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Non-Profits
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Workshops About Volunteerism

Are we volunteer ready?

Volunteers can be the cornerstone of assisting a nonprofit in delivering its services to clients and participating in activities such as fundraising. Using the skills and talents of volunteers helps to build capacity and extend a nonprofits reach into the community.

This workshop will enable nonprofits to examine their potential for using volunteers and/or to assess their current volunteer program. The ability to use episodic, pro bono, and consultant volunteers will help to extend the reach of any nonprofits capabilities. Using volunteer program quality assurance standards, participants will be able to assess their volunteer ready potential.

Is Your Nonprofit On The Right Track?

How do you know if you are on the right track if you do not know where you want to go? One proven method of keeping an organization on track is to develop a solid vision of where you want to be. To begin a successful trip, you must know why you exist and what priorities will take you to your vision. Thorough first steps will keep you on the right track.

The ability to articulate a vision for a nonprofit and understand how various programs are an integral part reaching an organization’s mission is a key competitive skill. Examining the trends, history, and what stakeholders think will enable a nonprofit to establish priorities and methods of measurement of success.

Managing Volunteer Expectations

The ability to manage expectations is central to a well functioning volunteer program. Examining why a volunteer’s performance is not up to expectations is one of the more difficult duties of a manager of a volunteer program or staff supervising volunteers.

How do you determine where the performance problem began, how do you determine what to do, and how do you approach and work with the volunteer are areas that are key to a positive outcome.

When performance is not properly managed, it can affect everyone in the organization. Performance management allows volunteers to be successful in all their endeavors. Consequently, managers of volunteer programs or staff supervising volunteers need to be able to not only recognize poor performance and work with the volunteer but also to recognize good performance and praise the volunteer. This workshop will cover several components of effective performance management and present a method for analyzing performance.

Professional Ethics In Managing Volunteers and Non-Profit Programs

There are six ethical areas, developed by the Josephson Institute of Ethics, which can assist managers of volunteer resources and nonprofits in handling a variety of ethical issues. If a nonprofit does not have an ethical compass to guide it, the unimaginable can happen. The key to a well run nonprofit is to have that compass in front of all paid and volunteer staff as well as members of the board of directors at all times.

Ethics not only applies to the nonprofit as a whole but is ideally used in the decision- making process. This workshop will cover each of the core ethical areas, assist participants in establishing guiding principles, and discuss the importance of using these when making decisions.

Managing Those Who Serve

Designed for nonprofits, the intricacies of managing staff in a nonprofit setting will be examined. How to deal with employees when their performance is not up to expectation is one of the more difficult duties of a manager, supervisor, or a board president.

How do you determine where the performance problem began, how do you determine what to do, and how do you approach and work with the individual areas that are key to a positive outcome. This workshop will cover several components of effective performance management and present a method for analyzing performance for paid and volunteer staff members including boards.

Using a systematic performance management process, the workshop will help participants understand what setting people up for success looks like, how to hold people responsible and accountable as well empowering them. It will also help in determining the causes of poor performance.

Measuring Program Outcomes: A First Look

You have a plan in place. You know what you want to do. Now how do you measure success? An understanding of inputs, activities, and outcomes will enable participants to examine their own organization and work toward measurable outcomes.

Today funders, donors, and other stakeholders in a nonprofit want to know what the nonprofit is accomplishing beyond numbers. Aspects such as gathering data and checking for success enable a nonprofit to adjust continuously for greater success. This session will enable participants to explore the basic concepts of outcome-based measurement for their programs.

Paid And Volunteer Staff Relationships

This should be an arrangement tailor made for a nonprofit. Often it is not. What causes problems in this relationship that is vital to an effective and efficient nonprofit? Why don’t paid staff accept volunteer staff? Why can’t they just get along?

In a time when resources are finite, the possibility of volunteers is not. Volunteers can be a critical component in service delivery for a nonprofit. A UPS survey noted, “People are more likely to volunteer when they feel an organization is well-managed and will make good use of their time.” Often volunteers are truly making a difference in the services a nonprofit presents in a community. Thus, it is critical to be very thoughtful about how to approach integrating volunteer staff in with paid staff. This relationship is important in order that a good productive environment is created that serves the nonprofit fully.

Recruiting, Managing, and Retaining Volunteers

Volunteers enhance the services that a nonprofit can provide its clients and they assist with the sustainability of programs. Volunteers enable a nonprofit to reach beyond its internal resources to encompass the community through the use of volunteer resources.

According to several studies, individuals will volunteer and stay with nonprofits where they are well managed. The ability to recruit and retain volunteers is an important resource for any nonprofit endeavor. This workshop will enable attendees to learn various aspects of managing volunteer resources. It will also include information about the latest trends, recruitment, and integrating volunteer programs into the overall mission of the nonprofit.

For a complete list please contact us:

Phone: 512-515-0580
Fax: 512-515-0590
E-mail: Kathleen McCleskey

E-mail: Bob McCleskey

Project Management For Non-Profits

Up to 50% of projects fail because their success is compromised in some manner – over budget, behind schedule, or failing to deliver expected outcomes.  From fund raising to initiating a new program, the fundamentals of project management hold true. Using a systematic process will assist in ensuring a smooth “roll out” of any event or program.

A project is a series of activities that has a limited time for completion with a specific outcome in mind. When completed there will be a service, product, funding, or a specific result. A project can include a fund raising event, a volunteer recruitment process, the hiring of a new executive director, launch of a new program, or anything that is not part of the “everyday business” of the nonprofit. Project management is a systematic process that balances the elements of time, money, quality, monitoring, and execution to reach a specific goal.

Specifically project manage is the process of:

  • Exploring the history/background/environment/trends
  • Understanding the steps in starting a project
  • Determine the systematic process of planning
  • Developing a work breakdown structure
  • Evaluating and monitoring the project
  • Closing out the project

Why use a systematic approach to project management?

The ability to plan and document the ins and outs of a project have been proven to produce better and more smoothly run projects. Where time is of the essence, nonprofits need to be sure they are using the best tools possible to reach the goals of every project they undertake. By reaching these goals in a systematic way, clients are served better and the entire organization benefits. Some of the benefits of a project management approach are:

  • A systematic approach to the planning process that can be replicated
  • Understanding the connection between the project and the overall mission
  • Development of subsidiary plans such as communication, quality, budgeting, risk management, and staffing
  • Having a plan that incorporates specific actions for paid and volunteer staff to take
  • Determine when to check for progress
  • Understanding the importance of documentation and close out

What KM Consulting and Training Connection will contribute

Working with key individuals in the nonprofit we will:

  • Present a review of the purpose of the project
  • Work hand-in-hand to develop a project plan and explore subsidiary plans
  • Assist in the development of a work breakdown structure
  • Help in the monitoring, evaluating, and closing phases through a check in process

As a result of using a systematic project management approach you will have
A tailored blueprint for implementing a project

For more information please contact us:

Phone: 512-515-0580
Fax: 512-515-0590
E-mail: Kathleen McCleskey

E-mail: Bob McCleskey