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Keep Those Volunteers Around: Chapter 3
By Dr. Bill Wittich
From Keep
Those Volunteers Around
The leader finds the dream and then the people.
The people find the leader and then the dream.
—
John Maxwell
Somehow people think of volunteers as people who
care but really can’t get the job done. The whole concept that we hear so
often that they are “only volunteers” says it all.
Even volunteers have been heard saying that they are only volunteers,
therefore don’t expect too much of them. Or the attitude
that the volunteer is not getting paid, so don’t expect a
professional attitude or performance. This is absolutely silly.
Look at college sports players. They don’t get paid, but
they still play their hearts out on the football field or basketball
court. Why doesn’t the college player say, “Well I
am just a College player, don’t expect too much from me until
I get a big salary in the pros”? You and I know that this
attitude would never get them to the professional ranks. Also,
the Fans don't pay high dollars for college stadium fifty-yard
seats and then say, “Don’t expect too much because
they are only beginners.” So why do we allow this minimal
expectation from our volunteers? It’s our job to raise the
bar and begin to expect excellence, to commit to excellence. Lou
Holtz in his book, Winning Every Day, gives it to us directly
when he says, “Leaders must challenge and inspire. I know
that many people today believe that demanding excellence is politically
incorrect. We are supposed to accept whatever an individual gives
us as the natural expression of his ability and not pressure him
or her by asking for anything more. Nonsense.”11 Our
job as volunteer coordinators is just like the college coach, that
is, to find and develop the best volunteers we can. Our job is
to encourage our players and help them reach their goals. Every
volunteer arrives at your front door fired up to perform a job
that will make a difference. They have a burning desire to create
change for people. Read the mission statement for your agency.
Isn’t that what it says it will accomplish? And those volunteers
come in to do these tasks that will make that difference. So what
happens? Many times it is the lack of leadership on the part of
the manager and their staff that deflates that excitement. Holtz
uses the example of General Patton who, when quizzed about the
ability of his army to finish one battle, march one hundred miles
and then fight another encounter in less than forty-eight hours,
said, “That’s what we’re in business for.” Every
leader must think that way.
For books on this topic in our bookstore, click the link(s) below:
A to Z: Volunteer Management Overviews
Supervision
________
Permission is granted for organizations to download and reprint this article. Reprints must provide full acknowledgment of source, as provided:
Excerpted from Keep Those Volunteers Around by Dr. Bill Wittich 2002 Knowledge Transfer Publishing. pp. 43-44
Found in the Energize website library at: http://www.energizeinc.com/art.html
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