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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

As the volunteer coordinator for the Art Gallery, a well-known institution in your large city, you need to find volunteers to give guided tours to visitors. They have to commit to at least two hours a week and should ideally possess some knowledge of art. Given the large number of volunteers you seek, you think you'll have to advertise.

Volunteer coordinators deal with people all the time: volunteers, staff, their board of directors and community members. Every time they excite, motivate and manage others, they're using communication skills to do it.

"Excellent communication skills are required -- oral, verbal and written," says volunteer coordinator Ruth Mackenzie. First and foremost, of course, you must persuade people to volunteer for your organization.

For positions where no specific skills and a large number of volunteers are required, Mackenzie says, the appeal can be quite general.

"An example would be recruiting for a volunteer canvasser, where a volunteer manager may display a poster calling for volunteers at a community center or put ads in a church bulletin."

Volunteer positions that require specific skills call for more targeted recruitment. What if you were looking for a volunteer treasurer?

"The recruitment would be targeted to segments of the population that might have some financial skills," Mackenzie says. "The volunteer manager may ask to have an ad placed in a professional association journal."

Back at the Art Gallery, you must write an ad that accurately describes the position while striking a chord with the potential volunteer.

Instead of saying you "need" volunteers, you will tell them you "want" them. You will let them know that you will provide training and support. And you will give them an idea of what they can expect in return.

The best ads manage to weave all these elements together within a basic position description. "Position descriptions are crucial for volunteer involvement and are likely something that every volunteer manager has developed and uses on a regular basis," Mackenzie says.

Write a four-sentence ad for the position for the classifieds section of your community newspaper.

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OCAP believes that financial literacy and understanding the financial aid process are critical aspects of college planning and student success. OCAP staff who work with students, parents, educators and community partners in the areas of personal finance education, state and federal financial aid, and student loan management do not provide financial, investment, legal, and/or tax advice. This website and all information provided is for general educational purposes only, and is not intended to be construed as financial, investment, legal, and/or tax advice.