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(ARA) Baby boomers have been rewriting American culture for
decades. Now, as the first wave of retiring boomers leaves
the work force and the next wave is reaching the 55-plus mark,
they are redefining yet another great American institution
volunteerism.
In 2002, Dom Gieras retired from his job with the State of
New York after 30 years. Where once his volunteering revolved
around his family’s needs, including stints managing his son’s
baseball teams, today, he is a volunteer technology consultant
with the Executive Service Corps of the Tri-Cities. Gieras
consults on projects for local nonprofit agencies, is a volunteer
Webmaster for a literacy organization, and is the creator
of the Capital District Nonprofit Technology Assistance Project,
a Web site that serves as a reference guide to technology
solutions for local nonprofit professionals.
An avid reader, Gieras, 66, says his original plan for retirement
involved just the tutoring and literacy work. “But when I
discovered the state of their technology I decided they needed
me more there,” he says.
Now that baby boomers like Gieras have more time of their own,
they are increasingly looking for innovative ways to serve
nonprofits in causes they care about, volunteering experts
say. And, like Gieras, many are choosing opportunities that
are deeply rooted in the skills and experiences they acquired
in the working world.
“Boomers came of age in an era of activism and involvement,”
says Jill Friedman Fixler, an expert on boomer volunteering
trends. “As boomers reach the later years of their work they
are beginning to think about their legacy, how they will be
using their time and skills to impact their community and
skilled volunteering is the most logical way to contribute.”
This summer, Friedman Fixler partnered with VolunteerMatch,
the nonprofit organization whose Web service, www.volunteermatch.org,
is the leading volunteer matching network, to release “Boomer
Volunteer Engagement: Collaborate Today, Thrive Tomorrow.”
The book helps charities recognize opportunities for deep
engagement with older adults and reorganize their volunteer
programs to support more skilled volunteering.
According to Friedman Fixler, skilled volunteering is proving
more rewarding both for boomer participants and for the organizations
they support. “Boomers who are pondering their next act are
looking for new ways to give their skills relevance in service
to their community,” she says. “At the same time, nonprofits
are looking for ways to expand their capacity. This powerful
collaboration is a win-win for everyone.” Skilled volunteering
opportunities tap a wide range of professional expertise.
Some popular opportunities include grant writing, accounting,
marketing, strategic planning, board development, fundraising
and social services.
The majority of volunteers 55 and older and nearly two-thirds
of men prefer volunteer positions that employ their personal
or professional skills, according to a recent VolunteerMatch
report.
“We are seeing volunteerism evolve into a more collaborative
relationship between the volunteers and organizations,” says
Diane Stobnicke, division director for Volunteers of America.
“Not only is it especially fulfilling for volunteers to be
able to use their professional experience to help others,
collaborative volunteering has significant cost benefits for
organizations. Skilled volunteers can handle tasks that might
otherwise be done by paid professionals.”
Largely comfortable with the Internet (if less immersed in
technology than their kids), boomers are increasingly going
online to find volunteering opportunities that match their
skills, interests and schedules. More than 200,000 older adult
volunteers currently use VolunteerMatch, the largest Web site
for skilled volunteer opportunities. Using just a few key
words, volunteers can search for opportunities based on geographic
region, cause, and the types of skills they have to offer.
To find skilled volunteer opportunities, visit www.VolunteerMatch.org.
Geiras says he still has fond memories of his days as a baseball
coach, but his volunteer work as a technology consultant is
a better match for where he is in life today.
"I still run into kids who were on teams I managed," he says.
"But I’ve learned a lot over the years and I like sharing
what I know and what I can do."
Article courtesy of ARA Content
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