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Headlines
The changing face of CSR in Bangladesh: Bringing policy, business, and accountability together | The Business Standard, 24 may 2026
MASS: A Non-Profit Model for Architecture in Service of Society | ArchDaily, 23 may 2026
Four strategies to make the most of your charitable giving in 2026 | Marshall Independent, 22 may 2026
Is India Inc's CSR truly driving systemic change or just shifting funds? | The Economic Times, 22 may 2026
Why social enterprises need a different approach to capital and growth | World Economic Forum, 22 may 2026
Protecting a nonprofit's mission from the 'new idea' trap | Go Erie, 18 may 2026
Philanthropy in Asia emerging as 'risk capital' for social innovation: Report | The Hindu, 18 may 2026
Engaging volunteers to become advocates for nonprofits | Candid, 14 may 2026
Top 9 Nonprofit Funding Sources for Any Organization | GoFundMe, 09 may 2026
How to keep your nonprofit's fundraising safe online | AZ Big Media, 07 may 2026
Capacity Is Tested in Transition: Interim Leadership as Nonprofit Infrastructure | Nonprofit Quarterly, 04 may 2026
What Every Organization Needs To Know About? Enterprise-Grade Volunteering | Forbes, 01 may 2026
September 2024
Mohammad Anas Wahaj | 27 sep 2024
According to Goodera website (goodera.com), Skill-Based Volunteering (SBV) involves assisting and helping nonprofits in specific work areas through professional skills, knowledge and expertise. Leila Saad, CEO of Common Impact, says, 'SBV involves a little more effort than traditional volunteering. Employees use their professional skills in areas such as technology, HR, and finance to support a nonprofit that has an internal need. In particular, companies that have (artificial intelligence) expertise are interested in giving that resource back to nonprofits. According to Stanford Social Innovation Review article 'The Promise of Skills-Based Volunteering' (Authors: Christine Letts; Danielle Holly), 'Employers sometimes cast a wary eye on SBV, though, because it is complex to implement, it requires a longer-term commitment, and the results of the engagement can be harder to measure. Traditional community engagement programs such as grantmaking and volunteerism - by contrast - more readily align with a company's short-term quarterly outputs. And because the goals of these types of projects are narrower, the results can be easier to measure.' Tammy Perkins, chief people officer at ProService Hawaii, says, 'Making volunteering part of our workplace culture boosts employee morale, fosters teamwork, improves our community, and strengthens company culture. We think of volunteering less as a way for employees to polish their skills and more as a way for us to use our collective expertise to support these vital community services.' Meg Garlinghouse, vice president of social impact at LinkedIn, sees benefits for the company's workers and says, 'Employees are gaining and refining skills like empathy, teamwork, communication, problem solving, creativity, presentation skills, and more. According to a six-year study that the Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship conducted of a professional services firm found a 36% reduction in attrition for employees who participated in SBV, compared with those who did not. A 2024 Deloitte survey found that 91% of professionals indicated volunteer opportunities can have a positive impact on their overall work experience and connection to their employer. According to the SHRM's 2024 Employee Benefits Survey, more than 1/4 (28%) of 4529 respondents said that their organization provided the benefit of time off for volunteering. Ms. Perkins says, 'Ultimately, a purpose-driven workforce leads to better performance and a stronger, more unified organizational culture, and the nonprofit organizations who benefit are often under-resourced, especially in the area of HR.' Read on...
SHRM:
Skills-Based Volunteering Uses Employee Talents to Benefit Nonprofits
Author:
Kathy Gurchiek
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