How to Motivate Volunteers Season After Season

Researchers have identified six key motives for volunteering: · Values - expressing philanthropic ideals; Example: a person who loves gardening and is concerned about city beautification may volunteer for a tree-planting organization. · Understanding - learning or practicing skills; Example: a person who wishes to learn more about the hearing impaired community may volunteer her time tutoring children with cochlear implants. The volunteer will gain an understanding of the challenges and triumphs children in this community experience

 Volunteer Tanzania

· Social - engaging in volunteer work to be with friends; Example: volunteering to hand out water together at a charity run. The primary goal is to be with friends while working for the cause. · Career - furthering professional opportunities; Example: an event planner who volunteers his services to plan a charity auction will meet key business contacts and vendors in the process of planning the event. · Protection - counterbalancing adverse feelings or sadness; Example: A mother who lost a child to a drunk driving accident may volunteer her time to Mothers' Against Drunk Driving. · Enhancement - augmenting self-image or person growth; Example: A person who feels better about themselves as a result of their volunteer work. Research varies on which motivations are the best practices, however many people cite a combination of several factors in their reasons to volunteer. Volunteering and Serious Leisure A variety of volunteer opportunities are available to people in their leisure time. Often, one chooses a particular volunteer activity based on their personal interests or the interests of a family member. What may start as a couple hours of assisting with the check-in table at a child's hockey tournament can blossom into organizing registration for 30 hockey teams the following year. Volunteer activities can become so involved that they consume a person's leisure time. This type of experience is known as serious leisure, meaning the organized, long-lasting pursuit of an activity or skill set in which the participant is fully engrossed. Serious volunteers may describe their volunteer activities as work. For instance, the person who volunteers in a community gift shop or feeds animals at the shelter may call this activity her job.

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