This is an archived version of the Virtual Volunteering Project web site from January 2001.
The materials on the web site were written or compiled by Jayne Cravens.
The Virtual Volunteering Project has been discontinued.
The Virtual Volunteering Project web site IS NO LONGER UPDATED.
Email addresses associated with the Virtual Volunteering Project are no longer valid.
For any URL that no longer works, type the URL into archive.org
.
For new materials regarding online volunteering, see
Jayne Cravens' web site (the section on volunteerism-related resources).
 
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how the virtual volunteering project
involves online volunteers

by Jayne Cravens, Project Manager, Dec. 1996 - Feb. 2001

This information was last updated on April 3, 2000

With a lot of initial preparation, developing online volunteer opportunities and working with volunteers online quickly became relatively easy for me. The key was employing basic volunteer management practices, and that has kept managing volunteers, online or offline, from ever seeming burdensome or more trouble than it's worth.

Initially, I followed the VV Project's own guidelines for recruiting and involving volunteers for online assignments. These guidelines have proven so successful, in fact, that I don't actively try to recruit volunteers anymore, except for very specific types of assignments (such as helping with our filemaker pro database). The Project has a core group of 50 to 65 online volunteers at all times, ready to take on assignments; most wander onto the site by searching for online volunteering opportunities via their favorite search engine, and somehow find our very buried volunteer application (more on that later).

Reading all that I do, you may think I spend a large amount of time working with online volunteers. I don't. I spend 10% or less of my time each month doing all of the steps I've outlined here.

For easier reading, this narrative has been divided into separate Web pages:

 
I hope you find this narrative about my own experience helpful. I am always interested in hearing about your own experience managing online volunteers as well, either in narrative form (sent to me via e-mail, or via our online survey.

Our Index of Organizations Involving Online Volunteers offers a profile of more than 100 organizations and how they are involving volunteers virtually, the systems they use to recruit, evaluate and manage online volunteers, and visions for future virtual volunteering activities.

 


 
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If you find this or any other Virtual Volunteering Project information helpful, or would like to add information based on your own experience, please contact us.

If you do use Virtual Volunteering Project materials in your own workshop or trainings, or republish materials in your own publications, please let us know, so that we can track how this information is disseminated.


 

Copyright © 1999 - 2000 The University of Texas at Austin


 
This is an archived version of the Virtual Volunteering Project web site from January 2001.
The materials on the web site were written or compiled by Jayne Cravens.
The Virtual Volunteering Project has been discontinued.
The Virtual Volunteering Project web site IS NO LONGER UPDATED.
Email addresses associated with the Virtual Volunteering Project are no longer valid.
For any URL that no longer works, type the URL into archive.org
.
 

If you are interested in more up-to-date information about virtual volunteering, view the Virtual Volunteering Wiki.

about Jayne Cravens | contact Jayne Cravens