Why People Aren’t Signing Up to Volunteer For Your Cause

Read time: 5 Minutes

In our newsletter a few weeks ago, we covered how to motivate your team to take action.

But inspiring people to volunteer is special. Because what people get in return is often not anything tangible – its community. It’s purpose. It’s feeling like being part of something bigger than you.

Recruiting volunteers effectively takes practice and skill.

In today’s issue of Changemaker Mondays ☀️ ☕ 🌍, I want to help you get ahead of the curve with an examination of why people might not be signing up to volunteer – and what you can do to inspire them to participate.

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A Quick Comment on the Volunteering Landscape

I think it’s important to acknowledge something before we get into this, and that is, that volunteer rates have been on the decline over the past few years.

COVID-19 didn’t help. In 2021, 23.2% of Americans volunteered, down 7% from 2019.

But there are some signs that volunteering is rebounding (fingers crossed); it looks like about 30% volunteered with an organization in 2023 (this doesn’t include informal volunteering that’s really hard to track, like helping your neighbor).

So that’s promising.

But we’ve all felt it. People are tired. Overworked. Many are burned out or burning out of their jobs. Of course recruiting volunteers feels harder now.

At the same time, though… people are craving community. Connection. Purpose, and meaning. And all of those are things they might, potentially, find while helping a great cause (like yours!).

So how do we give our social impact efforts the best chance possible in recruiting these amazing, passionate volunteers in our communities?

Here are some tips and strategies I’ve seen be highly effective in my own work, and in organizations I’ve had the honor of partnering with over the years.

Why People Don’t Volunteer

If you look up any research on the reasons people give for not volunteering, there’s an obvious one that rises to the top:

“I don’t have time.”

We live in a fast-paced world that prioritizes work and busy-ness. So, that tracks. But let’s dig a little deeper, because there are some interesting data points beneath that:

While insufficient time or fear of making a long-term commitment are top responses in a few studies, take a look at some of the reasons not falling too far below them:

Some standout, discussion-worthy responses include:

I’ve had a bad experience in the past.”

“I haven’t been asked to volunteer.”

“I hadn’t thought about it.”

All three of those things are things we can do something about in our role as nonprofit or social impact leaders.

Like aligning your team around how to make sure volunteer experiences feel welcoming and positive for people.

In other cases, just making sure people are aware of your work, and actively inviting people to participate, can bring in more volunteer support. Sure, it won’t get everyone, but it will reach some!

Some other common reasons I’ve seen for hesitation to volunteer include:

  1. Volunteers didn’t understand how the volunteer activity would make an impact
  2. Volunteers weren’t sure if they were “qualified” for the volunteer role
  3. Volunteers didn’t receive enough details or communication around expectations

Strategies to Recruit Volunteers

Now that we understand some reasons people might not engage, let’s talk about some strategies for mitigating that hesitation.

Flexibility

The fear of long-term commitment can be addressed by creating micro- or one-time volunteer experiences.

Yes – we need people who can commit for the long haul, too. But shorter-term opportunities can get people in the door to learn more about the great work you do, and that can be the beginning of a beautiful long-term friendship. 🙂

In my past organization, we did a survey of our volunteer base to understand reasons they did or did not volunteer.

One response intrigued us: “I don’t want to sacrifice family time.”

So, we started offering more opportunities for people to volunteer together as a family. The effort was so successful that family volunteering became an entire program for our organization, resulting in new volunteers and also, new donors (because when people form special bonds with your cause, many will also support it financially).

Messaging the Mission

It’s really important people see the line between their volunteer tasks and your ultimate mission. It’s 100% fine to ask a volunteer to help with cleaning up your nonprofit’s lobby, use their skills for accounting tasks, and more – you just have to explain how those things matter to your bigger cause (ending homelessness or improving education, etc.).

There’s a famous story about what happens when people see the connection between their efforts and the bigger mission.

You might have heard the anecdote about NASA’s janitor.

If you haven’t, the story goes that during a visit to NASA in 1962, President John F. Kennedy noticed a janitor sweeping the floor with a broom. The President walked over to the janitor and asked him what he was doing. The janitor replied with a smile on his face: “Well, Mr. President, I’m helping put a man on the moon.”

Smart volunteers understand that it takes a lot of effort – from cleaning up the lobby, to the administrative background work, to the direct service itself – to make a mission successful.

So talk about it. When people volunteer, explain how their tasks connect to the ultimate goals.

“By helping get our lobby tidy, you’re freeing up time for our vet techs to care for more animals,” and so forth!

Reduce Confusion

Would you sign up for an event or activity if you had no clue what you’d be doing once you got there?

Neither would many volunteers.

It’s important to create clear, detailed volunteer opportunity descriptions that include all the necessary details – when, where, what they’ll be doing, and what impact they’ll be making.

Will they need to wear certain shoes? Park in a specific place?

Leave as few details up to uncertainty as possible. This increases confidence, and the likelihood of getting sign ups.

And Communicate

But volunteers aren’t “recruited” until they come through the proverbial door, right?

So, once you do get sign ups, you’ve got to retain them, and solid communication is key here.

In my past work, I had a “3 email rule”. It meant me and my team:

  • Acknowledged a volunteer’s sign up within 2-3 days max
  • Provided a reminder with additional logistics details about a week or two before the volunteer activity began
  • And sent a final reminder 2 days before the activity, too.

If your team is on the ground a lot (and not at their desks), there are ways to achieve this without constant oversight of your sign up system too.

You could have email auto-replies kick out when someone signs up, or better yet, use a volunteer management system that does this for you automatically (there are many tech solutions out there).

Make it a Welcoming Environment

We touched on this before, but it’s worth repeating.

Volunteers (or any humans for that matter) don’t stick around in places they don’t feel welcome.

It doesn’t mean you have to bend over backwards, or provide top notch snacks (though pro tip: Most kinds of snacks always help, if you can swing it).

Mostly, it just means you need to be kind. And give volunteers an opportunity to build community with each other, too (and if possible, to build community with those they’re serving, too – but with empathy, equality, and dignity, not in an icky exploitative way.)

It seems obvious. But, we’re still seeing “I had a bad past experience” high on the “reasons someone doesn’t volunteer” list.

Final Thoughts

At the end of the day, remember volunteers are human, like any of us. And time is a human’s most precious gift. There are ways to make volunteering fulfilling and ensure it meets genuine needs for your cause!

Resource Roundup

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Funding Opportunities

  • Due August 31: The Lowe’s Foundation’s Gable Grants provides funding in the range of $100,000 – $1 Million to U.S.-based nonprofits supporting skills-development for trade professions.
  • ICYMI: Due September 6: The Arc is offering grants in the $5,000-$20,000 range for community organizations offering inclusive volunteer opportunities during the 2025 MLK Day of Service.
  • Due September 15: Robert Lehman Foundation provides grants up to $50,000 to museums, arts organizations, educational institutions, and other nonprofits who promote the visual arts.

📅

Events & Programs

  • September 17: Save the Date! I’ll be co-hosting a very special interactive webinar about grants. You don’t want to miss it – Stay tuned for details!

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Hey, Changemaker!

I’m Amber, writer of the Changemaker Mondays newsletter! I’m a nonprofit founder, speaker, and social entrepreneur on a mission to equip you with the tools you need to create positive change where ever you live — whether you’re starting a nonprofit or socially-conscious business, looking for a social impact job, or leading a volunteer project in your city. Don’t hesitate to connect (socials below), or reply to this email if you ever have any feedback on how we can make Changemaker Mondays the best newsletter for supporting changemakers in the world!