Uncover key trends, effective enablers, and strategies for the coming year to build a successful volunteering portfolio.
- Explore three major volunteering trends shaping corporate social responsibility in 2024.
- Identify critical enablers that drive effective and impactful volunteering programs.
- Learn how to create a robust and future-ready volunteering portfolio for 2025.
- Gain insights and case studies from industry experts on elevating your CSR initiatives.
Join us for an engaging discussion on Volunteering Trends in 2024 as we decode insights from Goodera’s Corporate Volunteering Quotient (VQ) report. This session will uncover key trends, effective enablers, and strategies for the coming year to build a successful volunteering portfolio. Gain actionable insights from industry leaders and discover how to amplify the impact of your volunteering programs.
Q1: How can technology make volunteering easier and more seamless for employees?
A: Harshith (Regional Impact Programs Lead - India and EMEA, Atlassian): Technology platforms, like Goodera’s Champions Hub, allow employees to view and select volunteering opportunities just like booking a movie ticket. They help in event booking, participation tracking, impact reporting, and communication before, during, and after events. Virtual volunteering and AI-driven tools further enhance accessibility and scale.
Q: What are the challenges in adopting technology for corporate volunteering?
A: Harish (Corporate Social Responsibility Manager, Tata Communications):
- Mismatch of expectations between companies, NGOs, and platform providers.
- Difficulty in creating platforms that cater to multiple organizations with different needs.
- Investment constraints for NGOs and platform providers to customize solutions.
- Potential risk of over-reliance on tech reducing human engagement.
A: Harshith (Atlassian):
- Supply-demand imbalance: many volunteers ready to contribute, but insufficient opportunities from nonprofits on tech platforms.
- Need for nonprofit-side tech enablement to scale volunteering effectively.
Q: What are some emerging trends in technology and AI for volunteering?
A: Harshith (Atlassian):
- Gamification to make volunteering fun and engaging.
- Champion networks for volunteer leadership and coordination.
- Virtual volunteering to connect employees globally with mentoring or projects.
- AI applications for matching mentors with mentees and recommending volunteer activities.
Q: How can organizations increase volunteer participation?
A: Harish (Tata Communications):
- Track volunteer numbers to demonstrate impact and secure leadership buy-in.
- Build a champions network to extend reach beyond lean CSR teams.
- Develop partnerships with NGOs to support volunteering initiatives.
Q: How can a good volunteering experience be translated into long-term meaningful support?
A: Harshith (Atlassian):
- Create a volunteering journey roadmap for individuals:
- Occasional volunteer → Champion (organizer, event lead) → Change maker (fundraiser, skilled volunteering)
- Occasional volunteer → Champion (organizer, event lead) → Change maker (fundraiser, skilled volunteering)
- Provide tailored resources, support, and motivation at each stage.
- Programs like Atlassian’s Foundation Rewards help formalize progression and rewards.
Q: Do employees continue volunteering after their first experience?
A: Harish (Tata Communications): About 25–35% of employees continue volunteering independently after their first organizational volunteering experience. Champions and alumni of volunteer programs often drive initiatives in other organizations or advocate for volunteering policies in their teams.
Q: How can small CSR teams manage complex volunteering initiatives efficiently?
A: Harshith (Atlassian) & Gazal Raina (Sr. Director, Client Engagement & Solutions, Goodera India):
- Use technology to handle scale, multi-geography programs, and complex operations.
- Champion networks reduce manual workload for small CSR teams.
Leverage virtual volunteering and AI tools to maximize impact without increasing team size.








