point, many people usually roll their eyes and say, "we
don't have time." Yet, statistics on the reasons and costs of
turnover point to the lack of management guidance and mentoring on
a regular basis. You choose what you have time for - turnover; which
has a high cost, or a high performance work system, which includes
all the elements of the human resource function. Cultivation Then it happens: Once on board, we tend to lose our perspective of making that relationship the focal point. This happens time and again in the workplace, when product becomes the focal point, and the relationship is secondary. However, research studies have shown that interpersonal relationships are a critical component of how work gets done. Today we have direct evidence that people bounce from one organization to another based on what fuels them - usually respect and recognition for what they bring to a particular role. One recent study by WorkforceOnline found that people do not leave companies, they leave managers (see Bibliography). Let's piece it all together. As a manager of volunteers, you more often than not will be managing short-term, episodic volunteers. You have only a short time to cultivate the relationship. However; if the experience is a good one, they will recommit to another short-term episodic experience. What are you doing to bring them up to speed on their role and expectations? Orientation? Event specifics? How will they recognize success? Do you really know who they are and what makes them happy? For books on this topic in our bookstore, click the link(s) below:________ Permission is granted for organizations to download and reprint this article. Reprints must provide full acknowledgment of source, as provided: Excerpted from A Roadmap to Managing Volunteer Systems: From Grassroots to National, National Health Council, Inc., 2000. Found in the Energize website library at: http://www.energizeinc.com/art.html |
|
Energize empowers and inspires leaders of volunteers worldwide. Our specialty is creating and selecting the most relevant, innovative resources in volunteer management. We’re advocates for the power of volunteers and for the recognition of the leaders who unleash it. About Us
Energize, Inc., 5450 Wissahickon Ave., Philadelphia PA 19144 Phone: 215-438-8342, Fax: 215-438-0434 Contact Us By E-mail
![]()
Register for our free monthly e-mail update
[Hot Topic] [Bookstore] [Library][Referral Network ] [Recognition] [Jobs] [Search] [About Us] [Site Map] [Home]
[Home: http://www.energizeinc.com]