Ask a non-profit what they think of running a group volunteering program, and most of them will tell you that it’s simply too much work.
For the most part, they’re right. It’s well known that unless you’re a multinational NGO with access to large amounts of time, funding, and staff, hosting volunteering teams and running hands-on volunteering programs can prove to be more of a drain on resources than any immediate gain.
But this is looking at corporate and team event volunteering the wrong way. Yes, it takes a lot of effort and resources to run these kinds of events. But they shouldn’t be one-offs. They should be just the first building block for a fruitful and ultimately highly beneficial corporate partnership – one that can support your non-profit through thick and thin.
Here’s how.
Corporate volunteering is often the first connection with companies
For many nonprofits, the first meaningful interaction with a company happens through corporate volunteering.
Teams of employees arrive for a volunteering day. Companies organize Volunteer Weeks. Departments participate in community initiatives.
These moments bring employees directly into contact with a nonprofit’s work and mission.
For nonprofits, they provide helping hands and valuable support. But they also do something more important: they create a first connection between the organization and the company.
Many corporate–nonprofit relationships begin exactly this way.
Yet the true potential of these encounters is often underestimated.
Volunteering creates something more valuable than labour
Corporate volunteering is frequently viewed as operational support.
Employees help with projects, events, or activities. They contribute their time and energy to the organization’s work.
But the most valuable outcome of volunteering is not the labour itself.
When employees volunteer, they:
- learn about the nonprofit’s mission
- meet the people behind the organization
- understand the challenges the organization is addressing
These experiences create personal connections.
Employees leave with a deeper understanding of the cause and often share their experience with colleagues inside their company.
At the same time, the nonprofit becomes visible within the organization.
This interaction creates something powerful:
the beginning of a relationship between the nonprofit and the company.
The missed opportunity
In many cases, that relationship ends when the volunteering event ends.
Employees return to work.
The event concludes.
The interaction fades.
But that moment actually holds significant potential.
Employees who have connected with a nonprofit often:
- care about the mission
- talk about the experience inside their company
- want to stay involved or contribute further
What began as a volunteering activity can become the starting point for deeper engagement.
When nonprofits recognize this opportunity, corporate volunteering can evolve into something much more impactful.
Introducing the Volunteering Journey
Relationships between companies and nonprofits often develop through a natural progression.
What begins as a volunteering activity can grow into deeper collaboration over time.
We call this progression the Volunteering Journey.
Community Volunteering
↓
Skills Volunteering
↓
Fundraising
↓
Corporate Partnership
Each stage represents a deeper level of engagement between employees and nonprofits.
Volunteering opens the door. From there, relationships can grow in ways that provide increasing value for both the nonprofit and the company.
Stage 1 — Community Volunteering
The journey typically begins with community volunteering.
Employees contribute their time through team volunteering events, Volunteer Weeks, or other community initiatives.
For nonprofits, this stage offers an opportunity to:
- introduce employees to the mission and impact of the organization
- create meaningful experiences that connect people with the cause
- build personal relationships with employees and CSR teams
These experiences shape how employees perceive the nonprofit.
When volunteers leave with a strong understanding of the mission, they often become informal ambassadors inside their company.
This first stage establishes the foundation for deeper engagement.
Stage 2 — Skills Volunteering
Once employees understand a nonprofit’s work, many realize that their professional expertise can also help.
This leads to skills volunteering.
Employees may contribute:
- legal or financial expertise
- marketing and communications support
- digital and technology knowledge
- strategic advice or mentoring
For nonprofits, access to professional expertise can be transformative. Skills volunteering can unlock capabilities that might otherwise be difficult or expensive to obtain.
At this stage, employees move from contributing time to contributing knowledge.
Stage 3 — Fundraising
As employees build stronger connections with a nonprofit’s mission, they often want to support the organization in additional ways.
This can lead to employee-driven fundraising initiatives.
Employees may organize campaigns linked to activities such as running, cycling, or hiking, where participants raise funds through pledge-based contributions supporting a nonprofit initiative.
These campaigns often mobilize teams, colleagues, and wider employee networks around a shared cause.
What began as an individual volunteering experience can now engage a much larger group within the company.
At this stage, employees move from contributing time and expertise to also mobilizing financial support.
Stage 4 — Corporate Partnership
Over time, sustained engagement can evolve into a long-term partnership between the nonprofit and the company.
Instead of isolated activities, the relationship becomes ongoing and multi-dimensional.
Companies may support nonprofits through multiple forms of engagement, such as:
- continued employee volunteering
- skills-based support and knowledge sharing
- employee-led fundraising initiatives
- collaborative community initiatives
Through these forms of collaboration, the nonprofit gains sustained support, while the company develops a deeper relationship with an organization that advances its community impact.
What began with a volunteering event can evolve into a stable corporate partnership that benefits both the nonprofit and the communities it serves.
How nonprofits can grow these relationships
Corporate partnerships rarely happen automatically. They grow from relationships that develop over time.
Nonprofits can actively support this progression by:
- creating meaningful volunteering experiences that help employees connect with the mission
- maintaining relationships with employees and CSR leaders after volunteering activities
- identifying opportunities where professional expertise could support the organization
- enabling employee-led fundraising initiatives that allow supporters to mobilize others
When nonprofits view volunteering not just as support but as the beginning of a relationship, they can help that relationship grow into deeper engagement.
The role of Copalana
Copalana helps nonprofits connect with companies and grow these relationships over time.
Through the platform, nonprofits can:
- host corporate volunteering opportunities
- engage employees through skills volunteering
- support employee-led fundraising campaigns
The platform provides the structure that makes these forms of engagement easy to organize and scale, helping nonprofits manage corporate engagement more efficiently.
From the nonprofit perspective, Copalana acts as a Corporate Partnership Gateway — opening the door to relationships with companies and their employees and enabling those relationships to evolve into long-term partnerships.
The key takeaway
Corporate volunteering is often the first interaction between a nonprofit and a company.
But its true value lies in what can come next.
When nonprofits view volunteering as the beginning of a relationship, it can lead to deeper engagement, broader support, and long-term corporate partnerships that help advance their mission.