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STAKEHOLDER CONTRIBUTIONS AND BENEFITS
A CASE STUDY OF A THIRD SECTOR ORGANISATION IN WALES
Christine Caroline Esposito
A submission presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the
University of South Wales/Prifysgol De Cymru for the degree of Doctor of
Business Administration
March 2018
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank the following people for their support over the past six years
that I have been studying for my DBA at the University of South Wales;
To my director of studies Professor Catherine Farrell and my supervisor Professor
Jennifer Law for their direction, knowledge and patience which kept me motivated
through some difficult times. To my husband Philip, without his support of my
lifelong ambition this would not have been possible. Thanks to my children Sarah
and Oliver, my adopted daughter Lauren, and my bright, intelligent and witty
granddaughter Georgia. They sometimes thought that they had been orphaned. To
my mother, father, sisters and their families, I know they are so proud. To all the
consultants, volunteers, staff and board members of the South West Wales Charity
(SWWales Charity), without whose co-operation this research would have been
impossible. I will conclude by thanking all those who backed my study in my
personal/work/student life and, of course, to all my friends for our continued
friendship.
Every single minute that each and every one of you supported me on my DBA
journey means far more to me than you will ever know. I am forever in your debt,
mille grazie.
ii
Table of Contents
Abstract Page vii
Chapter One – The Theoretical and Practical Context for Doctoral Research Page
1.0 Introduction. 11.1 The Third Sector. 71.2 Organisational Context. 101.3 Stakeholder Theory. 161.4 Structure of the Thesis. 211.5 Conclusion. 25
2.0
Chapter Two – A Review of Literature that is Associated with Stakeholder Contributions and Benefits Introduction.
Page 26
2.1 A Review of the Literature. 302.2 Organisational Improvement and Performance: Accreditations
and Corporate Social Responsibility. 392.3 Non-profit Studies: Traditional Volunteering and its Impact. 532.4
2.5
Human Resource Management: Valuing and Measuring Paid Employees’ Contributions.Accounting For and Measuring Contributions.
66 77
2.6 The Incomplete Picture from the literature and the Recognition that All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions and its Benefits are not Measured. 84
2.72.82.92.10
2.112.12
2.132.14
Measuring the Contribution of all Stakeholders.Measuring Tangible Inputs and Outcomes.Measuring Intangible Inputs and Outcomes.The Threefold Benefit that All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions bring to Organisations, Communities and the Volunteers Themselves.Organisational Benefits and Competitive Advantage.Enhanced Services in the Community as a Benefit of All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions.Wellbeing as a Return on Individual Stakeholder Contributions.Conclusion.
88 90104
117119
123126133
Chapter Three - The Methodological Framework and Methods for Data Collection
iii
Page3.0 Introduction. 1373.1 Research Philosophy. 1383.2 Ontology, Epistemology and Research Paradigms. 1403.3 Pragmatism. 1453.4 Research Design. 1473.5 Case Studies. 1493.6 Ethics. 1513.7 Introducing the Chosen Tools for Data Collection and the
Timescales. 1543.8 The Follow-up Interviews. 1683.9 A Summary of the Timescales for Data Collection. 1703.10 Methods for Presenting the Data. 1713.11 Conclusion. 17
Chapter Four – Presentation of the Findings from the Case Study
Page
4.0 Introduction. 1794.1 The Data from the Responses from the Consultants. 1804.2 The Data from the Responses of the Traditional Volunteers. 1974.3 The Data from the Responses of the Paid Employees. 2134.4 The Data from the Responses of the Board Members. 2454.54.6
A Review of Organisational Documentation.A Summary of all the Findings.
264267
4.7 Conclusion. 274
Chapter Five – Analysing, Interpreting and Reflecting on Findings Page
5.0 Introduction. 2755.1 Review of Findings. 2755.2
5.35.4
5.55.6
The Threefold Benefit that All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions bring to the Organisation, the Community as well as back to the Volunteers Themselves. Enhanced Services for Community Participation.Wellbeing as a Return on Individual Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions.Capturing All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions – ASVCB.Conclusion.
283292
295
302309
Chapter Six –ConclusionPage
6.0 Introduction. 3116.1 Findings. 3156.2 The Contribution of this Thesis to Theory and Practice. 3206.3 The Limitations of this Study. 3246.46.5
Future Research.Conclusion.
328330
iv
Bibliography Page viii
List of FiguresPage
Figure 1 Mendelow’s ‘Power/Level of Interest’ Matrix. 17Figure 2Figure 3
Equal Power/Level of Interest Model as the result of ASVCB.The ASVCB Augmentation Model.
281308
List of TablesPage
Table 2.1
Table 4.1
A Summary of what the Literature Does Measure and what it Does Not Measure.The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Consultants.
130190
Table 4.2 The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed by the Consultants. 192
Table 4.3 The Follow-up Interview Themes for the Consultants. 196Table 4.4 The Initial Thematic Map as advocated by Braun and Clarke,
(2006 p.99) for the Consultants. 196Table 4.5 The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Traditional
Volunteers. 208Table 4.6 The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed
by the Traditional Volunteers. 210Table 4.7 The Follow-up Interview Themes for the Traditional
Volunteers. 212Table 4.8 The Initial Thematic Map as Advocated by Braun and Clarke,
(2006 p.99) for the Traditional volunteers. 213Table 4.9 The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Paid Employees. 235Table 4.10 The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed
by the Paid Employees. 237Table 4.11 The Follow-up Interview Themes for the Paid Employees. 243Table 4.12 The Initial Thematic Map as Advocated by Braun and Clarke,
(2006 p.99) for the Paid Employees. 244Table 4.13 The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Board Members. 256Table 4.14 The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed
by the Board Members. 258Table 4.15
Table 4.16
Table 4.17
Table 4.18
Table 4.19
The Themes from the Follow-up Interviews for the Board members.The Initial Thematic Map as Advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006 p.99) for the Board members.A Content Analysis of the Data from The SWWales Charity’s Organisational Reports.A Summary of all the Intangible Data Contributed by all Stakeholder Categories.The Tangible Quantitative Contribution of the Voluntary Time Contributed by all Stakeholder Categories.
263
264
263
268
269
v
Table 4.20
Table 5.1
The Developed Thematic Map for the Intangible and Tangible Data for all the Stakeholder Categories from Braun and Clarke, (2006, p. 100).The Annual Voluntary Contribution of all Stakeholders to The SWWales Charity (The Final Thematic Map as described in Braun and Clarke, 2006, p.101).
271
279
Appendix 1Appendix 2Appendix 3Appendix 4Appendix 5Appendix 6Appendix 7Appendix 8
Appendices Page Suggested Questions for the Pilot Questionnaire. xxxi Pilot Questionnaire. xxxvCovering Letter to all Stakeholders. xlviiiConsultant Questionnaire. lTraditional Volunteer Questionnaire. lvPaid Employee Questionnaire. lxiiiBoard Member Questionnaire. lxxFollow-up Interview Questions. lxxviii
vi
Abstract
In this thesis, I aim to identify all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and the
benefits it brings to a South West Wales charitable organisation, the local
community and to the contributing individuals. There is a large body of research that
is concerned with the contributions of traditional volunteers and there are many
examples of how traditional volunteering benefits society through a variety of
approaches in the literature examined. However, I found that not all stakeholders, or
their voluntary contributions and its benefits, are currently being measured in one
all-encompassing model and it was therefore found to be an under-researched area.
This thesis focuses on the four categories of stakeholders of consultants, traditional
volunteers, paid employees and board members. In order to establish if all
stakeholders voluntarily contribute, and whether there were any benefits of this
activity, a pragmatic research approach by means of a case study is adopted. The
research includes mixed methods and uses the research tools of questionnaires,
interviews and the scrutiny of organisational documentation. The analysis refers to
the period between January and December 2014. As there was found to be a
significant amount of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and benefits,
(ASVCB) to the SWWales Charity, this thesis concludes with a new all-
encompassing model which is used to show their annual contribution and highlights
the augmentation that it brings. There is a recommendation for future research as the
new model shows that all categories of the SWWales Charity’s stakeholders
vii
contribute a significant amount of time and effort, which benefits the organisation,
the community and themselves. The impact of ASVCB is positive and significant in
a period where much of the reform in public services is focused on co-producing
services with stakeholders in all sectors, and this is my contribution to knowledge.
viii
Chapter One
Introduction
1.0 Introduction
This thesis is concerned with identifying, and reporting on the benefits of the
voluntary contributions made by all stakeholders of a third sector charitable
organisation. Contributions may be both tangible and intangible. Tangible
contributions include time and money whereas intangible contributions include
goodwill, capability, loyalty, entrepreneurship, motivation, commitment or
innovation. The beneficiaries of any voluntary contributions may include the
organisation, the community or the individual stakeholders themselves. The
stakeholders who it examines cover the range of stakeholder categories according to
Freeman, (1984, 2004) and are consultants, traditional volunteers, paid employees
and board members. It aims,
to identify and report on the benefits of the tangible and intangible voluntary
contributions made by all stakeholders of a third sector organisation – a case
study of a SWWales charity.
This chapter sets the scene for the research by first introducing the theoretical
framework of stakeholding as advocated by Mendelow, (1991) and Freeman, (1984,
2004). For example, Freeman, (2004, p. 42) defined stakeholders as, “those groups
who are vital to the survival and success of the corporation” while O’Donnel et al,
1
(2014) describe the positive effects of volunteering on the health of traditional
volunteers, who are one of the stakeholder categories examined in this research.
Traditional volunteers are people who give their time for free to organisations and
this is supported by Putnam, (1995), Haldane, (2014). Banks, (2016), the Chief
Executive of Greater London Volunteering, for example, has argued that,
if we looked beyond just the wage costs of the staff we would need to replace
those volunteers, and considered the wider economic value of the
contribution of volunteers, we would need to get our hands on £625 million,
in Merton alone, to achieve the same impact in our community. (Banks,
2016, p.1).
Banks, (2016) also estimates that it would also cost £156m to replace board
members. As well as the voluntary contributions to the third sector, there are also
contributions to private organisations such as the voluntary contributions made to
small firms, “during financially difficult times” as described by Danes et al, (2009
p.211). Volunteering can also be associated with nonprofit boards forming
relationships with local authorities for the delivery of effective public services, as
described by Liddle, (2003) and Cornforth, (2012). These are some of the benefits of
the voluntary contributions of stakeholders that are currently reported on, but Liddle,
(2003, p.34) agrees that softer indicators such as aspirations, feel-good factors and
community spirit are more difficult to measure.
However, it is argued that none of these voluntary contributions, or its benefits, is
being reported on effectively. Indeed, there are other stakeholders throughout
2
organisations that regularly voluntarily contribute to organisational sustainability and
whose contributions are not currently required to be accounted for by an
organisation’s regulators. It is usually the contributions of traditional volunteers
which are well documented and seen as important to The Welsh Council for
Voluntary Action’s (WCVA’s) Voluntary Sector Almanac, (2011), Taylor, (2011)
Drucker, (2012), the WCVA, (2012), and Gregg and Marazzi, (2012), who agree that
traditional volunteering contributes to the benefit of organisational success.
However, other categories of stakeholders are less frequently reported on. There is
some reporting on the importance of voluntary board members and organisations
cannot legally do without them to ensure good governance according to Liddle,
(2003) and Cornforth, (2012, 2015). The practice context for this research indicates
that all stakeholders, including consultants and paid employees volunteer their time,
free of charge, but there is currently no way of reporting on it, or its benefits, in its
entirety by organisations.
In practice, the context for this research is that author has been employed by the
SWWales Charity for fifteen years and has been a traditional volunteer in the third
sector for many years. The notion that all of stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to
an organisation are not being fully accounted for has been of great interest. This
research looks to find a way of both identifying whether all stakeholder voluntary
contributions exist, as well as providing organisations with a model that could easily
report on it and its benefits it if it does. Each stakeholder category is associated with
the SWWales Charity in a variety of different ways such as by helping to achieve
quality marks to comply with contracts. However, it is suggested that to date only
traditional volunteering has been identified in the organisation’s annual reports. Even
3
then their altruistic activity may only have appeared as a cost through such headings
as travel expenses or subsistence. This thesis seeks to explain the notion of all
stakeholders’ voluntarily contributions to an organisation. It also seeks to report on
any outcomes, or benefits that it brings.
In order to undertake the research, a number of approaches from the literature on the
various stakeholder categories are examined to identify if any voluntary
contributions are measured. There is a vast amount of literature around the voluntary
contributions’ of stakeholders and their potential benefits that were identified for this
research. These are drawn from different fields such as accounting and human
resource management. Often the different literatures focus on specific groups of
stakeholders and identify the advantages of their involvement.
For the purposes of the literature review, the approaches of Corporate Social
Responsibility, (CSR) and Quality Marks, (IIP), which are mostly associated with
consultants are analysed because they are the stakeholder category that usually takes
the lead on them to enable organisational improvements. While the literature on
Social Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback
on Volunteering and The Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA), are
literatures that focus on traditional volunteers. They are non-profit studies that report
on volunteering and its benefits. However, the literatures on Human Capital, Virtual
Human Resource Development, (VHRD), The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees
and Human Resource Accounting, (HRA), focus on paid employees. These studies
are part of the literature on Human Resource Management and value and measure
employee contributions and the resulting benefits. The associated literature around
4
accounting related to board members are of Return on Capital Employed, (ROCE),
Return on Talent, (ROT) and Social Value. These are accounting approaches that are
concerned with measuring contributions of time and money and its benefits. All of
the approaches examined in the literature review can be attributed to at least one of
the four stakeholder categories.
Having established that a number of approaches from the literature are associated
with each stakeholder category, the literature can be examined to identify if any of
the approaches measure any voluntary stakeholder contributions or its benefits. A
comprehensive literature review is the first stage of this research, and subsequently
both primary and secondary data will be collected from all stakeholders of the
SWWales Charity. This is to establish of any of them voluntarily contribute their
time to the organisation and, if so, whether it or its benefits are being reported on. If
found it could show competitive advantage of these benefits over other organisations
that may not have as many voluntary contributions. Recording all of the
organisation’s voluntary contributions, not just the financial bottom line, may enable
the organisation’s performance to be fully reported on as Drucker, (2012, p.1)
advocated that, “business usually defines performance too narrowly – as the financial
bottom line”.
This statement is fundamental to this thesis as only, ‘the financial bottom line’ is
currently required by the regulators. This is a potential business limitation for the
author as a practitioner, as well as the organisation and the community. The
organisation has always reported fully to its regulators, such as the Charities
Commission, Companies House, and all other stakeholders however, the formal
5
reports only acknowledge the existence of its traditional volunteers. Any
acknowledgement of them is only in the form of their costs, such as travel expenses
and there is no formal way of reporting any of their contributions, or its benefits,
apart from a few photographs and anecdotes from public events. It is suggested that
there is no current reporting of any voluntary activity of any of the stakeholder
categories at all by the SWWales Charity. There is also no reporting of the benefits
that it may bring.
This is a real-world problem that the author felt had implications for theory and
practice. Utilising the author’s knowledge of the sector had resulted in an MBA
dissertation in 2005. In that dissertation, it had been written that this thesis was an
idea for future research. So, it was inevitable that eight years later, the opportunity
arose for the author to submit a proposal to the then University of Glamorgan, now
the University of South Wales. The proposal was accepted and the DBA journey
began in March 2012. It was perfect timing for a number of reasons. First the
organisation had been through a period of change that led to some paid employees
being made redundant. This meant that they changed from one stakeholder category,
(paid employees) to another, (traditional volunteers) because they still continued to
work with the organisation in an unpaid capacity. Some of their heartfelt responses
to the questionnaires are presented in Chapter Four and it is their passion and pride
in the organisation that led to the research being so interesting to the author.
The organisation, despite some difficult times and through a lot of hard work,
successfully achieved the internationally recognised, Gold IIP standard. This was a
turning point and a very real sense of achievement was felt throughout all the
6
stakeholder categories and it was this enthusiasm that led to the participation of all
stakeholder categories in this research. Aligned to this, the organisation was the only
Welsh European Social Fund, (ESF) project that was nominated for one of its
prestigious awards that year. All these achievements were duly recorded in the
annual report, yet the author believes that there was still so much that may be being
missed. For a small, third sector charity in South West Wales to achieve so much
was remarkable, but it was becoming more and more obvious to the author that there
was a gap in what was being reported on. Apart from a few photographs and
anecdotes of the traditional volunteers being acknowledged in the quarterly
community magazine, or on the website, there was nothing to show for all the
voluntary contributions of all its stakeholders or its benefits. The third sector and the
organisational context of the SWWales Charity are now presented.
1.1 The Third Sector
This thesis focuses on a South West Wales charity and in relation to charities,
Saxton, (2005, p.188) argues that, “they set performance targets, employ
professional fundraisers, marketers, campaigners and CEO’s to do their work”.
Saxton continues, “to do so, they must begin with mission, for the mission defines
what results are for an organisation … every non-profit organisation exists for the
sake of performance in changing people and society”. Performance is exactly what
the organisation is measured on, through their annual financial reports. However,
third sector organisations rely on the voluntary contributions, or social capital, of
stakeholders particularly traditional volunteers and board members to help change
people and society.
7
Changing people and society for the good of all stakeholders is associated with
social capital as described by Bourdieu in Bourdieu and Wacquant, (1992, p.2) as
“… something that people can accumulate through their social networks which has
benefits for the stakeholders themselves, society and organisations”. However, there
is no current measure for all the benefits that stakeholders’ voluntary contributions
bring. In association with traditional volunteering Hutt, (2000, p.1) wrote that,
“volunteering, doing things for others, freely and by choice, is part of good
citizenship, an essential ingredient of a healthy democracy and in indispensable part
of creating an inclusive and supportive society”. Hutt, (2000, p. 1) continues that the
Welsh Government put volunteering at the heart of its, “social inclusion policies” but
the benefits of volunteering that Hutt describes are not fully measured.
On discussing volunteering, Adam Smith, (2006, p.3, first published in 1759) in his,
‘Theory of Moral Sentiments’ argued that, “societies function best when economic
interests and ethical interests coalesce”. This landmark work is the original theory of,
“conscience, moral judgement and virtue.” Smith, (2006) continues,
how selfish soever a man may be supposed, there are evidently some
principles in his nature, which interest him in the fortune of others, and
render their happiness necessary to him, though he derives nothing from it,
except the pleasure of seeing it. Smith, (2006, p.3).
Altruism, has direct correlation with the ethical interests associated with
volunteering as Smith, (2006) suggests. Other advocates of volunteering include Day
8
et al, (2006) Danes et al, (2009), Drucker, (2012) and Fujiwara, (2012) and are
amongst many who have reported the various ways that traditional volunteering and
the resulting contributions benefit society.
Traditional volunteering is also advocated by Tan et al, (2005 p.353) who describe
social entrepreneurship and suggest that it, “… may be aimed at benefiting society
rather than merely maximising individual profits. It appears to promise an altruistic
form of capitalism that does not evaluate all human activities in business terms”. It is
this benefiting of society through the voluntary contributions of people to
organisations that underpins this research. Tan et al, (2005) found that social
entrepreneurship may be aimed at benefiting society, by evaluating it in business
terms, but suggested that it is only undertaken by traditional volunteers. The work of
Tan et al excluded any voluntary contributions of the other stakeholder categories. In
relation to altruistic capital, Day et al, (2006, p.1) cite, “the notion of a civil society
suggests a sphere that is distinguished by more than the fact that it is inhabited by
people and organisations that come together voluntarily and are not characteristically
engaged of goods and services for profit”. Again, Day et al were only referring to
traditional volunteers and the benefit of providing goods and services in the
community for no financial payment to themselves. Aligned to selflessness and
doing things for the benefit of others, Knight, (2009) discusses the 1851 writings of
Auguste Comte, who was the first to use the term altruism. Discussing Comte’s
writings, Knight continues that the word, ‘altruism’ comes from,
… the Italian adjective ‘aluri,’ and was employed by him to denote the
benevolent, as contrasted with the selfish propensities … It is used in a
9
psychological sense, to designate emotions of a reflective kind, the
immediate consequences of which are beneficial to others; its important
significance is ethical … the happiness to be found in living for others.
Knight, (2009, p.1).
Volunteering in this way may be a description of why people do it and it suggests
that the reward is happiness or wellbeing but it also only refers to traditional
volunteers. This thesis investigates the voluntary contributions of all stakeholders of
the SWWales Charity, and the resulting benefits, not only its traditional volunteers.
The following section introduces the organisational context.
1.2 Organisational Context
The SWW Charity chosen for this research is the Lead Delivery Body, (LDB) for the
Welsh Government’s Communities First and Communities for Work programmes in
its area. It has a number of contracts to deliver services through European Social
Fund, (ESF), Dept. of Work and Pensions, (DWP), JobCentre Plus, (JCP), Local
Authorities, as well as grants from The Big Lottery, Children in Need and others. It
also utilises a number of social enterprise methods in its projects, for sustainability.
It has achieved IIP Gold status, is Agored Cymru and City and Guilds accredited. It
is a UK Learning Provider and its services include the provision of both accredited
and non-accredited training to enable the hardest to reach individuals in deprived
communities to become more employable and to enter further learning. It provides
volunteer opportunities and work experience to prepare people for the world of work
as well as a suite of other interventions that aim to tackle poverty. It is one of the
10
WCVA’s, (March 2013, p.1) 18% of third sector organisations in Wales that are
involved in community development. This figure rose to 19.76 in 2016, according to
the WCVA. The SWWales Charity’s Business Plan, forms the basis for its objectives
and critical success factors for all its stakeholders. The organisation has recently
merged with similar, smaller third sector organisations in the area. These mergers
have led to increased capacity across the whole of South West Wales. It is a member
led, community based regeneration organisation that is governed by a Board of
Director Trustees, drawn from the community.
The SWWales Charity employs forty nine people and has a large database of its
regular, traditional volunteers. It also works with a number of consultants on its
various projects and its area of benefit is South West Wales. It was established in
1995 to improve the living conditions of one of the poorest communities in Wales. It
formed working parties to discuss issues, such as pollution, poor health and
unemployment, that later fitted perfectly with the, ‘Communities First Vision
Framework Themes’ of prosperity, learning and health. Communities First is a
Welsh Government programme that aims to regenerate its most deprived
communities.
As the Grant Recipient Body, (GRB) for the Communities First programme, since
2001, the organisation’s capacity was increased substantially by the grant. It is
currently still the GRB, now called Lead Delivery Body, (LDB) for the Communities
First and Communities for Work Cluster and its new Business Plan 2015-2020,
forms the basis for its objectives and critical success factors. It was runner up in the
Western Mail’s, ‘FastGtrowth 50 Wales Award’ fastest growing community and
11
social sector organisation in 2008/9. It won its category in 2009/10. Professor Dylan
Jones-Evans, writing in the Western Mail on the 2nd February 2008 stated that, “there
have been notable successes, such as (this organisation), which has been extremely
successful in delivering projects that make a real difference to its community. Not
surprisingly, this innovative organisation was recently named as the only social
enterprise to be featured in last year’s Fast Growth 50 list of the fastest growing
businesses in Wales”.
More recently the organisation was shortlisted for a European Union, ‘RegioStars’
Award. It was one of five shortlisted and the only one from Wales. Its stakeholders
have also won numerous awards locally, including the Chair of the Board winning a
Welsh Council for Voluntary Action, (WCVA) Award for his dedicated volunteering
in the community. Also, its traditional volunteers have won awards such as,
‘Volunteer Mentor of the Year’ as well as the organisation itself being recognised as
having achieved the internationally recognised, ‘Gold’ IIP Status. This demonstrates
how the organisation’s success has grown by winning local, regional, national and
international awards, as well as a number of large contracts.
The SWW Charity also cultivates community enterprise and is also a member of the
Development Trust Association, (DTA) Wales. It acquires or purchases local assets
to meet local needs. It secures community prosperity by keeping money within the
community by sourcing local suppliers and customers. It strives to build a
sustainable organisation in a sustainable community. Its charitable objectives
include, ‘the promotion of public benefit, the advancement of education, to relieve
sickness and to preserve and protect good health, the relief of poverty, the provision
12
of recreational facilities, the promotion of public safety and the prevention of crime
and such other means as may from time to time be determined subject to prior
written consent of the Charity Commissioner for England and Wales’. Its
beneficiaries include residents, community groups and organisations in the area
supporting or delivering services for people, those who are unemployed,
economically inactive, those who experience social exclusion and or disadvantage
and those who experience ill health and or poverty. Its volunteers, who contribute,
range from board level as Director/Trustees who are in constant contact with the
organisation, to traditional volunteers who may only turn up once a year at its annual
events. They undertake, ‘micro-volunteering’ as advocated by Browne et al, (2013,
p.65), in the community. The community is described by The Welsh Government as
being high (within the top 10% of deprived communities in Wales) in The Welsh
Index of Multiple Deprivation, (WIMD) 2011.
The SWWales Charity’s Communities First status indicates the high levels of social
disadvantage and deprivation that the community experiences. Three wards have
been divided into twelve Lower Super Output Areas (LSOAs) in the Welsh Index of
Multiple Deprivation (WIMD) 2011. Eleven of the twelve have Communities First
status. Seven of the twelve are in the top 10% most deprived LSOA’s in Wales. The
area of benefit has a total population of almost 24,000, (2012 Census) which
encompasses 7,982 households. 24.8% of the population is over sixty years of age.
32.8% have a life-limiting long term illness. 49.65% have no qualifications. 35.8%
are claiming some kind of income related benefit. These are the SWWales Charity’s
baseline statistics as The Welsh Government has announced that its Communities
First programme will be phased out during 2017 but that the ESF funded
13
Communities for Work programme will continue. The area of deprivation can be
compared to the work around regeneration of Liddle, (2003) who argues that,
… as well as employing large numbers of people, the creative, cultural and
tourism sectors provide opportunities for wealth creation and the economic
regeneration of de-industrialised areas. Cultural projects can raise the profile
of a region as well as maximising social benefits or minimising the
disadvantages of fragmented approaches to regeneration. Liddle, (2003,
p.34).
Liddle was describing the significance of culture, tourism and leisure services in
social and economic development a very similar former industrial area in the North
East of England. She describes the way in which partnerships were formed to
achieve community economic development and wellbeing.
In a similar way, the SWWales Charity works on the three-thirds method of
partnership working that has to include statutory, commercial and the third sectors to
deliver its outcomes. However, the Communities First programme has received some
criticism in the past and for example, Jones-Evans, (2008) argued that there was,
“more thought needed to put community first”, he continued that the, “anti-
deprivation programme is not meeting its potential”. There was criticism throughout
the lifetime of the Communities First programme from the press in particular, where
it was highlighted that it was unable to measure its soft outcomes effectively. Results
Based Accountability, (RBA) was introduced to measure hard outcomes. All
stakeholders are expected to contribute to making positive change in the community,
14
but there is currently no one all-encompassing way of measuring all the voluntary
contributions that enable those outcomes to be successfully met.
There are many authors who theorise on the contributions of stakeholders to
organisational success, and Donaldson and Preston, (1995, p.66) describe an
organisation as a, “constellation of cooperative and competitive interests possessing
intrinsic value”. While Gomes et al, (2010, p.708) argue that,
with reference to instrumental power, they (Donaldson and Preston)
recognized the importance of defining the relationships between stakeholder
influence and the achievement of the organization’s objectives. Normative
validity is the acceptance that each stakeholder represents a set of interests to
which the organization should devote attention. The organization should
therefore know each stakeholder as well as the sort of influence or
collaboration that stakeholder is able to dedicate to the organization’s
objectives. Gomes et al, (2010, p.708).
However, Gomes et als, (2010, p.720) work concentrated on a, ‘five-sided
stakeholder influence model for local government’, which contributed to the
literature on public management and leadership by describing the decisions of local
government managers and the influences of stakeholders.
It is suggested that each stakeholder, in Mendelow’s, (1991) Power/Level of Interest
Matrix, may contribute to the organisation’s objectives in a number of different
ways. Many other authors such as Freeman, (1984), Donaldson and Preston, (1995),
15
Freeman, (2004) Gomes et al, (2010) and Cots, (2011), also attempt to map
stakeholders and have been advocates of stakeholder theory. Their work forms the
theoretical framework for this research.
1.3 Stakeholder Theory
Stakeholding is the theoretical framework that this research is based on. It has been
established that there are many authors who define stakeholders, but this research
concentrates on the work of Freeman, (1984, 2004) and Mendelow, (1991) and
Gomes et al, (2010) as they are key authors in the field. According to Freeman,
(1984, p.46), the traditional definition of a stakeholder is, “any group or individual
who can affect or is affected by the achievement of the organisation’s objectives”.
Stakeholders are often defined by Freeman and Mendelow as, anyone with a stake in
an organisation. Mitchell et al, (1997, p854) questioned Freeman’s 1984 stakeholder
approach and argued for, “a theory of stakeholder salience that can explain to whom
and to what managers actually pay attention”. The definition has changed over time
and Freeman, in (2004, p.42), changed his definition of stakeholders to, “those
groups who are vital to the survival and success of the corporation”.
While Gomes et al, (2010, p.702) introduce, ‘A Five-Sided Model of Stakeholder
Influence’ and argue that, “there are few empirical, or even theoretical, studies
focussing on cross-cultural investigation on the subject of stakeholder analysis”.
Gomes et al, (2010, p.722) call for more, “cross-national investigations” concluding
that, “this would be a reliable path for constructing stronger, normative stakeholder
16
theory, capable of defining strategies for managing relationships with these powerful
actors in the domain of public organizations”. Without vital stakeholders companies
such as the SWWales Charity may not survive, and local authorities could not
deliver services, yet none have measured the totality of their voluntary contributions
or its benefits.
For the purposes of this research Mendelow’s, (1991) Power/Level of Interest Matrix
is used to describe both internal and external stakeholders. Stakeholder mapping
clarifies the roles of all stakeholders of an organisation and is described by
Mendelow who clarifies the roles of stakeholders in an organisation and states which
ones have the most power and level of interest. Figure 1, below is Mendelow’s,
(1991) ‘Power/Level of Interest Matrix’ which was used as it was easy to transpose
the stakeholders of the SWWales Charity on to each category of the matrix:
Figure 1: Mendelow’s, (1991, p.159) ‘Power/Level of Interest’ Matrix:
17
Power Level of interest
Low High
Low
High
A. Minimal Effort –Consultants
D. Key Players –Board Members
C. Keep satisfied –Paid Employees
B. Keep informed – Traditional Volunteers
There are other categories of stakeholder and those having low power/low level of
interest include infrequent customers and people who do not have regular contact
with the organisation, such as central government. The low power/high level of
interest stakeholders may also include major customers and the media. The high
power/low level of interest stakeholders could be environmental groups, for example
and high power/high level of interest stakeholders are local authority planners and
investors, according to Mendelow, (1991). For the purposes of this research, the
following focuses on the four stakeholder categories of consultants, traditional
volunteers, paid employees and board members of the SWWales Charity as
advocated by Mendelow, (1991). By utilising this matrix all stakeholders are
represented.
A. Minimal effort (low power low level of interest) – Consultants
Mendelow, (1991), advocates that stakeholders, who are commissioned to
undertake a particular piece of work in an organisation, have low power. This
category could include auditors or grants assessors, for example. Mendelow
suggests that they also have a low level of interest because they leave as soon
as the work is done and it was felt that the consultants fitted best into this
category. There are a number of consultants who occasionally work with the
organisation and a sample was identified as potential respondents for the data
collection in Chapter Three. The consultants work with the organisation to
enable the achievement of quality marks and with writing funding
applications, as well as being a critical friend. They often help with ‘horizon
scanning’ to inform organisations of new opportunities.
18
B. Keep informed (low power high level of interest) – Traditional volunteers
Stakeholders with low power but a high level of interest could be described
in Mendelow’s, (1991) matrix as traditional volunteers. Residents, members,
voluntary groups and partners are included in this category. Mendelow,
(1991) suggests that they may be perceived as being lower down the
hierarchy because they are not paid and therefore have low power. Mendelow
does, however, suggest that they are very interested in their community and
that this may be the reason that they undertake unpaid work. There is a good
cross section of about fifty regular traditional volunteers throughout the
organisation. They include people who volunteer in the garden and food co-
op project, volunteer hair and beauty supporters, business and administration
voluntary supporters, job search volunteers and voluntary café workers.
C. Keep satisfied (high power low level of interest) - Paid employees
Stakeholders with high power and a high level of interest are described by
Mendelow, (1991) as employees. It is suggested that they can influence
decision making power through their high numbers, particularly in unionised
organisations. The SWWales Charity does not recognise any particular union,
although the majority of its employees are union members, which protects
salaries through negotiation at a national level. Mendelow, (1991) does,
however, suggest that paid employees have a low interest in the organisation
and that some are only interested in their salaries. All forty nine employees of
19
the SWWales Charity are invited to be part of the research from all levels
throughout the management structure that include administrators, mentors,
managers, senior managers as well as ICT technicians.
D. Key players (high power high level of interest) – Board members
According to Mendelow, the board members have the highest power,
although some may disagree, as they have the responsibility and authority of
the organisation. They can delegate authority to senior employees, but they
cannot delegate responsibility. They also have the highest personal interest
because they must protect both their personal and organisational reputations.
There are sixteen unpaid board members who are Trustee/Directors of the
SWWales Charity’s Board. They include the Chairman, Vice Chairman and
Treasurer. The CEO is the Company Secretary and although he has authority
to act on behalf of the board, he does not have responsibility for any board
decisions. He is also a paid employee so does not fall into this category. The
board meets four times a year and regard themselves as volunteers. They all
attend stakeholder days and help out with operational tasks such as cutting
the grass around the centres and teaching people to read.
The idea for this research is that all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions may be
benefiting the SWWales Charity, although, it is suggested that none of the inputs, or
outcomes, are currently being measured. This thesis introduces the possibility that all
20
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and its benefits may exist and it presents the
epistemological position of the author that informs the research in Chapter Three. It
focuses on identifying the attributes of a sample of all stakeholder categories of the
organisation and discusses the reasons for the ontology, the facts, around which the
research is based. The following describes the structure of the thesis.
1.4 Structure of the Thesis
The aim of this thesis has been presented, which aims to identify if all stakeholder
voluntary contributions exist, and if so, whether it may be shown, alongside its
benefits, in a new model. This could be used to identify any added value that
stakeholders bring to funders and other external bodies to show how it measures
voluntary contributions in the same way as some of the literature presently does. For
example, Hesketh, (2014, p.7) advocates, “four levels of investment into human
capital” that include the metric, “Return on People Employed” as, “outcomes
measure the quality of outputs and the resulting impact at business level from the
combination of inputs and activities”, including knowledge and skills.
However, Hesketh only discusses the inputs and activities of paid employees and
their human capital. This is a potential gap in the literature as it does not help with
the understanding of what is being contributed in its totality. While Saxton, (2004,
p.188) concludes that, “nonprofits need to act now, however, if they are to close the
gap in public understanding and bring their stakeholders with them”. This can only
be done if there is a comprehensive way of measuring all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions and the benefits that they bring. Some of the approaches from the
21
literature only measure tangible time and money, while others attempt to measure
intangibles such as goodwill, capability, loyalty, entrepreneurship, motivation, trust,
commitment or innovation. However, there is a potential need for an all-
encompassing model that measures all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and the
resulting benefits to organisations, the community and the individual stakeholders
themselves.
The theoretical context for this doctoral research is set in Chapter Two. It examines
what may be an under-researched area by investigating a number of approaches from
the literature that are presently used to report on stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions and its benefits. It aims to establish whether, or not, any of the studies
refer to all stakeholders’ and all their voluntary activity. There are a number of
studies that take tangible contributions into account, such as those that advocate
organisational improvements and performance, non-profit studies and human
resource management as well as those that account for and measure contributions.
However, there may be ways in which all stakeholders contribute to an organisation
that may not be being fully accounted for in the existing literature. It is recognised
from the literature review that not all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, or the
resulting benefits, are currently measured. As well as there being a potential gap in
the literature, it may be a practical problem for organisations to properly measure the
resulting benefits. The chapter looks the current measures as well as examining both
tangible and intangible inputs and outcomes. There is also the prospect of being able
to fully report on the potential threefold benefit to the organisation, the community
and the individual stakeholders themselves. Chapter Three describes the
methodological framework and the methods used for data collection. These methods
22
will be used to identify whether, or not, all stakeholders of the SWWales Charity
voluntary contribute to the organisation, and if so, whether this activity brings any
unreported benefits.
Chapter Three outlines the methodological framework and research design types for
data collection. It aligns the SWWales Charity’s stakeholder categories with the
literature to inform the questionnaires for data collection. Researchers have
advocated a number of tried and tested tools or methods for data collection that
include Guba, (1990), McNeil, (1990), Richards, (2005) Denscome, (2008), Bazeley,
(2009) and Bryman, (2012). While Cameron and Miller, (2010) also produced a
table of the research design type and methods that could be used for DBA theses.
The chapter introduces the ontology, an individual’s view of reality. While the
epistemology relates to how the enquirer should go about gaining knowledge and
introduces the methods for research. This research uses the approaches from the
literature in Chapter Two as the basis for the research questions. It identifies any
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to the SWWales Charity as well as their
potential benefits. The author has access to all stakeholders and was been given full
permission to undertake the empirical research.
This empirical study introduces methods of capturing data that complement the
author’s pragmatic research position. In Chapter Four the primary qualitative and
quantitative data from the questionnaires as well as the follow-up interviews is
presented. It is undertaken by means of descriptive codes for the stakeholder
categories, topic codes for the literature and analytical codes for the organisation,
community and individuals. The resulting data is presented in a number of tables that
23
culminate in initial, developed and final thematic maps. It also analyses the
secondary data that includes the scrutiny of organisational documents in the content
analysis to search for patterns and meanings, as presented by Bryman, (2012).
Authors utilised for the presentation of all the data include Guba, (1990), Richards,
(2005) as well as Braun and Clarke, (2006). All data is collected in a way that shows
congruence with the main research aim in Chapter Five, the analysis, interpretation
and reflection on findings.
The analysis, interpretation and reflection on findings are presented in Chapter Five.
It discusses what the findings mean, in the real world, within the context of the
literature. It discusses the findings that are presented in Chapter Four and relates
them to the literature review in Chapter Two as it analyses and interprets the
thematic data. There is found to be a threefold benefit to the organisation, the
community and the individuals themselves as a result of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. It presents organisational sustainability and competitive advantage as
well as enhanced services for community participation. Individual stakeholders’
wellbeing is found to be a return of their voluntary contributions. As well as this a
way of capturing their voluntary contributions is introduced in a new model called,
All Stakeholder Voluntary Contributions and Benefits, (ASVCB). It is a way of
measuring and reporting on its benefits annually. This is the contribution of this
research to knowledge and professional practice.
Finally, Chapter Six outlines the nature of the contribution to knowledge and
professional practice and discusses the new model, including the benefits of its
findings for theory and practice. It recommends the new model for capturing the
24
voluntary contributions of all stakeholders and its benefits to organisations, the
community and the individual stakeholders themselves. Alongside this, the chapter
critiques the research and highlights its limitations of the reporting of the
contributions in the literature. It highlights the benefits, and costs, of reporting in this
way as well as the limitations of this research and future research. The conclusion of
this whole DBA thesis draws together the research in the contribution to knowledge.
It finally focuses on what the findings mean in the real world and what is now known
a result of this research.
1.5 Conclusion
This chapter introduces the notion that the SWWales Charity’s current voluntary
contributions are unidentified and therefore may not be being fully reported on. It
suggests that the organisation may be missing an opportunity to account for the
benefits of those contributions to itself, the community and the individual
contributors. The voluntary contributions of all its stakeholders should be able to be
reported on annually in the same tangible way that money and time currently is. It
could provide the SWWales Charity’s funders, Companies House, The Charity
Commission and others with a much more accurate way of reporting on all of the
organisation’s voluntary contributions and its benefits. It could be used as part of the
organisation’s obligations around annual reporting, as a model, to market success in
the future and assert how stakeholders work together. All of the organisation’s
stakeholders may have had a positive effect on turnover, not just the traditional
volunteers. It could be presented in a model that emphasises the role that
organisations can and should play in developing stakeholders by valuing all their
25
contributions and its subsequent benefits. The following, Chapter Two, is the
Literature Review and sets the theoretical context for the research.
Chapter Two
A Review of the Literature that is Associated with Stakeholder Contributions
and Benefits
2.0 Introduction
The aim of this chapter is to review literatures that focus on the voluntary
contributions which a range of stakeholders make to organisations. The input of
voluntary contributions may result in the outcome of benefits to the organisation, the
community and individuals. The chapter introduces the notion that some authors
argue that the current literature gives an incomplete picture of what is being
voluntarily contributed and that therefore its benefits are not being properly reported.
This is partially argued by Haldane, (2014), O’Donnel et al, (2014) and Bassi et al,
(2015). Aligned to this, there is an examination of a number of approaches in the
26
literature that highlights what contributions and benefits are currently measured, as
well as what are not currently measured. There is a discussion around the outcomes
of competitive advantage gained by organisations, the benefits of the contributions
for the communities of enhanced services as well as the increased wellbeing and
skills that are the outcomes for the individual stakeholders themselves. The
conclusion recognises that there is a requirement for giving a more complete method
of reporting on all stakeholders’ voluntary inputs and outcomes. It also recognises
the threefold outcome, or benefit multipliers, that all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions may make possible. Reporting in this way may enable more
comprehensive reports that will give a complete picture of how organisations,
including the community and the volunteers themselves, benefit from all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. Much of the literature currently focuses
heavily on traditional voluntary activity. However, this thesis is concerned with all
categories of stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and the resulting benefits.
This thesis is focused on identifying the contribution which all categories of
stakeholders may voluntarily input to organisations. Currently this not widely
recognised or assessed. It is proposed that there may also be an incomplete measure
for the benefit of those voluntary contributions that are made by all stakeholders.
While there is a wide range of literature around traditional volunteering, there is not
much known about the contribution of the paid employees or consultants who work
extra time that they are not paid for. Stakeholders can contribute a range of both
tangible and intangible resources to organisations and the various categories of
stakeholders have been discussed in detail in the introductory chapter, as has
traditional volunteering. The categories examined for this thesis include consultants,
27
traditional volunteers, paid employees and board members. The voluntary
contributions that are currently measured are now reviewed. While discussing
traditional volunteering, Chum et al, (2013, p.412) argue that, “nonmonetary factors
come into play such as tradition, the good will that volunteers bring to an
organization, and roles that are either prescribed for volunteer board members by law
or those that are prescribed for paid employees through union agreements”. While
Chum et al, consider most of the stakeholder categories in their work, they do not
consider the voluntary contributions of consultants, or any of its benefits, in their
argument.
However, despite the significant literature around traditional volunteering, there is
the recognition that the threefold benefit to organisations, the volunteers themselves
and the community are not fully measured. This is also true of the other stakeholder
categories and is a potential business limitation for organisations at least. If this
unmeasured contribution, and its outcome, could be measured and multiplied
throughout the sector it could have an effect on one of the existing measures, which
is Gross Domestic Product, (GDP). GDP has been advocated by Tucker-Drob et al,
(2014, p.2047) as well as Morgan et al, (2015, p.544) and measures the national
wealth, per capita, of a country or, “country-level per capita GDP”, Tucker-Drob,
(2014, p.2049). Nevertheless, GDP does not measure anything that’s worthwhile,
according to Kennedy, (1968). Cha, (2013) for example proposes that,
GDP also does not capture the value added by volunteer work, and does not
capture the value of caring for one’s own children. For example, if a family
hires someone for childcare, that counts in GDP accounting. If a parent stays
28
home to care for their child, however, the value is not counted in GDP. Cha,
(2013, p.1).
GDP does not consider any voluntary contributions of paid employees. This supports
the argument for a new all-encompassing measure of everything that is being
voluntarily contributed to organisations by all voluntary stakeholders’ contributions,
as well as its benefits. In relation to defining stakeholding, Miles, (2012, p.285)
states that, “the nature of what is a stakeholder is highly contested,” with, Miles,
(2011, p.1) also stating that, “hundreds of definitions existing in the academic field”.
The definition of the sample of categories for this thesis is the one advocated by
Freeman, (1984, p.46), who states that the definition of a stakeholder is, “any group
or individual who can affect or is affected by the achievement of the organisation’s
objectives”. This definition has changed over time as a result of their importance to
organisational survival and Freeman, in (2004, p.42), changed his definition of
stakeholders to, “those groups who are vital to the survival and success of the
corporation”. Without these vital stakeholders companies could not survive. The
stakeholders of the SWWales Charity and the voluntary contributions that they may
make will now be analysed in conjunction with the following current approaches in
the literature.
There are a number of approaches within the literature which recognise the
contribution of a range of stakeholders. These approaches include; Investors’ in
People, (IIP), Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR), Social Capital, Mass
Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering, The
Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA), Human Capital, Virtual Human
29
Resource Development, (VHRD), The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees, Human
Resource Accounting, (HRA), Return on Capital Employed, (ROCE), Return on
Talent, (ROT) and Social Value. These approaches are relevant to all of the four
stakeholder categories of the SWWales Charity.
Mendelow’s (1991) categories are examined, but there are other categories, such as
customers, The Welsh Government or funders externally, but the scope of this thesis
means that only consultants and traditional volunteers as external stakeholders of the
SWWales Charity are considered. However, all four stakeholder categories are
represented. Some of the approaches from the literature could be applied to all
stakeholders, while others are specific to a particular stakeholder category. For
example, the literature around formal, informal, micro-volunteering or altruism
includes Investors’ in People, (IIP), Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR), Social
Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, The Volunteering
Investment Audit, (VIVA), Human Capital and Human Resource Accounting,
(HRA). As a result of their work, Wang et al, (2016) argue that,
to date, existing literature on volunteering has focused much attention on
formal volunteering (doing unpaid work for an organization) but very little
on informal volunteering (doing unpaid work for strangers, acquaintances,
friends, and other individuals). Wang et al, (2016, pp.20-21).
Yet, it is suggested that their study does not go far enough because they also only
concentrate on traditional volunteering. Most of the literatures examined in this
chapter recognise that they do not fully report on the value of all the contributions
30
made by all stakeholders to organisations, the stakeholders themselves, or the
community. These threefold benefits are termed, “benefit multipliers”, by Haldane,
(2014, p.15). However, there is no way of presenting these benefits currently in one
approach, to give a complete picture of what is being contributed in order to achieve
those benefit multipliers in the literature.
2.1 A Review of the Literature
Each approach, such as CSR, IIP and Social Capital from the literature provides
important insights into particular stakeholder categories. The literatures examined
demonstrate that stakeholders, who are usually categorised as traditional volunteers,
contribute a range of resources to organisations that include their time and
commitment. For example, Danes et al, (2009, p.211) advocated that voluntary
inputs have the outcome of organisational survival in financially difficult times.
Fujiwara, (2012, pp.1,2 and 9) is among many who have reported the various ways
that voluntary contributions are made and Drucker, (2012, p.1) discusses the
outcome of volunteering being too narrowly defined. The stakeholders personally
benefit from the outcome of increased skills and wellbeing as a direct result of their
contributions is found by Moretti, (2005). According to Haldane, (2014, p.15)
traditional volunteering alone creates, “each year an economic value of at least £50
billion and potentially higher”. The voluntary contributions made by people to
organisations with the result of them benefiting from increased skills are considered
to be the benefit multipliers of “enhanced well-being, health benefits and increased
skills and employability”, according to Haldane, (2014, p.10), and O’Donnel et al,
(2014), call them rewards. Communities also benefit from traditional volunteering
31
according to Putnam, (1995, p.66) and Cots, (2011, p.334). For example, in their
research, Browne et al, (2013, p.65) discuss micro-volunteering, which are, “short
time bursts of volunteering with bare minimum formality”. It is suggested that these
inputs contribute to the outcome of a threefold benefit. Some of the approaches only
measure tangible outcomes such as money while others attempt to measure
intangibles such as goodwill, capability, loyalty, entrepreneurship, motivation,
commitment or innovation. It is suggested that none of the approaches examined
here measure all the inputs, or indeed all of the outcomes.
A number of authors agree that the current way of measuring voluntary contributions
does not go far enough and that the literature could go even further. They suggest
that the existing approaches in the literature need to reflect the contribution of a
range of stakeholders in their widest sense. This is supported by Shortt, (2004,
pp.11-22), Kane, (2014, p.1), Haldane, (2014, p.15) and Banks, (2016) who agree
that the current way of reporting in literatures on voluntary contributions lack a
complete measure. This may also include a complete measure of its benefits. In
support of this, O’Donnel et al, (2014) argue that the measure of economic success,
GDP does not tell the whole story because it does not include all voluntary activity.
This gap has also been recognised in a paper produced by The Valuing Your Talent
Partnership, (May 2016, pp.4,19 and 47) and is supported by Kane, (2014, p.1) who
states that, “the sector’s contribution to the UK is about much more than just
finances”, which is the crux of this thesis. In relation to this statement Drucker,
(2012, p.1) identified comparable themes in relation to private businesses suggesting
that, “business usually defines performance too narrowly – as the financial bottom
line”. Bassi et al, (2015, p.71), in the same way, advocate that the usual reporting is
32
too narrow and could be linked to measuring the creation of value. However, none of
the literature considers all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions or the value of its
benefits.
Stakeholder theory is the theoretical framework for this thesis and stakeholding is
advocated by Freeman, (1984, 2004), Donaldson and Preston, (1995), Gomes et al,
(2010) and Cots, (2011) who each describe the evidence and implications of
stakeholder theory. This thesis argues that there are a number of approaches from the
literature that support the various categories of stakeholder, however they may not
account for the value of the contributions of all stakeholders, as they are mostly
concerned with traditional volunteering. It has been well documented, for example
by The WCVA’s Voluntary Sector Almanac, (2011), Taylor, (2011) Drucker,
(2012), Gregg and Marazzi, (2012), as well as the WCVA, (2012, 2014, 2016) that
traditional volunteering benefits organisations, yet there currently is no all-
encompassing way of showing this. All of the literatures examined here refer to at
least one category of stakeholder. Some also have shareholders as well as
stakeholders who need to know exactly how productive the organisation is as they
expect a measure for the return on their investment of shares. Productivity is
measured nationally by Gross Value Added, (GVA). Aparaschivei et al, (2011)
define GVA as,
... a measure of the value of goods and services produced in an area, industry
or sector of an economy. In the national accounts, GVA is output minus
intermediate consumption; it is a balancing item of the national production
account. Aparaschivei et al, (2011, p.210).
33
As a measure, both GVA and GDP are referred to in a number of the literatures by
Cha, (2013) and Tucker-Drob, (2014), for example. They recognise that GDP shows
the value of all productivity to the economy in one comprehensive measure. Yet, it is
suggested that there is no comprehensive measure of the benefit to GVA or GDP of
all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions at present and this is therefore a limitation
of the literature.
It is evident that there is a vast amount of empirical work that has been undertaken
around the various stakeholder categories by Freeman, (1984, p.42) and Mendelow,
(1991, p.159) for example, who consider all stakeholder categories in their work.
Both of their approaches focus in general on the categories that include internal
stakeholders such as paid employees and board members. They also consider
external stakeholders such as consultants and traditional volunteers in their work. As
well as Mendelow and Freeman, stakeholding has also been researched by
Donaldson and Preston, (1995), Freeman (2004) Gomes et al, (2010) and Cots,
(2011). More recent work, which only considers traditional volunteer stakeholders
has been presented by Cha et al, (2016).
Gomes et als, (2010, p.720) work on a, ‘five-sided stakeholder influence model for
local government’, contributed to the literature on public management and leadership
by describing the decisions of local government managers and the influences of
stakeholders. However, there is some criticism of how the value that partnerships
produce can be measured. In her work on Public Value Management, (PVM) and
New Public Governance, (NPG), Liddle, (2018) describes key characteristics of
these new concepts. She argues that the state is shrinking and that stakeholder
34
influence and power with public sector leadership is key to delivering public goods
and services. This can be achieved by both formal and informal arrangements with it
being overseen by public leaders.
The Strategic Triangle of Public Value is a model that shows how public value is
created and is advocated by Moore, (1995). His model describes how it is defined in
situations where there are public outcomes that satisfy the strategic goals of
governments. Its authority is for maintaining and building on stakeholder coalitions
on the three thirds model of private, public and the third sector to build on delivery
capacity to deliver the strategic goals and public outcomes to, “wicked problems”
Pressman and Wildavsky, (1973). Wicked problems include poverty and The
SWWales Charity had to form a partnership following the three-thirds principle to
deliver the Communities First outcomes in the area. The government’s goal at the
time was to reduce poverty in Wales by 2020. Governments have the overall power
in society to ensure that public value is achieved. They have to ensure that outcomes
can be met by ensuring that there are the right skills, technology, staff and finance to
satisfy the public interest and be seen to be doing it for public good. In relation to
public value, Benington and Moore, (2011) present that,
one of his, (Moores, 1995) goals was to develop a conceptual framework that
would be practically useful to public managers doing their jobs, and to
encourage strategic thinking and entrepreneurial action to tackle complex
problems in the community. Benington and Moore, (2011, p.1).
35
However, Moore did not consider any voluntary actions of stakeholders in his model
and Liddle, (2018, p.969) argues that, “research on public value is a highly contested
territory". Liddle, (2018, p.970) continues, “… there are studies of public value
approaches from numerous disciplines, but the whole notion of virtue, public good
and (the) key question of where values arise from remain problematic”. The
Wellbeing of Future Generations (Wales) Act, (2015) ensure long term-interests by
establishing public service boards in local authority areas to add value for,
‘connected purposes’. While Liddle, (2018, p.971), quoting the work of Bennington
and Moore, (2011), agrees that, “… we can only understand what adds value in the
public sphere by identifying the long-term interests of future generations, rather than
current practices”.
There is a move away from the traditional hierarchical structures of control to more
collaborative, or connected, ways of working. Curtin et al, (2010) argue that the
public management style of NPG is more aligned to co-operation amongst the
various sectors. The SWWales Charity is a member of a number of partnerships
whose terms of reference give equal power to the various sectors, including the third
sector to ensure public value. This has enabled the SWWales Charity to access
funding as part of a consortium that it would not have been able to access on its own.
However, the public bodies that support this way of working also need the
participation and influence of the third sector to comply with public value clauses,
for example. In this way, services can be delivered and outcomes met, because
organisations working alone would not be able to access the funding in the first
place, let alone deliver the outcomes, Gomes et al, (2010). However, as has been
discussed, there is no evaluation of any voluntary contributions to Public Value.
36
There are a number of approaches from the literature that do evaluate voluntary
stakeholders’ contributions and the resulting organisational benefits. For example,
The US Government Accountability Office, (GAO), (2012, p.9) suggests that
through greater consultation with community stakeholders they could, “strengthen
their refugee resettlement programme”. In their costings they do not consider the
voluntary contributions made by those voluntary community stakeholders’ and
therefore its benefits are not reported on by the organisation. This is also true of
other approaches from the literature such as in the work of Herman and Renz, (1998,
p.32) who undertook, “comparisons of the relationships between the most and least
effective non-profit organisations”, and found that stakeholder contributions are an
important factor. Whilst Gordon et al, (2010, p.213) studied the annual reports of
non-profit organisations and Krishnan and Yetman, (2011, p.1015) analysed the,
“institutional drivers of reporting decisions” in non-profit hospitals. They found
drivers of reporting based on tangibles such as money, but as a non-profit
organisation they did not include any intangible contributions such as commitment
or loyalty. Both studies use approaches that enable them to analyse tangibles that
give them competitive advantage over other organisations. Nonetheless, these two
approaches may not give a complete picture of everything that is being voluntarily
contributed by all stakeholders, or its benefits.
All of the literatures, or approaches to stakeholder contributions examined, suggest
that organisations will benefit from competitive advantage. Some of the approaches
are well recognised audits or accreditation for organisational performance such as
Investors in People, (IIP). Others are less well known and include Human Resource
37
Accounting, (HRA) and Return on Talent, (ROT). Not one of the existing
approaches to assessing and capturing the contributions of volunteers are compulsory
for organisations to adopt, and all promise to offer some sort of competitive
advantage over organisations that do not embrace, or pay for them. Some benefits
are measured by standards, strategies, matrices, ratios, audits, cultures, frameworks
or clauses.
All are resources that are used to benchmark how good or bad an organisation is at
managing money, people, the environment, or the community in which the
organisation is based. They attempt to enable the organisation to reflect on, and
measure the contributions that are made by some stakeholder categories. Some
advocate their benefits too, such as the, “outerperformance” described by Devoy,
(2015, p.8). All use key performance indicators, (KPIs) of some sort as well as the
organisation’s mission statement to drive the approach, and therefore the
organisation, forward. All offer a degree of sustainability, through the promise of
competitive advantage, over those that have not adopted them. Porter, (1985) (cited
by Thompson, 2001, p.343) argues that, “competitive advantage is created and
sustained when a firm performs the most critical functions either more cheaply or
better than its competitors as part of the value chain”. Some of the literatures partly
recognise the benefits that could be gained by measuring voluntary contributions,
such as The WCVA’s Voluntary Sector Almanac, (2011) and the WCVA, (2016),
for example. But, as has been discussed, these approaches are only concerned with
traditional voluntary contributions and the benefits they bring.
38
The benefits can be used for positive promotion, image and reputation to favourably
market how well the organisation is doing, to its shareholders or stakeholders. This,
in turn, attracts more business, funding, or even more voluntary contributions and
may repeated because, it is suggested, that the benefits provide the propensity to
repeat volunteering for even more benefit multipliers such as possibly doubling the
annual £50bn brought by the diverse army of traditional volunteers found by,
Haldane, (2004, p.15). Nevertheless, not one of the measurement approaches
examined offers a comprehensive examination of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. This, it is suggested, gives an incomplete picture of the resulting
benefits that may be fundamental to organisational survival. Nor do they fully
quantify the wellbeing benefits back to individual stakeholders or the community,
which is the threefold benefit. This section gave an overview of the approaches from
the literature examined. To enable a more in-depth analysis, the next section
provides an examination of the literatures that report on different voluntary
stakeholder categories and their contributions. It will also identify any benefits.
There is a vast amount of literature around the various voluntary contributions’ of
stakeholders and its benefits. First, the literature of Quality Marks, (IIP) and
Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR) are examined. This is because it is mostly
associated with consultants as they are the stakeholder category that usually takes the
lead on them for organisations. They are branded to enable organisational
improvements. Following the examination of the approaches from the literature
associated with consultants Social Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of
the Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering and The Volunteering Investment and
Value Audit, (VIVA), are examined. They are the approaches that are aligned to
39
traditional volunteers and they report on volunteering and its benefits. Then the
approaches of, Human Capital, Virtual Human Resource Development, (VHRD),
The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees and Human Resource Accounting, (HRA),
are examined because they typically focus on paid employees. These approaches are
aligned to Human Resource Management and value and measure some aspects of
employee contributions. Associated with board members is the literature of Return
on Capital Employed, (ROCE), Return on Talent, (ROT) and Social Value. These
are accounting approaches that are concerned with measuring the Return On
Investment, (ROI). The literatures are demarcated into categories for ease of data
collection in Chapter Three. First, the approaches from the literature that is
associated with consultants are examined. These approaches profess to enable the
benefit of organisational improvements and increases in performance.
2.2 Organisational Improvement and Performance: Accreditations and
Corporate Social Responsibility
Some of the literature focuses on organisational improvement through accreditations
such as IIP and CSR. These approaches attempt to measure some stakeholder
contributions and its benefits. However, they may ignore important dimensions such
as any voluntary time contributed by consultants, for example. Consultants have low
power and a low level of interest in an organisation and are external stakeholders,
according to Mendelow, (1991). As such they are often portrayed as having little
interest in the organisation apart from the work that they are commissioned for. In
Blagden’s, (1973) conference paper, he states that,
40
consultants have been described as 'the people who borrow your watch to tell
you what time it is and then walk off with the watch' … In my view
management consultants, properly selected and briefed can make a real
contribution to the health of an organization. He states that they do this in a
number of ways including giving, ‘impartial advice … help on projects …
and an overall audit … they utilize in their work a wide range of techniques
drawn from such differing areas as behavioural science and operational
research together with a few gimmicks’. Blagden, (1973, p.459).
Consultants are commissioned to undertake a piece of work which saves
organisations the cost of employing a full-time member of staff. Consultants often
lead on accreditations such as IIP and Werr, (1999), in relation to this, argues that,
the actual leadership is seldom the responsibility of the consultant. Instead
this task has to be carried out by a respected actor in the client organisation;
still, consultants play a role in identifying suitable leaders and supporting
existing leaders in the work of the change process. Werr, (1999, p.357).
Yet, consultants’ input of their skills, and perhaps some of their voluntary time, for
that support is not acknowledged in the achievement of the standard. IIP gives
important insights into three of the stakeholder categories that are traditional
volunteers, paid employees and board members. However, it is suggested that by
ignoring the potential voluntary contributions of consultants, which benefits its
attainment, the IIP approach does not give a full picture of how it is achieved.
41
The argument is that there is a vast array of literature around consultants, and the
work for which they are paid. However, most of the literature ignores any voluntary
contributions of the unpaid skills that they may contribute to organisations, or the
resulting benefits, that is the achievement of the IIP standard. This literature on the
measurement of skills is also true of other stakeholders. The work of the Leitch
Review of Skills, (2006, p.20) suggests that, “Investors in People (IIP) can engage
employers in developing the skills of their employees to enhance business
performance, recognising achievement through a common standard”. There have
been a number of versions of IIP over the years but it remains a widely recognised
common standard. In criticism of the IIP version at that time, Lord Leitch, (2006)
called for a review of the standard to again be revised to reflect his findings. It was
then reviewed to become less bureaucratic but still attracted some criticism. In
criticism of the reviewed IIP standard, Hoque and Bacon, (2008, p.472) argue that,
“this needs to be balanced against the lack of growth in IIP recognition in
workplaces in small firms. This suggests that the new, supposedly less bureaucratic
version of the Standard is no more popular with small firms than was its
predecessor”. In their study of small firms Hoque and Bacon, (2008, p.472) “…
suggest that the government’s £30 million financial commitment in 2002 to raise
recognition rates through IIP UK’s Small Firms Initiative has not achieved its aims”.
This was despite IIP still being a government sponsored training initiative at that
time that included a requirement for equal opportunities. It was still not compulsory.
Hoque and Bacon, (2008) continue that,
one interpretation of the findings therefore is that the lack of uptake of IIP
among small firms could be seen as symptomatic of the problems inherent
42
within voluntarist institutional frameworks, particularly in terms of the lack
of employer willingness to engage with training initiatives. Hoque and
Bacon, (2008, p.472).
This may be because of the significant time and effort, including the voluntary time
contributed by consultants that has to be put into meeting the standard. Their
contribution is not measured or accounted for in attaining the standard. Although IIP
is important in measuring the organisational maturity of all sized organisations, it is
the argument for measuring all stakeholders’ voluntary time, including any voluntary
time and skills of consultants which should be considered by the latest Sixth
Generation Framework. Without these voluntary benefits, in some organisations, IIP
may not be achieved at all. It is suggested that the omission of consultants’ voluntary
contributions of their time and skills is a limitation of IIP. De Waal, (2015) argues
that,
Investors in People (IIP) was introduced by the UK Government in 1991 as a
reaction to the UK’s poor industrial performance, in comparison with other
developed countries at that time, (Smith et al, 2014). The aim of IIP was to,
help UK organisations improve the way they manage, develop and inspire
their workforce, on the premise that a focus on skills training was crucial in
achieving and sustaining the competitive advantage of organisations, their
sectors and the overall country. De Waal, (2015, p.665).
De Waal, (2015) continues that,
43
IIP is a quality standard by which organisations measure themselves in
relation to their human resources (HR) practices, (DeWaal, 2015). To support
the quality standard, IIP offers principles of best practice in people
management and techniques that organisations can apply to improve their
performance in these areas”, (DeWaal, 2015). According to the chain of
impact described by Bourne et al, (2008), “organisations that adopt IIP will
eventually achieve better financial performance. De Waal, (2015, p.665).
To date, there is no measure for the voluntary contributions of all stakeholders in the
achievement of IIP, including those of consultants, in the attainment of better
financial performance. The literature around IIP does not consider all stakeholders
because it only considers the skills of internal stakeholders. It therefore does not
provide an accurate measure of how it may actually be being attained. According to
the literature, “IIP is a measure of organisational maturity which is advocated by
Churchill and Lewis, (1983), who state that it encourages relationships between
internal stakeholders”, DeWaal (2015c, p.6). If IIP is concerned only with internal
stakeholders, then it already acknowledges the fact that it ignores any external
stakeholders’ contributions such as consultants. Only some of an organisation’s
stakeholders undertake any measure of skills performance to improve growth. It is
suggested that IIP is not accounting for everything in its achievement by not
measuring any skills of external stakeholders, such as those voluntarily contributed
by consultants.
44
It would be interesting to measure consultants’ voluntary contributions, and its
benefits, to fully report on how they contribute to IIP. In regard to business
performance, De Waal (2015) argues that,
the notion that organisations adopt IIP for two main reasons, obtaining
benefit by association or obtaining benefit by practice, provides another
possibility for future research on the link between the reasons for
implementing IIP and the organisational results achieved. A difference could
be expected because, for instance, organisations that adopt IIP in order to
benefit by association are unlikely to benefit in terms of performance, as in
these cases IIP has had no part in improving organisational practice. De Waal
(2015, p.678).
This argument is important, as IIP is branded as a way of improving complete
business performance, however the literature around it does not consider the
performance of all stakeholders, including consultants. With regard to the standard
De Waal, (2015) continues,
… the introduction of the new sixth version of the IIP Standard offers another
avenue for research and calls for more research. The effects of this new
Standard should be closely monitored to see whether the move towards a
high-performance framework will change perceptions of whether IIP
increases organisational performance. De Waal, (2015, p.678).
45
It can be argued that an organisation can have some increased competitive advantage
by adopting IIP; however, it has been discussed that it is not a comprehensive
measure of everything that leads to its achievement. A potential limitation of IIP is
that it focuses exclusively on the contributions of paid employees and board
members with some input from traditional volunteers. While the skills of these
stakeholders are central to achieving IIP, it may be worth considering the skills of
consultants in its attainment, because IIP has also been criticised for its neglect of the
issue of skills by Hoque, (2008) and Hoque and Bacon, (2008).
Advocates of the argument for skills include Smith et al, (2014, p.266) who state
that, “commonly cited as key factors in the drive to increase competitiveness, are the
development and acquisition of skills and the nurturing of a “positive” training and
development culture within the workplace”. Smith et al continue,
The Leitch Report (2006), which reviewed skills and education in the UK,
has been one of the more recent initiatives in this domain. Since the
economic turmoil of 2008 and beyond, Lord Leitch’s words have become
more prescient: without increased skills, we would condemn ourselves to a
lingering decline in competitiveness, diminishing economic growth and a
bleaker future for all. (Leitch Report, 2006, p. 1).
However, despite this warning, there are still shortcomings in the literatures that are
associated with IIP’s stance on skills. For example, while discussing the IIP Fifth
Generation Framework, Smith et al, (2014, p.274) argued that their, “findings
strongly align with viewpoints in the literature, whereby IIP is criticized for its
46
limited impact on training and development practices and the ease with which
organizations can secure recognition.
Smith et al, (2014, p. 274) continue that, “the data therefore raise a number of points
of concern and trepidation concerning the Standard. Indeed, IIP recognition may
simply represent external recognition, a ‘badge’ or ‘plaque on the wall’”. This, it is
suggested is for what the organisation is already doing anyway and, Smith et al
continue, “this could provide one explanation as to why IIP recognized organizations
may outperform non-IIP recognized organizations” as, “IIP status is merely a by-
product of recognition for the improvements already actively implemented. The
organizations studied were seeking external recognition for prior accomplishments
and were not using IIP as a tool by which to engender quality improvement”. This is
where the argument for what IIP actually helps organisations achieve is needed.
Being able to measure everything that contributes to its achievement would go some
way to giving an accurate account of what actually leads to the organisational,
‘outerperformance’ in the new Sixth Generation Framework as advocated by Devoy,
(2015). It is suggested that by measuring all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to
the organisational benefit of achieving IIP, it could produce a more meaningful
measure for, ‘outerperformance’.
Continuing with the argument that IIP is just a badge, Smith et al, (2014, p.275)
maintain that, “further research is also needed beyond the six organizations studied
here in order to fully understand why IIP recognized companies appear to
outperform non-IIP organizations”. Further research could consider measuring all
47
voluntary contributions as well as the outcome of the skills that benefit all an
organisations’ stakeholders. Smith et al, (2014) continue,
… nevertheless, this paper importantly highlights that IIP may not be the
transformative change tool it claims to be. Thus, it is suggested that there is a
timely need for government agencies to revisit how the principles of IIP are
introduced and embedded into organizations. Smith et al, (2014, p.275).
Any updates could consider the skills of all an organisations stakeholders, including
the voluntary skills contributed by consultants. Smith et al, (2014, p.275), continue
to criticise IIP by stating that there is a need for more empirical studies. With regard
to their findings, Smith et al, (2014, p.275) argue that, “ultimately, these findings
hold significant doubts concerning the relevance and usefulness of the Standard and
its potential to deliver an improved future for UK organizations”. Smith et al agree
with the earlier literature in that IIP recognition is still associated with it being a,
‘badge’. Whereas, if IIP included a measurement for all stakeholders’ contributions,
it may confirm that it is not just a badge.
Overall there are some limitations of IIP as it does not show the contribution of all
stakeholders, or its benefits. The literature does not consider any voluntary
contributions of consultants. Therefore, it may not show how the outcome of IIP
accreditation is actually achieved. The main focus of IIP is on whether stakeholders
receive enough training to enable them to support their own continuous
improvement, as well as that of the organisation. However, as all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions to the benefit of achieving IIP are not considered then it may
48
not be a comprehensive measure of continuous improvement. IIP is marketed as a
benchmark and that reaching the recognisable standard ensures organisational
sustainability. There is also some focus on whether top managers such as board
members provide strong inspirational leadership in order to maximise business
potential, but any contributions made by consultants remain unmeasured. IIP also
advocates dispersed leadership throughout organisations, yet De Waal, (2015) found
that it is usually associated with top leaders and managers. While Hoque, argues
(2003) that it is an international standard with a recognised logo, or badge, and Berry
and Grieves, (2003, p. 302) call it a trophy. Some funding contracts’ scores are
weighted in IIP’s favour, and a contract may be lost on the quality marks score
alone. So, it is important for organisational financial sustainability to show how
quality marks such as IIP are actually achieved.
Another approach that is connected to the idea of stakeholders and improving
organisations is Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR). CSR gives back to the
community and encourages social relationships by including external stakeholders in
an organisation’s mission. The mission provides vision and a clear purpose. CSR is
promoted as a benefit to society in that influences transparency, image and loyalty. It
accounts for the relationship between an organisation and society and relies on
stakeholders volunteering their time for free to attend meetings and briefings. An
example is large windfarm projects distributing community benefit funds for
voluntary groups in the area that is affected by their work. Yet, like IIP it does not
currently measure any of the contributions of consultants who are often
commissioned to communicate the organisation’s mission in the community. They
also lead on organisational improvements such as CSR. CSR generally argues that if
49
organisations look after the communities in which they are based then the
community will support its mission. It is the idea that a strategic and integrated
approach is important and that both IIP and CSR create a favourable impression of
the organisation in its community, which for CSR also includes stakeholders such as
the Welsh Government, according to Brooks and Evans, (2005). They are both
aligned to value and creating the right impression, as argued by Branco and
Rodrigues, (2007) and De Waal, (2015). CSR is not only concerned with economics,
but the social aspect too and the integration of all an organisation’s functions, not
just finance, marketing or HR departments as part of a communication strategy.
Gronroos, in (1990, pp.6-14) states that, “trust and commitment” are the products of
good communication. Communication is about how organisations send messages, as
a continual process and Schramm, in (1973, p.12) found that, “in fact, it is
misleading to think of the communication process as starting somewhere and ending
somewhere. It is really endless. We are little switchboard centres handling and
rerouting the great endless current of information”. This communication may be
undertaken by all stakeholders. However, this is not acknowledged in the CSR
literature, which is mainly concerned with the trust and commitment of the
community in which it is based. In support of a positive current of information in the
community Branco and Rodrigues, (2007) advocate a stakeholder view that
considers environmental protection. They also discuss the management of human
resources, internal and external relationships as well as health and safety.
CSR manages the risk of legal sanctions by abiding by rules, but goes further than
just legal requirements. This is supported by Brooks, (2005, p.403), who states that,
50
“it follows the claim that CSR is a strategic issue is to claim that it should be
considered as an integrated practice across the organisation and should not be
thought of as the domain of any particular function”. This statement means that CSR
is not just in the domain of HR, finance or marketing, or indeed any particular
category of stakeholder, yet it does not measure any voluntary contributions of
consultants. While the literature around CSR provides important insight into
particular stakeholder categories, such as community members, it should be noted
that the literature does not consider the role of consultants. This may be because,
according to Mendelow, (1991) consultants appear as external stakeholders, but so
do traditional volunteers which are considered in the CSR approach. This, it is
suggested, only gives a partial account of what actually contributes to CSR. In order
for CSR to be completely integrated it should consider the contributions of all an
organisations’ stakeholders, paid or unpaid, and the benefits they bring to achieving
an organisation’s mission.
The CSR approach shows that an organisation is citizen-centric and that stakeholders
are involved in its activities in a comparable way to IIP. It also utilises the balanced
scorecard method of Kaplan and Norton, (1996) which balances an organisations
internal and external environment. CSR is also comparable to IIP as it is about the
values of senior leaders who push them forward in their strategies. CSR does,
however exclude consultants and any voluntary contributions in the same way as IIP;
therefore it also gives an incomplete measure of how it is achieved. It can promote
the organisation to customers and prospective future employees, but, CSR is always
led by internal employees and board members. Consultants often lead on strategies
51
like CSR, yet they are not fully recognised for any of their voluntary contributions to
the organisations’ relationships with the community.
CSR accounts for the relationship between an organisation and society, which is one
of the functions often provided by consultants. Consultants can provide training and
introduce the organisation’s mission to stakeholders. Its main argument is whether it
is economic or social responsibility that leads to sustainability. It can be argued that
it is both, but neither aspect is fully reported on in the current literature. It is
suggested that this is because all stakeholders and their voluntary contributions are
not presently acknowledged, or its benefits reported on. It is not a legal requirement
to report formally on any voluntary contributions, but it would give a more complete
picture if strategies like CSR went further than its legal requirements.
Seitanidi, (2009, abstract), an advocate of CSR states that, “the role of accountability
is prominent in safeguarding that the voices of the internal and external stakeholders
are being heard”. While CSR considers the importance of communicating with
traditional volunteers, who are external stakeholders, it does not acknowledge any
voluntary contribution of its consultants. Externally, consultants may speak
favourably of the organisations that commission them, giving examples of good
practice, which could provide free marketing.
Kaplan and Norton, (1996) also consider the internal and external environment in
their balanced scorecard approach. With regard to managing the internal
environment, CSR “addresses morals and values in managing an organisation”
according to Freeman, (1984, p.12). IIP also addresses values in its framework,
52
according to De Waal, (2015a). CSR influences value, loyalty and image and
creating a strong impression by considering the interests of all parties affected by an
organisation’s actions. Creating a good impression is related to marketing and is
fundamental to organisational survival by attracting consumers to its services over
the long term. CSR is also responsible for an organisation’s ethics, legal and finance
functions as well as its own organisational philanthropy. But it does not take the
philanthropy of all its stakeholders into account because it does not consider any
voluntary contributions of consultants. CSR ensures survival through profits but also
has social considerations. There are benefits for both businesses and the community
in which the organisation is based.
There is a substantial amount of literature on CSR found in accounting journals
according to Huang and Watson, (2015) and is the way of managing all an
organisation’s activities and their impact. However, it can be argued that CSR does
not manage all an organisations stakeholders’ contributions or their impact. Even
though CSR places the organisation favourably in the community, so that the
economic welfare of society is maximised, it could go much further by including all
stakeholder categories, their voluntary contributions and its benefits. CSR involves
the community to ensure that it complies with its ethical and legal obligations. While
there is some crossover, IIP reports on the investment of upskilling people. While the
literatures around both IIP and CSR provide important measures for organisational
success for internal stakeholders, they are limited in that do not consider any
voluntary contribution of time, knowledge, skills and the free marketing that may be
made by the consultants. There are clearly many benefits of such behaviour that
includes the delivery of effective public services and goods, organisational
53
sustainability, survival and improvements. Volunteering helps achieve quality marks,
competitive advantage, benchmarking, increased performance, good citizenship,
social inclusion, social enterprise, knowledge and skills. As well as increased human
capital, community benefits, individual wellbeing, goodwill, capability, loyalty,
entrepreneurship, motivation, commitment and innovation.
Traditional volunteering helps to strengthen programmes and provides recognition,
accreditation and ‘outerperformance’ as well as positive promotion, image and
reputation. It supports best practice, better financial performance, increased
competitiveness, a positive training and development culture, continuous
improvement, health and safety, complying with legalities, value, loyalty and image,
ethics, legal and finance functions. These benefits are partially contributed by
external stakeholders, such as consultants, yet they are not fully accounted for or
measured in the literature. Having considered the potential voluntary contributions
made by consultants and the resulting benefits, the next section examines non-profit
studies and the impact of traditional volunteers who are also external stakeholders
according to Mendelow, (1991).
2.3 Non-profit Studies: Traditional Volunteering and its Impact
According to Mendelow, (1991) traditional volunteers have low power but a high
level of interest in an organisation. There is a significant body of literature that
typically focuses on traditional volunteers such as Social Capital, Mass
Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering and
The Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA). Social Capital is something
54
that people can accumulate through their social networks, which has payback for the
volunteers themselves, society and organisations, resulting in a threefold benefit.
There are matrices, audits and measures that capture traditional voluntary
contributions and social capital, for example, measures the degree of individual
volunteers’ contacts, information and support that is translated into benefits for
society through social action. Putnam, (2001) and Wang et al, (2016) describe how
the amount of personal social capital has a positive correlation with the amount of
volunteering undertaken. While Hof, (2005, p.1) describes mass collaboration as,
“people power” and volunteers have the power to influence what they want on their
terms. Another approach from the literature is the contribution of the third sector,
which measures voluntary resources to third sector organisations and is advocated by
the WCVA, (2013), Browne et al, (2013) and Mahdi, (2016). This payback on
traditional volunteering is supported by Fujiwara, (2012) Haldane, (2014) and
O’Donnel et al, (2014) who agree that while people contribute voluntarily, they
receive benefits back to themselves. This can be partially measured in the
volunteering and value audit, (VIVA) which is advocated by Gaskin, (2011) and
shows the profit and loss of managing volunteers. First Social Capital examined and
is defined by Bourdieu in Bourdieu and Wacquant, (1992) as,
…the sum of the resources, actual or virtual, that accrue to an individual or a
group by virtue of possessing a durable network of more or less
institutionalized relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition. This
may also be called community cohesion and plays an important role in the
delivery of key public services. Volunteering is also good for the volunteer: it
helps improve health and wellbeing and provides opportunities for
55
individuals to acquire skills and knowledge that can enhance career
development or employment prospects. Bourdieu and Wacquant, (1992, p.2).
Social Capital also benefits the organisation, the individual and the community and
Liddle, (2003) and Cornforth, (2012, 2015) argue that decision making at a local
level is encouraged through the participation of all stakeholders. What social capital
does measure is the degree of individual volunteers’ social reserves of contacts,
information and support that is translated into benefits for society through social
action. This is as a result of community participation. It is aligned to civil society,
associations, social connectedness, civic engagement and trust. While monetary
rewards for these societal outcomes may be de-motivators for the prosocial acts of
traditional volunteers as they may be concerned about their reputations if they are
rewarded financially. People may fear not being seen as truly altruistic, if they are
paid, according to Carpenter and Knowles Myers, (2007). In agreement with this
Smith, (2006) also argues that people volunteer purely for the benefit of others and
do not expect any financial reward. It is suggested that the WCVA’s, (2013)
calculation for the hourly rates of pay for volunteering, does not reflect the true
effect of social capital to families, civic society or organisations as it only considers
traditional volunteering.
The literature does not consider the voluntary contributions of all stakeholders,
particularly around the contribution of their skills. For example, children of educated
people may be healthier because they have higher birth weights by the education of
the mothers around smoking according to Moretti, (2005, p.3). In agreement with
this, Wang et al, (2016, p.5) state that, “social capital, defined as a person’s social
56
networks, has been found to play a critical role in creating opportunity structures for
voluntary participation”. Wang et al also found positive correlation between
volunteering and personal social capital. They continue, “Social Capital provides
links to other members of society and is an important source of support, information,
and further social contacts, (Putnam 2001)”, Wang et al, (2016, p.5). Putnam’s,
(2001) work around social capital includes people voluntarily manning outposts,
branches of institutions or organisations and is mostly associated with women.
According to Putnam, (1995) female contributions declined as a result of more
women taking on paid employment in the 1960s and 1970s. With regard to
accounting for the benefits of social capital, Carpenter and Knowles Myers, (2007)
found that,
volunteers may value monetary rewards, but such rewards can also have the
indirect and presumably unanticipated e ect of discouraging prosocialff
behaviour among those who care about being perceived as altruistic.
Carpenter and Knowles Myers, (2007, p.21).
This is linked to the expectancy theory of Vroom, (1964, 1970, p.39) which argues
that, “one good deed will lead to another”. One of the outcomes is the benefit is to
the volunteers’ reputations. Carpenter and Knowles Myers’ research is only related
to the altruism of traditional volunteers and they agree that social capital benefits
organisations. However, there is currently no measure for how social capital benefits
organisations, only organisations. Of course, it may not be a good thing if volunteers
take the work of paid employees in the current economic climate.
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In relation to this, Blackadder and Jackson, (2011, p.2), The TUC, (2012) and
Volunteering England, (2012) have identified the need for cohesion between paid
workers and traditional volunteers. There are theories that argue the fact that people
function best when they coalesce because some paid employees may also contribute
time to their organisations that they are not paid for. This makes them volunteers too,
although not in the traditional sense. Historically, in discussing the goodwill and
reputational outcomes of volunteering, Adam Smith, (1759 and republished in (2006,
p.3) in his, ‘Theory of Moral Sentiments’ argues that, “societies function best when
economic interests and ethical interests coalesce”. His landmark work is the original
theory of, “conscience, moral judgement and virtue”. Smith, (2006, p.3) continues,
“how selfish soever a man may be supposed, there are evidently some principles in
his nature, which interest him in the fortune of others, and render their happiness
necessary to him, though he derives nothing from it, except the pleasure of seeing
it”.
This altruism is fundamental in that it is linked to social capital, which is also
defined by Cots, (2011, p.334) as having three main benefits of stakeholder social
capital which are, “(1) as a solidarity weaver;” (coalescing), “(2) as a mechanism for
managing collective action;” (voting, participation, collective action, networking)
“and (3) as a facilitator of intellectual capital”, (skills and education) “… among the
firm and its stakeholders”. Social Capital claims to help tackle poverty, yet while the
approach provides some important understanding, is suggested that there is no
measure of everything that is voluntarily contributed by all stakeholders and this is a
limitation of the literature. Mass Collaboration is another approach from the
literature that relies on the voluntary involvement of people.
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Mass Collaboration is a resource for organisational improvement and a way of
measuring people’s voluntary involvement in the design of services and products.
Proponents of Mass Collaboration argue that it gives competitive advantage over
other organisations, as people may buy into and support the services that they helped
to design. Field, (2009, p.2) argues that, “mass collaboration has had a substantial
impact on a number of information based domains, notably software development”
that is made possible by technology. It supports ‘people power’ and Hof, (2005, p.1)
defines Mass Collaboration as, “the power of us” by the sharing of resources such as
personal computers for, “no central capital investment – just the willingness of its
users to share”.
This cooperation and participation is a force that may be contributing to the economy
through GDP and Public Value, but it is suggested that a measurement of this kind of
voluntary participation is not measured in the Mass Collaboration approach at
present, or in the measure for GDP. Mass Collaboration helps stakeholders to design
and create products and services, who then automatically become customers, or
service users through the use of technology. Stakeholders influence what they want
on their terms as they have the power to demand the services that they want. Mass
Collaboration also promotes the sharing of company secrets to gain trust and can be
aligned to ‘autopoiesis’, which is advocated by Maturana and Variella, (1992) and
describes people acting in a force that is greater than the sum of the parts. This is
also beneficial as the volunteers can acquire shares in the company that they provide
predictions for. Through Mass Collaboration people use their own mobile phones
and computers to cast their votes, for example.
59
In comparison, Mass Collaboration can be likened to Social Capital as it refers to
networks of the volunteers; they are potential customers volunteering their time to
give feedback. Increased voting is also one of the outcomes of social capital,
Putnam, (2001) and Wang et al, (2016). Mass Collaboration helps to design citizen-
centric products and services. It can be aligned to the SERVQUAL (service and
quality) model advocated by Parasuraman et al, (1991, pp.420-450) and supported by
Marshall and Murdock, (2005). It forms service users’ opinions on the quality of a
service so that customer’s needs are be satisfied. Mass Collaboration can augment
community participation by showing payback to the community itself. People get
together to tell the organisations which services they want.
Mass Collaboration can be considered a benefit of the volunteers’ time for the good
of the community. It measures voluntary participation by increased votes such as in
the Obama election, for example. Volunteers got up early on voting day and texted
reminders to the electorate. They also provided coffee and cakes as an incentive at
polling booths, simply because of their loyalty to the cause. Mass Collaboration
partially measures the interventions of traditional volunteers in this way by counting
increased votes, but it does not measure the number of volunteer hours contributed,
or if there was any volunteering by any of the other stakeholder categories such as
paid employees. The increased participation of traditional volunteers in developing
goods and services can be measured but the Mass Collaboration approach, but the
literature does not consider the voluntary contributions of all stakeholders, or its
benefits. It provides a valuable understanding of stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions but there is no current way of pulling all the approaches together to
60
give an all-encompassing measure for the benefits of what is being contributed. Mass
Collaboration partially communicates the benefits of people voluntarily working
together to enable citizen-centric services in a traditional volunteering role.
However, it disregards the totality of the other volunteering stakeholder categories
and their contributions.
Another approach that examines traditional volunteering is The Contribution of the
Third Sector, which measures the voluntary resources of third sector organisations.
One aspect of this is what Browne et al, (2013, p.17) describe as, “micro-
volunteering, which is a short time burst of volunteering with bare minimum
formality”. Doing it could lead to formal volunteering which is associated with
regular hours per month, and according to Wang et al, (2016),
during the course of an individual’s life, it is likely that he or she will move
back and forth across a ‘spectrum’ of volunteer activities — from the most
informal and direct to the most formal and mediated (Williams 2003). The
relationship between formal and informal volunteering may be influenced by
an individual’s gender, race, education, income, employment, marital status,
the presence of children, and immigrant status. Furthermore, individuals’
social networks, community connections, associational participation, and
other related factors might have different influences on the proclivity to
volunteer formally and informally. Wang et al, (2016, pp.3-4).
The spectrum that is presented by Wang et al, (2016) could also include paid
employees who are on parental leave, for example as volunteering during that time
61
would enable skills and social networks to be kept updated. So, someone could go
from a paid employee to a volunteer and back again. However, while the measure for
The Contribution of the Third Sector gives a partial insight into what is happening in
society, it only accounts for traditional volunteering. There is presently no measure
for the unpaid work that consultants or paid employees contribute in austere times or
even the benefit of the hours that are contributed by board members.
The Contribution of the Third Sector can be associated with the connectivity of
social capital that is brought about by informal volunteering as suggested by Putnam,
(2001). Also in alignment with informal volunteering, Wang et al, (2016, p.5-6)
continue that, “… there is extensive literature on formal volunteering, predominantly
in the US context, with only a handful of empirical studies that have focused on
informal volunteering. In addition, different views exist on how formal and informal
volunteering are related”. Wang suggests that they are related by a number of factors
that include demographics, age and sex. Informal volunteering could include the
voluntary contributions of the other stakeholder categories too, but there is nothing
in the literature that acknowledges this. The WCVA, (2011, 2013, 2016) publish
various documents on the contributions of traditional volunteers in Wales and show
how volunteering contributes to GDP as a benefit to society. In the WCVA’s, (May
2011) briefing paper, which highlighted The Contribution of the Third Sector, it is
stated that,
however, the voluntary contribution of the Third Sector cannot simply be
evaluated through financial means or conventional economic data or the
number of employees it has. As an industry, the Third Sector is underpinned
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by a shadow labour force of volunteers. The time given by volunteers has an
estimated value of £1.6 billion. WCVA, (May 2011, p.1).
This approach measures actual volunteer time contributed by traditional volunteers,
but does not consider the benefits of the volunteering contributed by any of the other
stakeholder categories. This estimated value increased to £2.2bn in May 2013,
according to the WCVA, (2013, p.1). "If we combine the value of volunteers with
the income of the Third Sector in Wales, the Third Sector generates 7% of the GDP
of Wales. This is similar to the construction industry in Wales”. This 7% could be
used as a benchmark to account for all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, which
is presently ignored in the literature and in organisational financial annual reports,
because the regulators do not ask for or require it. If it is accounted for in future then
the figure of 7% could be vastly increased and it is this that is going unaccounted for
at present. The WCVA, (May 2013, p.1) reported, that, “volunteers make a
significant contribution, in unpaid hours’, to the economy of Wales. It is estimated
that every year volunteers contribute 191 million hours’, which is worth £2.2 bn.
This is equivalent to nearly 5% of Wales’ GDP”. The WCVA, (2016) published
figures of £3.7bn, which is equivalent to 6.8% of GDP in 2016.
It could be much higher and in support of this argument Mahdi, (2016) describes
austerity and how the contribution of the third sector could lead to organisational
sustainability by strengthening planning and good governance. Yet, there is no
comprehensive current measure for the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions in the third or any other sector. So, the headline figure of 6.8% does
not tell the whole story. While each of these literatures provides important insights
into traditional volunteering, there is nothing that draws on each stakeholder
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categories’ voluntary contributions to pull them all together and measure everything
that is being contributed.
The literature around Payback on Volunteering is another approach to measuring
traditional voluntary contributions. It argues that there is payback, or benefits, on
volunteering to both the individual and society, but also focuses only on traditional
volunteering. For example, Fujiwara, (2012, pp.1, 2 and 9) found that for adults,
participating in a part-time course the payback is, “a greater likelihood that people
volunteer on a regular basis, which has a value of £130 to the individual”. Their
work also took into consideration the demographics and lifestyles of volunteers
finding that, “married, middle-aged and elderly individuals, as well as people with
large social networks dedicate more time to volunteering. Religiosity also correlated
strongly with volunteering” and can be aligned with the work of Putnam, (1995).
The voluntary contributions made by people to organisations with the result of them
benefiting from increased skills are considered to be benefit multipliers, according to
Haldane, (2014), and O’Donnel et al, (2014). The result of volunteering is that the
third sector is a growth sector may be attributed to the threefold benefit of voluntary
contributions to organisations, the community and the individuals themselves, yet it
is only partially measured. Social Capital and the Contribution of the Third Sector
can benefit society in the same way as the Payback on Volunteering approach and
also benefits the stakeholders themselves. As discussed, volunteering encourages
participation in health related activity and increased voting or decreases in
criminality according to Moretti, (2005), which are all benefits to society.
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Another approach that attempts to measure traditional volunteering is called, The
Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA). This is an audit or ratio to
measure volunteering and is advocated by Gaskin, (2011, p.1), which shows the
profit and loss of managing volunteers. By undertaking the audit organisations gain
increased recognition in a comparable way to IIP. Through showing the due
diligence of good governance, organisations may benefit from more funding.
Contracts are also favourably weighted by an organisation’s due diligence as
advocated by the Volunteering Impact Assessment Toolkit (VIAT), which is
associated with VIVA and advocated by Volunteering England, (2011) as a measure
for traditional volunteering. The types of things that are measured include the
number of volunteer hours multiplied by the hourly rate for the job from The Office
for National Statistics, (ONS) (2012/13). VIAT measures money and the economic
value of volunteers and it can be used to lever in more funding by showing how well
an organisation governs its people through due diligence. An example of this is
linked to the strategic responsibilities of boards, yet their voluntary contributions are
not measured in the VIVA or VIAT approaches.
The general theory around Social Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of
The Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering and VIVA all professes to cut costs to
organisations through voluntary contributions. This enables them to gain the benefit
of better retention and recruitment of volunteers as well as recognition for
benchmarking. There are many gaps in the literature around fully reporting on all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and, it is suggested, that there are potential
business limitations for boards for failing to account for all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions and the benefits that it brings. At present the regulators do not expect
65
boards to report on all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions but it would give a
much more complete measure of organisational sustainability and how it contributes
to the productivity measured by GDP, and through Public Value if they did.
It has been established that the literature partially collects information on the benefits
of traditional volunteering to an organisation, but does not consider everything that
may be being voluntarily contributed as a result of stakeholders’ time, knowledge
and skills. The organisations, the community and the volunteers themselves benefit
from a number of outcomes as a result of their actions that include networking,
community cohesion, enhanced career development and employment prospects,
contacts, information and support, social action and participation, social
connectedness, civic engagement and trust. Also, free manned outposts, enhanced
reputations, increased voting, participation, collective action, networking decreases
in criminality, reduced poverty, citizen-centric design of services, people power,
payback for the community. Contributions to GDP, planning and good governance
though Public Value, £130 of new skills through volunteering to the individual,
participation in health-related activity, more funding for organisations through due
diligence. There is cost cutting because volunteers do the work for free, as well as
the recruitment and retention of volunteers, increased productivity, wellbeing and
social inclusion. Yet, most of these benefits are not being fully reported on at
present. This, it is suggested, is a limitation of the literature around traditional
volunteering.
There are other forms of volunteering in the literature that are associated with the
human resources of paid employees and their contributions, which will now be
66
investigated. It will be interesting to establish if they measure everything that may be
being voluntarily contributed, as well as any benefits of this activity. These
approaches include Human Capital, Virtual Human Resource Development,
(VHRD), The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees and Human Resource
Accounting, (HRA).
2.4 Human Resource Management: Valuing and Measuring Paid Employees’
Contributions
Some approaches such as Human Capital, Virtual Human Resource Development,
(VHRD), The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees and Human Resource
Accounting, (HRA) measure paid employees’ contributions to organisations. Paid
employees, according to Mendelow, (1991) have high power but a low level of
interest in an organisation. As such they may have increased Human Capital, which
measures an employee’s skills, health and education and suggests that it is a resource
for employees, as well as organisations. Aligned to the Human Capital approach is
the work of Weisbrod, (1966), who states that,
one of the early definitions in the literature revealed that human capital
represents resources which man (sic) has utilized to augment his personal
productivity. Expenditures on information, labour mobility, health, education
and training all are capable of enhancing the productive capacity of a worker
– his human capital. Weisbrod, (1966, p.6).
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Human Capital is linked to the education, training, skills and experience of the
workforce. The approach of Human Capital is not interested in money but leadership
skills, for example. Human Capital shows how the HR function creates value by
return on the investment in skills in annual reports. However, while the literature
around Human Capital is valuable for the production of paid employees, it does not
currently include the skills and experience of any of the other stakeholder categories
of an organisation.
It has been established, through the literature, that there are a number of measures for
the contributions of traditional volunteers which do not measure the human capital of
paid employees and vice versa. These include Social Capital, Mass Collaboration
and VIVA, for example. There is a need for a way of reporting on all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions and the resulting benefits in an integrated way. With regard
to integrated reporting, there is a quality programme leading to, “smarter annual
reports” presented by the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC) that
attempt a more in depth measure of non-financial contributions. It includes the return
of the investment in paid employees. Integrated Reporting, (IR) is also advocated by,
Carruthers, (24th February 2015), who describes IR as a concept for explaining
organisational success and it is an important measure for non-financial returns on
investment. IR has also been advocated by Abeysekera, (2013) and De Villiers, et al,
(2014). In his, ‘Presentation to Welsh Government Integrated Reporting Steering
Group’, Carruthers, (24th February 2015), describes IR as a concept for explaining
organisational success.
IR shows a return on investment in people and money, as well as system and
management improvements but it does not tell the whole story of any voluntary
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contributions made by paid employees and its benefits. Also, IR is only concerned
with paid employees’ at present and it does provide an important understanding of
what is invested into their development. It may, however give an ever better account
of organisational success if IR included the all stakeholders and any of their
voluntary contributions.
Most of the literatures examined involve contributions that paid employees make
through their Human Capital. It can be argued that some of these contributions may
be voluntary and it is possible to say that these contributions could be identified and
measured, even though they are not at present. Social Capital, which is about
connections to an individual’s community, is different from Human Capital which is
aligned to paid employees’ skills and productivity. Discussing Social Capital, Wang
et al, (2016, p.5) argue that, “in addition to formal memberships, an individual’s
connection to local communities and personal networks could influence the
likelihood of being asked to volunteer as well as obtaining information on
opportunities to volunteer, thereby increasing the propensity to volunteer for
organizations and help others”. Wang et al, however do not consider the propensity
of paid employees who may volunteer unpaid time to their organisations in their
work.
Wang et al, (2016, pp.8-9) also argue that, “there is a general consensus in the
literature that education, a component of human capital, increases the propensity to
volunteer for formal organizations ... However, working full time could also reduce
the free time available for unpaid voluntary work”. It is suggested here that people
who work may already be voluntarily contributing to their organisation by doing
69
unpaid work, but there is currently no measure for it or its benefits. In contrast
Blake, (2005) advocates that people who work do not have any time to volunteer
because they are, “worn out”. They may be worn out because they are doing over
and above what they are paid for in the current austere times. However, Blake was
discussing traditional volunteering that could be volunteered by paid employees to
organisations outside the organisations that they work for. It is suggested that this is
probably true, but that they are already volunteering within the organisations that
they are employed by, but that it is not recognised. This is supported by the work of
Danes et al, (2009, p.211) who argue that, “during financially difficult times, it could
be that human and social capital sustain small firms”. Yet, there is no measure for
how the social capital of traditional volunteers or the human capital of paid
employees actually sustains small firms because there is no comprehensive measure
for it. Bassi et al, (2015, p.71) agree that the usual reporting of Human Capital is too
narrow, and should be linked to measuring the creation of value. It does not report on
any voluntary human capital contributed by paid employees, so it does not tell the
whole story. Paid employees may be partially providing the benefit of organisational
sustainability through their voluntary contributions, although it is not presently
accounted for.
Virtual Human Resource Development, (VHRD) is another approach examined in
the literature. VHRD reports on human performance through technology. It may give
competitive advantage over other organisations that do not measure human
performance and report on it in this way. It treats employees’ competence as an asset
and gives it a value. Yet, it does not acknowledge any of the value of the other
stakeholder categories. VHRD was brought about by the technological advances in
70
learning and development of the workforce and is a performance framework which
measures workplace learning. Nafukho et al, (2010, p.648), undertook a literature
review in which they advocated that VHRD, “… demonstrates how technology can
be positively used to promote virtual learning, workplace learning and eventually
lead to performance improvement in the workforce”. However, VHRD does not
presently consider the knowledge, or human capital of all an organisation’s
stakeholders, or the benefits of any of their voluntary contributions. While it does
consider a wide range of performance indicators for paid employees, VHRD may be
enhanced even further if all stakeholders, and particularly the technological skills
they acquire through their
voluntary labour, are considered. Another approach from the literature that accounts
for the Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees is now presented.
The approach of the Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees accounts for the time that
people give over and above that which they are paid for. It could be associated with
the culture of a particular organisation, and is aligned to the work of Danes et al,
(2009). Paid employees may volunteer their time for the benefit of the organisation,
particularly in austere times, as has been discussed. However, they may also benefit
themselves through increased skills that enhance their human capital that may lead to
future promotion, for example. There are many ways in which paid employees
undertake duties that are over and above those that they are paid for, according to
Danes et al, (2009). Yet, the voluntary activity that is contributed by paid employees
is only considered in the approach from the literature on The Voluntary Labour of
Paid Employees. In agreement with the argument to report on the unpaid
volunteering of paid employees in this way Chum et al, (2013),
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estimated that about two-thirds of a broad sample of nonprofits reported
some interchangeable tasks between paid employees and volunteers, and on
average the interchangeability involved 12 percent of the tasks. In other
words, interchangeability was widespread but across a narrow range of tasks.
The interchangeability went two ways: in some organizations volunteers
replaced paid employees, and in others paid employees replaced volunteers.
Chum et al, (2013, p.410).
It is suggested that this interchangeability also includes the benefits of the unpaid
work of paid employees, not only volunteers. While Chum et al, (2013, pp.411-412)
found that, “volunteers represent a primary human resource for nonprofit
organizations,” they do not discuss the voluntary contributions of paid employees.
However, their research does provide valuable insights into one particular
stakeholder category which is the unpaid work of traditional volunteers. Associated
with this, Chum et al, (2013, p.413) found that organisations that rely on volunteers
will, “find it impossible to substitute total volunteers with paid staff. In contrast, in
some organizations providing very specialized services (such as for medical services
in hospitals), it would be legally impossible to substitute paid staff with volunteers
for particular roles (Handy et al. 2008)”.
It is suggested that as a result of Chum’s work it may be the paid employees,
working voluntarily, who sustain firms in austere times which is in direct alignment
with the work of Danes et al, (2009). Also, in alignment with the work of Chum et
al, (2013), the value of volunteers is also supported by Banks, (2016). Banks
discussed traditional volunteering at an annual voluntary sector council conference.
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He argued that voluntary organisations would not be able to survive without the
voluntary contribution of, “£625 million alone to replace the voluntary contributions
of traditional volunteers, including £156m to replace board members”. This is a valid
argument for the voluntary contributions of board members and traditional
volunteers, but it may cost a lot more to replace paid employees’ voluntary
contributions and the benefits that it brings to organisations. In relation to the
interchangeability of traditional volunteers working alongside paid employees,
Chum et al, (2013) also found that,
… various forms of organizational circumstances that create stress within an
organization and prompt changes in the allocation of human resources affect
interchangeability. Regarding the replacement of paid employees by
volunteers, we identified four such circumstances: an increase in workload
due to organizational growth, a shortage of paid employees, a sudden
increase in new tasks, and cost considerations. These circumstances explain
why certain tasks normally done by paid employees are done by volunteers
and why the organization must turn to volunteers for additional help. Chum
et al, (2013, p.423).
Yet, it can be argued that it is the additional help provided by the voluntary
contributions of paid employees taking on extra duties in austere times that are not
presently measured in the literature. This provides the benefit to the organisation of
cut costs. However, this kind of volunteering is not considered, nor is its benefits. If
it was considered it would greatly strengthen the relations between paid employee
volunteers and traditional volunteers.
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‘The Charter for Strengthening Relations between Paid employees and Volunteers’
was jointly published by Volunteering England, (2012) and The TUC (2012). The
Charter states that, “the involvement of volunteers should complement and
supplement the work of paid employees, and should not be used to displace paid
employees or undercut their pay and conditions of service”. It is suggested that this
cannot be the case when the employees are supplementing their own paid work with
volunteering. Some paid employees may take work home at the weekend, for
example. Gregg and Marazzi, (2012, p.875) and Whyte, (1956, pp.8-9), called this
type of volunteering by paid employees, “habits and dispositions”. These habits and
dispositions may now be the culture as during austere times when people may feel
coerced into giving free time in order to save their jobs.
This is supported by Warshaw, (2004, p.3) who states that, “workplace volunteerism
is a growth industry within a growth industry”. Paid employees may do it in
expectation of some return to themselves through increased human capital that may
lead to promotion or more work in the future. Any voluntary contributions that
benefit the organisation or the benefits back to the paid employees are not currently
reported. There is nothing in the literature that measures everything that is being
voluntarily contributed by paid employees, or indeed all stakeholders. They may
contribute in the expectation of some benefit back to themselves and the notion of
expectancy theory, that one thing will lead to another, as a motivator is presented by
Maslow, (1943).
The notion of unpaid work is supported by the work of Gregg and Marazzi’s, (2012,
p.875) work which, “draws on classic studies of white collar work such as William F
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Whyte’s The Organisation Man, (1956, pp.8-9). Whyte particularly describes
executives who work 50-60 hour weeks, making use of communications
technologies to enable evening and weekend working. “In one company, the top
executives have set up a pool of Dictaphones to service executives who want to take
them home, to do more night and weekend work. In almost all companies the five-
day week is pure fiction” (according to Whyte, cited in Gregg and Marazzi, (pp.8-
9)). For Whyte, the executive is a driven individual, working not as a service to the
company but, “because his ego demands it”. Also, according to Gregg and Marazzi,
“the working habits and dispositions of executives have now been adopted by
ordinary workers – but without pay, status or job security”. It may be because their
egos demand it, which motivates them to continue volunteering in this way, Gregg
and Marazzi, (pp.8-9). It may benefit their reputations as argued by Carpenter and
Knowles Myers, (2007), or it may give them self-esteem. It may be because paid
employees are anxious of losing their jobs in these austere times, so they may learn
extra skills by taking more work on to give themselves the benefit of competitive
advantage over their colleagues.
The opportunity for competitive advantage of this kind exist for volunteers at any
level in organisations, and Taylor and McAdam, (2003, p.382) suggest that,
“congruence”, which means similarity and equivalence, should exist between all
employees, “both paid and unpaid”. In relation to this, Blackadder and Jackson,
(2011) empathise that,
we take on board real concerns about the loss of the skills when employees
are made redundant, and fears that successful volunteer programmes may
75
influence future employment policy and budgets. However, as long as
volunteers are not exploited, we must acknowledge that involving more of
them has the potential to bring many benefits, including widening
participation and improving services if and only if, there is appropriate
investment in their management. Blackadder and Jackson, (2011, p.2).
Blackadder and Jackson’s study refers to traditional volunteers and there is no
reference to the benefits of the voluntary work of paid employees. The Voluntary
Labour of Paid Employees provides an important insight into the paid employees’
stakeholder category and provides some crossover with traditional volunteering. In
order to fully account for what is happening in organisations, it would be useful if
there was an approach which also considered any of the other stakeholder categories’
voluntary contributions and its benefits, in the same way as the investment of money
currently is.
Whilst the accounting literature is concerned with the benefit of the investment of
money, Human Resource Accounting (HRA) reports on the results of investing in
human resources. The HRA approach is a valuable tool for collecting information on
the activity that employees are paid for, but it is suggested that any volunteer time
that they contribute is not currently reported on. In support of this, Chum et al,
(2013) state that,
… the number of volunteers was a strong predictor variable for the
percentage of tasks normally done by volunteers that can also be done by
paid employees. One hypothesis to explain this finding is that organizations
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in the study lacked adequate volunteer management resources to manage
large numbers of volunteers and therefore relied to a greater extent on paid
employees to handle tasks previously done by volunteers. Chum et al, (2013,
pp.422-423).
The work of Chum et al goes some way to acknowledging the pressure that paid
employees may feel in austere times. They may feel coerced into doing extra or even
unpaid work, managing volunteers, when there is a threat of redundancies, for
example. Yet, this voluntary work and its benefits to organisations are unaccounted
for in the HRA approach. HRA is defined by Birnberg, (2011, p.594) as, “the
process of identifying and measuring data about human resources and
communicating this information to an interested party”. This includes the number of
years employees have worked for a company and their motivation. It is argued that it
promotes competitive advantage over organisations that do not measure human
resources in this way. It can be used to show turnover of staff, for example which is
a measure of good management of human resources. It can be argued, however, that
there is no one model or method of calculating the value of all human resources,
whether paid or unpaid. The literature on HRA does not consider all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions as it does not include any resources provided by consultants,
paid employees, or the unpaid systems of management that are provided by board
members, for example. In support of management systems, Bullen and Flamholz,
(1967, p.947), wrote that, “… the history of HRA illustrates how academic research
can generate improvement in management systems”. In relation to this, Bullen and
Eyler, (2009) also state that,
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accountants and others in the financial reporting environment have become
accustomed to using more complex measurement approaches to the financial
statement reported amounts. This would lend support to the possibility that
future financial reports may include non-traditional contributions, such as the
value of human resources using HRA methods. Bullen and Eyler, (2009, p.2).
It is suggested that HRA would give human resources a more complete value if it
included all stakeholders’ and any voluntary contributions and the benefits that they
bring. This would go some way to expand on an all-encompassing account of all
stakeholders’ human resources. As discussed, Flamholtz et al, (2002, p.947)
advocate that HRA has implications, “for measuring human capital for financial
reporting and managerial uses”. It considers the tangible investment of time and
money in HRA for accounting purposes, which gives a return on that investment.
The approaches from the literature on Human Capital, Virtual Human Resource
Development, (VHRD) and The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees provide an
essential understanding into one particular category of stakeholder, paid employees.
The benefits they provide are acknowledged in the literature and include the fact that
their voluntary contributions may sustain firms in austere times. As a result, they
also benefit communities. They may also volunteer some time that leads to increased
skills, health and education, productivity, experience through management
improvements. They undertake virtual learning, workplace learning that may lead to
performance improvement, promotion or job security. This cuts costs, strengthens
the relations between paid employee volunteers and traditional volunteers, which
results in personal self-esteem and ego. It gives competitive advantage over
colleagues, widening participation and improving services as well as self-motivation.
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However, the approaches from the literature could be pulled together to identify all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and the benefits that it leads to in the same way
that some accountancy approaches currently do. Some approaches that do account
for and measure contributions and its benefits that are used to report to boards
include Return on Capital Employed (ROCE), Return on Talent, (ROT) and Social
Capital and are now examined.
2.5 Accounting For and Measuring Contributions
Board members are the stakeholders who are responsible for the due diligence of
organisations through properly accounting for its activities and making strategic
decisions. According to Mendelow, (1991) they have high power and a high level of
interest. A number of the approaches to measuring contributions are drawn from
accounting techniques and reporting and include Return on Capital Employed
(ROCE), Return on Talent, (ROT) and Social Capital. ROCE is also a measure of the
return on financial capital employed that can be reported to boards. It is desirable for
organisations to have high ROCE and Singh and Yadav, (2013, p.1) state that, “high
ROCE is a validation of a company’s competitive advantage”. The Return on Capital
Employed is concerned with the return on money that is invested in various stocks
and shares, for example, and is usually reinvested back into organisations, which
may give shareholders the propensity to invest more money.
As part of competitive advantage, ROCE demonstrates strong leadership and
management. The board members endorse the spending of money (capital employed)
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to enable a number of training activities, for example. This may include the
investment of training for paid employees, as well as board members, to ensure that
they have the right skills to take the organisation forward strategically. This also
increases their human capital employed. ROCE is unlike the other approaches as it
does not advocate any measuring those increased skills. It does, however, highlight
an important aspect of reporting on financial investments. The literature on ROCE
does not consider how the skills and talent of consultants, traditional volunteers, paid
employees or of the board members themselves lead to the benefit of organisational
sustainability. This benefit may be being partially achieved by some voluntary
contributions of all stakeholders, but it is not considered in the ROCE approach.
Measuring the return on talent is however related to the approach of Return on
Talent.
Return on Talent (ROT) is a measure of money invested in workforce talent as
advocated by Chowdhury, (2007, p.1). Boards must analyse how much talent results
from their financial investment. ROT acknowledges how talent, through skills, may
contribute to organisational success for competitive advantage. However, the
literature around ROT does not consider any of the other stakeholder categories, only
the talent of paid employees. It does not consider any of the skills of consultants or
traditional volunteers, for example. ROT is like the, Return on Investment in Talent,
(ROIT) advocated by Deloitte, (2014). Deloitte, (2014, p.4) advocates a metric that
analyses it called, “five steps to calculating your gross and net return on invested
talent … return on invested talent (or ROIT)”. The five steps are, “1. Overarching
ROIT, 2. Working capital, 3. Calculating invested capital,” which is related to
ROCE, “4. Calculating the capital charge, and 5. Underlying ROIT”. Deloitte’s
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(2014, p.12) research summarises, that, “corporate leaders must be able to make
evidence-based strategic choices to drive the performance of their business”. Yet, it
is suggested that corporate leaders, such as board members do not have all the
evidence on which to base their strategic choices. While measuring the talent of paid
employees goes some way to reporting on one stakeholder category, it would give an
even better indicator of success if all stakeholders’ talent, including the unpaid skills
of board members, could be accounted for in this way. In support of this, Rajesh and
Bajpayee, (2009) state that,
... there remains a great deal of ambiguity over the idea of managing talent as
an asset. It is a payback from investment in people and a return on invested
talent like ROIT. While organisations commit huge investment in talent and
incur heavy costs on it, rarely do CEOs have visibility on the returns on talent
employed, (ROTE). Rajesh and Bajpayee, (2009, p.2).
However, in austere times it has been established that it is paid employees’ voluntary
contributions are what help to partially keep organisations afloat, Danes et al, (2009),
so there are no heavy costs involved. Organisational sustainability is aligned to ROT
and Chowdhury, (2011) suggests,
to focus a successful organisation, managers must use a new tool called
Return On Talent, (ROT). Most organisations focus on Return On
Investment, (ROI), also known as ROCE, and fail to understand the key
strategy of how to increase ROI by increasing ROT. ROT = Knowledge
generated and applied - Investment in talent. Chowdhury, (2011, p.1).
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This calculation gives the talent of paid employees a value, which could also be
applied to the talent as a benefit of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. This
would give a more complete picture of the literature around ROT. Although ROT
measures an important aspect of one category of stakeholder at present, it could be
expanded on to include the talent of all stakeholders and give boards a much clearer
account of the value of skills within an organisation. It could also take account of the
benefits of any voluntary contributions.
Social Value is another approach from the literature that seeks to measure voluntary
contributions in delivering social benefits. It is often outlined in a clause in the
procurement of contracts drawn from accounting in the same way as ROCE and
ROT. The Public Services (Social Value) Act, 2012, written by Parliament, is, “an
Act to require public authorities to have regard for economic, social and
environmental wellbeing in connection with public services contracts; and for
connected purposes, 8th March 2012”. It is similar in this way to the Well-being of
Future Generations (Wales) Act, (2015) anaw 2. It has been produced by the Welsh
Government as an act, ‘to establish public service boards in local authority areas to
plan and take action in pursuit of economic, social, environment and cultural
wellbeing in the area; for connected purposes’. It has been recognised by law that all
procurement of contracts must now have regard for a social, aspect and it is presently
only the time of traditional volunteers that is weighted in applications. The voluntary
time of all stakeholders is presently ignored in the procurement process.
The Act continues that, “all contracts must comply with the new requirements,
‘before’ starting the process of procurement”. The act exists to ensure that
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communities are at the heart of service delivery in a similar way to CSR and
contracts are weighted towards this. There is an emphasis on the social side of public
service delivery, see Liddle, (2003) and Cornforth, (2012, 2015) who agree that
boards have to manage the shift from grant funding to contracts with local
authorities. Social Value is mostly aligned to delivering public services and takes
into account what service users want in the planning of those services in contacts.
However, their voluntary contributions are not fully acknowledged in the Social
Value approach.
In her article to the Public Sector Commissioners on how to include social value in
contracts, Ingliss, (2012) states that,
ironically, given the name of the Public Services (Social Value) Act,
commissioners could probably satisfy their duties under it without any
reference to the relative importance of outcomes; i.e. value. Value can
include potential savings but it can also include some prioritisation of
outcomes for which there is no market price. Ingliss, (2012, p.2).
Ingliss refers to intangibles such as goodwill, branding, capability and loyalty, which
could be associated with all categories of stakeholder. Aligned to this value, The
Social Enterprise UK (SEUK, 2012) and Anthony Collins Solicitors, (2012) have
published a guide for the ‘Public Services (Social Value) Act. They describe Social
Value as, “a way of thinking about how scarce resources are allocated and used. It
involves looking beyond the price of each individual contract and looking at what
the collective benefit to a community is when a public body chooses to award a
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contract”. While this is a valuable measure of the benefit to a community, the Social
Value Act does not measure the benefits of the voluntary contributions of all
stakeholders, and this is a limitation of the literature.
To summarise this section, there were found to be many examples in the literature of
how consultants help organisations to achieve quality marks, Werr, (1999) and
DeWaal, (2015) and implement their corporate social responsibilities, Brooks and
Evans, (2005) and Huang and Watson, (2015). The literature around paid employees
also examined how voluntary contributions may be measured by means of the human
capital approach as presented by, Bassi et al, (2015). Alternatively a measure for
virtual human resource development, (VHRD) is shown by Nafukho et al, (2010).
The voluntary labour of paid employees is advocated by Danes et al, (2009) and
Chum et al, (2013) and human resource accounting, (HRA) is a measure for human
capital, for uses such as financial reporting. The board member category highlighted
literatures such as return on capital employed, (ROCE), Singh and Yadav, (2003),
while return on talent, (ROT) was described by Chowdhury, (2007) and Ingliss,
(2012) introduced the social value approach. Yet none of the literature described all
stakeholder categories, all their voluntary contributions, or its benefits in one
approach. It was therefore found to be an under-researched area.
It has been found that consultants’ voluntary contributions are not measured in the
IIP or CSR approaches. The literature around traditional volunteering does not
consider any other stakeholders’ voluntary contributions in the approaches of Social
Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback on
Volunteering and The Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA). While,
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paid employees voluntary contributions, or any of the other stakeholder categories’
voluntary contributions, are not measured in Human Capital, Virtual Human
Resource Development, (VHRD), The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees or
Human Resource Accounting, (HRA). The approaches of ROCE, ROT and Social
Value are concerned with the governance of finances by boards, yet they did not
measure any voluntary contributions, made by board members, or any of the other
stakeholder categories. Board members provide the benefits of strong leadership and
management, human capital, social capital, value, sustainability, increased skills,
competitive advantage, talent, goodwill, branding, capability and loyalty. Yet, these
voluntary benefits to the organisation, the community and the individuals themselves
remain unaccounted for. It can now be recognised that there is an incomplete picture
as not all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, or its benefits, are presently
measured in any of the approaches that were examined in the literature.
2.6 The Incomplete Picture from the literature and the Recognition that All
Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions and its Benefits are not Measured
It has been established that there is an incomplete picture of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions, and the benefits that it brings, from the approaches
investigated in this literature review. Whilst there is recognition that all the
approaches provide valuable information on a particular stakeholder category, there
is no single approach that draws them all together at present. Also, there is the
acknowledgement that the current ways of reporting do not go far enough as there is
presently no all-encompassing measure for the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. There is a significant amount of literature around traditional
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volunteering, which does not consider any voluntary contributions by any of the
other stakeholder categories. According to Haldane, (2014, p.15) traditional
volunteering alone creates, “each year an economic value of at least £50 billion and
potentially higher”. It is suggested that it could have a higher value if all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions were measured in the same way as traditional
volunteering currently is.
In support of this is the work of Kane, (2014 p.1) who argues that, “the sector’s
contribution to the UK is about much more than just finances”. This is agreed, but
Kane is discussing gaps in fully reporting on everything that is being voluntarily
contributed by traditional volunteer stakeholders. The literature in general does
provide a valuable understanding of the benefits of volunteering but it would give a
much more complete picture by recognising all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. There is also no all-encompassing literature on the benefits that all
stakeholder categories may bring to organisations, the community, or the volunteers
themselves. In support of this argument, Drucker, (2012, p.1) states that, “nonprofits
are, of course, still dedicated to doing good but they also realise that good intentions
are no substitute for organisation and leadership, for accountability, performance and
results”. It is suggested that organisational performance, not just in the nonprofit
sector, is being enhanced by the contributions of a wide range of stakeholders, but
the current literature does not consider this.
As has been discussed, some literatures such as IIP, CSR, The Contribution of the
Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering, The Voluntary Labour of Employees, ROCE
and ROT are based on organisational sustainability, growth or performance. All
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argue that adopting some, or all, of these approaches will improve organisational
performance. The approaches usually cost money to adopt but their advocates claim
that by investing in them, organisations will be better and have competitive
advantage over those who do not adopt them. Comprehensive research on everything
that contributes to their achievement has not been undertaken to date, so this remains
an under-researched area. It can be argued that because some organisations do not
have a badge or the accreditation of IIP, as argued by Hoque, (2003) it does not
mean that they are not better than those that do. Achieving quality marks is not
mandatory and it costs organisations a substantial amount of time and money to meet
the IIP standard, for example. As has been established, the other approaches, not
only IIP, do not consider everything that may be contributing to their achievement.
None of them consider the whole picture in terms of the full benefit of voluntary
contributions, or its benefits.
Some of the other approaches from the literature, such as ROCE, ROT and CSR
suggest measuring in terms of tangibles, such as money. While others, such as IIP,
VIVA and HRA attempt to measure intangibles such as goodwill, capability, loyalty,
entrepreneurship, motivation, commitment or innovation. None of them, it is argued,
report on the benefits of everything that may be being voluntarily contributed.
Associated to this, Shortt, (2004, pp.11-22), Kane, (2014, p.1), Haldane, (2014, p.15)
and Banks, (2016) agree that the current way of reporting in literatures on voluntary
contributions do not go far enough. For example Haldane, (2014) argues for a better
way of reporting on the benefit of wellbeing. In support of this, O’Donnel et al,
(2014) suggest that the current measure of economic success, GDP does not tell the
whole story, neither does Public Value. This gap is recognised by The Valuing Your
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Talent Partnership, (May 2016, pp. 4, 19 and 47) their paper sought a standard way
of reporting on the contributions of, “Knowledge, Skills and Abilities (KNA)”. They
argue that people create value and are an organisation’s greatest asset, but these
assets may not be being fully reported on because they are only concerned with paid
employees. They are also not being fully reported on in the Integrated Reporting,
(IR) approach and Bassi et al, (2015, p.73), argue that IR is, “… still early in
grappling with the issue of consistency of definition and measurement”. They looked
at a number of companies’ integrated reports and found no consistency in reporting.
Aligned to fully reporting on people, The Valuing Your Talent Partnership, (2016,
p.47) also found weaknesses and inconsistencies in reporting on human capital, but
summarised that, “the progress noted in this report is certainly a step in the right
direction and companies should be encouraged to continue enhancing their HC
reporting”. Their study called for more research on the reporting of human capital,
but it would be useful if there were a comparable, consistent approach to the benefits
of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. A more consistent way of reporting in
the future could consider everything, not just the tangible economic value or
intangible loyalty. Also, all stakeholders should be considered to ensure that there is
a degree of consistency that would allow an all-encompassing definition and
measurement.
If there could be a new way of measuring all stakeholders’ contributions, and the
benefits that it brings, it may lead to even better competitive advantage for
organisations, the community and the stakeholders themselves by fully reporting on
everything. For example, a tangible accounting measure such as ROCE is usually
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applied in large enterprises such as those associated with utilities (electricity, gas and
oil), but it is useful for boards across all sectors. It would be interesting to have a
measure to show investment in all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and its
benefits in the same way as ROCE. This may show a significant return on their
investment too in regard to recognition in a way that is similar to the recognition of
IIP. Both tangibles and intangibles could then be accounted for more
comprehensively.
In agreement with this argument, some authors have also suggested that ROCE is not
effective on its own and Enyi, (2001, p.1), as well as Singh and Yadav, (2013, p.3)
advocate the adoption of an Enhanced Return on Capital Employed, (EROCE) that,
“measures the return or profit on each area expended by the firm for the financial
period”. In relation to this Enyi, (2005, p.1) also questioned the role of Return on
Capital Employed, (ROCE) as a performance indicator. In his paper he used the
premise that, “performance indication can only be meaningful to the user if it bears a
true reflection of the relationship that it intends to measure”. He concludes, “…
therefore, it is the considered opinion of this paper that the use of ROCE as currently
defined is erroneous and capable of misleading investors and other interested parties
on the performance of an enterprise”. So, it has been established by some authors
that ROCE is a limited approach as it gives a snapshot of the financial position of an
organisation in a given financial period alone. It does not report on the social
benefits of any stakeholder voluntary contributions and is another example of what is
currently missing from the literature.
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O’Donnel et al, (2009), also calls for a more meaningful way of reporting, which
includes a social aspect. While, Haldane, (2014) argues for a better measure for
wellbeing and Smith, (2015) discusses the shortcomings of IIP. While in relation to
traditional volunteering, Chum et al, (2013, p.412) reported on, “organizations in
which volunteers are an essential part of the mission, as in faith-based
organizations”. However, it has been established that none of the literature measures
all voluntary contributions and its benefits in one all-encompassing approach. This, it
is suggested, results in an incomplete picture and the recognition that the all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions are not measured. The benefits that it brings
are also not measured. The next section investigates what is currently measured by
the approaches in the literature.
2.7 Measuring the Contribution of All Stakeholders
In relation to the benefits of stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, there are a
number of literatures that measure certain aspects of this, although it is usually the
literature on traditional volunteering. This section draws all those aspects together.
The main measure of everything in the entire economy that is produced by industry
is Gross Gross Domestic Product, (GDP), while Gross Value Added, (GVA) is the
measure of how much enterprises add to the economy and some authors such as
O’Donnel et al, (2014) suggest that these measures do not tell the whole story. The
contributions of volunteering are partially accounted for in the approaches of Social
Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback on
Volunteering and VHRD, which are measures of the outcomes for organisational
benefit. There is also measurement of some contributions in the traditional
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accountancy methods are used in CSR, VHRD, The Voluntary Labour of Paid
Employees and ROCE. All except Payback on Volunteering, VHRD, The Voluntary
Labour of Paid Employees and Social Value include a framework, matrix, ratio,
reports, integrated reports, resource, contribution or measure to show outcomes or
benefits to organisations. Some rely on the organisations’ mission statements like
IIP, CSR, Social Capital, VHRD, The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees and
ROCE are aligned with KPIs to drive the organisation forward. Greiner and
Ennsfellner, (2007, p.5) advocate that in order to perform, organisations, “must begin
with mission, for the mission defines what results are for an organisation … every
non-profit organisation exists for the sake of performance in changing people and
society”. But there is currently no effective way to measure how all stakeholders
voluntarily contribute tangible time converted into money for match funding
contracts, for example. Intangibles include goodwill, capability, loyalty,
entrepreneurship, motivation, commitment or innovation, trust and commitment to
organisations. It is this that may be changing people and society. It is argued that this
change can only happen if the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to
organisations, communities and back to themselves are now fully measured.
2.8 Measuring Tangible Inputs and Outcomes
Measuring tangible inputs such as the voluntary contribution of time made by all
stakeholders would enable a more complete picture of the benefits that this activity
provides. Tangible measures include time and money, while intangibles include
goodwill, capability, loyalty, entrepreneurship, motivation, commitment or
innovation, trust and commitment to organisations. There are some measures for
both in the literature but intangibles are not reported on in the same way as money in
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organisational reports. This is because intangible contributions are not a requirement
of the regulators at present. However, some of the approaches from the literature,
such as Integrated Reporting, do measure more than just financial results. From the
results of this literature review, it has been shown that it is increasingly important to
show the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. For example, Gaskin,
(2011, p.1) states that there is, “a demand for ‘headline’ figures that evidence the
impact of volunteering. Expressing this in financial terms is not the only option”.
However, her work discussed traditional voluntary activity. Yet, from the literature,
there may be the tangible voluntary time contributed by all stakeholders that enable
outcomes such as the money saved by organisations. This enables the tangible saving
of money on wages, NI and pension as the work is done voluntarily, by both paid
employees and traditional volunteers, but there is no current measure for it.
In relation to Gaskin’s argument of measuring the impact of volunteering, Banks,
(2016), also discussed the benefits of traditional volunteering at an annual voluntary
sector council conference. It is this voluntary contribution that should be properly
accounted for in annual reports, but even then it does not give the full picture of
everything that is being volunteered, or its benefits. Regarding the reporting of
volunteering Wang et al, (2016, p.11) discuss that, “… informal volunteering has
been underexplored in the literature in a disaggregate form”. This argument could
also include all stakeholder categories. The benefits of micro-volunteering “for the
individual volunteer and the organisation can be significant,” argues Browne et al,
(2013, p.65). Yet, all that is measured is the input of time to the organisation; there is
not a standard measure for all the time that is contributed by all stakeholders. There
may also be benefits back to the contributors themselves, but that too is
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disaggregated at present. Measuring voluntary contributions in this way is advocated
by the Payback on Volunteering, VIVA and Human Capital approaches. They all
offer valuable insights into the traditional volunteering aspect, but these approaches
also appear disaggregated because they do not measure all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions, or all its benefits.
A tangible measure such as time banking is advocated by Time Bank UK as, “giving
a little but getting a lot in return”. It encourages paid employees to volunteer extra
hours, which can be aligned to the literature around the Voluntary Labour of Paid
Employees. A tangible measure of paid employees’ volunteering could be used in
contracts as part of The Social Value Act to enhance business, for example. With
regard to measuring business performance, Smith et al, (2014, p.275) argue that,
“further research is needed, however, to understand more conclusively if, and to
what extent, IIP contributes to business performance”. This may be because there is
not presently a complete measure for how it is actually achieved as all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions are not measured. The benefit is the achievement of the IIP
standard, but there is an incomplete picture of how it is achieved. ROCE is the
tangible financial return on the capital employed by boards to sustain organisations,
which is relatively easy to measure. While Return on Talent (ROT) measures the
return of investment in upskilling paid employees and can be aligned to HRA,
VHRD and Human Capital as the knowledge generated can be partially measured.
CSR also measures the money generated by financial investment, but none of them
measure all stakeholders’ voluntary contribution, or its benefits.
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It can be agreed while there are many ways of measuring financial performance the
approaches from the literature do not tell the whole story. For example, CSR may be
used to justify what the organisation is delivering in the community and that it is
acting benevolently by meeting performance targets. Greiner and Ennsfellner, (2007,
p.5), found that charities now run their operations like professional businesses, “they
set performance targets, employ professional fundraisers, marketers, campaigners
and CEOs to do their work. Nonprofit Third Sector organisations have been equally
successful in improving their own effectiveness: in attracting new groups of
volunteers; in converting volunteers, from helpers to partners”. Describing
partnership working, Diamond and Liddle, (2005, p.9) argue that, “by identifying a
thematic approach to regeneration it was evident that individual agencies working
alone would not be able either to secure additional funds through the initiative or to
meet the stated outcomes”. However, there is no current measure for how these
outcomes are being fully met. Therefore, the contributions of the voluntary activity
of consultants and paid workers as well as the value of traditional volunteering,
including board members, should now be measured to show how the outcomes of
partnership working are achieved.
The approaches from the literature that include Social Capital, the Contribution of
the Third Sector, VIVA, Human Capital, the Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees,
HRA and ROT also measure at least one tangible contribution to an organisation.
They all partially measure how people help to develop products and services in the
community. It has been established that ROCE measures tangible money, but
traditional volunteering also measures the tangible time that people volunteer to an
organisation that can be used for contracts in the Social Value Act. This is invaluable
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to organisations which only have to manage the volunteers in return for their
voluntary contributions. This may put some strain on resources as it has a cost on
management time and the volunteer’s training, WCVA, (2015). Organisations
however, may consider that the benefits outweigh the costs. Yet, costs, such as
volunteers’ travel expenses are the only measure that are associated with traditional
volunteers and shown in annual reports at present. It may be challenging but it would
be advantageous to both people and organisations if the benefits of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions are able to be fully measured in the future.
Social Capital leads to increased participation in health related activity, increased
voting or decreases in criminality, according to Moretti, (2005). While Human
Capital measures the benefit to an organisation of paid employees’ skills. It promotes
the economic benefits of an educated population as they are less likely to be
associated with anti-social behaviour and crime in the community. “Education has
social benefits over and above the private return”, according to Moretti, (2005, p.4).
However, the literature does not measure everything that is being contributed to
society. This is corroborated by Shortt, (2004, p.11-22) who states that, “the
theoretical articulation of social capital remains under-theorized and its measurement
is subject to considerable debate”. The measurement of social capital is debatable, as
is the approach of the Contribution of the Third Sector.
The Contribution of the Third Sector approach from the literature measures the
(virtual money, not real) impact of traditional volunteers’ contributions as a
percentage equivalent to GDP by The NCVO and others. Kane, (2014, p. 3) argues
that, “… at the moment, coverage of the voluntary sector in the national accounts is
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poor”. Volunteer hours are multiplied over the year and costs taken out to give an
accurate value. The Contribution of the Third Sector can be aligned to the
approaches of Payback on Volunteering and Human Capital, which can also be
measured and used in the same way that CSR counts the Return on Capital
Employed or Return on Investment. Organisations do not legally have to do adopt
any of these approaches from the literature because they are optional. Human Capital
measures the skills of paid employees. Wage rates for paid workers are obtained
from the Office for National Statistics to establish how much money has been saved
in wages for match funding European projects. The approach of VIVA measures the
virtual money of time and gives it a value and can also be aligned to The
Contribution of the Third Sector.
However, Kane, (2014, p.2) describes a new way of measuring the contribution of
volunteering to GDP and argues that, “this doesn’t mean the voluntary sector will be
responsible for an economic recovery, as the changes are retrospective corrections to
previous years, but it does mean we’ll be better at quantifying the contribution it
makes to the economy”. He describes a new way of measuring the contribution of
volunteering to GDP. Kane’s approach is positive but his work does not consider
informal or micro volunteering, or any of the contributions or any of the other
stakeholder categories, only traditional volunteers. National GDP can be enhanced
by micro-volunteering, which, “for the individual volunteer and the organisation can
be significant” argue Browne et al, (2013, p.65), but while micro-volunteering is not
measured in Kane’s work, it is a very useful way of measuring some of the tangible
voluntary contributions of a particular stakeholder group. It has been established that
Deloitte, (2015) has presented a measure for intangible outcomes and combined with
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tangible GDP this partially helps to quantify some of the voluntary contributions.
Yet it does not consider all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, and the benefits
that it brings, and this is a limitation of the literature on GDP, as well as that on
Public Value.
Also aligned to measuring voluntary contributions is the approach of VIVA, which
reports on the outcomes of volunteer programmes in regard to the investments made
by a company on training etc. It measures the time in the community multiplied by
the hourly rate for the job, according to Blake, (2005). It includes the time put in by
organisations to managing volunteers and accounts for overheads associated with
them, such as their management. These annual expenditures are collected and
include estimates for Human Capital where hard figures are not available such as the
intangible abilities advocated by The Valuing Your Talent Partnership, (May 2016).
With regard to the benefits, Human Capital also measures the impact on
organisations of increased skills. This has the outcome of increased productivity,
which can be measured by GDP, although there is not one all-encompassing measure
for everything that is being voluntarily contributed at present, or its benefits to GDP
or Public Value. The traditional voluntary inputs that can be measured at present
give the mean average to GDP over the year. “It accounts in financial figures the
value that volunteering creates”, advocates Gaskin, (2011, p.1) but the literature does
not consider all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to GDP. Cha, (2013) proposes
that GDP does not account for the childcare of ones’ own children, which is
provided by paid employees, for example. While the voluntary contributions to
Public Value are also not accounted for.
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Organisations are increasingly focussing on developing staff in order to achieve
better results and are using a range of approaches for measuring this. In relation to
Human Resources, (HR), Bassi et al, (2015, p.71) found that, “HR is still developing
consistent standards and metrics for the reporting of important human capital
outcomes in organizations – and we are making progress”. Measuring progress on
voluntary contributions is not mandatory at present, but could be a choice that
organisations could make public alongside their annual reports. Human Capital is
reliant on a strong narrative so does not just consider financials as in annual reports.
It reports on good as well as bad results, which could be of value to regulators. In
association with reporting Human Capital, VHRD measures the development of
people through technology and this may be easier to measure as there is a benchmark
of where an individual starts and their progress can be measured. But it does not
communicate the Human Resource Development, (HRD) of volunteer board
members, for example. In relation to HRD, McCracken and Wallace, (2000)
advocated, ‘Strategic Human Resource Development’, (SHRD) as another method of
communication. They argue that,
the decade of the 1990s may be remembered for producing more rapid
change than in the whole of the preceding years of the twentieth century
combined. Such rapid changes resulted in radical and widespread shifts in the
global economy, allied with the emergence of communication and
information technology infrastructures which have revolutionised how
business is now carried out … the HRD function has experienced
considerable change in recent years. McCracken and Wallace, (2000, p.425).
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In relation to HRD McCracken and Wallace advocate organisational maturity,
(Churchill and Lewis, (1983) as tool for human resource development that is also
used by IIP, (2015c, p.6). The current indicators of performance for VHRD are
people’s competences and it measures them as assets in the same way as Human
Capital is measured by Human Resource Development, (HRD). McCracken and
Wallace, (2000, p.425) also suggest that in organisations that are mature, HRD has a,
“proactive role in helping the organisation to both frame and achieve its corporate
objectives”. This is linked to organisational Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and
mission statements and has some crossover with IIP. IIP enables top managers to
collate information on how adequate its HR procedures are functioning. It does not,
however, give any measure of any voluntary contribution of stakeholders, or its
benefits, to that function. IIP also accounts for the value of Human Capital alongside
the practices of traditional accounting and is based on the value of the skills of
people. However, it does not account for all stakeholders voluntary contributions,
such as those of consultants, as has been discussed.
VHRD also has some crossover with traditional Human Capital as it uses technology
and Nafukho et al, (2010, p.648) suggest utilising VHRD to, “define human capital
and demonstrates how technology can be positively used to promote virtual learning,
workplace learning, and eventually lead to performance improvement in the
workforce”. Yet, it is suggested that all workplace learning, including that of
traditional volunteers who shadow staff and that of board members who have to
attend training to comply is currently unmeasured. While VHRD provides important
insights into the virtual learning of paid employees, there is nothing that draws it all
together to give its true benefit through all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions.
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This impact could then be measured more fully by GDP as it measures the impact on
an organisation’s human assets and the outcome of enhanced performance. In
alignment with HRD models, McCracken and Wallace, (2000) also argue that,
a new model of SHRD is then developed which proposed that strategic
partnerships (between HRD and senior management, line management and
HRM) are at the heart of the development of both SHRD and a learning
culture. The evaluation of training and development activity in cost
effectiveness terms is put forward as the key lever or trigger for the
development of these strategic partnerships … cost effectiveness evaluation,
it is suggested, could provide, ‘the ticket to ride’ for such organisations.
McCracken and Wallace, (2000, p.458,464).
However, there is no way of measuring the voluntary contributions, or human assets,
of all stakeholders in developing a learning culture, or how strategic human resource
development could fully contribute to organisational performance at present.
With regard to voluntary human assets, the approach of The Voluntary Labour of
Paid Employees has some crossover with Human Capital and HRA as it considers
the mission statement and KPIs as the way to account for paid human activity. HRA
also currently calls for a way of measuring traditional unpaid activity, alongside paid
employees activity, which could give a more complete picture of what is being
contributed. However, it does not measure everything that is being voluntarily
contributed by the other stakeholder categories. With regard to traditional volunteers,
Taylor, (2011) argues that,
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too many fundraisers do not appreciate the potential contribution of
volunteers and waste their support by assigning them to time-consuming,
peripheral tasks not likely to yield significant income. Managing volunteers
does take a bit of time, but by being selective in your recruitment and
focusing on core fundraising activities, volunteers can significantly boost
your charity’s fundraising capacity. Taylor, (2011, p.1).
Volunteering in this way can be compared to Social Capital and HRA, as it also
considers the recruitment process as an indicator of talent management through
skills. The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees also has some crossover as it is
linked to a company’s KPIs and mission statement like HRA, Human Capital and
VIVA. VHRD is linked to GDP and Public Value the economy as it puts a value on
KPIs to give a useful measure, but there is not one measure that considers everything
that is being volunteered, or the benefits that it brings, at present. While regarding
traditional volunteers, The International Labour Office of Geneva, (2011, pp.16)
found that, “efforts that have been made to measure volunteer work have been
sporadic and frequently uncoordinated, leaving us without up to date, reliable
comparative data on the scope of this important social and economic phenomenon”.
They produced a, ‘Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work’ that included
time and money as measurements. But they only focussed on voluntary activities
such as “buying groceries for an elderly neighbour”, “making clothes for children”
and “driving a neighbour to a medical appointment”. The reporting of this kind of
voluntary activity provides an important understanding but the literature does not
consider all stakeholders or the benefits of their voluntary contributions. It only
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concentrated on measuring traditional volunteering, as a phenomenon, not the
voluntary contributions of paid employees, for example.
With regard to paid employees and their voluntary contributions, Flamholtz, et al,
(2002, p.947) state that, “the history of HRA illustrates how academic research can
generate improvement in management systems … and suggests implications of
measuring human capital for financial reporting and managerial uses”. Their work is
also limited as it does not account for all improvements, as it does not measure all
human capital. In relation to measuring, HRA is defined by Birnberg, (2011, p.594)
as, “the process of identifying and measuring data about human resources and
communicating this information to an interested party”. This includes the number of
years paid employees have worked for the company and their skills, but suggests a
formula where only paid employees are considered for measurement and disregards
any data around traditional volunteers or any of the other stakeholder categories.
HRA has some overlap with ROCE, for example as improved skills can be measured
in an equivalent way, but ROCE is concerned with benefit of the return on the
investment of money, not people. HRA attempts to measure the return on the
investment of training and experience of people like IIP and is linked to Human
Capital. In support of this, Hesketh, (2014, p.7) advocates, “four levels of investment
into human capital” that include the metric, “Return on People Employed” as,
“outcomes measure the quality of outputs and the resulting impact at business level
from the combination of inputs and activities”, including knowledge and skills.
These measures go some way to measuring paid employees’ impact on businesses,
but do not consider all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to the benefit of
business performance.
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Allied to measuring business performance, Birnberg, (2011, p.594) advocates that,
“accounting information is communicated to and utilized by people and serves
initially to motivate and subsequently to inform all parties about performance”. This
accounting information may be used by stakeholders who are given encouraging
news about their chosen organisation and may then buy their services in the same
way as Mass Collaboration, which has the measurement of increased sales. Making
positive information public may have the propensity to motivate the volunteers
themselves to continue to do it again. While measuring it could show the benefit of
competitive advantage over organisations which may not have as many voluntary
contributions.
Measuring competitive advantage is argued by the approach of, Return on Capital
Employed, (ROCE). Singh and Yadav, (2013, p.1) state that, “high ROCE is a
validation of a company’s competitive advantage”. The return on ROCE is usually
reinvested back into organisations by means of shares, giving shareholders’
enhanced motivation. ROCE is a very important tool used by boards to give a
tangible snapshot of the financial health of a company, but it has limitations as it
excludes any intangible contributions at present. ROCE is a tried and trusted
accountancy term, advocated by Mills and Robertson, (2000, p.388) and it, “is a ratio
that indicates the efficiency and profitability of a company’s capital investments”.
This is supported by Cox and Street, (2011, p.25) who define it as a, “measurement
of how well the total capital employed has been used by an organisation to generate
profits”. It is not concerned with the human side of performance, or human capital.
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ROCE is a universal measure for multinationals and capital intensive firms, which
can also be used by non-profits.
The Return on Investment is shown on balance sheets to inform boards, who are
usually shareholders, as it is a reliable measure of company performance. It takes
away leases, for example, to show what is invested back into the company to give a
ratio to compare to other growth companies for benchmarking against. Some returns
on investment in money are measured by ROCE, ROT and HRA and are all linked to
financial performance. These are current approaches that measure performance, but
they do not tell the whole story of how all stakeholders’ contribute to the benefits of
organisational performance, community participation or stakeholders’ return of
wellbeing.
To account for the time and money saved, Banks, (2016) advocates a standard way
of reporting on tangible contributions, such as in the Time-banking approach. There
are approaches that do consider the benefits of volunteering and how it contributes
virtual money to GVA of £12.2bn in 2016 as advocated by The UK Civil Society
Almanac. Haldane, (2014) however, argues that it in relation to GDP it is closer to
£50bn per annum. The WCVA, (2015) agree that this figure would be much higher if
it included informal volunteering. It has been well documented that volunteering
results in increased civic behaviour such as voting, according to Moretti, (2005), as
well as decreased criminality. Haldane, (2014) calls them, ‘benefit multipliers’. A
number of authors have identified the need to report on social outcomes, including
Spence and Rutherford, (2001, pp.126-139) who suggest that, “a sociological
approach has much to offer”. While Shortt, (2004, pp.11-22) supports this and found
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that, “social capital remains undertheorized”. However, they concentrated only on
the social aspect of accounting.
The literature around Human Capital which shows expenditures on information;
labour mobility, health, education and training all are capable of enhancing the
productive capacity of a worker’s human capital, but it only considers paid
employees. Virtual Human Resource Development, (VHRD) and The Voluntary
Labour of Paid Employees have no complete measure and Human Resource
Accounting, (HRA), does not consider any other of the stakeholder categories, only
paid employees. Return on Capital Employed, (ROCE), is also limited as it only
measures money. Return on Talent, (ROT) acknowledges how talent could
contribute to organisational success for competitive advantage, but it does not
consider any of the other stakeholder categories, only paid employees. It does not
consider board members, for example, who play a significant part in its ROI and
Social Value is also limited in its measurement as it only considers traditional
volunteers.
In summary, it is suggested that currently, the approaches from the literature for
measuring tangible inputs and outcomes do not examine all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. The literature does not consider consultants’ inputs to organisations’
such as the benefit of achieving IIP. Or the board member’s contributions that equate
to millions of pounds saved across the country, as presented by Banks, (2016), for
example. This lack of measurement is noted by, Meadows et al, (2006, p.1) who
state that, “documenting volunteer programmes is overlooked”. Alternatively,
O’Donnel et al, (2009, p.362) in their research around Human Capital suggest that,
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“... the findings around the themes from the interview responses. These themes
include: a current lack of focus on industry based HC (Human Capital) analysis and
reporting, a trend towards formulaic rather than meaningful reporting, a perception
that analysts are not seen as strategic in their ability to understand implications of
human capital, and a belief that there is a need for alternative forms of reporting”.
This is agreed, however, O’Donnel et als, (2009) valuable work too only
concentrated on one aspect of reporting that does not include any other form of
reporting other than that of paid employees’ Human Capital. There are ways of
easily measuring the tangible input of time and money, for example and tangible
outcomes such as increased turnover but it is much more difficult to measure the
intangible contributions of all stakeholders that may lead to the benefits of increased
business performance through Public Value, or higher GDP. Having established
what tangible outputs, or outcomes, are measured, the following highlights which
intangible inputs and outcomes from all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions are not
currently measured.
2.9 Measuring Intangible Inputs and Outcomes
Tangible inputs include time and the contribution, through fundraising, of money.
Intangibles include goodwill, capability, loyalty, entrepreneurship, motivation,
commitment or innovation, trust and commitment to organisations, as has been
discussed. The Integrated Reporting, (IR) approach includes all financial activity in
its reports and is similar to the Balanced Scorecard method. It measures the internal
and external environment for intangibles such as innovation, intelligence and
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competence, but while it is a relatively new and valuable approach, it does not
account for any voluntary innovation, intelligence or competence. Intangible
outcomes could also be the cost savings by someone volunteering to do a piece of
work, rather than someone being paid to do it, as it is not measured. This often
happens in the SWWales Charity as it has a bank of skilled volunteers that support
its mentors, or help out in its environmental projects, for example. Change through
social capital can be seen in the community, although, it is not formally reported on
at present.
It has been established, through the literature, that it relatively easy to measure
tangibles, but it is more difficult to measure intangibles such as the networks that
help build Social Capital as defined by Bourdieu in Bourdieu and Wacquant, (1992).
While an increase in money can be measured it is more difficult to measure
intangible networks. A number of approaches from the literature include KPIs as a
measure and the mission statement for the Balanced Scorecard method. This is
advocated by Kaplan and Norton, (1996), as a way of measuring intangibles such as
innovation, intelligence and competence. In their research, Surroca et al, (2010,
p.463) whose results, “indicated researchers failed to take into account intangible
resources”, yet they only examined CSR. Fletcher et al, (2003, p.505) state that,
“few authors have examined the intellectual capital of nonprofits or discussed their
strategic management in terms of intangibles”. While giving an important insight
into intangibles, their work only focussed on intellectual capital.
‘Intangible Assets’ are defined by Deloitte, (2013, p.1) in the International
Accountancy Standards, (IAS, standard 38) as, “IAS 38 Intangible Assets outlines
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the accounting requirements for intangible assets which are without physical
substance and identifiable (either being separable or arising from contractual or legal
rights)”. Intangible assets such as licences can currently be described in the balance
sheets of annual reports, but the current way of reporting does not give the complete
picture of all an organisation’s assets. Neither, it has been suggested by this literature
review, does Gross Value Added, (GVA). For example, GVA in 2016 stated that the
voluntary sector contribution was calculated at £12.2bn, according to the UK Civil
Society Almanac, (2016), yet there is no measure for any intangible assets, such as
the social networking contributed by volunteers in CSR, for example. In support of
this, the WCVA, (2016) only considers formal volunteering and agrees that if
informal volunteering is measured, as well its benefits, it would be far higher.
Human Capital measures the impact on organisations of increased skills. The
intangible of abilities is advocated by The Valuing Your Talent Partnership, (May
2016). Intangibles also include commitment and loyalty. Social value measures the
amount of voluntary input that is contributed to the running of services in the
community. This also supports the notion of Drucker, (2012) that business reporting
should include much more than it currently does, which is the financial bottom line.
According to The Pensions and Investments Research Consultants, (PIRC), (2015,
p.7), “to enable human capital to be full and effectively valued in business decision-
making, there must be a change in mind-set, competency, and culture within
business at all levels”. This is a step in the right direction, but in order to instigate a
change in mind-set, it is suggested that a far more comprehensive measure of
intangibles is needed. This is because deprived communities with a high amount of
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social capital are more inclined to benefit from The Social Value Act, as their
applications will score highly and more contracts may be won as a result.
However, intangible assets such as trust and commitment can be withdrawn at any
time, as they are not owned by the organisation in the same way as the intellectual
copyright of intangible assets as argued by Deloitte, (2015). They cannot be
considered in the same way as tangible assets such as stock or depreciation for
accounting information to show productivity for GDP, for example. Therefore, all
categories of stakeholder, who contribute their intellectual capital are all powerful,
not just board members, as suggested by Mendelow, (1991). It is difficult to measure
the intangible contributions of stakeholders at present and some literatures such as
those of, Surroca et al, (2010, p.463), Ingliss, (2012, p.2) and Kane, (2014 p.1)
acknowledge this. Kane for example, agrees that the current way of reporting in
literatures on all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and the resulting benefit lack
a complete measure. It is established that some approaches from the literature do
mention intangibles, but even then they do not give a complete picture.
Drucker, (2012) is a great advocate of traditional volunteering and presents awards
to organisations that embrace traditional volunteers, but his work does not consider
any other stakeholder categories. Also, Baines, (2004, pp.267-295) investigated
unwaged work in social services in Canada and traditional volunteering, which is
also advocated by O’Donnel, et al, (2014 Executive Summary Report, p.2). They say
that the contribution that people make through volunteering enhances wellbeing.
However, he is arguing for wellbeing to be measured as a result of their behaviours.
O’Donnel et al, (2014, p.2) state that, “… so in pursuit of policies to promote
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wellbeing, researchers are collaborating to build models that reflect the way people
actually behave, rather than how the traditional models assume they behave. To
assess the success of such policies we need to measure changes in wellbeing”. We
also need to measure the changes in the intangible outcome of wellbeing for all
stakeholder categories. While the work of Drucker, Baines and O’Donnel et al is
invaluable, with regard to the contributions of traditional volunteers, Drucker and
Baines’ work excludes a measure for the contributions of any of the other
stakeholder categories.
It is more difficult to measure intangibles that include goodwill, trust and
commitment to organisations that result in increased productivity which is measured
by GDP, for example. The fact that GDP does not tell the whole story has also been
argued by Kennedy, (1968), Cha, (2013) and O’Donnel et al, (2014) argues for a
method that goes beyond the financial figures associated with GDP. He advocates a
worldwide measure of success that includes, ‘subjective wellbeing’. This measure
could be expanded to be associated with the intangible motivation of the other
categories of stakeholder and include the motivation of paid employees, who are
considered in the HRA and VHRD approaches, for example. This is one of the
intangible outcomes of the literature that Shortt, (2004, p.11-22) refers to in that,
“theoretical vagueness also encourages confusion as to measurement issues,
particularly with reference to the creation of valid indicators for a highly complex
social phenomenon”. Shortt is discussing Social Capital, but it could refer to the
potential measurement of any of the approaches from the literature. Saxton, (2004,
p.188) concluded that, “nonprofits need to act now, however, if they are to close the
gap in public understanding and bring their stakeholders with them”. This
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understanding can only be achieved if there is a comprehensive way of measuring all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to the benefit of organisational success. This is
allied to the positive organisational culture of Peters and Waterman, (1982, p.9) who
emphasise the importance of culture and values to organisational success and the
desirability of developing a strong, common organisational culture, “capable of
motivating employees to unusual performance levels”.
However, Peters and Waterman also ignore the other stakeholder categories that may
be contributing to unusual performance levels. It is suggested that understanding
how organisations perform must now include a measure for how intangible inputs
contribute to those performance levels, alongside tangible time and money to give a
comprehensive picture. If its benefits are reported on fully it may also motivate other
stakeholders to volunteer or increase its unpaid voluntary workforce by giving them
the propensity to repeatedly act in this way. It may be worth their extra management
and cost of their out of pocket expenses to the organisation, as traditional
volunteering could be considered as a social return on that investment. It could be
measured in the same way as ROCE and ROT and could be included in tenders as
advocated by the Social Value Act. There is however, as has been argued, no
measure for the return on investing in all stakeholders, or all the benefits of their
contributions, in one all-encompassing model at present.
An approach that does consider some of the social return on investment is advocated
by The Social Return on Investment (SRI) Network, (2012, p.6) which issues a
‘Guide to Commissioning for Maximum Value’. This can be likened to the Social
Value Act, which also considers the social aspect of tenders for contracts. The guide
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recognises that there need to be better ways to account for, “the social, economic and
environmental value that results from our activities. The language varies – ‘impact’,
‘returns’, ’benefit’, ‘value’ – but the questions around what sort of difference and
how much of a difference we are making are the same”. While this measure gives an
invaluable insight into the return of the social return on investment and its impact on
society, it presently only considers traditional volunteer stakeholders and can be
compared to the Payback on Volunteering approach.
This measure can also be compared to the Return on Talent, (ROT) of paid
employees and, and Chowdhury, (2011, p.2) states that, “ROT measures the payback
from investment in people”. This has some crossover with IIP. Both use KPIs but do
not really measure the intangible contributions or any of the time contributed by all
stakeholders. It has been established that time, for example, could be converted into
money as a tangible asset to account for some stakeholders’ contributions by the
WCVA and WEFO to offset staffing costs in applications for funding applications.
As discussed, ‘Intangible Assets’ such as branding and loyalty are defined by Mills
and Robertson, (2000) and Deloitte, (2013) but the intangibles of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions and its benefits are more difficult to define and are therefore
not currently measured.
The Contribution of the Third Sector does not consider all stakeholders, only
traditional volunteers’ contributions in its measurement of how it, virtually, enhances
GDP. Payback on Volunteering encourages participation in health related activity
and increased voting or decreases in criminality. Yet, there is no measurement for
any of these contributions. While The Volunteering Investment and Value Audit,
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(VIVA), professes to cut costs, allow better retention and recruitment of volunteers
as well as recognition. It also attracts more funding, but that increased funding is also
not measured. It is suggested that there is a significant amount of voluntary
contributions that are being missed, particularly around the budgeting considerations
made by boards. In relation to volunteering, Chum et al, (2013) maintain that,
the interchange of paid and unpaid labor also raises a fundamental question
for managers: how to deal with budget shortcomings? Cutting down on costs
of paid labor is an attractive option for nonprofits, which can often recruit
volunteer labor. However, such action should be done judiciously,
notwithstanding the ethical problems. Chum et al, (2013, p.424).
There is no argument against the fact that volunteers are a valuable resource, but
they should not be at the expense of paid employees, which is supported by
Blackadder and Jackson, (2011).
The exploitation of volunteers who may replace paid employees is also described by
The TUC, (2012). While Chum et al, (2013, p.424) argue that, “even if no labor
union contracts exist to stop such conversions, replacement of paid staff by
volunteers could result in a fragmented labor force, require additional paid staff to
manage volunteers”. This is in alignment with the appropriate management of
volunteers advocated by Blackadder and Jackson, (2011, p.2). Finally, in their
work, Chum et al found that, “the benefits of such interchangeability must also be
recognized, such as the contribution of volunteer labor in providing word-of-mouth
endorsement and exposure, which may result in support (and funding) for the
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organization and its mission”. This is the propensity to fund organisations again and
can be aligned to the approach of expectancy theory, Vroom, (1964, 1970) in that
one good thing will lead to another such as the free marketing of the organisation by
its volunteers. Nevertheless, this is not fully measured or acknowledged in the
literature.
The tangible measurement approach of Human Resource Accounting, (HRA)
promotes advantage over organisations that do not measure the human resources of
paid employees. But there is no one all-encompassing model or method of
calculating the value of all the intangible human resources to an organisation at
present. A better way of measuring the benefit of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions to show that all contributions are needed, not just reports on financial
performance to external stakeholders such as regulators and customers. In relation to
customers, Van der Wiele et al, (2002, p.184) state that,
… it is possible to find evidence for the notion that there is a positive
relationship between customer satisfaction and organisational performance
indicators, although the relationship is not very strong, is amongst the
empirical evidence for the relationship between customer satisfaction and
business performance. Van der Wiele et al, (2002).
This is relevant because customers are also stakeholders and if they are satisfied they
will buy into the organisation’s products and services. However, it has been
established that intangibles are not able to be measured fully at present. Fletcher et
al, (2003, p.505), in their discussion on the management provided by board
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members, argue for measuring the intangible impact of volunteering. By measuring
the intangible impact of IIP, for example, it would be able to show the return on
investing money in it in an equivalent way to ROCE. This could also then include
the contributions of consultants and all stakeholders to be used as match funding for
European funding contracts, for example. Some contracts’ scores are weighted in
favour of IIP, for example and a contract may be lost on this alone. So, it is
important for organisational financial sustainability to measure all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions properly to give the benefit of competitive advantage over
others who may not have as many contributions.
The Contribution of the Third Sector, as an approach, is not the same as the financial
measures of ROCE and CSR as they measure a financial return to capital employed.
This is dissimilar to the Contribution of the Third Sector because it is linked to the
intangible governance by boards and the training of volunteers. In relation to boards,
Cornforth, (2012, p.1129) states that, “... nonprofit governance needs to recognize
that boards are part of a broader governance system, including regulators, auditors,
and other key external stakeholders, such as funders, that can place accountability
requirements on an organization and its board”. Cornforth’s research calls for boards
to be developed and that, “research on the governance of organizations with
subsidiary boards and those with federal structures is still relatively undeveloped ...
increasingly, nonprofit organizations are taking part in collaborations, partnerships,
and alliance with other organizations to address important social problems”. This is
also supported by Liddle, (2003).
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Aligned to the approval by boards, The Social Value Act, (2012) allows third sector
organisations to deliver in partnership with local authorities and is supported by both
Liddle, (2003) and Cornforth, (2012). Cornforth’s (2012) work shows that third
sector organisations are becoming increasingly accountable and have increased
collaborations with local authorities to address important social problems. While
Liddle, (2003, p.41) argues that, “here are clear tensions between the different levels
of governance despite the appearance of harmony”. However, as there is no measure
for those collaborations or partnerships, they do not show a complete measure of
what each party contributes, or any of the other stakeholder categories and therefore
they cannot show all of the benefits.
There should now be a more robust way of measuring exactly what stakeholders
actually voluntarily contribute to the governance functions that address social
problems. Large contracts are vital to organisational sustainability and social
problems would not be addressed without the voluntary contributions of the board
members, or the other stakeholder categories. It could be considered in the approach
of Payback on Volunteering. Voluntary contributions could include paid employees
delivering citizen-centric services to address social problems. This is can be aligned
to the traditional volunteers’ contributions to Mass Collaboration and the
Contribution of the Third Sector. Both approaches from the literature utilise various
volunteers in diverse ways, but neither approach measures everything that is being
voluntarily contributed by all stakeholders or its benefits. The WCVA’s Voluntary
Sector Almanac, (2011, pp.1, 5) found that the third sector is a growth sector, but it
could be even more so if it measured the intangible unpaid work of all stakeholders
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such as board members, Banks, (2016). It is in this way that intangibles could
become tangible.
Regarding what is important to measure in organisations; The Balanced Scorecard
method is a general theory of measuring what counts in organisations. It gives a
measure of intangibles such as the connections of the Social Capital approach.
Integrated Reporting positively promotes (communicates) how good the organisation
is at responding to the needs of its stakeholders. Organisations do this by creating a
strong image to the community in which it is based. CSR is a strategy that measures
the input of money for the intangible outcome of community participation to an
organisation’s goods and services as is Mass Collaboration. CSR also gives
something back through funding community groups, not only the measurable, well-
publicised contributions to a charity, for example. With regard to measuring
intangibles, The Integrated Reporting approach also goes some way to giving a more
complete picture of non-financial measures, but it still does not measure all
intangible contributions to organisational success. Integrated Reporting is advocated
by Carruthers, (24th February 2015), who describes it as a concept for explaining
organisational success and while it gives an invaluable insight into the contributions
of paid employees, it ignores the other stakeholder categories contributions, such as
those of board members. While, Bassi et al (2015, p.72) and the Global Reporting
Initiative (GRI) concentrate more on CSR than value creation for their smarter
annual reports. Smarter reporting could include internal assessments on Human
Capital and external assessments such as the payback on volunteering. This would
give a more complete account of all intangible contributions for smarter annual
reports.
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To summarise what is not currently measured; whilst there is some measure in the
literature for tangible benefits there is generally no comprehensive measure for
intangible benefits such as connectivity, networks or empowering people. There is
also a lack of measure or meaningful reporting on both tangibles and intangibles in
one all-encompassing approach and it is this that is missing from the literature.
Finances are not enough on their own, as in Drucker’s, (2012) stance on businesses
reporting too narrowly on the, (financial) “bottom line”. Drucker thought that reports
should include voluntary contributions as well as money, but his work does not
include any other stakeholder categories. Wellbeing also needs to be measured
according to O’Donnel et al, (2014) and the fact that GDP does not tell the whole
story as has also been discussed. “There is no one clear model or method for
calculating human value and researchers have failed to take account for the
mediating effects of intangible resources”, according to Surroca et al, (2010, p.463).
The Mass Collaboration approach does go some way to account for increased sales
by the value gained by involving customers, but, “value has no market price” and is
therefore intangible, according to Ingliss, (2012, p.12). There is a desire for the
intangible value created by all stakeholders to now be reported on in the same
tangible way as Return on Investment. The Valuing Your Talent Partnership, (May
2016) called people an organisation’s greatest asset and has been found that this
asset is currently only partially measured. This is supported by Freeman, (2004) who
states that stakeholders are vital to organisational survival. While Shortt, (2004,
pp.11-22) calls their Social Capital, “a highly complex social phenomenon”. This is
supported by The SRI, (2012, p.6) who agree that there needs to be a better way to
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account for social (stakeholders), economic (organisational) and environmental
(community) value. It would give a far more complete picture if it included the value
of the benefits that result from all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. The
literature suggests that all these voluntary contributions have a threefold return, not
only to the organisation but to the individuals and the community as well. Yet, the
literature is broken up with some such as the literature around payback on
volunteering and social capital only considering traditional volunteers. The
approaches of the Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees and VHRD also do not
consider all stakeholders. It has been established that there is not one literature that
reports on all the tangible and intangible contributions of all stakeholders in one
approach. There is also no measure for the benefits of these contributions.
In all of the approaches examined in this literature review, it is found that most do
not show how the contribution of all stakeholders leads to standards being met. This
does not show how the outcomes such as competitive advantage are actually
achieved. Organisations cannot legally do without voluntary board members, but
they are not fully recognised for their voluntary contributions in the CSR model,
neither are consultants. This is not a true measure of the benefits. Social Capital
helps the understanding of stakeholders and their contributions by the strength of
what they are doing and how it helps society, yet there is no measure for it apart
from generalisation. Mass Collaboration does not measure linkages and networking
and it does not consider the interventions of all parties affected by the organisation’s
actions. The literature does not measure the contributions of all stakeholders whether
voluntary or not. It also does not measure any of the benefits of volunteering, to
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organisations, the community and individuals. The following is an analysis of that
potential threefold benefit.
2.10 The Threefold Benefit that All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions
bring to Organisations, Communities and the Volunteers Themselves
The threefold benefit to organisations, the community and the stakeholders
themselves of volunteering is comparable to the, “benefit multipliers” of Haldane,
(2014, p.15). He states that, “now, it is fair to say that I have not much discussed any
costs of volunteering. Plainly, no activity is costless, both in a direct and opportunity
cost sense. But the evidence here, however imperfect, suggests some significant
benefit multipliers from volunteering, economically, privately and socially”.
Haldane’s research is based purely on traditional volunteers and argues that the
benefits outweigh any costs associated with their volunteering. Volunteer costs are
already accounted for in annual reports, in their current form. If there could be a way
to report on all voluntary activity, and its benefits, then it would be an even better
way to influence policy, as he proposes. According to Haldane, (2014, p.15)
traditional volunteering alone creates, “each year an economic value of at least £50
billion and potentially higher”. His measure of that contribution is the tangible input
of time, and it has been established that there are also intangibles such as loyalty and
commitment that are not being currently measured.
The approaches from the literature attempt to enable organisations to reflect on, and
measure some of the contributions that are made to them. All use key performance
indicators, (KPIs) and the organisation’s mission statement to drive the approach,
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and therefore the organisation forward. All offer a degree of sustainability over those
that have not adopted all or some of the approaches from the literature. The different
approaches outlined in the literature review all recognise that the additional
information gained by measuring these different contributions can be used for
positive promotion, image and reputation to favourably market how well the
organisation is doing, to its stakeholders. This, in turn, may provide benefits that
would attract more business, funding or the propensity for even more voluntary
contributions. Nevertheless, not one of these measurement approaches offers a
comprehensive examination of all functions or contributions and its benefits that are
fundamental to organisational survival. Nor do they fully quantify the wellbeing or
social benefits back to individual stakeholders, or the community, that enable
organisations to have competitive advantage over others that do not have as many
voluntary contributions.
2.11 Organisational Benefits and Competitive Advantage
There are many benefits that result from the input of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions to organisational sustainability. The benefits are that an organisation
may have competitive advantage over other organisations that may not have as many
contributions. However, there is no current way of reporting this because all
voluntary contributions are not fully reported on. Reporting on volunteering goes
some way to help organisations to do things better than its competitors and does gain
a degree of competitive advantage, as argued by Kane, (2014), the WCVA and
(2015) Banks, (2016). For example, Banks argues that without the substantial
voluntary contributions to voluntary organisations they would not survive. While
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Freeman, (2004) argues that organisations could not survive at all without
stakeholders.
In order to examine organisational benefit further, it has been found that the
literature is usually associated with only one particular stakeholder category. Yet,
most of the literature states that adopting some or all of the approaches offer
competitive advantage. For example, both IIP and ROCE profess continuous
improvement. Singh and Yadav, (2013, p.1) state that, “high ROCE is a validation of
a company’s competitive advantage”. The general literature around IIP advocates the
standard as a way to inspire employees by valuing excellent people management,
according to De Waal, (2015a). Achieving IIP confirms that the right people policies
are in place to ensure the continuous improvement that result in competitive
advantage over other organisations that do not have the quality mark. IIP helps the
organisation to achieve its ambition through a framework of nine indicators, IIP
(2015b, p.1). All of the approaches from the literature, including VIVA, VHRD, The
Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees, HRA, ROCE, ROT and Social Value, profess
organisational benefit. All of them offer competitive advantage of some kind, Porter,
(1985) and cited by Thompson, (2001). The approaches of IIP, Human Capital,
VHRD and HRA promote communication and information. Values, value creation
and validation are included in the approaches of IIP, CSR, VIVA Human Capital,
VHRD, The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees, ROCE, ROT and Social Value
and all argue that they are linked to competitive advantage.
Parallel to these approaches from the literature, Social Value incorporates equality as
well as meeting the criteria of the contract through relationships with the community.
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In these ways it contributes to competitive advantage. Social Capital is a resource
that is contributed by paid employees and is also translated into societal benefit. The
organisation may gain competitive advantage over others that may not have as much
of it. However, this is not currently known because it is not fully measured. It is
contributed through the networks of relationships among people who live and work
in a particular society, enabling that society to function more effectively through
volunteering according to Hof, (2005) and Smith, (2006). In relation to the
competitive advantage brought by people, The Pensions and Investments Research
Consultants, (PIRC), quoting Hesketh, (2015, p.7) states that, “some organisations
do publish people-related data in their annual reports and corporate social
responsibility reports, which focus on the contribution of volunteers. Very few
communicate an integrated understanding of the capacity of their business to deliver
sustained value-creation through their people”. This is integral to this thesis which
argues for the measurement of the benefits provided through people and their
voluntary contributions.
In relation to this, Bullen and Eyler, (2009, p.2) also state that, “accountants and
others in the financial reporting environment have become accustomed to using more
complex measurement approaches to the financial statement reported amounts. This
would lend support to the possibility that future financial reports may include non-
traditional contributions such as the value of human resources using HRA methods”.
It would be beneficial if non-traditional contributions brought by people could be
fully reported on to give a better measure for the competitive advantage that
volunteering may give. McClean, (2004, p.16) argues that, non-profit third sector
organisations can perform better, or even, “create a benchmark for delivering
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customer value amongst all its stakeholders”. Stakeholders’ voluntary contributions
may deliver value back to all organisations for competitive advantage. By utilising
volunteers to help deliver the services, there are savings on salaries that may lead to
sustainability. This voluntary activity, particularly of board members may enable
organisations to go from asking for grants to generating their own income for
organisational sustainability. It is their skills and knowledge that would lead to
competitive advantage over other organisations, as a Payback on Volunteering.
While competitive advantage through the skills of paid employees can be aligned to
the work of Chowdhury, (2011, p.3) who advocates that, “ROT is a superb
performance indicator, and one that is set to be measured and managed in much the
same way as financial issues”. The measurement of financial performance through
accountancy methods has been discussed in the ROCE approach which also shows
competitive advantage. Organisational performance is reliant solely on the talents of
its paid employees, according to Chowdhury, (2011). However, this argument can
now be challenged. Performance is also linked to increased sales like Mass
Collaboration. The SRI, (2012, p.6) states that, “… although the value we create
goes far beyond what can be captured in financial terms, this is, for the most part, the
only type of value that is measured and accounted for”. The SRI is discussing
tangible money and agrees that intangibles are not being measured or properly
accounted for. It would be beneficial to organisations to have a complete measure of
everything that gives it competitive advantage, including quality marks, so that it can
benchmark against other comparable organisations.
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Another benefit for organisations identified in many of the approaches from the
literature is that adopting quality marks can enable benchmarking. Both IIP and
CSR offer ways of benchmarking with other organisations through people for IIP
and through services for CSR, which has its roots in the military, according to
Brooks, (2005). Other approaches such as ROT, HRA and Social Capital also
promote ways of benchmarking by measuring outcomes. Human Capital and ROCE
are also used to benchmark and all the approaches give some measure of ROI or
show profit and loss. HRA shows return on investment, as does Social Value. These
measures can be benchmarked with other organisations who measure in a
comparable way. Stakeholders voluntarily contribute to organisations with no
financial investment, apart from some management time and training. While, Human
Capital can be compared to IIP as it measures retention, training, performance and
absenteeism as well as talent which resemble the ROT approach. Retention, for
example can be benchmarked against other organisations whose turnover of staff
may be higher. All of the approaches from the literature can be used for recognition
and benchmarking and there is a lot of organisational financial information being
currently reported on in the literature. Benchmarking is a measure of how an
organisation compares to others that are in the same field, but it misses out a
significant amount of information on how it is actually achieved. At present it is used
to convince customers that an organisation is at a certain standard when compared to
others in the community.
2.12 Enhanced Services in Communities as a Benefit of All Stakeholders’
Voluntary Contributions
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The benefits of stakeholders volunteering in a community is also linked to the work
of Moretti, (2005) who found a positive effect on civic behaviour as a benefit of it,
such as increased voting through participation. Some stakeholder categories, such as
board members have increased Social Capital through the skills they gain by
volunteering for an organisation. This increase in skills and education can lead to an
impact on wider social goals such as enhanced participation and can be measured by
the numbers that vote in an election, as has been discussed. Moretti, (2002) argues
that Social Capital shows that there are decreases in criminality as the result of
voluntary activity but while this work is extremely important, the literature does not
consider all stakeholders voluntary activity, so it does not give a full understanding
of what is happening in communities. Traditional volunteering through Mass
Collaboration also has also been shown to have a positive impact in communities
because volunteers can have a say in which services are delivered. CSR accounts for
the relationships between an organisation and its community and gives its services a
valuation through loyalty, according to De los Salmones and Del Bosque, (2011).
There is a large variety of CSR undertaken by SMEs in Wales, according to Brooks
and Evans, (2005). It decreases risks and improves organisational performance,
argue Fontaine et al, (2006). It cultivates loyalty by giving back to the community
through initiatives such as community benefit funds.
Another benefit that is discussed in some of the literature is the benefit back to the
community from stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. The benefits include
enhanced services that are delivered by voluntary stakeholder activity that may also
lead to the benefit of community participation. For example, Putnam, (1995)
describes people voluntarily manning outposts, branches of institutions or
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organisations to provide services. Stores were run by volunteers, in newer
democracies, particularly the USA, but throughout the world. The volunteers’ Social
Capital can be aligned to Mass Collaboration as it includes the voluntary
contribution of people to enable citizen-centric goods and services to be produced
and delivered in the community.
Social Capital results in a civil society, according to Day et al, (2006) and decision
making at the local level is encouraged through participation, according to Liddle,
(2003) and Cornforth, (2012, 2015). The third sector can attract grant funding to
enable it to address social problems in the community and is aligned to the wellbeing
that is argued by O’Donnel et al, (2014). While Mass Collaboration advocates people
power to deliver citizen-centric services as it relies on their voluntary input. Wang et
al, (2016, p.6) state that, “… long-term residents may be more willing to volunteer
for the public good of the community because they have more of a stake in the safety
and quality of life in the community. Comparably, an individual with a stronger
sense of belonging in their particular community would probably be more willing to
undertake the costs associated with volunteering than someone less attached who
may not value the benefits of the public good produced through volunteering”. The
belonging that is described by Wang et al could include the benefit of the wellbeing
felt by individuals through volunteering.
The significance of the literature is that more contacts can be won by involving
stakeholders. Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector and Social
Value are approaches that are associated with customers or service users in the
community. While the Contribution of the Third Sector, VIVA, Human Capital and
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Social Value are all involved in citizen-centric planning. Aligned to this, VIVA and
The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees are involved in influencing policy and
most claim enhanced quality, delivery, services, systems, functions, operations,
commissioning or procurement, which also leads to enhanced services. This leads to
less crime and more voting in the community. For example, Putnam in (1995, p.66)
wrote the paper, ‘Bowling Alone’, stating that, “life is easier in a community blessed
with a substantial stock of social capital”. His work includes women’s institutes
PTAs etc., but he claims that volunteering is declining due to the number of women
going out to work since the 1960s and 1970s. Putnam, (1995) argues that it is
stakeholder contributions that lead to enhanced social capital. As do Wang et al,
(2016).
Social Capital promotes skills in a way that is not unlike Mass Collaboration uses
volunteers’ knowledge of IT skills to submit their feedback to organisations. The
outcome of increased sales is tangible and relies on people power to change the
delivery of citizen-centric services in communities. Mass Collaboration is a driver
for productivity through people behaving socially. People volunteering in the Mass
Collaboration approach results in increased sales as products and services are
citizen-centric in the community. In relation to people acting socially Field, (2009)
advocates that Mass Collaboration is made possible by volunteers using their own
technology. The benefit to the company is that it does not have to pay for computers
or mobile phones, so this is also a voluntary contribution. VIVA also assesses how
services could be improved through acting on feedback, like Mass Collaboration, by
improving the management of volunteers. VIVA gives volunteers feedback on how
their contributions make a difference to the community and is also used to market
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and attract more funding that can be spent in the community. It also helps to
influence policy and the law. Involving the participation of community stakeholders
is paramount in The Social Value Act, as contracts could not be delivered without
them. Volunteering may also result in the outcome back to the stakeholders
themselves of their enhanced wellbeing.
2.13 Wellbeing as a Return on Individual Stakeholder Contributions
Some of the approaches in the literature highlight the individual benefits, such as the
wellbeing, that results from all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to an
organisation. It is interesting to note that IIP has recently introduced a, ‘Health and
Wellbeing Award’ as part of its recognition and awards portfolio. In support of this,
are Haldane’s, (2014, p.15) “benefit multipliers”. Aligned to Haldane’s argument,
are the approaches of Social Capital, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback
on Volunteering, VIVA, Human Capital and Social Value which all claim benefits to
health and wellbeing. They include benefit multipliers that enhance volunteers’ self-
esteem and confidence, which may increase the propensity for them to do it again.
While these approaches are usually associated with traditional volunteers, Human
Capital is linked to paid employees.
The benefits of Human Capital are long-term through investing in employees’
education, on the job training and work experience that lead to retention of the
workforce. O’Donnel et al, (2014, p.48) concluded that, “… unemployment is a
major cause of misery and this is mainly for psychological rather than financial
reasons … more generally, these results show that when we consider disadvantage,
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we need a much wider concept of deprivation than simple lack of income”.
Volunteering may help people feel less miserable if they are unemployed, but has the
added benefit of enhancing their skills to increase their Social Capital until they can
become employed again. However, others argue that volunteering can have a
negative impact on wellbeing such as Blackadder and Jackson, (2011). They argue
that paid employees may feel coerced into volunteering in austere times, which is
opposite to them feeling good about contributing their unpaid time. Associated with
this, O’Donnel et al, (2014, p.54) argue that, “… governments should develop new
methods of analysis where wellbeing is taken as the measure of benefit”.
Aligned to wellbeing, Jones-Evans, (2018) argues that, businesses large and small
are turning their attention to making sure their staff are happy and fulfilled by
treating Monday morning’s like Friday afternoons and advocating 20-minute power
naps. He continues that, “more importantly, an increasing number of organisations
will begin to integrate mental and emotional wellbeing into performance
management indicators, especially if it can be shown that the return on investment
into such programmes can lead to increased competitiveness”. It would be
encouraging if showing wellbeing could include a measure for the wellbeing of the
other stakeholder categories too, particularly if it was as a benefit of any voluntary
contributions. The wellbeing from the approach of Payback on Volunteering, or
Haldane’s, (2014) ‘benefit multipliers’ is also aligned to the findings of Moretti,
(2005, p.1) who advocates that, “the possibility that the social return to human
capital differs from its private return has a tremendous practical importance”. He
continued, “in fact, much of the argument for public education is based on the
recognition that education not only rewards the educated individual, but also creates
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a variety of benefits that are shared by society at large”. Education ensures that the
volunteers have the skills to deliver services in communities. In return, the
volunteers have the benefit of increased wellbeing. Volunteering in this way is
advocated by Leaman, (2015, p.1) who was a games marker for the 2012 Olympics,
where she had, “four of the most extraordinary weeks of her life”. She continues, “…
my personal motivation is to give something back to the hospital that saved my
husband’s life. While not having everything I want, I am fortunate to have
everything I need and believe that most of us can help in the community in some
way and not ask for a monetary reward”. Leaman also writes on emotional health.
Emotional health and wellbeing includes the increased skills of volunteers and is
supported in the work of Fujiwara, (2012).
Another benefit for individuals is that they may develop new skills. While the
approach of Mass Collaboration also measures increased skills as do HRA, Human
Capital and VHRD. VHRD also uses accounting practices to measure the value of
skills. Human Capital and HRA use metrics to analyse the contributions of skills too.
Skills are also considered in the Social Return on Investment, (SRI) which is akin to
Return on Talent Employed, (ROTE), ROCE and The Social Value Act because it is
a way of continuous improvement though skills. Increased skills to enable economic
growth are presented in The Leitch Review of Skills, (2006) as previously discussed.
However, none of the approaches measure the resulting wellbeing of all stakeholders
that is gained by learning new skills. Training for continuous improvement is also
advocated by IIP and it has been discussed that people who are well trained may
have competitive advantage over those who are not. Many who volunteer do so in
the third sector but The Contribution of the Third Sector approach has no measure
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for the increased wellbeing that results from new skills. Also linked to skills,
Fujiwara, (2012, pp.1, 2 and 9) found that, “participating in adult learning is found to
have significant positive effects on individual health, employability, social
relationships, and the likelihood of participating in voluntary work”. This value is
worth £130.00, according to Fujiwara, for the individual, but there is no measure for
the wellbeing gained by that value. While undertaking a VIVA audit means that
things get done in societies through unpaid work and this is alike the skills that
contribute to the Human Capital of paid employees. VIVA measures traditional
volunteering which overlaps with HRA that measures paid employees’ skills.
However, there is no current measure for the wellbeing that results from the
increased skills of all stakeholders.
The approach of The Contribution of the Third Sector can be compared to Social
Capital in that it is contributed for the benefit of society. However, while these
approaches give valuable insights into traditional volunteering, they do not measure
the contributors’ wellbeing. A number of the approaches that measure traditional
volunteering, like Payback on Volunteering implies that volunteering is also good for
the volunteer: it helps improve health and wellbeing, but does not present an accurate
measure for it. Usually, it is only traditional volunteering that is reported on in the
literature while it excludes the voluntary contributions of the other stakeholder
categories. The approaches from the literature such as IIP claim better behaviour,
competency, culture or motivation while others, such as HRA support performance
and retention. All the approaches from the literature include a degree of outcomes
such as training, skills, knowledge, intellectual capital, development, talent,
innovation, competence, or promotion for individuals voluntarily through unpaid
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work. This is in alignment to the voluntary labour of paid employees as a way of
continuous improvement though the transfer of their skills. Nevertheless, there is no
measure for all the voluntary activity that enables the people who volunteer to gain
enhanced wellbeing. There is also no current measure for the voluntary services that
are provided in the community by all stakeholders or the voluntary contributions that
result in organisational sustainability. Table 2.1, below is a summary of what the
literature does measure and what it does not measure:
Table 2.1 A summary of what the literature does measure and what it does not
measure.The approaches from the literature for the consultants:
What the literature does measure:
What the literature does not measure:
Quality marks, (IIP)
IIP is a benchmark for organisational, ‘outerperformance’ that is a standard achieved through excellent people management and maturity, which enables growth.
IIP is focussed primarily on paid employees and does not measure any voluntary time or skills contributed by consultants, or any of the other stakeholder categories in attaining the standard.
Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR)
CSR measures an organisation’s relationship with its community and influences an organisations’ transparency, image and loyalty.
There is a substantial amount of literature on CSR in accounting journals, but it does not account for any time voluntarily contributed by consultants, or any of the other stakeholder categories.
The approaches from the literature for the traditional volunteers:
What the literature does measure:
What the literature does not measure:
Social Capital Social Capital is a resource that includes networks that is contributed for free by volunteers and translated into societal benefit, or benefit multipliers. It also plays an important role in the delivery of services.
Social Capital results in enhanced wellbeing, health benefits, increased skills and employability, but does not measure any voluntary contributions to how it is achieved. It usually measures the social capital of
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traditional volunteers.Mass Collaboration
Mass Collaboration is a resource and a way of measuring people’s involvement in the design of services and products that gives competitive advantage over others as people will buy into the services they helped to design. Also called, ‘people power’ or, ‘the power of us’.
It measures voluntary participation by increased votes and partially measures the benefits of people voluntarily working together to deliver citizen-centric services. It does not measure the time contributed by traditional volunteers or any of the other stakeholder categories.
The Contribution of the Third Sector
The Contribution of the Third Sector measures the impact of the time contributed through traditional volunteering to the economy and compares it as a percentage of GDP.
It does not measure the voluntary contributions of any of the other stakeholder categories such as the voluntary contributions of paid employees.
Payback on Volunteering
There is a payback from volunteering that results from voluntary activity such as increased skills that will result in better jobs for the contributors themselves, but also to society through reduced criminality which is a benefit multiplier.
It contributes to sustained economic growth and wellbeing through social action, but there is no measure for everything that is being contributed to the resulting growth and wellbeing because it only considers one of the stakeholder categories and their contributions.
The Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA)
VIVA is an audit or ratio which measures the profit and loss of managing volunteers. By undertaking an audit an organisation gains increased recognition, potentially more funding and better public relations.
It accounts for the overheads associated with managing volunteers and gives time a value. It cannot be used to account for the time given voluntarily by paid employees or the due diligence provided by boards in their management.
The approaches from the literature for the paid employees:
What the literature does measure:
What the literature does not measure:
Human Capital Human capital is linked to the education, training, skills and experience of the workforce. It contributes to the sustainability of organisations.
It shows how the HR function creates value by return on the investment in skills to productivity. It does not consider any human capital of any of the other
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stakeholder categories.Virtual Human Resource Development, (VHRD)
VHRD reports on human performance through technology. It treats paid employees’ competence as an asset and gives it a value. It leads to performance improvement in the workforce.
It considers a wide range of performance indicators for paid employees, but it does not measure the human performance of board members, traditional volunteers or consultants.
The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees
The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees accounts for the time that paid employees give over and above that which they are paid for. It helps to shore up organisations in austere times until the economy improves.
The interchangeability between paid employees the reasons for it such as increased costs or a shortage of paid employees is acknowledged in the literature, but it does not fully measure the voluntary labour of paid employees or any of the other stakeholder categories.
Human Resource Accounting, (HRA)
HRA measures five parameters of recruiting, acquisition, formal, informal training, experience and development. It measures metrics such as absence and staff turnover.
A valuable tool for collecting information the activity that employees are paid for, but does not measure any voluntary time that they, or any of the other stakeholder categories, contribute.
The approaches from the literature for the board members:
What the literature does measure:
What the literature does not measure:
Return on Capital Employed, (ROCE)
ROCE is a validation of a company’s competitive advantage. High ROCE enables competitive advantage through the strong leadership and management of boards. It is an important aspect of reporting on financial capital investments.
The literature argues that it is, ‘erroneous’ and can mislead investors because it only gives a snapshot of the organisation’s position at a given time. It does not account for any voluntary activity or intangibles in its measure. It does not consider any of the stakeholder categories or their voluntary contributions, including the board members who manage it.
Return on Talent, (ROT)
ROT measures the amount of money invested in workforce talent and boards analyse how much talent
It only measures the talent of paid employees in a similar way to financial issues and does not consider the talent
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results from their investment and how it contributes to organisational success for competitive advantage.
of any of the other stakeholder categories as indicators of success.
Social Value The Social Value Act is a way of thinking about how scarce resources are allocated and used and considers the collective benefit to the community when awarding a contract from a public body.
Contracts are weighted to include voluntary activity in the community in the achievement of its outcomes, but social value does not consider any voluntary activity of consultants or paid employees in the procurement process.
It can now be shown that the approaches from the literature give an incomplete
measure of everything that is being voluntarily contributed by all stakeholders, as
well as all the benefits it brings. It has been shown that there is no complete measure
for all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and its benefits.
2.14 Conclusion
In conclusion of the literature review, all stakeholders both contribute to and benefit
from a range of both tangible and intangible resources. However, a significant
amount of voluntary contributions that result in this threefold benefit to
organisations, communities and the stakeholders themselves currently remains
unmeasured. This may be partly because trust and commitment, for example are
intangible, but also because there is no all-encompassing measure for what is being
contributed and its resulting benefits. This highlights the need for a more complete
picture of the inputs and outcomes from all stakeholder contributions, whether paid
or unpaid.
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It is found that all the approaches from the literature investigated, purported to
improve organisations, society or individuals, but they are all fragmented as none of
the approaches from the literature provide a comprehensive measure of all
stakeholders’ voluntary contribution or its benefits. The outcomes of adopting some
or all of these approaches are argued to benefit the contributors through increased
wellbeing and skills. Communities benefit by having citizen-centric services through
participation and the benefit to organisations is competitive advantage for
sustainability. The approaches are used mostly to benchmark against other
organisations to show what they produce or deliver is even better than their
competitors. However, some say that they are just a badge or trophy, (Hoque, 2003,
Berry and Grieves, 2003 and Smith, 2014). Organisations do not account for all the
contributions of all its stakeholders in their reporting. Therefore, it is suggested that
this is a business limitation as it may be all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions that
provide the benefit of helping organisations to survive in these austere times. All
organisations have to do in return is to properly manage the volunteers, traditional or
otherwise, and report fully on the benefits of all their contributions.
Throughout the literature, no single study has produced an all-encompassing
approach of all the voluntary contributions made by all stakeholders or its benefits. It
has been established that the third sector is presently a growth sector, according to
The WCVA’s Voluntary Sector Almanac, (2011) and in 2016, there was an increase
in the number of Companies Limited by Guarantee, (2016, p.8), but it may not be
fully reporting on what is contributing to its growth. It has been established that it
would be much higher (Haldane, 2014) if it included informal volunteering.
Haldane’s argument is a step in the right direction but it needs to include all
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stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, not just traditional volunteering. This is not
only a potential business limitation for the SWWales Charity but the sector as a
whole. All stakeholders’ voluntary contributions should be captured and reported on
as its benefits may be a driver for that organisational growth, as it has been
established that GDP does not tell the whole story, nor does Public Value. The
SWWales Charity may contribute to third sector growth alongside the other,
“approximately 33,000 voluntary and community organisations in Wales, of which
32,197 are recorded on the All Wales Database, maintained by the WCVA”, the
WCVA, (March 2014). The SWWales Charity’s Board reports on an annual turnover
of £1.6m, but this may not be the full value of its human assets. Current reporting is
only concerned with traditional volunteer costs and the costs associated with
consultancy, for example. The Board may be omitting to report on its total assets to
its funders, governing bodies, the Charities Commission, Companies House or any
of its other external stakeholders, but it is not a legal requirement at present.
The aim of this chapter was to examine a range of literature that focuses on
approaches that highlight stakeholders’ voluntary inputs to organisations. It was
found that each approach is limited as it only concentrated on one particular aspect
of stakeholders and their individual contributions. This is a limitation, as no one
approach from the literature acknowledged all stakeholders or all their voluntary
contributions. They also did not acknowledge the threefold benefit. Each literature
provides important insights into particular stakeholder categories but all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and benefits are under-researched. There was
found to be a small amount of research around consultants, but none on any
voluntary contributions, for example, but a large body of research around traditional
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volunteering. However, there is presently not one all-encompassing approach that
measures everything that is being voluntarily contributed or the benefits that it
brings. It may also now be stated that as the literature advocates that all stakeholders
contribute to organisational success, in a variety of ways, Mendelow’s, (1991) model
could now possibly be updated. It could now show that all stakeholders who
voluntary contribute have equal power and an equal level of interest in the
organisation, but first the primary research must be undertaken to test this theory. In
order to establish if all stakeholders of the SWWales Charity voluntarily contribute
to it, the methods to collect primary and secondary data will now be examined. The
approaches from the literature will be aligned to the four stakeholder categories and
used to form the research questions to collect the primary data in Chapter Three. It
will also examine organisational documentation of the SWWales Charity to collect
secondary data. It introduces the methodological framework of case studies and
methods for data collection to establish if all stakeholders of the SWWales Charity
voluntarily contribute to a threefold benefit to the organisation, the community and
back to themselves.
Chapter Three
The Methodological Framework and Methods for Data Collection
3.0 Introduction
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This chapter focuses on the research question, which is to identify the voluntary
activities that may be being contributed to the SWWales Charity by all its
stakeholders, and any benefits that result from their actions. It presents the methods
for collecting data from the SWWales Charity’s stakeholders, as stakeholding is the
theoretical framework for this research. It will examine if all stakeholders voluntarily
contribute to organisational success, community participation and the wellbeing of
the contributors. It will gather both primary data from the stakeholders and
secondary data from organisational reports. In order to gather primary data, each
stakeholder category is linked to the relevant approaches from the literature. For
example, the consultants were assigned quality marks and the paid employees were
assigned the human capital approach. These approaches from the literature will
inform the research question to establish if there are any contributions that the
SWWales Charity’s stakeholders’ voluntarily make. The literature highlighted that
all stakeholder categories may voluntarily contribute a range of both tangible and
intangible resources. There are measures for some of their contributions, but they
may not measure everything that is being contributed.
The research question suggests that a mixed methods approach is considered as it
seeks to identify both tangible time contributed and intangible contributions such as
trust and commitment. It discusses both qualitative and quantitative methods that
would complement this research. This chapter aims to revisit the findings from the
literature and the stakeholder categories. It introduces research philosophy, Guba,
(1990) and reviews a range of research methods, Denscome, (2008) and Yin, (2012),
identifying the most appropriate. It reviews and summarises the methods used for
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data collection that includes questionnaires and follow-up interviews. It then
considers the collection of secondary data from organisational documentation, using
a content analysis. The chapter concludes with the method of analysing the data from
all the stakeholders.
3.1 Research philosophy
The methods of data collection available for research will ensure that it is
methodologically robust. Methods of data collection must take into consideration
the research question and the author’s ontological position. Ontology and
epistemology are the philosophical assumptions that researchers make. For example,
ontology is an individual’s view of reality and whether there is a single reality or
truth, or many. These contribute to many different research paradigms. There are a
range of paradigms that include positivism, post positivism (pragmatism), critical
constructionism and interpretivism, according to Guba, (1990). Epistemology is
concerned with how reality can be known and methodology is how the enquirer
should go about gaining knowledge. It sets out and defends the author’s proposed
methodology to support their ontological position. Guba (1990, pp.17-27), suggested
various ontological positions and argued that, “ontology: is an individual’s view of
reality about people’s perceptions and describes the facts that exist when conducting
research”. Positivism is based on observation of reality to draw conclusions, whereas
post positivism, or pragmatism describes that reality exits but can never be fully
apprehended. Constructionism is socially and experientially based that is dependent
for their form and content on the persons who hold them. Interpretivism is concerned
with social actors and patterns of meaning.
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Many authors have described research philosophy and the paradigms associated with
it. As well as Guba, (1990), these include McNeil, (1990) Denscombe, (2008),
Bryman, (2012) and more recently Morgan (2014). Traditionally, the tried and tested
methods of data collection include the scientific positivist methods using quantitative
techniques. By using this method any enquirer will always get the same result, while
an interpretivist approach using qualitative methods would be influenced by the
perceptions of the researcher. In his findings around generating inquiry paradigms,
Guba, (1990, p. 18) states that inquiries, “… can be characterised by the way their
proponents respond to three basic questions. The questions are: 1. Ontological: what
is the nature of the “knowable” Or, what is the nature of “reality”? 2.
Epistemological: What is the nature of the relationship between the knower (the
enquirer) and the known (or knowable)? 3. Methodological: how should the inquirer
go about finding out knowledge?”
The author’s ontological position is central to the research design, as it informs the
gaining of authoritative knowledge, or epistemology. Guba, (1990 pp. 17-27)
describes epistemology as gaining authoritative knowledge about a social problem or
phenomena in research and describes methodology as the how the enquirer should go
about gaining knowledge. A pragmatic standpoint adopts both quantitative and
qualitative methods and undertakes an inquiry in more natural settings, as opposed to
the scientific method suited to positivism. As such, this research suits the mixed
methods approach of case studies. Combined, it is both ontology and epistemology
that inform the methodological tools needed to inquire of the SWWales Charity’s
stakeholders and to identify any voluntary contributions that they may make.
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It has been established that research philosophy includes ontology, epistemology and
research methods. These research paradigms are now investigated fully before
choosing the ones that have best fit for the research question. In his writings
Denscombe, (2008, p.5) attempted to, “avoid jargon”. It has been established that
ontology is an inclination to a particular view of the world and the philosophy
includes positivism and interpretivism. Aligned to research philosophy, Denscome,
(2008, p.5) stated that, “theoretical debates have been deep, complicated and,
sometimes, abrasive between researchers who hold different beliefs about the nature
of social reality, (‘ontology’) and competing visions about the ways that humans
create their knowledge about the social world in which they live (‘epistemology’)”.
As has been discussed, the research question may indicate a more pragmatic
approach but first ontology, (what facts exist in reality) epistemology, (the theory of
obtaining that knowledge) and research paradigms are examined in more detail.
3.2 Ontology, Epistemology and Research Paradigms
In order to begin the process of answering the research question, first the author’s
ontological view must be established. It has been recognised that ontology is an
individual’s view of reality and include a single reality, (positivist) or only
perceptions of reality, (interpretivism). There is also the pragmatic approach which is
a view of reality which, “focuses instead on ‘what works’ as the truth regarding the
research questions under investigation” as argued by Tashakkori and Teddlie, (2003,
p.713). Pragmatism considers some qualitative methods and undertakes an inquiry in
natural settings. Pragmatism also suits the mixed methods approach for case studies,
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for example and Bryman, (2012, p.6) stated that ontology is related to, “… how
social phenomenon influence the research process”. He continues, “… it is simply
there, acting upon and influencing their behaviour, beliefs, and values. We might
view the culture of an organization as a set of values and behavioural expectations
that exert a powerful influence over those who work in the organization and into
which new recruits have to be socialised”. Bryman continued, “… but we could also
view it as an entity that is in a process of reformulation and reassessment, as
members of the organization continually modify it through their practices and
through small innovations in how things are done. Considerations of this kind are
referred to as ontological ones”.
To link the ontological considerations of what exists, or not, and how to translate a
phenomenon into knowledge is achieved through epistemology. In the various
paradigms, positivism asks scientific questions and lets nature answer back. In the
interpretivist approach an understanding of the meaning of the respondents’
definitions of the situation are interpreted by the author. Epistemology, or gaining
authoritative knowledge about a social problem or phenomena in social research, is
presented by Bryman, (2012, p.4). He states that it, “… it denotes academic research
on topics relating to questions relevant to the social scientific fields, such as
sociology, human geography, politics, and criminology. Thus, social research
involves research that draws on the social sciences for conceptual and theoretical
inspiration”. In relation to social research, Bryman continues, (p.5), “such research
may be motivated by developments and changes in society … it is deeply rooted in
the ideas and intellectual traditions of the social sciences”. The research question is
based on a social aspect around the behaviours of stakeholders of the SWWales
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Charity’s and it is crucial to have an understanding of the social aspect, which must
reflect the right research method.
It has been discussed that research paradigms, according to Guba, (1990) include:
positivism, post positivism, pragmatism, critical theory, constructionism and
interpretivism. The paradigms range from positivism and interpretivism, according
to Guba, (1990 p.17) who argues that, “in between these two pillars, there are the
other, emerging paradigms of post positivism (pragmatism), critical theory and
constructionism”. Guba continues, “… the salient differences between traditional
positivism, on the one hand, and three paradigms that have emerged to challenge
(replace? Parallel?) it on the other”. These paradigms are, “postpositivism, critical
theory and constructivism”, according to Guba, (1990 pp.17-25). Guba also
describes the doctrine of positivism, which is aligned to quantitative methods of data
collection and in the scientific method. In agreement with Guba, Denscombe, (2008,
p.6) stated that, “by using the scientific method researchers hoped to achieve the
same level of success in explaining the social world that their counterparts had
managed with the natural world. Using the tried and tested methods of science, they
hoped to diagnose social, economic and psychological problems and offer advice to
influential leaders about appropriate remedies”. Another scientific, hypothetico-
deductive method is advocated by Popper, (1979) which suits the method of
positivism. Popper likens this method as a crime being solved through investigation.
With regard to the hypothetico-deductive method, Popper, (1979) also discusses
causal relationships for corroboration of facts. In relation to this, Bryman, (2012,
p.27) argues that, “… positivism is extremely difficult to pin down and therefore to
outline in a precise manner, because it is used in a number of different ways by
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authors”. He continues, “for some writers, it is a descriptive category – one that
describes a philosophical position that can be discerned in research – though there
are still disagreements about what it comprises; for others, it is a pejorative term
used to describe crude and often superficial data collection”. Positivist paradigms are
associated with realism, what is fact and can be measured, while interpretivist
paradigms are more closely aligned with naturalist and constructivist stances. This
research however uses both ends of the spectrum because quantitative questions
around the amount of time contributed by stakeholders would fit into the scientific
methods because anyone undertaking this part of the research would gain the same
results. The doctrine of positivism is linked to the traditional scientific methods of
collecting data in a tried and tested way. In these scientific circumstances, only one
result can be achieved.
Alternatively, interpretivism, according to McNeill, (1990, p.119) is, “the central
feature of social life is that actions are the result of people’s interpretations of the
situation that they are in … the causes of social action lie in people’s ‘definition of
the situation’, their interpretation of events, not in some pattern of objective laws that
govern from outside”. Interpretivism, provides an, “alternative to the positivist
orthodoxy that has held sway for decades”, according to Bryman, (2012, p.30). It
considers the view that there needed to be a strategy that embraces the differences
between objects and people. Bryman (2012, p.28) also states that, “interpretivism is a
term given to a contrasting epistemology to positivism”.
Realism, also known as essentialism or critical realism is another epistemological
consideration that chronologically appeared after positivism and before
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interpretivism. Realism is defined by Bryman, (2012, p.715) as, “an epistemological
position that acknowledges a reality independent of the senses that is accessible to
the researcher’s tools and theoretical speculations. It implies that the categories
created by scientists refer to real objects in the natural or social world”. While the
most recent consideration, advocated by Michel Foucault, is postmodernism and also
defined by Bryman, (2012 p.714) as, “a position that displays a distaste for master-
narratives and for a realist orientation. In the context of research methodology,
postmodernists display a preference for qualitative methods and a concern with the
modes of representation of research findings”.
It is also concerned with knowledge, power and methodology which are linked to
phenomenology. Interpretivism takes the standpoint that purely qualitative research
is undertaken. Ajjawi and Higgs, (2007, p. 614) argue that, “… these phenomena
cannot maintain their essential and embedded features if reduced or measured as in
quantitative research. Both clinical reasoning and communication are complex
phenomena involving multiple strategies, purposes and interpretations; there are no
perfect approaches to reasoning or communication”. The qualitative questions
around stakeholders’ thoughts and feelings can be more aligned to the interpretivist
paradigm as they often use mixed methods of data collection, which are more
aligned to the pragmatic school of philosophy.
3.3 Pragmatism
A pragmatic epistemological, (authoritative knowledge) position considers
involvement, understanding, values and can include mixed, or qualitative and
quantitative methods. Morgan, (2014, p.1049) argues that, “pagmatism presents a
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radical departure from age-old philosophical arguments about the nature of reality
and the possibility of truth”. The pragmatic approach is also advocated by
Denscome, (2007, p.91) who states that, “pragmatism places great emphasis on the
‘practical’ rather than the ‘abstract’ when it comes to issues of knowledge and truth
and it operates on the premise that the value of any theory can only be gauged by
how well it addresses real practical needs and how well it works in practice”. This
method is suitable to this research, which aims to address the practical need of
reporting on whether or not all stakeholders’ voluntarily contribute to the SWWales
Charity.
Denscombe, (p.116), continues that, “pragmatism is generally regarded as the
philosophical partner for the Mixed Methods approach. It provides a set of
assumptions about knowledge and enquiry that (a) underpins the Mixed Methods
approach; and (b) distinguishes the approach from purely quantitative approaches
that are based on a philosophy of positivism and purely qualitative approaches that
are based on a philosophy of interpretivism”. Therefore, the pragmatic approach,
which underpins the choice of research methods, provides the best fit for this
research.
The author did not consider either positivist or interpretivist approach alone, as
separate constraints would not give the right mix for data collection. In his argument
for a pragmatic approach, Morgan, (2014, p.1051) continues, “rather than framing
the study of social science research as commitments to an abstract set of
philosophical beliefs, pragmatism concentrates on beliefs that are more directly
connected to actions”. Another advocate of pragmatism McNeill, (1990, p.123)
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states that, “some writers refer to this process as ‘triangulation’… and means that
you get a better view of things by looking at them from more than one direction”. He
continues that, “while people’s actions are a result of their interpretation of a
situation, their interpretations and their choices are limited by structural factors
external to them and beyond their control”. Having established the author’s
pragmatic ontological stance and the epistemological position, research design of
mixed methods is now examined.
Having considered all of the different paradigms that have been advocated by
Popper, (1979) Guba, (1990) McNeill, (1990), Ajjawi and Higgs, (2007),
Denscombe, (2008), Bryman, (2012) and Morgan, (2014), there is only one possible
method that would answer the research question and that is a pragmatic, mixed-
methods approach. However, a mixed-methods research (MMR) approach is not
necessarily related to pragmatism, as argued by Morgan, (2014, p. 1045), who asks,
“… does arguing for a broader application of pragmatism to social research require a
clarification of its specific relationship to MMR? At issue here is the idea that
pragmatism is somehow uniquely related to MMR. This confusion is reminiscent of
some paradigmatic claims that qualitative methods must be connected to
constructivism and quantitative methods must be connected to post-positivism. In all
of these cases, there may be an affinity between paradigms and methods, but there is
no deterministic link that forces the use of a particular paradigm with a particular set
of methods”. Morgan, (2014, p.1051) continues that, “switching to this new
(pragmatic) paradigm does indeed require effort, but the benefits that it provides are
well worth it”. While Meissner, (2010, p.24) states that, “mixed methods research
may place a higher burden on participants than single-method approaches, but may
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also give greater benefit … investigators should carefully consider and identify any
unique benefits from the use of mixed methods, such as the potential for individual
or community impact”. The research question includes both quantitative and
qualitative perspectives for a greater benefit through a mixed methods research
approach. Therefore, the author’s ontological position for this research is a pragmatic
one and in order to find out the facts it utilises both quantitative and qualitative
methods to gather data. Examples of advocates of mixed methods as a research
design are Rowley, (2002, pp.17, 27) and Cameron and Miller, (2010, p.7-8).
3.4 Research Design
Statistics alone would not give complete results in this research, neither would
purely qualitative methods. However, the quantitative contribution of any voluntary
time that the stakeholders may give must be asked alongside any qualitative
questions aligned to the literature. As well as the quantitative methods of research for
collecting the unit of time, there also needed to be qualitative methods which draw
out detail and individual perspectives in questionnaires. Follow-up interviews also
form the basis for collecting more data for triangulation and advocates of this
method include Spitzeck and Hansen, (2010, p.379) who undertook research into
stakeholder governance. They found (p.387) that there were limitations to one kind
of research and that, “a triangulation with further qualitative data could help to
establish a more critical analysis”. The mixed methods movement, which combines
both qualitative and quantitative methodological methods is supported by, amongst
others, Cameron and Miller, (2010, p.1) who presented a paper, “to map the
experience of introducing the teaching of mixed methods in an international Doctor
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of Business Administration (DBA) curriculum within an existing Australian
University”. They found (p.11) that, “however, there is a need to be cautious that
mixed methods does not be seen as a compulsory approach to be adopted by
researchers in business and universities that need to promote a general philosophy
that there are many ways that a research problem might be investigated, each with its
own strengths and weaknesses and that no one particular paradigm, is superior to
another”.
Researchers have advocated a number of tried and tested tools, or methods for
collecting data, while Cameron and Miller, (2010, pp. 7,8) also produced a table of
the research design type and methods that could be used for DBA theses. This
included, “exploratory, case study, descriptive, explanatory, action research,
experimental, grounded theory, longitudinal, quasi experimental and mixed
methods”. In order to answer the research question, mixed methods is the chosen
epistemology.
Case studies, which use mixed methods fit well with the research question and in
support of case studies, Rowley, (2002, pp.17,25) contrasts surveys to case studies
by stating that, “… typically the number of units studied in a case study is many less
than in a survey, but the extent of detail available for each case should be greater. As
compared with an experiment, the case study researcher has much less control over
the variables, than if an experiment were used to investigate a situation”. As a
research strategy, Rowley, (2002) advocates that the kinds of questions that case
studies ask are, ‘how’ and ‘why’. Therefore, in order to answer the research
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question, mixed methods is the chosen epistemology to gain authoritative knowledge
by means of a case study.
3.5 Case Studies
There are a range of methods for collecting data that include qualitative and
quantitative methods aligned to the social aspect of research. In his work around case
studies, Yin, (2012, p.19) “… pointed to the potential relevance of both qualitative
and quantitative data in doing case study research. This duality reinforces the
positioning of the case study method as a method not limited to either type of data.
An important correlate is that case study investigators should be acquainted with
collecting data from a variety of sources of evidence as well as using a variety of
analytic techniques”. The case study approach is also defended by Denscombe,
(2008, p.45) who states that, “unwarranted though it may be, case studies are often
perceived as producing ‘soft’ data. The approach gets accused of lacking the degree
of rigor expected of social science research. This tends to go alongside the view of
case study research as focussing on processes rather than measureable end-products,
as relying on qualitative data and interpretative methods rather than quantitative data
and statistical procedures”. Siggelkow, (2007, p.20), however defends the single
case study method as a, “very powerful example”.
A case study is defined by Yin, (p.4) as, “an empirical inquiry about a contemporary
phenomenon (e.g., a “case”), set within its real-world context – especially when the
boundaries between phenomenon and context are not clearly evident”. Case studies
include both qualitative and quantitative questions to complement the research
question and in support of case studies, Yin, (2012, p.3) states that, “the case study
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method embraces the full set of procedures needed to do case study research. These
tasks include designing a case study, collecting the study’s data, analyzing the data,
and presenting and reporting the results”. As this research is an experiment in the
real-world context of a SWWales Charity, a case study approach seems to be a good
fit for the research question as it utilises quantitative and qualitative methods for
triangulation, which are aligned to the author’s pragmatic ontological position.
A case study approach appears to give the best fit to the aim of this research. This
method is supported by Eisenhardt, (1989, pp.548-549) who states that case studies
can be, “particularly well suited to new research areas or research areas for which
existing theory seems inadequate. This type of work is highly complementary to
incremental theory building from normal science research. The former is useful in
early stages of research on a topic or when a fresh perspective is needed, whilst the
latter is useful in later stages of knowledge”. Case studies are usually assigned to
new research areas and include more than one organisation. However, a more
suitable approach for this research is a single case study methodology. In her defence
of single case study methodology, Siggelkow, (2007, p.20) states that, “…
researchers using case research often feel they are fighting an uphill battle to
persuade their readers”. Her research uses the analogy of a talking pig, and suggests
that reviewers of the paper would say, “… interesting, but that’s just one pig, show
me a few more and then I might believe you”. Siggelkow continues (p.20), “I think
that we would agree that that would be a silly response. A single case can be a very
powerful example”. Therefore, a single case study was found to have the best fit to
undertake the research aim of this thesis.
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Having discounted all of the previous methods for collecting data, a single case study
is chosen as the best method as it enables a rich and detailed examination of the
social phenomenon of volunteering and provides the results needed for this research.
It is aligned to the author’s pragmatic research philosophy, as has been discussed.
The limitations of a single case study includes its lack of comprehensiveness; ideally
it would be more robust to be able to compare with other, similar non-profits or even
the statutory sector for multiple case studies in the area but this would have had great
time and cost constraints. It may, however, be an idea for future research. A single
case study is chosen because, as described, case studies include mixed methods of
research that include both interpretive qualitative and positivist quantitative methods
of collecting data inform a pragmatic approach. This single case study takes into
account all ethical considerations.
3.6 Ethics
This research sets out to investigate all of the tangible and intangible contributions
that all stakeholders of the SWWales charity may make. It is undertaken ethically to
ensure that there is no risk, or conflicts of interest, to individuals, the SWWales
Charity or the University of South Wales.
Axiology is concerned with personal values and ethics that may impact on the
research. As stated earlier, the author has been employed at the SWWales Charity for
a number of years and this is taken into consideration when designing the
questionnaires. Ethical considerations are paramount to any research and
Denscombe, (2007, p.174) described, “in the English language the word “ethics” has
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come to combine the two origins by linking (a) the duties and responsibilities of
individuals; with (b) broader systems of moral principles by which individuals can
judge their actions as right or wrong, good or bad”. As an example of ethics in
relation to his research, Denscombe, (2008, p.128) found that, “the distinct ethical
problem for action research is that, although the research centres on the activity of
the practitioner, it is almost inevitable that the activity of colleagues will also come
under the microscope at some stage or other, as their activity interlinks with that of
the practitioner who instigates the research … the usual strands of research ethics
must be observed: permissions obtained, confidentiality maintained, identities
protected”. In support of this Winter, (1996, p.17) and cited by Denscombe, (2008,
p.129) advocated that ethics in research should include that, “the development of the
work must remain visible and open to suggestions from others. Permission must be
obtained before making observations or examining documents produced for other
purposes. Description of others’ work and points of view must be negotiated with
those concerned before published. The researcher must accept responsibility for
maintaining confidentiality.” Confidentiality is paramount to this research as it takes
place in a relatively small organisation in a close-knit community where everyone
knows each other.
The author guaranteed confidence by personally overseeing the whole process and a
confidentiality statement is included in all the questionnaires and throughout the
follow-up interview process. This research is guided by the good practice of The
Economic and Social Research Council, (ESRC) ESRC Framework for Research
Ethics (FRE) 2010, Updated September 2012, (p.2), which advocates that the
research it carries out is to a high ethical standard. As a result it has published a
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framework of six key principles for its researchers, “1.Research should be designed,
reviewed and undertaken to ensure integrity, quality and transparency. 2. Research
employees and participants must normally be informed fully about the purpose,
methods and intended possible uses of the research, what their participation in the
research entails and what risks, if any, are involved. Some variation is allowed in
very specific research contexts for which detailed guidance is provided in Section 2.
3. The confidentiality of information supplied by research participants and the
anonymity of respondents must be respected. 4. Research participants must take part
voluntarily, free from any coercion. 5. Harm to research participants and researchers
must be avoided in all instances. 6. The independence of research must be clear, and
any conflicts of interest or partiality must be explicit”. This refers to medical
research and ensures that no harm befalls anyone who offers themselves up for
medical research but it is a good standard to follow in this research.
Similarly, from an ethical perspective, the SWWales Charity’s Ethics Policy includes
a reference to, “dedicating ourselves to carrying out the mission of the organisation”
and states that, “we (employees and board members), will: Recognise that the main
function of the charity at all times is to serve the best interests of our communities.
Respect the structure and responsibilities of the Board of Directors, provide them
with facts and advice as a basis for their policy decisions, and uphold and implement
policies adopted by the Board of Directors. Keep the community informed about
issues affecting it. Demonstrate the highest standards of personal integrity,
truthfulness, honesty, and fortitude in all our activities in order to inspire confidence
and trust in our activities. Not engage in any activity that might create a conflict of
interest for ourselves or the charity. Respect and protect privileged information to
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which we have access in the course of our official duties. Strive for personal and
professional excellence and encourage the professional developments of others”. The
SWWales Charity’s policy also recognised that ‘… the main function of the charity
at all times is to serve the best interests of our communities’. This formed the basis
for the ethical considerations from the author’s standpoint which adhered to the
policy at all times. For the purpose of this research, The University of South Wales’
Ethics Policy is also taken into consideration.
With regard to the ethics of a mixed methods approach, Meissner, (2010, pp. 23,24)
advocated the, “protection of human subjects”. It is suggested that there were three
examples of ethical issues that may relate to the use of a mixed methods approach.
Firstly, (p.23) “describe potential methodological issues and challenges that may
arise in using a particular mixed methods design”, this example included explaining
to respondents that there were others who had used this method in the past and that it
is suitable to the aim of the research. Secondly, (p.23) it is suggested to, “include a
timetable of the quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods procedures involved in
the design”. Confidentiality is paramount to this research and the SWWales
Charity’s stakeholders’ can only identified with their prior written consent. In order
to begin this research, the following introduces the chosen tools for collecting the
data and the timescales.
3.7 Introducing the Chosen Tools for Collecting the Data and the Timescales
The body that advocates good governance, AccountAbility, (2008, p. 27) uses a
myriad of data collection techniques including, “surveys, focus groups, meetings
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with selected stakeholders, workshops, online feedback mechanisms, advisory
committees, collective bargaining, multi-stakeholder forums, advisory panels as well
as integration of stakeholders into governance, strategy and operations
management”. The NCVO/CAF’s overview of charitable giving the UK, (2010/11,
p. 25) also, “used a survey, three times a year, carried out face to face in people’s
homes”. This vast collection of data included a broad range of social, economic and
demographic data which is published on their website. A number of authors in
various fields, including accountancy, have identified the need to report on social
activities, including Spence and Rutherford, (2001, pp.126-139) who suggest that, “a
sociological approach has much to offer”. However, Spence and Rutherford thought
that the figures alone did not give the full facts when reporting on organisational
performance. This is in alignment with the research question which aims to establish
if all stakeholders voluntarily contribute social capital, amongst other approaches
from the literature. Having examined the approaches of surveys and focus groups,
they have to be ruled out as the method of gaining knowledge for this research,
because they are designed for larger organisations and collective bargaining and
advisory panels are not appropriate for a relatively small charity. The more relevant
tools for data collecting, questionnaires and follow-up interviews are now examined.
Data collecting tools include questionnaires and follow-up interviews.
Questionnaires act as a multi-purpose tool which allow for a range of both
quantitative and qualitative data to be gathered. The arguments for questionnaires are
that it is possible to get brief answers which can be followed up at interviews. As
they can include both quantitative data such as time and money they can also use
qualitative ‘soft’ anecdotal data and are suited to a mixed methods approach.
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According to Rowley, (2002, p.22) who advocates that, “… the evidence to be
gathered is defined as it is collected, and the researcher is an active agent in the
process. This means that the researcher undertaking data collection needs to be able
to ask good questions, to listen and to interpret the answers. This involves having a
sound grasp of the questions and propositions of the case study, and being able to
approach the study in an unbiased, and flexible manner”. Having chosen
questionnaires as the method for the research, the questions can be related directly
back to the findings in the literature review. Questionnaires had been used previously
for other research, so all stakeholders are familiar with them and consist of both
closed and open questions.
This is supported by McNeill, (1990, p. 26) who advocates that, “questionnaires or
interview schedules may be made up of ‘closed’ or ‘open’ questions. Limitations of
questionnaires are that with closed questions, the researcher has in some way limited
the possible responses”. However, some closed responses have to include ‘yes’ or
‘no’ closed answers, for the amount of time contributed, for example, which can then
be further probed by follow-up interviews. The disadvantages of asking just closed
questions were that the responses would have been limited and McNeill continues,
“… the problem is that the researcher has imposed a limit on the possible answers
that the respondent may give, and this may cast doubt on the validity of the data
collected”. Being mindful of this, a set of both open and closed questions to probe
further is used. McNeill, (1990, p.26) also advocates that, “there are, however,
dangers in ‘over-probing’, which may put answers into respondents’ heads”.
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In order to design the questionnaires, first the findings from the literature review
were revisited: the review of the literature found that there were existing studies that
have used the approach of stakeholding. Freeman, (1984), Johnson and Scholes,
(2001), Yuen et al, (2004), Williams and Lewis, (2008) Slatten, (2010), and Chigona
et al, (2010) have all categorised stakeholders. For example, Freeman stated that
stakeholders are vital to organisational survival and they all advocate the use of a
model that demarcates internal and external stakeholders. They have undertaken a
large body of research in the public and private sectors. However, only a few studies,
of the sample used, refer to the third sector and they include Balser and McClusky,
(2005, p.302) and, more recently, Krishnan and Yetman, (2011, p.1015). However, it
is the reporting of the all contributions of all the stakeholders of the SWWales
Charity that this thesis seeks to establish, regardless of where they are placed in
Mendelow’s matrix.
Authors such as Mendelow, (1991, p.159), Freeman, (1984, p. 42), and Gomes et al,
(2010) identified the need to map stakeholders and identify the impact of their power
and levels of interest. It has been established that there are a number of literature
approaches that take tangible voluntary contributions into account. Time is a tangible
measure that could be converted into money. For example, the time contributed by
traditional volunteers is well documented in the literature, while the additional hours
that the other stakeholders contribute, has a tangible value that could also be
documented and converted into money. The SWWales Charity has high number of
traditional volunteers but their contribution may not be being reported on in its
entirety at present. Their contributions may only be shown in annual reports as a cost
of expenses, for example but this will be examined in the review of organisational
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documentation. There are a number of tools that can be used to gather primary data
that include hermeneutically (deciphering texts) as advocated by Guba, (1990) and
Ajjawi and Higgs, (2009).
The SWWales Charity’s stakeholders, who were focussed on to gather data for the
purpose of this research, included both internal and external stakeholders. External
stakeholders are defined as those in Mendelow’s, (1991, p.159) A and B categories.
Members of category A are those who contribute minimal effort, (low power low
level of interest). An example of this category is consultants. The B category are
those who need to be kept informed, (low power, high level of interest) and includes
residents, members, voluntary groups and partners, called traditional volunteers for
the purpose of this research. Mendelow, (1991) also suggests that the C and D
category are internal stakeholders. Category C stakeholders are those that need to be
kept satisfied, (high power, and low level of interest). Included in this category are
paid employees. While category D stakeholders are key players, (high power, and
high level of interest) and this group includes Board members.
Having established the arguments and limitations for questionnaires and the pitfalls
to avoid, another issue to consider when designing and conducting questionnaires is
being over ambitious. In his description of these issues Yin, (2012, p.91) advises,
“keep your research questions focused and don’t be too over ambitious in the scope
of your study … although teachers of research methods and writers and writers of
textbooks like the present one observe that the choice of method should be shaped by
the research question(s) being asked, researchers do not always follow this practice,
(citing Bryman 2006b)”. The issues for this research and the design of the
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questionnaire have been well considered alongside the research question. After
consideration, it was decided to undertake a pilot questionnaire to make sure that it
was right. Suggested questions for the pilot questionnaire may be found in Appendix
1.
3.7.1 Pilot Questionnaire Design
To ensure that the final questionnaire was absolutely suitable a pilot questionnaire,
was undertaken with a sample of the stakeholder categories. The final pilot
questionnaire, (Appendix 2) included both quantitative and qualitative questions as
case studies include a mixed methods approach. Each question requested both
quantitative and qualitative responses. Lickert Scales, which gather thoughts and
opinions by means of a sliding scale, were not used because there needed to be more
in-depth responses in order to fully interpret the answers. Lickert Scales always have
a middle question as they use odd numbers. The questions in the pilot questionnaire,
(Appendix 2) were designed and aligned to the approaches in the literature review
and included even numbered questions. This ensured that opinions were clear and
that there was no middle ground. Each stakeholder category was given a set of their
own questions as well as some general ones. Initially, the font and size was
consistent (Times New Roman, 12 pitch) and bold print used for the instructions as
well as the questions. The number of questions in each category corresponded to the
number of approaches in the literature review. The scale included the closed
question, ‘how many’ for the number of quantitative hours. Bryman, (2012, p. 252)
observed that, “closed questions may be irritating to respondents when they are not
able to find a category that they feel applies to them”. The closed question referred to
the number of hours contributed, (including 0 hours), as well as the symbol for plus
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(+) this eliminated the respondents’ not being able to find a category that applied to
the number of hours that they contribute. The qualitative scale included the open
questions, ‘why’ and ‘what’, as discussed earlier. This allowed, according to
Bryman, (2012, p.252) for, “a chance for personal expression”. The pilot ensured
that this was the right approach and that the instructions were clear as well as that it
was easy to complete. The pilot questionnaire can be found in Appendix 2.
The pilot study was conducted using a small random sample of stakeholders. On the
importance of pilot studies, Van Teijlingen and Hundley, (2001, p.2) stated that, “the
term ‘pilot studies’ refers to mini versions of a full-scale study (also called
‘feasibility’ studies), as well as the specific pre-testing of a particular research
instrument such as a questionnaire or interview schedule. Pilot studies are a crucial
element of a good study design”. In agreement with this, De Vaus, (1993, p.54)
warned, “… do not take the risk. Pilot test first”. Bryman, 2012, p.263) also
advocates that, “it is always desirable, if at all possible, to conduct a pilot study
before administering a self-completion questionnaire or structured interview
schedule to your sample … piloting also has a role in ensuring that the research
instrument as a whole functions well”. The pilot study was undertaken and
completed by the end of March 2014. It highlighted the issues with interpretation of
the questions, as well as dealing with practical issues such as the time needed for
completion and any other observations from the stakeholder sample that needed to be
considered. One member of each stakeholder category was chosen at random to
complete the pilot questionnaire, at a stakeholder event. The pilot questionnaire
explained the process, which included the ethical considerations around
confidentiality. The aim of the research was also described in detail. They were
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observed completing the questionnaire to see if they missed out any answers or had
any other difficulties. The method, results and feedback appear below:
The small sample of stakeholders that were chosen at random included two
employees, one consultant, one traditional volunteer and one board member. A brief
introduction to the process was given and the author was not really concerned with
the answers just for ease of understanding and layout, this took two minutes. During
the questionnaire completion, some instruction was given and all were completed in
seventeen minutes. At the end a feedback/discussion took ten minutes. The feedback
was gathered from the stakeholders on the process and the whole pilot questionnaire
was evaluated. This process produced some valuable pointers into the design of the
final questionnaire. The pilot questionnaire consisted of one document with
instructions for each stakeholder category to complete, (Appendix 2). This proved
very stressful for the respondents, who not only had to answer some quite
challenging questions, but had to follow a set of complicated instructions in a set
time frame. The instructions for some were hard to follow, so it was suggested that
having a separate questionnaire for each stakeholder group would be beneficial. It
was also suggested that another box should be added for, “if you contribute no hours
at all”. The hours should be used to increase the amount of time being contributed to
1, 10, 20, 30 + as the original hours of 1, 2, 3, 4 were too small.
The Times New Roman font was perceived as too formal; ‘Comic Sans is good for
people with dyslexia because of the spacing of the words’ was the advice given by a
consultant who is a special needs teacher. ‘The spacing was too small and scrunched
together’, was the opinion of another. A colour scheme was suggested for each
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stakeholder group, but was not used because one of the respondents was colour
blind. A lot more instruction was needed and definitions should be in full. Take out
quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods as respondents do not need to know this.
Use sub numbering instead – 2.0, 2.0.1, 2.0.2 etc. They also said that there were too
many big words. They said that the final questionnaires should start with an
introduction, which would be useful to explain the research.
The feedback from the pilot questionnaire was taken into consideration and applied
to the final questionnaires. Once the final questionnaires had been designed, (see
Appendices 4-7) a free, electronic data collecting package was used for stakeholders
to complete the questionnaire electronically. It was decided early on that this
however, may have excluded some of the less IT literate stakeholders so, to ensure
fairness, alternatives were put in place to address this potential problem.
Questionnaires had been used previously for other research so all stakeholders were
familiar with them. The final questionnaires were completed individually, with
mentor support or in focus groups. Ethical considerations and confidentiality was
maintained at all times. The collection of the data took into account the potential cost
constraints of time and resources. The decision was taken to split the questionnaire
into four, corresponding with each stakeholder category, i.e. consultants, traditional
volunteers, paid employees and board members. The framing of the questions are
around the gaps in reporting on all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, and their
potential benefits, to the SWWales Charity in the form of open ended questions
beginning with, ‘what’ and ‘why’ to gather qualitative data, as well as, ‘how many
hours’ for the quantitative data.
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A sample of each stakeholder category was chosen to complete the final
questionnaire. Therefore, it is important to use a representative sample of all the
categories of stakeholders using a ‘sampling frame’. An advocate of using a,
‘sampling frame’ is McNeil, (1989, p.37) who discusses, “as soon as we have a
sampling frame, we can select a number of names from it. If we choose the names
out of a hat, or by using random numbers, then we are doing truly random sampling.
If we choose every tenth or every twentieth name, then this is called quasi-random
sampling, since not every name on the list has an equal chance of being chosen”.
Quasi-random sampling is not used as it is desirable for the respondents to be chosen
completely at random. In order to choose the sample, at random, the SWWales
Charity has a number of lists which can be utilised. All members of each category
that had previously given permission to appear on existing mailing lists etc. were
included in the circulation of a covering letter, (Appendix 3) and were sent the
questionnaire that was pertinent to them. The Business Administrator, who keeps all
the mailing lists up to date, adhered strictly to fairness and ensured independence
from the author in the random sampling and the mailing out of the letters and
questionnaires. For example, there is a preferred suppliers list that the consultants
were chosen from. The community stakeholder’s mailing list was used for the
traditional volunteers as well as the payroll list of paid employees. The board
members’ sample was chosen using the list of board members that is supplied
annually to Companies House. These four documents informed the sampling frame
and the following stakeholders were invited to take part in completing the
questionnaires completely at random:
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Category A – a final sample of four consultants responded. From the SWWales
Charity’s preferred suppliers’ mailing list, six consultants were sent an email, on
27th May 2014, with the covering letter and final questionnaire attached. Two
responded by return of email, two needed a bit more explanation and two did not
respond. At the end of the time given of 27th June 2014, in total there were three
responses to the questionnaire. Another one responded on the 25th July 2014. It was
decided not to pursue the other two because although there were only four
respondents, they provided some very comprehensive, useable data.
Category B – a final sample of six traditional volunteers responded. In order to begin
collecting the data, there is an organisational membership/mailing list that consists of
about fifty traditional volunteers from the community who are invited to quarterly
stakeholder days. These people attend events, support the organisation and join in
with any workshops around planning and evaluating its services. It was decided that
there would have been constraints on the cost and time to the organisation if
everyone on the list is included. Instead, the author decided to just send the
questionnaire out, on 27th May 2014, to the regular volunteers, i.e. people who turn
up at least once a week, even if it is only for an hour, to volunteer in any of the
organisation’s projects. They were the ones that had a SWWales Charity, ‘Volunteer
Contract’. This made the process more manageable and 16 people were sent the
covering letter in Appendix 3 along with the traditional volunteer questionnaire in
Appendix 5. At the end of the time given of 27th June 2014, in total there were six
responses to the questionnaire.
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Category C – a final sample of seventeen paid employees responded. A selection of
employees from 17 – 64 years of age, male and female and from all levels
throughout the management structure completed the questionnaire electronically. All
said that they were involved with the SWWales Charity by giving their job titles and
a significant amount of data was gathered from their responses. This was collated by
hand by the author in the same way as in the other stakeholders’ responses. The
organisation’s IT department was sent the questionnaire, (see Appendix 6) which
included the covering letter. This was uploaded into a free survey computerised
package. After the changes were made to the pilot questionnaire to make it easier to
complete it was circulated by email to all employees on 27th May 2014. The
responses were slow at first with some employees needing further clarification of the
questions. It was decided to send a reminder email about ten days after it was first
sent. This led to eight being completed in one day and the rest were completed
intermittently within the timeframe. At the end of the timeframe which was the 27th
June 2014, in total there were seventeen responses to the questionnaire. All forty
nine employees were invited to complete the questionnaire. A subsequent email was
sent to all employees after the closing date of 27th June 2014, inviting them to
complete it by hand if they found the electronic computer package difficult. This
offer was not taken up by any of the employees. Being satisfied that all avenues were
exhausted and that the process had been fair, the author proceeded to gather the data
from the seventeen respondents.
Category D – a sample of six board members responded. The final six replies from
the board members confirmed that their involvement included them having a number
of titles including; Trustee, Director of the SWWales Charity Board, Chairman,
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Director/Trustee, board member and volunteer. This provided a good selection
across all officers and included an age range from 45 to 80 years of age. They all had
specific areas of expertise throughout the Board but all regarded themselves as
volunteers as they gave their time freely. A relatively small sample of respondents
gave their opinions about the way that the organisation operates, yet they were
passionate about their voluntary contributions. Prior to the scheduled Board meeting
on the 21st May 2014, the covering letter and questionnaire, (Appendices 3 and 7)
were mailed to all sixteen board members. The research was an agenda item under
AOB. The author introduced the research, distributed a hard copy and was on hand
to give advice throughout its completion, which took approximately 15 minutes. One
board member took it home and posted it back. Two others, who were absent on the
day were sent it electronically for ease of completion. At the end of the time given of
27th June 2014, in total there were six responses to the questionnaire.
They were all told that they could opt in or out or any time with no negative effect
for fairness. In relation to fairness, Meissner’s (2010, p.23) third example was, “in
discussing preliminary studies for new applicants, highlight prior quantitative,
qualitative, and mixed methods experiences”. This research ensured that the author
adequately documented each stage of the process through, “the inclusion of
individuals with expertise in these areas”, according to Meissner, (2010, p.24). In
this research advice was sought from the author’s Director of Studies and Supervisor
at all stages. Meissner, (2010, p.24) also advised to, “maintain the anonymity of the
participants … the investigator may need to gather information that can identify
participants … put safeguards in place for protecting that information”. The author
was the only one with all of the information, stored securely in files kept locked
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away in a filing cabinet that only they have access to. All computerised responses
were kept in an electronic file which was password protected.
The same process was used for each category for equality of presentation.
Respondents were all told that they could leave the survey at any time and that all
responses would be anonymous. The results of the pilot study proved invaluable in
making changes to the questionnaire in order to make it more user friendly, enabling
it to produce more useable results. The research needed everyone to be at the same
starting point and by eliminating the use of an electronic computer package for all
but paid employees. This ensured that all respondents were on a level playing field
and that no-one was disadvantaged by their lack of IT skills. All had the choice to
complete them either electronically or by hand. Having prior knowledge of all of the
respondents it was decided that it would be fair if everyone had the same help.
Timing was not really an issue so if anyone indicated that they would like the
questionnaire to be read out to them, or completed by a member of staff, that support
was also provided. They were also given the option of completing them at home. No-
one was disadvantaged in any way. It was emphasised that employees were only on
hand to offer independent practical support on the process but did not influence the
responses in any way. This ensured that there was no bias. For ethical, fair
considerations, as well as for clarity and better presentation, the decision was taken
to split the questionnaire into four, corresponding with each stakeholder category,
i.e. consultants, traditional volunteers, paid employees and board members. Each set
of stakeholders was chosen from mailing lists etc. and they were written to with prior
notice stating what the research was about, asking if they would be happy to
contribute and whether they wished to remain anonymous (see Appendix 3). It was
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also explained that if respondents remained anonymous, then they would be unable
to take part in any follow-up interviews, (as part of triangulation) for the data
collecting process. They were told that they could opt in or out or any time with no
negative effect.
The timescale for the return of the questionnaire was initially the 27th June 2014.
This was achieved for the consultants, paid employees and board members. However
the timescale was extended to the 18th July 2014 for the traditional volunteers in
order to give them more time. Time was planned, as was also advocated by
Meissner, (2010, p.23) to allow for, “transcribing qualitative data, meaningful
qualitative data analysis, and the integration of the quantitative and qualitative data
results”. Anonymity was re-iterated and everyone who responded also indicated that
they would like to be involved in any follow-up interviews to probe deeper into their
responses.
3.8 The Follow-up Interviews
Another tool to triangulate the data from questionnaires is follow-up interviews.
These were chosen so that more in-depth views could be gathered. This would
enhance the questionnaires by following up on any interesting responses to get more
detail and clarity. Each respondent answers the same set of questions, as suggested
by Yin, (2012, p.175). In order to gather secondary data reports and other
documentation can be examined for further triangulation. On discussing follow-up
interviews, Meissner, (2010, p.24) stressed that, “… investigators should inform
participants about the possibility of a follow-up contact so they understand the full
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nature of their participation at the time of initial consent”. In the covering letter,
(Appendix 3) that was attached to the questionnaire for this research, it was stated
that,
“… if you are willing to have a face to face follow-up interview with me,
please ensure that you add your name to the questionnaire. All results will be
anonymous and there will be no way of knowing who gave a particular
answer or comment”.
The advantages of follow-up or secondary interviews were that they allowed the
author to probe deeper into interesting issues that had arisen from the primary data.
As stated earlier, the disadvantage of this is that it may have led to over-probing, as
argued by McNeill, (1995, p.26). In order to address this, the author stuck to the
same format for all respondents and asked exactly the same questions, in the same
order to each category. Each response was transcribed by the author in the form of
notes as opposed to electronic recording.
The respondents were all asked the same set of open questions, please see Appendix
8. With regard to their aim Yin, (2012, p.209) describes interviews for social
research as, “in the social research interview, the aim is for the interviewer to elicit
from the interviewee or respondent, as he or she is frequently called in survey
research, all manner of information: interviewee’ own behaviour or that of others;
attitudes; norms; beliefs; and values”. The eliciting of this information was not an
issue at the SWWales Charity because the interviews took place as part of the usual,
planned individual supervision meetings and stakeholder days. They occurred as an
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agenda item at the end of regular management or board meetings and detailed notes
were kept alongside the results of the final questionnaire ready for the presentation
of findings from the case study in Chapter Four.
McNeill, (1990, p.123) states that, “some writers refer to this process as
‘triangulation’ … and means that you get a better view of things by looking at them
from more than one direction”. He continued that, “… while people’s actions are a
result of their interpretation of a situation, their interpretations and their choices are
limited by structural factors external to them and beyond their control”. Another
advocate of triangulation is Yin, (2012, p.104) who described it as, “consider the
difficulty of establishing the occurrence of an event if you were unable to observe it
directly yourself. You would be more confident in saying that the event had occurred
if your study showed that information from interviews, documents, and archival
records all pointed in the same direction … this type of triangulation is the most
desired pattern for dealing with case study data, and you should always seek to attain
it. An important clue when doing fieldwork is to ask the same question of different
sources of evidence, as well as asking the same questions of different interviewees.
If all sources point to the same answer, you will have successfully triangulated your
data”. Following the timescales, and having had information on the various analytic
packages such as SSPS and NVIRO, it was decided that as it was a relatively small
number of stakeholders that the interpretation would be done by hand. This is apart
from the initial interpretation of the quantitative data using the code of time, which
was analysed through the electronic computer package, ‘Excel’ as advocated by
Leahy, (2004, pp, 1-28). It is a database that includes a workbook with worksheets of
all the categories were designed to total the number of hours that respondents said
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that they voluntarily contribute to the organisation. It was felt that analysing the data
personally would enhance the author’s understanding of the responses from each
category and for ease of interpretation of the results by means of coding and
analysis. The following is a summary of the timescales for collecting data.
3.9 A Summary of the Timescales for Data Collection
In order to gather the data for identifying if all stakeholders voluntarily contribute to
the SWWales Charity, the research design for data collection was divided into three
parts; first a set of suggested questions and a questionnaire, (Appendices 1 and 2)
was piloted with a small random sample of stakeholders at the end of a scheduled
stakeholder day in February 2014. Having one questionnaire for all proved very
stressful for the respondents, who not only had to answer some quite challenging
questions, but had to follow a set of complicated instructions in a set time frame. The
questions were reviewed to ensure that the questionnaire was fit for purpose by the
end of March 2014. The changes which were put in place to reflect the feedback that
included the need to make it easier to complete and a covering letter with clear
instructions was circulated, (Appendix 3). Having acknowledged the advice given by
respondents in the feedback, the questionnaire, which originally consisted of one
document with instructions for each stakeholder category to complete, individual
questionnaires were subsequently produced for each stakeholder category
(Appendices 4-7). The third stage of the research, the follow-up interviews,
(Appendix 8) commenced in April 2014.
3.10 Methods for Presenting the Data
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Once the data from the questionnaires and follow-up interviews was gathered, the
task of its presentation was undertaken by means of an initial table. In order to record
the data, various techniques were used. This is a method advocated by Spiggle,
(1994, p.496) who stated that, “the primary sources describing qualitative research
(Glaser and Strauss 1967; Miles and Huberman 1984; Lincoln and Guba 1985;
Strauss 1987; Wallendorf and Belk 1989; Strauss and Corbin 1990) strongly
encourage the investigator to keep records of the analysis in the form of memos,
journals, charts, or other documents”. Once the information was in place, the table
was interpreted by the author by hand for patterns and meanings. The topic codes
were the approaches from the literature such as CSR, IIP etc. while descriptive codes
included the stakeholder categories. The analytical codes included the organisation,
community and individuals and each response was carefully interpreted by the
author into themes using thematic analysis.
With regard to thematic analysis, Lorelli et al, (2017, p.2) state that, “through its
theoretical freedom, thematic analysis provides a highly flexible approach that can
be modified for the needs of many studies, providing a rich and detailed, yet
complex account of data (Braun and Clarke, 2006; King, 2004). As thematic analysis
does not require the detailed theoretical and technological knowledge of other
qualitative approaches, it offers a more accessible form of analysis, particularly for
those early in their research career (Braun and Clarke, 2006)”. Thematic analysis
enables the author to establish what is interesting about the data. There are also
disadvantages and Nowell et al, (2017, p. 2) continue that, “the disadvantages of
thematic analysis become more apparent when considered in relation to other
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qualitative research methods. The lack of substantial literature on thematic analysis -
compared to that of grounded theory, ethnography, and phenomenology, for example
- may cause novice researchers to feel unsure of how to conduct a rigorous thematic
analysis. A simple thematic analysis is disadvantaged when compared to other
methods, as it does not allow researcher to make claims about language use (Braun
and Clarke, 2006)”.
Braun and Clarke, (2006, p.68) describe that codes, “identify a feature (semantic
content or latent) that appears interesting to the analyst”. For the purposes of this
research, the topic codes were drawn from the theories in the literature such as CSR,
HRA and ROCE, for example and were therefore, “theory-driven”, Braun and
Clarke, (2006, p.68). While, Richards, (2005, p.90) describes descriptive coding as,
“… information about the attributes of these cases, (the person’s gender, the school’s
size and so on)” and it was used to describe the code of the stakeholder category.
Richards continues, (2005, p.91) about topic coding by describing it as, “putting data
where it belongs … “this is about the local schoolteacher … this is about
neighbouring” and is used to describe the literature. For example, this is about CSR
or this is about quality marks. Richards, (2005, p.94) goes on to describe, “analytical
coding”, and all coding is a way of cataloguing or grouping text to create a
framework of thematic notions about it. When the analytical codes of organisational,
community and individual contributions and benefits were collated, “this phase,
which re-focuses the analysis at the broader level of themes, rather than codes,
involves sorting the different codes into potential themes … essentially you are
starting to analyse your codes, and consider how different codes may combine to
form an overarching theme”, Braun and Clarke, (2006, p.68).
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The initial thematic maps from the analytical codes of organisational, community
and individual contributions and benefits may be seen in Tables 4.4, 4.8, 4.12 and
4.16. The author is active in this process of this kind of research and themes do not
emerge as in grounded theory, as advocated by Cameron and Miller, (2010, pp. 7,8).
When all the themes are presented for all the stakeholder categories into an initial
thematic map, then further analysis can be undertaken to create a developed thematic
map as in Table 4.20 as coding always reduces the data. Braun and Clarke, (2006, p.
71) describe this phase as, “… you should have a fairly good idea of what your
different themes are, how they fit together, and the overall story they tell about the
data”. At the end of this process, the final thematic mark, as described by Braun and
Clarke may be found in Table 5.1. Braun and Clarke, (2006, p. 78) conclude that, “as
we have demonstrated, thematic analysis is a flexible approach that can be used
across a range of epistemologies and research questions”. Choosing this method of
analysing the data for this research is supported by Nowell et al, (2017, p. 11) who
concluded that, “highlighting the process of how to conduct a trustworthy thematic
analysis may be a positive contribution to qualitative research as a methodology and
help to the advance the elusive research method: thematic analysis”.
According to Braun and Clarke, (2006, p. 65), “some of the phases of thematic
analysis are similar to the phases of other qualitative research, so these stages are not
necessarily all unique to thematic analysis. The process starts when the analyst
begins to notice, and look for, patterns of meaning and issues of potential interest in
the data – this may be during data collection”. A variety of techniques for data
analysis and interpretation of the qualitative results explore the issues of reliability,
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validity, and research ethics by means of a number of tools that include content and
thematic analyses. This analysis also incorporates topic codes. The topic codes were
the approaches from the literature, such as IIP and CSR, which were associated with
the descriptive code of each stakeholder category and the analytical codes of the
organisation, community and individual stakeholders. The results of the coding then
informed the themes, which were not pre-set. Braun and Clarke, (2006, pp. 99,100
and 101) also state that, “thematic analysis is a method for identifying, analysing and
reporting patterns (themes) within data”. This is well suited to the case study
approach as it is the method used for analysis of both the primary and secondary
data. Triangulation was also used in order to interpret all the stakeholders’ responses
including in the scrutiny of organisational reports which included the use of a
‘content analysis’. Once the primary data was gathered, finally the scrutiny of
organisational documentation to gather any relevant secondary data via a content
analysis was undertaken.
3.10.1 Sources of The SWWales Charity’s Reports
A ‘content analysis’ of reports and written material from the SWWales Charity was
also undertaken. This is advocated by Bryman, (2012, p.289) as, “… an approach to
the analysis of documents and texts (which may be printed or visual) that seeks to
quantify context in terms of predetermined categories and in as a systematic and
replicable manner. It is a very flexible method that can be applied to a variety of
different media”. This was used because its approach to analysis which will consist
of putting the material into categories. Although usually aligned to quantitative
analysis, a content analysis looks for recurring themes and patterns, i.e., ‘are
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stakeholders’ contributions referred to or accounted for, either qualitatively or
quantitatively, in any of the SWWales Charity’s reports?’
All the reports that were investigated were already in the public domain so presented
no issues around confidentiality. They included, for example, Annual Reports,
project reports and The IIP Gold Report and were aligned to each stakeholder
category. For example, the IIP Gold Report 17th October 2013 Scrutiny of this
document was undertaken to establish if there is any evidence of recognition of
intangible contributions by consultants or any publicity of their contribution. These
reports were scrutinised to establish if there was any account of all stakeholders’
voluntary contribution or its benefits. A number of both qualitative and quantitative
reports were scrutinised to evidence any voluntary activity and whether it was
presented as a contribution or benefit. The results of the content analysis may be
found in Table 4.17 on page 263.
3.11 Conclusion
It has been established that a case study approach gains an in-depth study of the
behaviours of all stakeholder categories. The topic codes for the pilot questionnaires,
(Appendix 1) included both tangible questions around time. There were also
qualitative questions that referred back to the approaches, or topics such as CSR etc.,
that were examined in the literature review. The questionnaire was piloted,
(Appendix 2) and a number of changes were made to make it more user friendly.
When the author was satisfied that the questionnaire was able to produce the correct
responses a covering letter to all stakeholders was sent to introduce the research
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(Appendix 3). Each category’s final questionnaire is presented in Appendices 4-7.
Appendix 8 contains the follow-up interview questions. The data that resulted from
the questionnaires, follow-up interviews and content analysis was analysed and
interpreted by the author by hand. A computerised package was not used because it
was important to interpret the data in a way that reflected the words used by the
people themselves. In relation to ways of presenting data, Braun and Clarke, (2006,
pp. 99,100, and 101) presented a model which consisted of, “… an initial thematic
map, (p. 39) a developed thematic map, (p. 40) and final thematic map, (p. 41)”. This
method of presentation is now utilised to interpret the qualitative data in Chapter
Four. Strauss, (1987, pp. 27, 28) also incorporates coding in his work and he
describes, “… the excellence of the research rests in large upon the excellence of the
coding”. The interpretation of the data from the descriptive codes of the four
stakeholder categories, quantified their contribution by showing the code of the time
that they contributed each month, which is the quantitative data.
Richards, (2005, p.85) argues that coding, “refers to data reduction” and is shown in
the final thematic map adapted from Bruan and Clarke, (2006) in Table 5.1.
Richards, (2005, p.85) continues that, “in qualitative research you do usually have to
do some of this sort of data reduction, to store information describing the attributes
of an interviewee”. Richards, (2005, p. 94) also argues for analytic coding by stating
that, “I use the term analytical coding here to refer to coding that comes from
interpretation and reflection on meaning”. In the same way Braun and Clarke, (2006,
p. 56), call it thematic analysis, and describe it as, “a method for identifying,
analysing and reporting patterns (themes) within data”. This method of collecting
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both primary and secondary data, from a number of different sources, will examine
the theory that all stakeholders may voluntarily contribute to the SWWales Charity.
A single case study, using mixed methods fits well with the research question as it is
aligned to the author’s pragmatic epistemological position. Yin, (2012, p.173) states
that, “you should use the data from the multiple sources in converging fashion, to
determine the extent to which the data triangulate over the “facts” of the case.
Quantitative and qualitative data both may be considered potentially important and
relevant”. In order to evaluate the data, Yin continues, (p.175) “… thus, successful
case study evaluators are likely to be diligent investigators who (a) understand the
objectives of the inquiry and can identify relevant evidence even though specific
sources may vary, and (b) thoroughly document the methodological steps taken to
assure an unbiased data collection procedure despite this variation”. Next, the
findings from the case study are presented in Chapter Four.
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Chapter Four
Presentation of the Findings from the Case Study
4.0 Introduction
The author adopted a pragmatic epistemological approach which is suited to a case
study and this chapter presents the findings. Case studies enable the collecting of
primary data and its critical evaluation through questionnaires, (Appendices 4-7) and
follow-up interviews, (Appendix 8). The collection of secondary data included the
scrutiny of organisational documents and a content analysis, (Table 4.17) to search
for patterns and meanings is also applied. The authors who were utilised for
presenting the data include Strauss, (1987), Guba, (1990), Braun and Wilkinson,
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(2003), Leahy, (2004), Richards, (2005), Braun and Clarke, (2006) and Beazley,
(2009). They all advocate ways of analysing, interpreting and presenting findings.
All data was collected in a relevant way to explain the research aim which is,
‘to identify and report on the benefits of the tangible and intangible
voluntary contributions made by all stakeholders of a third sector
organisation – a case study of a SWWales charity’.
All the data was gathered from all four stakeholder categories, to explore the notion
that the organisation may not currently be fully accounting for all the voluntary
contributions of all its stakeholders. The following interprets the data using,
Richards’, (2005, p. 90) work, which introduces, “descriptive coding” and this was
used to code the stakeholder categories of consultants, traditional volunteers, paid
employees and board members. “Topic coding”, according to Richards, (2005, p.91)
was used to link the data back to the literature and includes CSR, quality marks,
HRA and ROCE, for example. In order to further analyse the data, Richards, (2005,
p.94) describes, “analytical coding”, and all coding is a way of cataloguing or
grouping text to create a framework of thematic notions about it and the analytical
codes of organisational, community and individual contributions and benefits were
applied for ease of presentation.
Braun and Clarke, (2006, p.69) describe, “this phase, which re-focuses the analysis
at the broader level of themes, rather than codes, involves sorting the different codes
into potential themes … essentially you are starting to analyse your codes, and
consider how different codes may combine to form an overarching theme”.
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Therefore, the data was analysed by means of descriptive coding for the stakeholder
categories, topic coding for the literature and analytical coding for the organisation,
community and individuals. This provides a framework on which to undertake the
initial themes. All four stakeholder categories are analysed in this way, but first the
data from the responses of the consultants is analysed.
4.1 The Data from the Responses of the Consultants
In order to present the data gathered from the descriptive codes of consultants, this
section compares data using thematic analysis by means of the topic codes of CSR
and quality marks. Table 4.1 frames the analytical codes of the organisation,
community and individuals and is a summary of the qualitative themes. Table 4.2
presents an analysis of the quantitative theme of time for the consultants. Table 4.3 is
the themes from the follow up interviews and Table 4.4 presents all the results by
means of thematic analysis using an initial thematic map as advocated by Braun and
Clarke, (2006).
Four consultants agreed to be part of this research. One respondent had recently
become a consultant after a number of years in industry and another had been a
consultant and an author in the voluntary sector for almost 40 years. One is a
national trainer for IIP and the other an IIP assessor and verifier. Between them they
had a significant number of years of experience in the third sector and willingly
came forward to take part in the research. They provided a great deal of useable data
by means of the time that they provided free and gratis on a monthly basis. They also
provided a large amount of anecdotal evidence of the unpaid time that they provided
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that enabled the organisation to meet its obligations to achieving and maintaining
both CSR and quality marks.
The consultants’ involvement with the SWWales Charity ranged from assisting with
the maintenance of CSR and quality marks to being a, ‘critical friend’ provided by
the WCVA to ensure compliance with grant applications. The themes from their
responses included assisting, improving, supporting, accreditation, specialist, help
and being a critical friend. The thematic analysis highlighted that they said that they
helped with relationship building and familiarisation with the organisation, as well as
helping the organisation to achieve and maintain quality marks. The cost to the
organisation of buying in the consultants is a relatively high monetary value that is
currently presented in the organisation’s annual reports. However, the benefits to the
organisation of achieving CSR and quality marks by the voluntary contributions of
the consultants cannot currently be given a tangible value and it is therefore not
being reported on. It was interesting to follow-up this notion by questions to
establish how the consultants saw their roles within the organisation. They said that
they were seen as, ‘the professionals’, ‘who were not afraid to criticise, if needed’
and that they, ‘transferred their skills’ in order to comply with CSR and achieve
quality marks. The topic codes of CSR and quality marks for the consultants are now
examined. The following are the responses to the questionnaire for the consultants,
(Appendix 4) and CSR is examined first.
Topic Code – Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR)
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CSR demonstrates an organisation’s relationship with the community in which it is
based and responses to the question around CSR included the themes of policy, top
down legislation, carbon footprint and that consultants must retain a critical aspect.
Most said that they had no choice but to do it to meet the standard to deliver quality
services. The benefits of volunteering their expertise were that it, ‘saves money’ but
that it also, ‘lets the government off the hook’ by them not having to pay for the
consultants expertise. There is evidence that,
‘… if the organisation is being provided with free expertise from the
consultants then it will lever in more funding’.
Yet, there is no current way of showing this because the free expertise that the
organisation gains is not currently being reported on anywhere. Most said that there
is a cost of time and money to achieve the aims set out in the CSR policy. But they
said that voluntarily contributing to it, ‘gives no choice because the organisation
must do it’ in order to comply. Yet, by voluntarily contributing, the benefit is to both
the consultants themselves through their enhanced reputations as well as compliance
to the regulators by the organisation. This in turn benefits the community by quality
services being provided through its relationship with the organisation. The benefit of
good CSR is imposed by the legislation, but through its imposition there is the
benefit of recognisable standards to the organisation, the community and the
consultants themselves.
When asked what the consultants thought was the benefit of good CSR, one quoted
from the Welsh Government’s policy on sustainability. While another said that it,
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‘would be unthinkable that the way in which it operates is not with social
responsibility for its environment; CSR must remain a critical aspect of the
organisation’s approach’.
The same respondent said that they thought that the organisation is supported by
their voluntary contributions around CSR, and another said that, ‘fortunately my
time is funded by WG’ so they didn’t provide any voluntary contributions to the
maintenance of CSR. The same respondent did, however indicate that they actually
contributed a number of hours, free of charge, to the organisation by helping to
achieve quality marks. While another said that their voluntary time,
‘… lets the government off the hook by relieving THEM of the responsibility
to act responsibly (i.e., it is not all positive)’.
This suggested that they thought that they had no choice but to contribute voluntarily
to the organisation in order that it complied. A follow-up interview question,
(Appendix 8) resulted in the consultant saying that even though he had said it, he did
not feel coerced into his voluntary activity. All agreed that CSR is, ‘very important’
and the themes included: measure, comparison, benchmark and support as well as
policy, top down legislation, carbon footprint and that it must remain a critical
aspect, that there is no choice but to comply and standards. The benefits of good
CSR were that it saves money and provides evidence to lever in more funding. Yet,
there is currently no way of measuring the benefits of the consultants voluntarily
contributing to CSR.
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In support of this, most respondents said that they thought that their voluntary
contribution should be measured because, ‘if we don’t measure then we can’t
improve’ the services that are provided. Most of the others said, ‘... no’ to it being
measured but one responded with, ‘my level of support is very small and is ancillary
to my paid work’.
While in agreement with this, another responded with the fact that the SWWales
Charity is already a, ‘sophisticated, well-run organisation. So any benefit is
marginal’. This small, marginal amount of support, however could be shown to yield
a significant annual contribution. The themes from the responses around CSR also
included: measure, comparison, benchmark, support, important, great and
recognition. Yet, while they all thought that it is important to demonstrate their
contributions, they could not put a monetary value on it but suggested that the value
may be, ‘potentially hundreds of thousands of pounds by an organisation’. It is
suggested that potentially hundreds of thousands of pounds go unmeasured at
present. Without these important contributions the organisation may not survive and
the community would not have access to services. The consultants themselves may
not feel valued.
With regard to measuring their contributions, most respondents agreed that the
organisation would be less successful if it is not for their voluntary contributions
even though it is, ‘only a small contribution so far’. Another commented that,
‘it might not be cost effective to measure my negligible contribution’.
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The same respondent continued,
‘but in principle I think it is extremely important to be able to demonstrate
the value of volunteering (both to the receiving organisation and to the
volunteers) to offset society’s obsession with evaluating everything in purely
financial terms’.
The response to further probing at their follow-up interview around measuring the
impact of their contribution is,
‘I don’t know. It is too early to say. But of course it would be great to have
that kind of impact. Then the value would include making me feel good about
myself’.
The themes were: contribution, volunteering, value, impact and self-gratification.
On the subject of whether the organisation would be less successful if not for the
voluntary contributions of consultants, most agreed that it would be less successful.
One respondent is adamant that,
‘you cannot put monetary values on the way people feel about their places of
work, their lives and their communities and the impact that has on everyone
else (not unless you’re stupid, anyway!)’.
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In a subsequent telephone conversation, this consultant agreed to a follow-up
interview to clarify some of the interesting issues raised. They responded that it is
their choice and that they were not made to do it. Another said that their work,
‘... will be over and above agreed time on goodwill basis and added value
should be recognised for good of both the organisation and those
contributing’.
Recognising or measuring their goodwill is crucial because they thought that the
organisation would be less successful, if not for their voluntary contributions. This is
important as one replied that theirs is a, ‘specialist area of work so I bring experience
and expertise to the processes’ even though their voluntary contributions go
unmeasured. The themes were; important, great and recognition. All respondents
agreed that a measure is needed and that although their support is small, it could
potentially equate to hundreds of thousands of pounds across the sector. The
following examines the responses made by the consultants on the topic code of
quality marks.
Topic Code – Quality Marks
Quality marks are a way of demonstrating that an organisation has reached a pre-
determined standard and the quality mark of IIP is interested in sustainability
through the continuous improvement of organisations through its people. Two of the
respondents said that they were involved in the maintenance of quality marks and
said that they volunteered time that they were not paid for during IIP assessments.
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They said that they did it because they thought that their contributions benefitted the
SWWales Charity as well as themselves. One consultant said that he is highly
interested in the organisation,
‘attending meetings and events in my free time allows me to build a
relationship with the team which supports the ongoing Quality Management
System, (QMS) activities’.
They said that this enables them to ensure that standards are met. The themes
included their immersion in the organisation as well as the transfer of their skills and
relationship building, which were themes that were aligned to the consultants’
individual values. There is a cost to the organisation of hiring consultants, but the
benefit of them voluntarily contributing their time to the organisation that is not
being reported on as was found in the content analysis in Table 4.17.
Their responses around their involvement in quality marks included that even though
they contributed their time freely to the organisation, it also gave the benefit of
enhancing their own reputations. Their individual values were aligned to those of the
organisation and that they also helped the, ‘credibility of the organisation’ through
relationship building and familiarisation. The themes also included: support,
reputation, individual values, partnership, credibility, assurance and confidence. The
responses included there being a benefit to themselves of credibility as well as the
organisation but there is no current way of giving this contribution a tangible value.
Nor can there be a monetary value put on the amount of voluntary effort to get
through an IIP review, for example. The consultants said that they impart their
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experiences, while benefitting from enhancing their reputations that also benefits the
organisation in the community. This was investigated later in the follow-up interview
questions in Appendix 8 and all said that they all had some degree of self-
gratification from their voluntary contributions. The overall benefit is seen to be the
achievement of the standard as a benchmark against other organisations and although
some authors view quality marks as just a badge or plaque, it was found that a
significant amount of voluntary contributions are being ignored in its achievement. It
is essential to now have some way of measuring the amount of time and effort that is
regularly contributed voluntarily by consultants. Below is a summary of the themes,
which were not pre-set, that formed the basis of the follow-up interview questions:
4.1.1 A Summary of the Thematic Analysis for the Consultants
There were three analytical codes in the data from the questionnaires that included
organisational benefit of survival, community benefit of better services as well as the
individual benefit of self-gratification. First, the organisational benefit is examined in
detail:
Organisational Benefit: This included knowledge transfer, immersion, recognisable
standards, compliance and achievement. The individual benefits associated with
quality marks benefitted the consultants themselves, as well as the organisation
through support, reputation, individual values, partnership, credibility, assurance and
confidence. They said that it saved money, lets governments off the hook, and
providing evidence that the organisation is doing it should lever in funding. CSR is
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of benefit to both the consultants themselves as well as to the organisation.
Recognisable standards also benefitted the organisation, services in the community
and the consultants themselves. They enable the organisation to measure, compare,
benchmark, recognise and support as well as adhering to policy, top down
legislation, carbon footprint and that it must remain a critical aspect. Also, that there
is no choice but to comply with the standards. The organisation is supported by
consultants’ voluntary contributions who gained self-gratification from their
voluntary contributions and it is agreed that some way of giving this benefit a
tangible value is needed. They also suggested that volunteering made a vast
contribution annually. The consultants also said that giving free time had some
definite benefit to themselves but greatly to the organisation and the community.
They said that it is important to be able to demonstrate the benefit of volunteering;
both to the receiving organisation and to the volunteers and that it would be great to
show this kind of impact. It is important to note they thought that the organisation
may not be able to survive without their voluntary contributions. Theme:
Organisational Survival.
Community Benefit: Voluntarily contributing to CSR and quality marks led to the
delivery of quality services that benefitted the community. It was found that without
the compliance that is enabled by the voluntary contributions of the consultants the
organisation may not be able to deliver services in the same way. Theme: better
Community Services.
Individual Benefit: It is suggested that relationship building through CSR and
quality marks are of benefit to the consultants themselves, while familiarisation with
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the organisation, helped it to maintain CSR and achieve quality marks. Consultants
said that they enhanced their reputations through their voluntary contributions. This
led to them gaining self-gratification. Giving free time benefitted the organisation
and the community, but they all said that there is some definite benefit back to them.
Responses included, ‘If it could be given a value, then the value would include
making me feel good about myself’. Theme: Individual Self-gratification.
The themes from the consultants’ qualitative responses are presented below in Table
4.1:
Table 4.1The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Consultants:
Consultants Qualitative organisational
benefit Survival
Qualitative community benefit
Services
Qualitative individual benefit Self-gratification
In summary of the themes, there is a threefold benefit to the organisation of survival,
quality community services and the self-gratification of the consultants themselves.
There is a high monetary cost by buying in consultants but the benefits to the
organisation of achieving quality marks and CSR but their voluntary contributions to
their maintenance cannot presently be given a tangible value. However, most played
down the time that they voluntarily contributed each month by saying that it was,
‘negligible’. Even though they thought it was negligible the annual amount of
tangible time was converted into a significant £24,681.60, (Table 4.2). This figure
was calculated by the number of hours that said that they voluntarily contributed to
the organisation per month.
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Two respondents said that they contributed 20 hours of time per month that they
were not paid for. Both of the other respondents said that they did not contribute any
time that they were not paid for. Total 40 hours.
Topic Coding – CSR. None of the consultants said that they contributed any
voluntary hours to comply with CSR even though they gave many examples of how
they helped the organisation to achieve it. Total 0 hours.
Topic Coding – Quality marks. Total 40 hours.
Total contribution = 40 hours per month, which is 2 consultants x 20 hours
each.
Theme – Time: the total hours per month were divided by the four respondents
which gave 10 hours per month, on average, per respondent. The method of
calculating the hourly rate is; £360 per day divided by 7 hours is £51.42 per person
per hour, which is then multiplied by 10, the number of hours per respondent which
gave - £51.42 x 10 = £541.20. This is then multiplied by 12 months for annual
reporting purposes which came to £6,494.40. This is multiplied by 4 for the number
of respondents which gave a grand total of £24,681.60 per annum. The quantitative
results of the voluntary time contributed by the consultants are presented in Table
4.2, below:
Table 4.2The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed by the
Consultants.Total hours per month 40
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Divided by number of respondents 40 divided by 4Average number of hours per respondent per month
10 average hours per respondent
Method of calculating hourly rate £360 per day divided by 7 hours is £51.42 per person per hour
X no. of hours per month per respondent
£51.42 x 10 = £514.20
X 12 months £6,170.40X number of respondents £6,170.40 x 4Total £24,681.60
The consultants said that they gave some small support, through their voluntary
contributions. They said that it could be of great benefit, to the organisation and
themselves if their voluntary contributions were reported on properly. As can be seen
from the quantitative results, the consultants’ said they contribute a relatively small
amount of time. Converting that time into money gives it a significant value that
could be reported on. In order to relate the data with the literature, the authors who
have written about quality marks include Drucker, (2000), Heskett, (2002) as well as
Hoque and Bacon, (2008). Whilst Driscol, et al, (2004), are amongst others wrote
about CSR. However, the approaches from the literature around CSR and quality
marks provided no evidence to support the voluntary contributions of all
stakeholders in one approach. In order to gather more data as evidence of the
consultants’ voluntary contributions, follow-up interviews were undertaken.
All four of the consultants said that they gave their time, free of charge, to the
organisation. They also indicated that there were be benefits back to them as a result
of their voluntary contributions. They were clearly passionate about the organisation
and wanted to help it to survive and continue the work that it undertakes in the
community to provide quality services. They said that they spend free time
promoting what the organisation does with other organisations that they support,
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which gives them the individual benefit of self-gratification, for example. This is the
author’s interpretation and summary of the data from the questionnaires. Probing
deeper into the responses was essential to provide more rich data by means of
follow-up interviews. Data was gained by using questions around the benefit of the
consultants’ contributions, the resulting recognition and the benefit to the
community:
Organisational Benefit: On the benefit of their intangible contributions, responses
from one consultant included that that they invoiced the organisation for much of
their time. However, they all thought that contributing their gift of volunteering some
hours is an integral part of their role and that they had a pretty good idea of its value.
Another said,
‘I would still contribute over and above to the organisation what I am paid
for’.
When asked why, they responded,
‘... because I believe in and am passionate about what people are trying to
achieve and I like to give something back to the third sector, I have a social
conscience and enjoy improving things’.
This was probed even deeper and the response to why they voluntarily contributed to
the SWWales Charity in particular is,
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‘… no particular reason for the SWWales Charity, I do it for others’.
The themes throughout their responses were individual benefits and gifting
something back. Theme: The Gift to the organisation of free consultancy.
Community Benefit: On the topic of how their individual recognition and
reputation had been enhanced by their involvement with the SWWales Charity,
responses were,
‘yes, I am sure it has, particularly if I am given the opportunity to work with
other third sector organisations’.
While the other said that it is, ‘too soon to judge’. One of the respondents is very
familiar with the organisation and had worked with it for at least twelve years, while
the other is relatively new and had only been involved for about six months. This had
a direct bearing on their responses and the themes for the one associated for the
longest included the fact that it had helped them transfer their skills to other similar
organisations in the third sector.
Whereas, the more recent consultant said that their previous skills lay in the
commercial sector. Even though they had given freely to the third sector organisation
which had a direct benefit to them, there is also a great deal of payback of more paid
employment as a result of their enhanced reputations in the community. This led to
the opportunity of better services that help to regenerate the community. Theme:
Community Opportunity.
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Individual Benefit: One respondent, in support of the benefit to community
members, answered, ‘although most of my work with The SWWales Charity is
behind the scenes in relation to people management etc., there is evidence which
indicates that commitment-based HR policies and processes coupled with strong
leadership result in improved performance of employees and volunteers which
inevitably impacts on the organisation's community work’. While another said,
‘in relation to Communities First I have brought my wider knowledge in
relation to poverty and the community for the bigger picture. It is where we
need to be going strategically as well as operationally in the community and
horizon scanning for future forward trends’.
Again, knowledge transfer and leadership were the themes, as well as looking to the
future for trends that would help the organisation to adapt through up-skilling its
people. It is also acknowledged that employees and volunteers benefit from
improved performance as a result of the consultants’ voluntary contributions, which
leads to the organisation being able to deliver quality services in the community. The
consultants also gained additional skills that improved their own performance.
Theme: Improved Performance.
The themes from the follow-up interviews are presented in Table 4.3, below:
Table 4.3The Follow-up Interview Themes for the Consultants.
Quantitative£24,681.60
Qualitative organisational
Qualitative community benefit
Qualitative individual benefit
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benefit Gift
Opportunity Improved performance
The results in Table 4.3, above demonstrate that as a result of the interpretation of
the themes for the follow-up interviews; the consultants gifted their time to the
organisation, the community had more opportunities as a result of this and the
consultants themselves had the return of improved performance as a return on their
voluntary contributions. The following combines the interpretation of the qualitative
data and the follow-up interviews. It also includes the quantitative data of the time
contributed by the consultants. Table 4.4, below, presents the initial thematic map as
advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006 p.99) for the Consultants:
Table 4.4The Initial Thematic Map as advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006 p.99) for
the Consultants.Quantitative £24,681.60
Qualitative organisational
benefit Survival and gift
Qualitative community benefit
Services and opportunity
Qualitative individual benefit Self-gratification
and improved performance
Table 4.4 demonstrates that as a result of the interpretation of all the data, the
consultants contributed £24,681.60 per annum and the organisation is able to survive
as a result of their gift of time. The community enjoys better services and more
opportunities while the consultants themselves have the benefit of their self-
gratification for giving their time free of charge which results in their personal
improved performance. The next section presents the data gathered from the
organisation’s traditional volunteers.
4.2 The Data from the Responses of the Traditional Volunteers
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In order to present the data gathered from the descriptive codes of traditional
volunteers, this section compares data using thematic analysis by means of the topic
codes of CSR, quality marks, Social Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution
of the Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering, and The Volunteering Investment and
Value Audit, (VIVA). Table 4.5 frames the analytical codes of the organisation,
community and individuals and presents the qualitative themes. Table 4.6 presents
an analysis of the quantitative theme of time for the traditional volunteers. Table 4.7
is the themes from the follow up interviews and Table 4.8 presents all the results by
means of thematic analysis using an initial thematic map as advocated by Braun and
Clarke, (2006).
There was a cross section of traditional volunteers throughout the organisation.
Between them they had a significant number of years of experience in the third
sector and willingly came forward to take part in the research. They provided a great
deal of useable data by means of the time that they provided free and gratis on a
monthly basis. They also provided a large amount of anecdotal evidence of the
unpaid time that they provided that enabled the organisation to meet its obligations.
The traditional volunteers’ said that their involvement with the SWWales Charity is
on a number of levels. Some helped paid employees to deliver courses during busy
periods and others included those who volunteered in the garden and food
cooperative project. There is a volunteer hair and beauty supporter, a business and
administration voluntary supporter, a job search volunteer and a voluntary café
worker. The age range is from 16 – 63 years of age. All were unemployed or
economically inactive and all contributed with enthusiasm. The following are the
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responses to the questionnaire for the traditional volunteers, (Appendix 5) and CSR
is examined first.
Topic Code – CSR
None of the six respondents answered the question around the topic coding of
Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR). In relation to how they were involved in
safeguarding the SWWales Charity’s environment, again, no one answered. This is
because some of the traditional volunteers have literacy and numeracy issues.
Although when asked in a more basic way if it benefited the organisation they gave
examples of how the organisation had taught them gardening which now produces
food, as well as homes for the wildlife. The themes were individual and community
benefit. The other two reiterated that any benefit they receive is passed on to others
in the community. The other two provided a response to the question on its benefits.
One said that they were grateful of the help that the organisation had given them and
the other, also gave examples of protecting the wildlife of the community. All six
respondents thought that the organisation is supported by their voluntary
contributions and were asked if they benefited individually in the follow-up
interviews, (see Appendix 8).
One respondent mentioned their support for learners and two others referred to the
fact that,
‘... without my contribution as a volunteer, it would be more difficult to
stretch employee resources’.
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While another stated that their voluntary contributions benefit both employees and
customers. All six agreed that their voluntary activity should be acknowledged. This
was also followed up in the content analysis of organisational reports in Table 4.17
to see if any of their activity is being acknowledged. When asked why they
contributed they responded with the themes, of the hard work that they provide,
recognition and appreciation. One said that they did it only,
‘to know that it is appreciated and that it is beneficial to the company’.
Other themes included self-benefit as well as organisational benefit. Two
respondents said that what they provided is, ‘hard’ work.
Two did not respond to the question around why they did it and two said that they
had been invited to a recognition event as thanks for their endeavours. Only one
respondent stated that the organisation would have been less successful if it was not
for their voluntary contributions. This may be because the others thought that what
they contributed is a relatively small amount. However, as well as the consultants the
relatively small amount of time voluntary contributed by the traditional volunteers
resulted in a substantial total of £43,302.88, (Table 4.6). They also said that there
were community and organisational benefits that resulted from their actions. Themes
included the fact that this is agreed with by the respondents who stated that if they
did not do it then the community would miss out. One respondent did not respond
while three alluded to the employees being more stretched and that their individual
experience is essential. Also that their help is needed because one stated that,
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‘... sometimes employees cannot spend enough time with individuals and my
experience is essential in various areas’.
This is CSR and was also a follow-up interview question, which is around the
amount of time involved in achieving quality marks that is being regularly
contributed by the traditional volunteers.
Topic Code – Quality Marks
All of the traditional volunteers provided a regular service for the community by
helping in the café, the community garden and by giving,
‘quality time to people who have not used computers or systems before’.
Which helped the organisation to achieve quality marks.
The community and organisational benefit themes were that they thought that their
help is appreciated which benefitted them. This is important because the consultants
also said that there were benefits to themselves through their voluntary contributions
to the organisation in order to achieve quality marks. Four of the six respondents on
the question about the value of quality marks did not respond, one only replied, ‘…
yes they were valuable’. Another mentioned being involved in the standard and
another said,
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‘yes, I definitely think it emphasises how good an organisation the SWWales
Charity is within the community’.
The themes included standards and the fact that all respondents thought that it is a
good organisation to be individually associated with as well as that it gave
community benefits by it being recognised as doing, ‘good’. This is linked to the
organisation’s relationship with the community through social capital.
Topic Code – Social Capital
The benefit of the traditional volunteers’ contributions has been found to be
significant. Terms of grants, such as those with volunteering outcomes would not be
complied with if there were no voluntary contributions. This is also a clause in social
value contracts. Social capital impacts on the Contribution of the Third Sector
because it match funds its grants by voluntary contributions, using the WCVA’s
method of calculating time and converting it into money. This is acceptable by
WEFO but can only be used for up to 20% of the grant total, which is of great help
to the organisation. With regard to whether peoples’ voluntary contributions
benefitted the organisation, three did not respond. Of those that did, their responses
included, one saying ‘… yes’, one said, ‘not at present’ and another responding with,
‘I do other work in the community as well which is not directly linked to the
SWWales Charity’.
The themes from all the respondents to the social capital question also included that
it had community and organisational benefit. Themes included one of the
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respondents saying that they are involved in one of the organisation’s major projects,
which helps the organisation achieve its outcomes aligned to the performance
measures, (KPIs) in its business plan. Yet, this crucial contribution is not
acknowledged in the organisation’s reports, even though it would be difficult to
achieve outcomes without the voluntary contributions of the traditional volunteers.
Another topic that relies on voluntary contributions through technology is mass
collaboration.
Topic Code – Mass Collaboration
The next topic coding is mass collaboration. The respondents were asked whether
they thought that there is a benefit to people volunteering their help in the
organisation’s community activities. Responses included all six saying that they had
been involved in community events while another respondent said that it is a chance
to meet new people and learn new skills. The themes here were; familiarity,
community benefit and individual benefit. Attending events in the community is a
way of being part of the organisation with the benefit of some recognition back to
them. One respondent said that they support the community and another said that
they had met new people and learned IT new skills. This is an individual benefit to
them that is then cascaded back to the community. While another simply replied,
‘yes’. There is also found to be a benefit of mass collaboration for themselves, the
organisation and the community. Only one of the six said that they attended formal
meetings, but they had all attended at least one AGM.
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All the respondents said that they voluntarily contribute because they live in a
deprived community and that the benefit is to everyone. Also that it creates a better
community and brings people together which is cohesion. One respondent said that
they do it,
‘not only for the deprived community but for individual satisfaction and
development’.
The themes were that they said that they all did it for the benefit of the community,
while another two mentioned that people should work together. Increased social
capital during austere times is supported by the fact that during a recession, when
paid work is scarce, people may have more time to volunteer and contribute to third
sector organisations.
Topic Code – The Contribution of the Third Sector
The next topic coding is around the contribution of traditional volunteers to the third
sector. All six respondents left the question on the number of hours they contributed
informally blank. This could be because they see themselves as not being informal
volunteers because they have a volunteer contract. There were plenty of responses to
the benefits of this to the organisation, even though they said that they did not do it.
The themes included raising the awareness of community services, volunteering
opportunities, support for workshop mentors and others of the SWWales Charity’s
volunteers. One responded by saying that they did it to,
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‘give other people time to concentrate on one to one time etc.’
They all said that this enabled community benefits, individual benefits as well as
benefits to the organisation. This has a value to the organisation and they were asked
if they knew the value of their volunteer time. Three did not respond but the
responses of those that did included, organisational support, knowledge transfer,
individual benefit as well as community benefit. They did, however, think that their
voluntary contributions benefitted the organisation by more people using its services
because they know the people who are volunteering, (recognition and appreciation).
Yet there is no current way of measuring the benefits that the volunteers provide to
the organisation, the community or themselves. There is a Volunteering Investment
and Value Audit, (VIVA) that is used to account for the voluntary contributions of
traditional volunteers, but it is suggested that does not give a complete picture
because it does not measure the threefold benefit to the organisation, the community
and the volunteers themselves. It only accounts for volunteer time.
Topic Code – Volunteering Investment and Value Audit
The subject of the next topic coding is VIVA. The respondents were all asked about
the benefits of volunteering. A typical response is that,
‘I am more skilled to pass on my knowledge to other learners’.
The themes from all the respondents were knowledge transfer, community benefit,
and individual benefit. One respondent said that he just turned up while another said
that they passed on their knowledge to others for community benefit. Another
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respondent is concerned with their own individual development and satisfaction as
well as transferring those skills to other people for community benefit. The responses
to the benefits of the increased knowledge of the traditional volunteers included them
transferring their new knowledge on to others in the community and other
organisations. They also said that it enabled them to gain confidence. The analytic
codes were knowledge transfer, community and individual benefit. They all
highlighted that what they learn through volunteering is then confidently passed on
to other people. This is admirable because not only they benefit by acting in such an
altruistic way, others in the community do too. The respondents benefitted
individually because they enjoyed giving something back to the organisation in the
community as well. The following is a summary of the thematic analysis for the
traditional volunteers.
4.2.1 A Summary of the Thematic Analysis for the Traditional Volunteers
There were three analytical codes in the data from the questionnaires that included
organisational benefit of increased outcomes from their support. The community
benefitted from cohesion through the transfer of skills as well as the individual
benefit of a feeling of belonging. First the organisational benefit is examined in more
detail:
Organisational Benefit: Contributions from the traditional volunteers included
compliance with grants, support for, ‘stretched’ paid employees, as well as their
voluntary contributions being used for match funding. The traditional volunteers
raised the awareness of community services, volunteering opportunities and gave
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support to the workshop mentors. Volunteering helped the organisation achieve its
outcomes aligned to its performance measures as well as self-benefit and
recognition. The organisation had high standards and the fact that it is a good
organisation to be individually associated with is one of the themes. What they
provide is, ‘hard’ work and the fact that it is a good organisation to be individually
associated with. Also, that it is good to know that it is appreciated and benefits the
organisation as well as it benefitted the paid employees and the community. The
SWWales Charity had the outcome of many things including compliance. Theme:
Organisational Outcomes.
Community Benefit: One respondent highlighted the benefits not only to the
community but individually as well through their own personal satisfaction and
development. They said, ‘I am more skilled to pass on my knowledge to other
learners’. The benefit is to everyone and that it created a better community and
brought all stakeholders together which is cohesion. They said that any benefit they
receive is passed on to others in the community. Most said that they are supporting
the community and standards through their voluntary contributions. The organisation
is at a good standard through knowledge transfer and familiarisation. They said that
they had met new people and learned IT new skills. However, they did say that it
was unable to provide services if the organisation did not comply with the regulators.
They also stated that if they did not do it then the community would miss out. They
thought that it benefitted the organisation by more people using its services because
the community knows the people who are volunteering there, (recognition). This is
an individual benefit to them that is then cascaded back to the community and other
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organisations, ‘not only for the deprived community but for my individual
satisfaction and development’. Theme: Community Cohesion.
Individual Benefit: The individual benefits included recognition, raising awareness
of services, volunteering opportunities, support for workshop mentors and other the
SWWales Charity’s traditional volunteers. Respondents said that they liked
belonging to the organisation with some recognition for themselves as well as
meeting other people, ‘without my contribution as a volunteer, it would be more
difficult to stretch employees’ resources’. One said that they,
‘met new people and learned new skills by liaising with other volunteers.
New skills, meeting people, gaining confidence, development, individual
satisfaction, help, being needed and that conservation is of great value’.
They all said that they received recognition and appreciation through their hard
work. The organisation had taught them how to garden which now produces food, as
well as homes for the wildlife. Their support for learners has a double benefit. The
respondents that stated that if they did not do it, then the community would miss out.
They had the opportunity to meet new people and learn new skills. Employees were
being more stretched in these austere times and that their experience is essential.
They also felt that their help is needed and relied upon, which gives them a feeling of
familiarity and belonging. Theme: Individual Belonging.
The themes from the qualitative data from the questionnaires for the traditional
volunteers are presented below in Table 4.5:
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Table 4.5The Themes from Questionnaires for the Traditional Volunteers.
Traditional Volunteers
Qualitative organisational
benefit Outcomes
Qualitative community benefit
Cohesion
Qualitative individual benefit
Belonging
In summary of the initial themes, there was found to be a three way benefit to the
organisation of increased outcomes, community cohesion and the traditional
volunteers themselves gained a feeling of belonging. This is the interpretation of the
qualitative value of their voluntary contributions. Their tangible contribution is
calculated by the number of hours that the traditional volunteers said that they
contributed monthly. This is presented below in the quantitative tangible
contribution of time provided voluntarily by traditional volunteers:
Topic coding – CSR: Are you involved in ensuring that our natural
environment is safeguarded, if so how many hours? Two said 20 hours, three said
0 and one did not respond. Total 40 hours.
Topic coding - Quality Marks: One respondent said that they contributed 6 unpaid
hours per month, one said 10 hours, one said 20 hours and three said 30+ hours.
Total 126 hours.
Topic coding - Social capital: How do you contribute to social/community
benefit? One said 10 hours, two said 20 hours and two said 30+ hours. One said 0.
Total 110 hours.
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Topic coding - Mass collaboration: How many hours are you involved in
partnership working/meetings? Five said, 0 while one said 6 hours. Total 6
hours.
Topic coding - Contribution of the third sector: How many hours do you
contribute informally? One said 6 hours, three said 20 hours and one did not
respond. Total 66 hours.
Topic coding - Payback on volunteering: Are you involved in learning? If so,
how many hours? Two said 20 hours per month, two said 0, one did not respond
and one said that they had, ‘previously supported a course’. Total 40 hours.
Total contribution per month = 348 hours.
Theme: Time - the total of 348 hours per month were divided by 6 respondents
which gave 348 hours per month, on average, per respondent. 348 is divided by the
number of 6 respondents which gave 58 average hours per respondent. The method
of calculating the hourly rate utilised WEFO’s guidance for in kind match funding @
an administrators’ rate of £10.13 per hour x 58 = £587.54, which is then multiplied
by 12 for annual reporting purposes gave £7,050.48, multiplied by the number of
hours per respondent which gave - £7,050.48 x 6 giving a grand total of £43,302.88.
The quantitative results of the time contributed by the traditional volunteers are
presented in Table 4.6, below:
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Table 4.6The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed by the
Traditional Volunteers.Total hours per month 348Divided by number of respondents 348 divided by 6Average number of hours per respondent per month
58 average hours per respondent
Method of calculating hourly rate WEFO’s guidance for in kind match funding @ administrators’ rate of £10.13 per hour
X no. of hours per month per respondent
£10.13 x 58 = £587.54
X 12 months £7,050.48X number of respondents £7,050.48 x 6
Total £43,302.88
In order to relate to the literature around CSR, quality marks, Social Capital, Mass
Collaboration, The Contribution of the Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering, and
The Volunteering Investment and Value Audit, (VIVA) are advocated by Hof,
(2005, p.1). Hof, for example, called mass collaboration, “the power of us” and
Kane, (2014, p.2) describes a new way of measuring the contribution of volunteering
to GDP. In order to gather more in-depth data, follow-up interviews were also
undertaken with the traditional volunteers.
The follow-up interview questions were around the benefit to the organisation of
their voluntary contributions, their increased personal satisfaction and the benefit to
others of them transferring their skills. Six traditional volunteers said that they
volunteered time to the organisation. They also indicated that there may be benefits
back to the community as well as themselves as a result of their voluntary
contributions. They were clearly passionate about the organisation and wanted
voluntarily involvement by their contributions and continue the work that it
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undertakes in the community through providing their knowledge. They said that they
time promoting what the organisation does in the community, which gives them the
individual benefit of confidence and self-assurance, for example. First the
organisational benefits of traditional voluntary contributions are presented:
Organisational Benefit: It is interesting that the six traditional volunteers said that
they were involved by contributing their time, free of charge, to the organisation.
The questions for the follow-up interviews evidently need to investigate the reasons
for why they do it because they were clearly passionate about volunteering in the
organisation. Responses on whether there is any benefit to the organisation of their
support for the paid employees included, ‘I am already doing it’ and, ‘yes, certainly’.
This input has a definite benefit but it is not being measured anywhere currently.
Theme: Voluntary Involvement in the organisation.
Community Benefit: The traditional volunteers said that they spend free time
promoting what the organisation does for other community members that they have
contact with. The community members themselves benefit from the free courses that
the organisation provides and the knowledge transfer of the traditional volunteers
who help the paid employees to deliver some courses. This means that without their
voluntary contributions, some of the courses may not be able to run, so it is vital that
the traditional volunteers’ knowledge is acknowledged and accounted for. Otherwise
there would be a definite cost to the organisation of buying in more staff, which can
be measured. Theme: Knowledge Transfer.
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Individual Benefit: The respondents were then asked if their individual self-
assurance, (knowledge, confidence, development and meeting new people) increased
through their voluntary activity. They mostly replied with,
‘… my confidence has increased and I also made new friends’ and, ‘yes, I
feel more confident to speak in front of people’.
Finally they were asked, what is the benefit to others by them passing on their skills?
Most answered positively and for example, one respondent answered,
‘I hope to pass on what I have learned myself over the years’ and, ‘I am
giving the others confidence in what they do’.
This self-assurance should also be acknowledged even if it cannot currently be given
a value. Theme: Individual Self-assurance.
The follow-up interview themes for the traditional volunteers presented are Table 4.7
below:
Table 4.7The Follow-up Interview Themes for the Traditional Volunteers.
Traditional Volunteers
Qualitative organisational
benefit Involvement
Qualitative community benefit
Knowledge
Qualitative individual benefit Self-assurance
The results in Table 4.7, above demonstrate that as a result of the interpretation of
the themes from the follow-up interviews, the traditional volunteers were involved
by contributing their time to the organisation, the community benefitted from their
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knowledge as a result of this and the traditional volunteers themselves had the return
of self-assurance as a result of their voluntary contributions. The following combines
the qualitative and quantitative data of the time contributed by the traditional
volunteers. Table 4.8, below presents the initial thematic map as advocated by Braun
and Clarke, (2006 p.99):
Table 4.8The Initial Thematic Map as Advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006 p.99) for
the Traditional Volunteers.Quantitative£43,302.88
Qualitative organisational
benefit Outcomes and involvement
Qualitative community benefit
Cohesion and knowledge
Qualitative individual benefit Belonging and self-assurance
Table 4.8 demonstrates that as a result of the interpretation of all the data, the
traditional volunteers contributed £43,302.88 per annum and the organisation is able
to continue to achieve its outcomes as a result of their involvement of time. The
community enjoys better cohesion through the knowledge imparted by the traditional
volunteers while the traditional volunteers themselves have the benefit of feeling a
sense of belonging and self-assurance as a result of their contributions. The next
section relates to the data gathered from the organisation’s paid employees using
topic coding, according to Richards, (2005, p.90):
4.3 The Data from the Responses of the Paid Employees
In order to present the data gathered from the descriptive codes of paid employees,
this section compares data using thematic analysis by means of the topic codes of
CSR, quality marks, Social Capital, Mass Collaboration, The Contribution of the
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Third Sector, Payback on Volunteering, and The Volunteering Investment and Value
Audit, (VIVA). Table 4.9 frames the analytical codes of the organisation, community
and individuals and is an analysis of the qualitative theme of time contributed by the
paid employees. Table 4.10 presents the quantitative themes for the paid employees.
Table 4.11 is the themes from the follow up interviews and Table 4.12 presents all
the results by means of thematic analysis using an initial thematic map as advocated
by Braun and Clarke, (2006).
The results of the data from the paid employees first described their involvement
with the SWWales Charity. Responses to each topic code from the literature gave
examples of them voluntarily contributing time by them staying on late after work
and taking work home with them at the weekend in order to meet deadlines. When
asked why, some responded with, ‘everyone does it’, which suggests that it is the
culture of the organisation. They said that they did it because the deadlines would
not be met if they did not do it. However, most paid employees said that it was a,
‘great place to work’. This was expanded upon in the follow-up interviews. First, the
approaches that are related to the literature for the paid employees are discussed. The
following are the responses to the questionnaire, (Appendix 6) for paid employees
and CSR is examined first.
Topic Code – Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR)
The first topic coding was around the benefit of maintaining good CSR. Responses
included the fact that,
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‘sustainability is embedded in the organisations ethos and as such we are
obligated to ensure that our natural environment is safeguarded for future
generations’.
Another responded,
‘yes, as it shows that as an organisation it is adhering to its environmental
policy and that it is contributing to reduce the carbon footprint’, as well as,
‘we all need to do our most to make the organisation a better place to work
and the community a place that is safe and clean’.
This is in compliance with CSR and another responded supported this comment
with,
‘I believe CSR promotes our standing as regenerators of the community if we
are seen to be helping out with recycling waste or resources, keeping the
grounds of our buildings smart and eco balanced where possible’.
The themes here included all respondents giving reasons for the benefits of good
CSR and how it was important to the organisation and the community. Most referred
to its environmental theme also benefits of the organisation’s reputation to external
stakeholders such as funders, community buy-in and the overall benefit of behaving
in such a socially responsible way. Although a CSR policy is not mandatory, there
was felt to be a definite benefit through benchmarking and recognition.
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With regard to what the paid employees said that they all considered the benefit of
safeguarding the environment and acting in a socially responsible way, their
responses included,
‘yes, the benefit is to see others take on board what you have said, to help
with their day to day handling of their own environment and that of the wider
family’.
Another responded with,
‘yes, you should treat your workplace like it is your house. You would not
leave the heating on with windows wide open or lights on in a room you’re
not in. Every little counts.’
As well as another respondent who said,
‘the benefit is immeasurable, not just my generation but the future generation
to come’.
While another referred to it having a three-way benefit,
‘… organisations need to care for the community and environment in which
they exist to enable preservation, growth of people, places and the natural
environment’.
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The themes here were that CSR is beneficial to the organisation by ensuring that it
acted socially responsible and globally by,
‘looking after the planet, EU, local, your town and even your own home.’
These were given as examples. Comments also included, ‘renewable energy, fossil
fuels and sustainability for all’.
There were no suggestions on how to measure this sustainability though.
Interpretation also included the respondents all giving reasons for the benefits of
good CSR and how was important to the organisation, as well as the planet.
Behaving in such a socially responsible way in the community was promoted by all
the respondents and is linked to quality marks.
Topic Code – Quality Marks
The next topic coding for this section was around the benefit of quality marks. Most
respondents found it difficult to give achieving them any value. Although there were
three respondents who said that achieving it had some sort of, ‘monetary value’. One
mentioned that it helped, ‘financially when applying for bids’. One respondent did
mention that the company valued the IIP standard, for example, but no suggestions
were made about what the benefit of achieving standards was. One stated that the
company invests, ‘time and effort’ in achieving standards and is, ‘investing in their
development’, which means that the organisation invests in the development of
quality marks but no value was suggested for any return on this investment. The
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themes from all the respondents for quality marks were that the organisation works
to a, ‘high standard’, ‘it instils confidence’, ‘work ethic, quality services, our
reputation even before people have worked with us’, which is important because it is
how the organisation is perceived by the community. As well as this, one respondent
said that,
‘truth, integrity and care ensures that all employees are treated fairly and all
sections of the organisations and are working the same and to the same
objectives’.
Another responded with the fact that there is, ‘enhanced credibility’ for the
SWWales Charity as a result of quality marks.
In order to ensure that there was plenty of rich data respondents were asked about the
benefits of quality marks to themselves. The themes consisted of, quality (7),
standards (5), and benefit (2). The highest number, seven people, mentioned quality,
with five mentioning standards and two saying benefit. They also said, procedures
(1), professionalism (1), expectation (1), fairness (1), recognition (1), continuous
improvement (1), reputation (1), image (1), commitment (1), excellence (1) care and
attention (1) and marketing (1). These are all words associated with the IIP Gold
standard, which could have been predicted as the organisation had recently achieved
the IIP Gold standard. Most respondents stated that it was a, ‘great place to work’
and that,
‘IIP enhanced partnership by offering a, high standard of working’.
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The benefit to the community of IIP was that included the marketing of the
organisation, enhanced its reputation and therefore provided quality services. The
interpretation of the themes included the respondents agreeing that there was a
benefit to reputation, goodwill and branding brought about by the achievement of
quality marks. They all gave examples such as,
‘I believe that the quality marks we have go a long way with our funders who
will have more trust in placing projects with the company’ and, ‘financially,
when compiling bids for funding the value and reputation of the company is
strengthened by the achievement of quality marks’.
Another respondent mentioned that the company valued the standard and that the
company invests, ‘time and effort’ in achieving standards. Another described the,
‘the monetary value of increased consideration for contracts and funding’,
It was also suggested by this respondent that human capital could be used as match
funding.
Topic Code – Human Capital
The next topic coding was Human Capital, which specifically investigated the skills
gained by paid employees through their human capital. Responses included,
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‘... to continue the good work that the SWWales Charity does its imperative
that new ways of working are designed to meet the needs of the local
community and the funders who provide the money for delivering’
And, ‘continuous improvement can only be a benefit to the SWWales Charity as it
improves performance for the benefit of the community’. Also that, ‘it is important
to offer up to date and effective provision both for the benefit of participants and also
to compete in a developing and changing market’.
A number of the paid employees agreed that,
‘yes, as employees are always striving to carry out tasks and have systems
that are more time effective and efficient.’ As well as, ‘as an organisation we
need to be ahead of the game to ensure that we are able to deliver on
contracts, offer new and unique services to ensure that we have a place in the
market’.
All respondents spoke of how improving their skills through human capital, was a
definite positive. They all gave examples of how a skilled workforce marketed the
organisation well to its external stakeholders. Part of marketing what the
organisation does is to show paid employees’ development through virtual human
resource development, which is another of the approaches from the literature.
Topic Code - Virtual Human Resource Development (VHRD)
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The themes here were that of the fourteen respondents that completed the question,
all agreed that one of the strands of Human Capital, improved technology, and
individually learning new skills, by means of VHRD, was beneficial. Responses
included, new, progressive ways of working (2), keeping up to date with technology
(2), effective provision, being ahead of the game, thinking ahead at all times,
updated systems, up-skilling, achieve the best results possible through technology,
improving skills, better skills (7) and increasing standards. They all agreed that
improved technology and new ways of working were beneficial to the organisation.
With regard to putting a value on that benefit the responses included,
‘funders are always looking to support organisations that are willing to
change to fit the needs of an ever changing society.’
Other common responses included that,
‘it portrays a professional and efficient company that is not afraid of change
and one that takes its valued employees with it’ and, ‘better engagement with
the community’.
The themes from all the respondents include the suggestion that the benefits of new
technology levers in more funding, to a company which values its employees. One
respondent described how technology helps the organisation to make good decisions
and gives better information for decision making. There was a lot of reference to
how excellent the organisation is at improving technology and developing new ways
of working. There were no suggestions as to the benefits of the organisation’s
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improved delivery and relationships with the community. One said that it, ‘... makes
me keep up with the pace of technology’ and was related to the respondents’
individual development. Most respondents agreed that,
‘… technology can make working more efficient and less time consuming’
and that, ‘technology makes delivering our services easier, better and more
efficient’.
There was a lot of reference to how excellent the organisation was at improving
technology and new ways of working.
The interpretation of this section included that all of the respondents agreed that
improved technology and new ways of working were beneficial to the organisation
because they were,
‘promoting excellence to our stakeholders whilst striving to be the best’ and,
‘it enables the company to keep close eye on all finances and records all
transactions.’
On the subject of benefits one respondent indicated that there were greater benefits
than just to the organisation alone,
‘developing human resources develops the organisation and its services and
therefore its participants’.
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The interpretation of the themes included that only one respondent saying that it was
of no direct improvement, but there were plenty of comments on compliance, being
honest and acting with integrity to benefit the organisation and the community
participants, making it a better place to work. Acting with integrity by voluntarily
contributing time over and above that what is paid for is the voluntary labour of paid
employees. As discussed earlier, it is the culture of the organisation to stay late when
there are deadlines because, as one suggested that,
‘... the work would not be completed on time otherwise!’
There was however, found to be a return to the voluntary labour of paid employees
by increased development and even job promotion for some.
Topic Code – The Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees
The following topic coding was the Voluntary Labour of Paid Employees and there
were also the three analytical codes of organisational, community and individual
benefit. The responses to the organisational benefit included,
‘as an employee of the SWWales Charity it benefits me as I am able to
continually learn new processes and apply these processes to the
sustainability of the organisation. I do not see it as, work that I am not paid
for I see it as valuable time spent by contributing to the success of the
organisation and therefore my employment and that of the team’
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This was the general response and,
‘it shows that as an employee you are willing to put in hours over and above
to ensure the organisation achieving what is set out in its business plan and
what is expected by funders’.
This suggests that it is the culture and norm of the organisation where everyone does
it. One response was to the point,
‘it allows me to complete jobs that I need to do, which otherwise I could not
do within working hours’.
However, in support of this statement another response was,
‘but I would not hesitate to do so if I thought it would help my managers or
the SWWales Charity to succeed’.
This last comment suggests that they do it willingly, but it was decided to ask a
question around this in the follow-up interviews, (Appendix 8). The themes
included,
‘this is a difficult question to answer. It depends on the type of work
required, for example if it is to support a worthy cause and gain something
valuable form it then I do not see why not. However, if it is working longer
hours to keep up with your workload then there is an issue that needs to be
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addressed. Long hours are not productive even when they are unpaid. I have
experience of this in my last job and it does finally lead to over work and
stress.’
This is something that was also probed further in the follow-up interviews in
Appendix 8. The interpretation of the data was that most respondents did give their
time for free at periods of high workloads so that it supported their colleagues, the
organisation and the community. Two respondents felt that their voluntary activity
benefitted the community by stating that,
‘yes, it helps promote the activities and the work that we do in the
community’.
As well as the benefits of the voluntary labour of paid employees to the community,
organisational and individual themes then explored and most of the responses
included,
‘the value that I gain is to know that I am trying to offer the best possible
support. It is obviously for the benefit of the organisation and the community
but also for my individual satisfaction’. And that, ‘it shows that the employee
is dedicated to the organisation and prepared to give up their time, for free,
for the benefit of the organisation’
And mostly all the respondents gave similar responses such as,
229
‘I want the SWWales Charity to be the best it can’.
One respondent felt passionate about the time that he was contributing to the charity
and said,
‘I think it shows commitment to ones’ job and company as well as to
demonstrate passion in ones’ work’.
A good example of all the responses was the respondent, who said that the
organisation is,
‘… working towards becoming an employer of choice, maintaining good
employees who are committed to the organisation and believe in the work it
does and are not there just for the money’.
The themes here included individual satisfaction and passion. The following is a way
of accounting for human resources that examines if there are any more voluntary
contributions made under the HRA topic code.
Topic Code – Human Resource Accounting, (HRA)
The following topic coding is Human Resource Accounting, HRA and the questions
here were specifically around the benefits of human management systems to the
organisation. Responses included,
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‘new and effective management systems have to be put in place to satisfy the
funders, the teams and the participants’ and, ‘change that improves the
working lives of employees and improves what the organisation can deliver
to the community is always welcome’
In support of the benefits of adopting new management systems, another responded
with,
‘I think that the benefit of improved human systems is a demonstration of the
commitment to the job and the sector’.
The themes here were the benefits to human resources to the altruistic acts of people
working over and above their contracted hours. Some mentioned commitment to the
organisation and the sector by keeping up to date, an ever changing organisation, and
continuous improvement and to satisfy funders as the benefits. All said positive
things. Interpretation of this section included that five of the fifteen respondents
thought that volunteering was referring to something that someone else, (the
traditional volunteers) did. This may be because it is not currently measured or
reported on.
On the subject of whether or not voluntary contributions should be measured, or
given a value, one respondent said, ‘one balances out the other’. One mentioned that
volunteer hours could be counted towards grant applications in the form of match
funding. Only one said whether or not they did it from choice with, ‘… no I just get
on with it’ which suggests that there may be some form of culture where they felt
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that they had no choice, yet they all voluntarily contributed repeatedly. When asked
whether the organisation be less successful if not for the voluntary contributions of
paid employees, responses included,
‘as a community organisation, we rely on volunteering and without it we
would be nothing’.
They all agreed that the voluntary contributions made by paid employees should be
measured and another responded in a similar way by saying,
‘yes, they show other people in the community the benefit of volunteering in
the organisation’.
On the topic of whether or not the organisation was supported by their voluntary
contributions, responses included,
‘I cannot say that the organisation is supported by my voluntary contributions
just that at times of need the team pulls together to ensure the success of the
task’ and, ‘absolutely, work does not finish as soon as 5pm arrives!’ As well
as, ‘with the volunteer contributions, by both paid and unpaid employees, the
SWWales Charity is supported greatly’.
Another typical response was,
‘work would not be completed or not to a high standard and deadlines for
funders/partner organisations would not be met’.
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This means that their contributions were integral to the survival of the organisation
and all thought that it should be measured to show how much hard work they are
putting in,
‘so that an organisation can fully appreciate the volume of work that is
carried out by employees that are not paid!’ and, ‘to measure the amount of
hard work that they put in’.
As well as all the respondents who spoke of the benefits of the free work to them and
the organisation of,
‘recognition, training, progression for the individual and the organisation and
monetary value for match funding’.
In support of this, one respondent said,
‘I think that all voluntary hours should be noted and recorded as it would
show the effort of the individual on behalf of the SWWales Charity and it
also shows the good that the SWWales Charity must be doing to inspire the
loyalty and commitment of such individuals to give up their time and help us
make our community a better place’.
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Typically all respondents spoke of the threefold benefit of voluntary contributions to
the organisation, the community as well as individual loyalty and commitment. This
was supported by the respondent, who said that,
‘volunteers and their contributions bring not only added value but show the
diversity of an organisation and the engagement and empowerment of the
community’ and, ‘volunteer hours are counted towards grant applications and
also valued by the organisation’.
Again, most respondents thought that voluntary activity was carried out by
traditional volunteers and did not mention their own voluntary contributions. All but
one respondent answered the question on the organisation being less successful if it
was not for their personal voluntary contributions,
‘as no funding is available to employ additional employees to assist carrying
out activities, running of projects, planning of events etc. so it has to be done
by existing employees working with volunteers or services would suffer’.
And that, ‘I believe the community benefits so much from the services the
SWWales Charity offers. It gives people the chance to change their
circumstances if they want to change them. There are so many cut backs from
local government that affects the everyday person the SWWales Charity
gives something back’
As well as the organisation and the community benefitting from their altruism,
another respondent described how it benefitted them,
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‘working for the SWWales Charity has brought me a lot of experience and
enjoyment and I hope to continue’,
This is a direct benefit back to the respondent. While another stated that they did it
because,
‘volunteering is part of the not for profit ethos’.
It may be part of the not for profit ethos but it is not acknowledged anywhere in the
literature even though many employees said that they regularly did it. The following
is a summary of the responses of the paid employees which demonstrates that there
are also a three themes brought by their own voluntary contributions to the SWWales
Charity.
4.3.1 A Summary of the Thematic Analysis for the Paid Employees
There were three descriptive codes in the data from the questionnaires included the
organisational benefit of sustainability, the community benefit of relationships as
well as the individual benefit development. First the organisational data is examined
in more detail:
Organisational Benefit: It was found that quality marks ensure that the organisation
is to a, ‘high standard’, ‘it instils confidence’, ‘work ethic, quality services, our
reputation even before people have worked with us’ and, ‘truth, integrity and care
ensures that all employees are treated fairly’. As well as, ‘enhanced credibility’ for
sustainability. Almost half of the respondents mentioned quality, professionalism,
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fairness, commitment and excellence, which are traits associated with organisational
sustainability. While the responses around CSR were that it added value to the
organisation of reputation, goodwill and branding. This they said was through
investing in, ‘time and effort’ acting in a, ‘socially responsible way’ through,
‘benchmarking and recognition’ that leads to organisational sustainability by looking
after the planet. The respondents said that their voluntary contributions should be
used for match funding and that it should be measured in the same way as traditional
volunteering currently is. The voluntary contributions of paid employees through
their human capital enabled new ways of working, continuous improvement and
more efficient systems that led to the sustainability of the organisation. The
respondents said that it enabled the organisation to be, ‘ahead of the game’ and that
VHRD gave the organisation new, progressive ways of working. This enabled it to
keep up to date with technology, provide effective provision, think ahead at all times,
updated systems, up-skilling, achieve the best results possible through technology,
improving skills, better skills and increasing standards through making good
decisions which are all associated with organisational sustainability. It was also
found that HRA enhances the sustainability of the organisation and that it can be
used as match funding, although it is not at present. Theme: Organisational
Sustainability.
Community Benefit: The voluntary labour of paid employees has been shown to
have a great impact on the organisation as ‘regenerators of the community’ and all
respondents said that they wanted the organisation to succeed. One respondent said
that,
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‘volunteers and their contributions bring not only added value but show the
diversity of an organisation and the engagement and empowerment of the
community’.
Another respondent said,
‘I think that all voluntary hours should be noted and recorded as it would
show the effort of the individual on behalf of the SWWales Charity and it
also shows the good that the SWWales Charity must be doing to inspire the
loyalty and commitment of such individuals to give up their time and help us
make our community a better place’.
The achievement of quality marks ensures that the community receives quality
services. While they said that human capital provided effective provision through
enhanced relationships in the community. VHRD gave value to the ‘better
relationships with the community’ and levered in more funding to provide even more
services that are, ‘easier, better and more efficient. It was also found that,
‘developing human resources develops the organisation and its services and
therefore its participants’ and that, ‘the community continued to be provided
with seamless services by targets being met’.
While HRA ensures that the organisation continues to deliver in the community and
CSR ensures community buy in. Respondents said that it provided a three way
benefit to people, places and the natural environment and the planet. Theme:
Relationships with the community.
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Individual Benefit: The paid employees said that they contributed by giving their
time for free, when needed to enable change.
‘Change that improves the working lives of employees and improves what
the organisation can deliver to the community is always welcome’.
They also said that without their hard work and the volume of their work the
deadlines would not be met. Through VHRD there was found to be the individual
benefits of learning new skills and development. They said that there was
recognition, training, progression for the individual and that change that
improvements to the working lives of employees is always welcome. They said that
there was the chance to change their circumstances if they wanted to through their
own development and that volunteering brought them a lot of experience and
enjoyment as it is part of the not for profit ethos. The voluntary labour of paid
employees may have the cost of employees being slightly stressed by overwork but
the individual benefit of the development of their jobs and the sector and all
respondents said that they have no problem contributing their time for free. They
said that doing it was a demonstration of their commitment to the job and the sector
through compliance, being honest and acting with integrity to benefit the
organisation and the community participants, making it a better place to work. One
respondent said,
‘I do not see the voluntary labour of paid employees as, work that I am not
paid for I see it as valuable time spent by contributing to the success of the
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organisation through my development and therefore my employment and that
of the team’.
All respondents said that their voluntary contributions should be measured. Theme:
Individual Development.
Table 4.9, below presents the themes from the questionnaires for the paid employees:
Table 4.9The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Paid Employees.
Paid Employees
Qualitative organisational
benefit Sustainability
Qualitative community benefit
Relationships
Qualitative individual benefit
Development
In summary of the initial themes from the questionnaires, there was a three way
benefit to the organisation of sustainability through the contribution of the
volunteers. The community of enhanced relationships and the paid employees
themselves benefitted from their own development. This is the interpretation of the
qualitative benefit of the paid employees’ voluntary contributions. Their tangible
contribution of time was the number of hours that they said they contributed per
month. This was then totalled to give a significant annual amount of £159,120.00.
The quantitative benefit of the time voluntarily contributed by the paid employees is
now presented.
Eleven of the respondents said that they contributed time to the organisation that
they were not paid for and six said that they did not do any unpaid work. Contrary to
this only one said that they contributed 0 hours per month. Four said that they
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contributed 10 hours (40 total), three 20 hours (60 total) and three 30+ hours per
month, (90+ total). Total 190 hours.
Topic Coding – CSR: Two said that they contributed no hours at all. Seven said that
they contributed 10 hours (70 total), three 20 hours (60 total) and two said 30+ hours
(60+). Total 190 hours.
Topic Coding – Quality Marks: In relation to quality marks, all stakeholder
categories were asked about their involvement, however seven employees said that
they were not involved in quality marks, ten said that they were. This is puzzling as
all are involved to some extent in maintaining the IIP Gold standard. The same seven
said that they contributed 0 hours to the achievement of quality marks. The four who
indicated that they did said that they contributed 10 hours (40 total), three said 20
hours, (60 total) and one said that they were involved for 30 hours, (30 total). Total
130 hours.
Topic Coding – Human Capital and VHRD: When asked if they improved their
performance through technology or new ways of working, one of the seventeen
skipped the answer. Eleven said that they were involved for 10 hours (110 in total),
one said that they were involved for 20 hours (20 total) and four said that they were
involved for 30+ hours (120+ total). Total 250 hours.
Topic Coding – The voluntary labour of paid employees: Responses included,
four who said 0 hours, five who said 10 hours (50 total), four who said 20 hours (80
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total) and three said that they contributed 30+ hours unpaid labour to the
organisation (90+ total). Total 220 hours.
Topic Coding – HRA: Four respondents did not respond to how they were involved
in the improvement of management systems as part of HRA. Of the remainder, five
said that they were not involved at all. Five said that they were involved for 10 hours
(50 total) one said 10 hours and two said that they were involved for 30+ hours a
month (60+ total). Total 120 hours.
Total contribution per month = 1,100 hours.
Theme: Time - 1,100 hours per month divided by 17 respondents equals an average
of 65 hours each. The average organisational wage totalled and divided by the full
number of employees was £12.00 per hour. This was multiplied by the average hours
per month which came to £780. This was then multiplied by 12 months for annual
reporting purposes, which totalled £9,360 and was again multiplied by the number of
respondents. This gave a grand total of £159,120.00 per annum.
The quantitative results of the voluntary time contributed by the paid employees are
presented in Table 4.10, below:
Table 4.10The Quantitative Results of the Voluntary Time Contributed by the Paid
Employees.Total hours per month 1,100Divided by number of respondents 1,100 divided by 17Average number of hours per respondent per month
65 average hours per respondent
Method of calculating hourly rate Average organisational wage totalled and divided by the full number of staff was £12.00 p.h.
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X no. of hours per month per respondent
£12.00 x 65 = £780.00
X 12 months £9,360.00X number of respondents £9,360.00 x17Total £159,120.00
As can be seen from the sum above, even though the paid employees said they
contribute a relatively small amount of time, by converting that time into a value it is
a substantial amount of money. The selection of authors, from Chapter Two who
have written about quality marks include, Drucker, (2000), Heskett, (2002) as well as
Hoque and Bacon, (2008). While Driscol, et al, (2004), amongst others, wrote about
CSR. Maslow, (1943), Weisbrod, (1966), Nafukho et al., (2010), and Saxton (2004)
and were advocates of Human Capital and VHRD. While HRA is promoted by
Bullen and Flamholz, (1967), Flamholtz, et al, (2002) Bullen and Eyler, (2009), and
Birnberg, (2011). Advocates of the voluntary contribution of paid employees include
Gregg and Marazzi, (2012), Whyte, (1956) and Baines, (2004). The sample chosen
for the literature review provided little evidence to support the voluntary
contributions of all stakeholders, as has been found as most were concerned with
traditional volunteers. As the results have shown, paid employees are voluntarily
contributing to all the topic codes from the literature. It has been established that not
only traditional volunteers are contributing to organisational, community and
individual success, paid employees are too. Having gathered a great deal of data
from the questionnaires, some further questioning was required to substantiate these
claims by means of the follow-up interviews in Appendix 8.
The respondents gave their opinions in the questionnaires about the way that the
organisation operates in both face to face and telephone interviews. Some responded
by email. They were complimentary about how, ‘there are so many cut backs from
242
local government that affect the everyday person. The SWWales Charity gives
something back’. They said that being involved in the organisation gave the
organisation sustainability, while they felt humility and pride in their relationships
with the SWWales Charity. The community benefitted from being occupied in the
organisation’s services and the paid employees themselves benefitted from
promotion as the result of some of their extra development through their voluntary
contributions. Again, there were found to be benefits to the organisation, the
community and the individual stakeholders themselves.
Organisational Benefit: It was interesting that all of the small sample of employees
gave a large amount of time, free of charge, to the organisation. They were clearly
passionate about the unpaid work that they undertook in the organisation. They said
that they spend free time marketing what the organisation does the community and
that they support by giving credible anecdotes of the ways they voluntarily
contribute their time. Three people, just over a fifth of the seventeen respondents,
indicated that they would be happy to take part in a follow-up interview. A follow-up
interview question included; ‘if you knew the benefit to the organisation of your
contribution, would you still give it freely?’ All three said, ‘yes’ giving accounts of
having the humility of, ‘no doubt that giving my time to the organisation has
benefitted both myself and the organisation’. The same respondent continued,
‘I am committed to the organisation and therefore take pride in completing
my responsibilities’.
While in support of their volunteering to the organisation, another said,
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‘for me it is about taking the organisation forward irrespective of the value of
the time’.
The third respondent summed up the responses of most of the respondents and said,
‘you must be willing to give above and beyond to support the organisation …
to give that little extra support when needs be’.
This gave them a feeling of humility and pride in being able to help the organisation
out. They all agreed that there was a need for them to work in this altruistic way and
said that the organisation worked with a, ‘great community’ and had, ‘organisational
common aims which has led to the benefit of its success and individual humility and
pride shown for allowing them to volunteer’.
Theme: Humility and pride of being associated with the organisation.
Community Benefit: The respondents also spoke of the benefit to the community
by being part of the support mechanism by working unpaid hours. Responses
included that,
‘it can often take over and above the time allocated within a working week to
establish’.
As well as most typically responding with,
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‘community work takes commitment and dedication to achieve aims and
outcomes’,
And that some of their time is unpaid. Another follow-up question was about the
benefit to others of them working over and above their contracted hours. Responses
included,
‘the community that I represent through my work has benefited by several
large contracts to help people find employment in an area of high deprivation
and poverty.’
And that, ‘each and every hour that I give freely is sometimes the difference between
successful resources being acquired for the local community’.
Another said that it,
‘means jobs/opportunities for local people ... which can then lead to other
employees being employed or volunteers being recruited’,
Therefore, people are being given occupation as a result of volunteering. The same
respondent said that, ‘free time can help to create a valuable resource helping others
to freely add their time to create a sustainable resource for generations’.
The final question to the paid employees was, ‘have community members benefitted
from your voluntary contribution?’ One said that, ‘all the free time that I offer is to
create and provide occupation and resources for the local community’.
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Another supported this by saying that the,
‘continuation of funding enables community involvement and provides
support for all members of the community. Active community members
improve the working and social life of families’.
While a third said,
‘… to give something back to them, for them to enjoy a day out being
occupied and gaining knowledge on what support organisations and
initiatives are being carried out in the area’.
Theme: Occupation for people in the community.
Individual Benefit: With regard to the individual benefit of their voluntary activity,
the paid employees were asked if there had ever been a detrimental effect on them
giving over and above to the organisation. Responses included that,
‘… it helped me to change my career’ and, ‘it helped me gain considerable
knowledge that has benefited me through gaining promotion’.
Another said,
246
‘I began in the organisation on a 3-month contract as an administrator and I
have been rewarded by successfully applying for and gaining promotion’.
The same respondent concluded with,
‘in my previous employment in the Civil Service I had no job satisfaction – I
do now’.
While a third responded with (volunteering),
‘… gives you a sense of achievement’ and that, ‘being a full team member
while supporting colleagues when needs be is in itself is a rewarding, and
allows you to gain more skills, knowledge and experience which is always a
benefit to myself through promotion’.
Aligned to the benefits of their own altruistic acts back to themselves, another
respondent said that it allowed,
‘the continuation of funding and therefore continuation of my employment’.
Typically, another said,
‘they have my time, commitment, skills, knowledge and support whenever
needs to be I am always willing and ready to help my colleagues as I believe
that team work is crucial to what we do on a daily basis’.
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Theme: Individual Promotion.
Table 4.11 below, presents the follow-up interview themes for the paid employees:
Table 4.11The Follow-up Interview Themes for the Paid Employees.
Paid Employees
Qualitative organisational
benefit Humility and pride
Qualitative community benefit
Occupation
Qualitative individual benefit
Promotion
The results in Table 4.11, above demonstrate that as a result of the themes from the
follow-up interviews, the paid employees voluntary contributions were humility and
pride while the community had the continued occupation in the services that are
enabled in the community. The paid employees themselves had the return of
promotion for some of them as a return on their voluntary contributions. The
following combines the qualitative data and the follow-up interviews. It also includes
the quantitative data of the time contributed by the paid employees.
Table 4.12, below presents the initial thematic map as advocated by Braun and
Clarke, (2006 p.99) for the paid employees:
Table 4.12The Initial Thematic Map as Advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006 p.99) for
the Paid Employees.Quantitative£159,120.00
Qualitative organisational
benefit Sustainability,
humility and pride
Qualitative community benefit Relationships and
occupation
Qualitative individual benefit Development and
promotion
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Table 4.12 above, demonstrates that as a result of the interpretation of all the data,
the paid employees contributed £159,120.00 worth of time per annum. The
organisation is able to be more sustainable as a result of their humility and pride in
their association with the organisation. The community enjoy better relationships
through their occupation in the services provided and the paid employees themselves
have the benefit of their own development and promotion. The next section relates to
the data gathered from the organisation’s board members using topic coding,
according to Richards, (2005) as well as Braun and Clarke, (2006).
4.4 The Data from the Responses of the Board Members
In order to present the data gathered from the descriptive codes of board members,
this section compares data using thematic analysis by means of the topic codes of
CSR, quality marks, ROCE, ROT and Social Value. Table 4.13 frames the analytical
codes of the organisation, community and individuals and is an analysis of the
qualitative themes. Table 4.16 presents an analysis of the quantitative themes of time
for the board members. Table 4.15 is the themes from the follow up interviews and
Table 4.8 presents all the board members’ results by means of thematic analysis
using an initial thematic map as advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006).
Board members responded that their involvement included them having a number of
titles including; Trustee, Director of the SWWales Charity Board, Chairman,
Director/Trustee, board member and volunteer. This provided a good selection
across all officers and included an age range from 45 to 80 years of age. They all had
specific areas of expertise throughout the Board but all regarded themselves as
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volunteers as they gave their time freely. A relatively small sample of respondents
gave their opinions about the way that the organisation operates, yet they were
passionate about their voluntary contributions. The following are the responses to the
questionnaire for the board members, (Appendix 7) and CSR is examined first.
Topic Code – CSR
On discussing the benefit of positive Corporate Social Responsibility, CSR,
responses included that,
‘all time given must have a value’ and, ‘social and environment benefits go
hand in hand as energy waste is both expensive and unnecessary’.
The themes were the cost to the organisation of ineffective CSR, to the community,
the wider environment and the planet of expensive energy waste through ignorance.
There was benefit to the community through the organisation’s energy efficiency
scheme and the saving of energy. They also said that positive promotion in the
community saves money and markets the organisation as one that complies with
legislation, even though there is no real choice. This can be translated to benefits by
word of mouth for free marketing and funders being satisfied and willing to fund
again because of the reputation of the organisation in the community through due
diligence.
With regard to the benefits of good CSR and being considerate of the environment,
typical replies included,
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‘trust from other organisations’ and, ‘this indicates to the community a
benefit of care and consideration by the corporate body towards the
community as a whole which is again of immense value’.
The themes included knowledge transfer, cost savings and individual benefits to
community members. Also, the benefit of contributing voluntarily and to due
diligence had the return back to the volunteers themselves. This was also a follow-up
question in Appendix 8.
They were then asked whether or not their voluntary contributions should be
measured. Responses included that it was,
‘voluntary only so no need of it being measured’ and, ‘individually I think a
measure would detract from the reason for doing it’.
Typical themes included, leading by example, cost savings, community benefit and
benchmarking against other organisations. They all said that CSR is good for the
organisation, the community and the wider environment. It was found to be of
immense benefit, but there was no way of measuring or reporting on it. They said
that measuring would have a negative effect because it would detract from the true
altruism of their acts. They also though that there would be a problem if people were
claiming state benefits. This is laid down in a DWP publication, (2010) as people can
only volunteer for a number of hours without it affecting certain types of benefits.
However, most said that they would still voluntarily contribute. Comments on
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whether the organisation would be less successful if not for their voluntary
contributions included all but one saying,
‘yes, it would be much less successful, indeed it could not survive’. The
reasons given for their responses included that, ‘volunteers are needed in
these organisations’ and ‘every voice should be heard and opinions listened
to for team work and community spirit’.
In contrast, the one respondent who said, ‘no’ also said that,
‘the organisation existed before I joined it and will exist in the future but the
best I can ask is that I left it by contributing in a positive way’.
Two respondents, who were positive about their experiences wanted to add
something and said that,
‘as a volunteer what is achievable is very much supported by the full time
employees, just to say thank you’.
Another responded by saying that,
‘this questionnaire has been difficult to fill in. Maybe a verbal questionnaire
could be had next time; I can speak better than I can write’.
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This request was undertaken by means of follow-up interviews with the people who
had indicated that they would like to take part. The following introduces the data for
quality marks.
Topic Code – Quality Marks
The topic coding for this category was quality marks and having established their
roles, the board members were then asked about the benefits of quality marks to the
organisation. Their responses included that it is,
‘a prestigious benchmark for others shows that the SWWales Charity is
operating in an efficient way and can demonstrate it to a measured standard’.
The themes included that quality marks give a prestigious benchmark, measure and
standard. The organisational benefit was that achieving quality marks show that it
has reached a benchmark and standard and can be benchmarked to the outside world.
They all thought that quality marks were important but there was no suggestion of
evaluating or reporting on these benefits. Responses to whether or not the
organisation would attract less funding if it was not for their voluntary contributions
were,
‘I think volunteering enhances the reputation of the organisation and the IIP
Gold standard is a demonstration of quality for any potential customer’.
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Other themes were quality, trust, funding, grants, and achieving IIP, for example
attracted more customers. They all responded, ‘yes’ to whether they ever talked to or
explained to external people or organisations about the work of the SWWales
Charity and commented that, ‘it is very much a bottom up driven organisation with
close contacts with the community and community groups’.
Themes were service, understanding, bottom up and community. Their responses
included that by them volunteering it levers in additional funding as well as
organisational survival through customers (the community), buying in to the
services. They also responded that they give free marketing, goodwill and reputation
through their due diligence. They said that the community was understanding the
organisation better through their voluntary contributions is its benefits. Aligned to
this was the benefit of the board members’ promotion of the organisation and
responses included the opinion that,
‘marketing is expensive, and an individual’s promotion of the organisation
shows self-commitment to its work’,
The voluntary contributions of the board members are also responsible for the due
diligence of the return on the capital that it employs.
Topic Code – Return on Capital Employed, (ROCE)
The next subject for topic coding was Return on Capital Employed, ROCE and
respondents commented that without their voluntary contributions the, ‘the
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SWWales Charity would be unable to fulfil their grants’. They also said that they
were responsible,
‘for the overall running of the organisation, funding grants and the due
diligence to fulfil them’.
For example, a grant from Children in Need required that board members undertook
training in child protection. If this had not taken place there would have been non-
compliance and the grant would have been withheld. When asked to give their
opinions on whether or not the organisation would be able to comply with terms of
grants if it was not for their voluntary contributions, the responses included,
‘good governance and the procedures that apply to the way the SWWales
Charity is run is of paramount importance to the organisation’.
The themes included cost savings, efficiency, governance and compliance. The cost
to the organisation of non-compliance would be the claw back of grants. They were
saying that due diligence is of paramount importance and that achieving it is the
return of their talent.
Topic Code – Return on Talent, (ROT)
The next topic code for the questionnaire was Return on Talent, (ROT). Responses
to the benefit of their increased knowledge through their voluntary contributions
included that, ‘knowledge is freedom’ and that volunteering, ‘changes values’ as
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well as, ‘money saved by not employing people to do work we already do’. While on
the subject of measuring voluntary contributions one responded with,
‘increased knowledge is also important in any organisation that is community
based. I am not aware of it being reported on currently’
They were also asked, ‘how the benefit of increased knowledge could be reported
on?’ The themes were individual benefits and decreasing costs to the organisation.
There is a cost to providing travel expenses, (even though hardly any Board
members claim them) room hire and buffets etc. It is not just the number of hours
that they volunteer has a benefit, the amount of money saved by due diligence, as the
cost of non-compliance has already been discussed. This is the true value of the
board members’ voluntary contributions, but there is no current way of reporting on
it. The board members intangible contributions to the organisation enable it to
comply with grants as well as in the weighting given to social value clauses in
contracts.
Topic Code – Social Value
One board member responded with the statement that, ‘the organisation would be
unable to deliver contracts without complying with social clauses’.
This is important but there is no measure for this compliance, which is due diligence.
Two Board members had been given an action at a Board meeting to ensure that a
recent Health and Safety, (H&S) report was being adhered to. Both were previously
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Health and Safety Officers in their former employment. Responses were that, ‘H&S
checks save the cost of buying it in’.
The theme was that money was being saved through voluntary contributions because
the cost of consultants to undertake the work would be £360 per day. There was a
question around whether or not they thought that if it was not for people’s
knowledge and talent being returned to the organisation that it would have to be
bought in. Comments were, ‘in our particular case it is invaluable having expertise
on tap’ and that,
‘information and knowledge spread across a larger number of people allows
for their experiences to expand and shared within the organisation’ as well as,
‘this shows willing and belief in the product that the organisation provides
for the community, that we are unpaid laymen have faith in what we are
trying to do’.
The themes were that there was no need to buy in consultants when they already had
the expertise, experience and belief in the organisation. As well as knowledge
transfer, no time constraints and advocacy. There was also found to be the invaluable
benefit of board members passing on their skills, to the community through the
organisation. Around the benefit of social value, responses included that,
‘the board oversees the contracts and their progress, looking for compliance
with the organisational arrangements and value for money’.
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They said that they did it for match funding and compliance as well as if it was not
for the board members’ social value then contracts would not be awarded in the first
place. The benefit to the SWWales Charity of due diligence is significant. It was
interesting to find out the benefit to the board members themselves, which was asked
as a follow-up question. The following summarises the responses of the board
members to the questionnaire, which included the three descriptive codes of
organisational, community and individual benefit.
4.4.1 Summary of the Thematic Analysis for Board Members
There were three descriptive codes in the data from the questionnaires included the
organisational benefit of due diligence, the community benefit of achievements as
well as the individual benefit of enhanced reputations. First the organisational data is
examined in more detail:
Organisational Benefit: The voluntary contributions of the board members were
found to be of great benefit to the organisation. The themes around quality marks
were that they were a prestigious benchmark, measure and standard. Achieving IIP,
for example, enabled quality, trust, funding, grants, and attracted more customers.
While responses to the questions around CSR were that it saves money and markets
the organisation as one that complies with legislation, even though there is no real
choice as,
‘good governance and the procedures that apply to the way the SWWales
Charity is run are of paramount importance to the organisation’.
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The themes included decreasing costs of energy, efficiency, governance, word of
mouth and free marketing. There is expertise on tap from the board members as there
are no time constraints for people who are unemployed or retired. Other themes
around IIP included decreasing costs by compliance and saving the cost of energy
waste, common aims and due diligence. The number of hours that the board
members volunteer has a value which is the amount of money saved by due
diligence, as there is a cost to non-compliance. This was supported by the board
member who said that, ‘the organisation would be unable to deliver contracts
without complying with social clauses’. Theme: Organisational Due diligence.
Community Benefit: There were benefits of the board members passing on their
skills through quality marks to the community through the organisation. The themes
were service, understanding, bottom up and community buy-in to services. They said
that the organisation would be unable to provide services if it did not comply through
marketing, goodwill, understanding, bottom-up driven and the achievement of
standards. There are standards for customers and the organisation has commitment to
the community through CSR. The board members said that they have experiences
and expertise to the community and want others to achieve the same. They said that
their voluntary contributions enabled, ‘trust from other organisations’ and that,
‘this indicates to the community a benefit of care and consideration by the
corporate body towards the community as a whole which is again of immense
value’.
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The themes included knowledge transfer, cost savings and belief in the product that
the organisation provides for the community. Theme: Community Achievement.
Individual Benefit: The board members’ responses to the IIP question were that
their voluntary contributions were of great benefit. They said that, ‘knowledge is
freedom’ and that volunteering, ‘changes values’ Other themes around IIP included
advocacy, match funding, through compliance, goodwill, enhanced reputation,
knowledge transfer, immersion, leaders in the field, decreasing costs by their good
reputations, individual values, feeling needed, teamwork and gratitude for being
allowed to volunteer. The themes for ROT were individual benefit to the board
members themselves through being leaders in the field. They said that this was of
high importance to them and their reputations as they said that they led by example.
They said that it was, ‘invaluable having expertise on tap’ and that voluntarily
contributing allows for their experiences to expand the expertise through their belief
in the organisation. Theme: Enhanced individual Reputation.
Table 4.13, below presents the themes from the qualitative data from the
questionnaires for the board members:
Table 4.13The Themes from the Questionnaires for the Board Members.
Board Members
Qualitative organisational benefit Due diligence
Qualitative community benefit
Achieving
Qualitative individual benefit
Reputation
In summary of the initial themes, there was the three way benefit of the board
members’ voluntary contributions to the organisation of due diligence that allowed it
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to comply with the regulators. The community was able to achieve its ambition of
more quality services and the consultants themselves gained enhanced reputations.
This is the interpretation of the qualitative benefit of their voluntary contributions.
Their tangible contribution was calculated by the time that they said they contributed
per month. This was then totalled and the benefit of the board members’ contribution
to the organisation is high when converted to an hourly rate. The benefit to the
organisation was that it was able to be given an hourly rate and used for match
funding by the WCVA. The board members, as well as the consultants, said that they
contribute a relatively small amount of time, but by converting that time into a value
gives a significant amount of money.
Topic Coding - CSR: How are you involved in safeguarding the SWWales
Charity’s environment? Two respondents said that they contributed no time at all to
safeguarding the SWWales Charity’s environment. Two said that they contribute 10
hours each (20 total) and two said that they contribute 20 hours each per month (40
in total). Total 60 hours.
Topic Coding - Quality Marks: with regard to whether or not they contributed any
time to the organisation that they were not paid for, all six said, ‘yes’. The number
of hours contributed ranged from three who said 10 hours (30 in total) two said 20
hours (40 total) and one who said 30 + hours. Total 100 hours.
Topic Coding - ROCE: When asked, ‘Do you ever talk to/explain to external
people or organisations about the work of the SWWales Charity?’ they all replied,
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‘yes’. Between them they said that they were involved in actively promoting the
performance of the organisation for 90 hours a month. Total 90 hours.
Topic Coding - ROT: ‘How many hours are you involved in governance training?’
they all replied that they contributed 10 hours each. Total 60 hours.
Topic Coding - Social value: ‘How are you involved to enable us to deliver
contracts and services?’ Four said 10 hours (40) and one said 30 hours +. Total 70
hours.
Total tangible contribution per month = 380 hours.
Theme - Time: 380 hours per month divided by the number of respondents gave an
average of 63.5 hours per month per respondent. The method of calculating the
hourly rate utilised the WCVA’s hourly rate of Board members’ time @£21.72 per
hour. This was the method most appropriate for the sector. This was multiplied by 12
months for annual reporting purposes and gave an average of £16,550.64 per
respondent per annum. This was then multiplied by the number of respondents and
gave a grand total of a quantitative £99,303.84 per annum.
The quantitative results for the voluntary time contributed by the board members can
be found in Table 4.14, below:
Table 4.14The Quantitative Results for the Voluntary Time Contributed by the Board
Members.Total hours per month 380Divided by number of respondents 380 divided by 6Average number of hours per 63.5 average hours per respondent
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respondent per monthMethod of calculating hourly rate WCVA’s hourly rate of board members’
time @£21.72 per hourX no. of hours per month per respondent
£21.72 x 63.5 = £1,379.22
X 12 months £16,550.64X number of respondents £16,550.64 x 6Total £99,303.84
The board members contributed the second highest amount, with the paid employees
being first. This is due to there being more paid employees @ £12.00 per hour
completing the questionnaire. If there were equal numbers of respondents then the
board members contribution at £21.72 per hour would have been higher. The
selection of authors, from the literature review, who have written about ROCE, for
example include Mills and Robertson, (2000), Enyi, (2005), Birnberg, (2011) as well
as Cox and Street, (2011). Whilst Chowdhury, (2011) described ROT. The Social
Value brought by Board members in order to comply with contracts was advocated
by The SRI Network, (2012), The Public Services (Social Value) Act, 2012, (SEUK,
2012), Anthony Collins Solicitors, (2012) and Ingliss, (2012). The sample chosen
provided little evidence to support the voluntary contributions of board members to
an organisation. Having interpreted the qualitative and quantitative data from the
questionnaires, probing deeper to provide more rich data by means of follow-up
interviews with the board members was undertaken.
The questions from the follow-up questions were around whether the benefits of the
voluntary contributions of the board members should be reported on included that,
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‘people should know of its achievements’ but also that ‘word of mouth is not
guaranteed to be positive’. They also said that, ‘the press may prefer less
successful stories’.
All but two respondents said that their voluntary contribution should be measured in
some way as they felt that their contributions enabled savings on, ‘consultancy costs
e.g. Health and Safety issues’ and, ‘it has saved quite a lot of money by people
giving freely’. The themes here were branding in the community, compliance,
knowledge transfer and money saving. This would cost a lot of money if it had to be
bought in.
It was interesting that the small sample of board members gave a large amount of
time worth £99,303.84 annually to the organisation. The questions for the follow-up
interviews evidently needed to investigate the reasons for this. However, in contrast
it was further investigated to establish if this was really ‘free’ time to the
organisation, or was it because of some benefit to them? They were clearly
passionate about it and the work that they undertake in the community. They actually
did spend free time marketing what the organisation does to other organisations that
they support by giving credible anecdotes of the way in which it operates. It was
decided to ask them again in the follow-up interviews if they thought their
contributions had a benefit and whether the organisation would be worse off it was
not for their contributions. There were the same three descriptive codes as were
derived from the questionnaire of organisational, community and individual benefits.
First the organisational benefits are presented:
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Organisational Benefit: The follow-up interview questions were around whether
the board members knew the benefit to the organisation of their voluntary
contribution as well as how they would feel about still giving it freely if it could be
measured. The responses included that it was an,
‘an interesting word 'benefit'. Are you thinking of this in terms of my time or
as a financial return or maybe something else? In all honestly, even if I had
an idea the benefit, both in terms time and money, would it make any
difference to me and my altruistic contribution to the organisation? I don't
think so. Its voluntary, if it causes me any difficulties or I stop enjoying it, I
can always walk away. I do it because I chose to, not necessarily because I
need to’,
Aligned to the benefits back to themselves another typical response was,
‘it is not something I do every day but I am not surprised how much a board
member would cost. I am not bothered by that because I have done it for the
past fourteen years and not claimed a penny. It’s about giving back to the
community, not what is in it for me’.
The cost of hiring consultants to undertake work has already been discussed so it was
asked as a follow-up question whether or not they thought that if it was not for
people’s knowledge and talent being returned to the organisation that it would have
to be bought in. The themes included; cost, financial, time, money and selflessness.
Theme: Organisational Altruism.
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Community Benefit: The responses around the benefit of their voluntary
contributions to the community included,
‘the fact that we are involved in community activities is secondary to me. I
see myself less as a contributor to the community, but more as an, enabler to
support those who are far better at this role than I am’.
Another response was,
‘I am older and wiser, more confident. I feel satisfaction by seeing things
happening and people succeeding. I like to see people genuinely happy with
their work. If I didn’t do it I’d be a vegetable, watching Jeremy Kyle all day
and would have to do something like work in a charity shop or be a driver for
someone’.
The themes were skills, management experiences, individual satisfaction, supporter,
experienced, responsible, and confident, being busy and enabler. Theme: Enabling
community activities.
Individual Benefit: Next, the individual gain of the board members was followed up
by asking them what they get individually by contributing to the community. Some
responses were that,
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‘I find this the most difficult of your questions. I am not convinced that I see
myself contributing to the community in the way I read your question. I see
my role as slightly removed from that. If I have a skill or contribution to
make, it is centred on my management experiences and as a result I get a lot
of individual satisfaction in seeing an organisation run efficiently and
effectively. That is why I joined the SWWales Charity’.
Although board members spoke of, ‘giving back’, that they did it, ‘not for individual
‘gratification’ and said that they had, ‘the freedom to withdraw it at any time’, they
all said that they felt responsible for the success of the organisation and that is why
they volunteered for the SWWales Charity through self-commitment. The responses
to whether they felt responsible by being a part of the board included,
‘of the many things I might feel about being a board member, responsibility
must be key. Like being a member of any committee, it has a degree of
frustration, celebration, anxiety, humour and achievement’.
And, ‘I feel part of a team that I try to nurture and mentor. I help other people and
consider employees as friends rather than employees. It fills me with pride to see
people getting on. I like to think I have enabled someone to have a better start in life
than I had and I lead by example’.
Both the respondents said that they did not feel powerful and the themes were
responsibility, knowledge transfer and leadership. They all said that they liked being
part of something and making friendships. They took responsibility by voluntarily
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contributing to the compliance of a well-run organisation and using their time to give
something back. Theme: Individual Responsibility.
Table 4.15 below, presents the themes from the follow-up interview questions for the
board members:
Table 4.15The Themes from the Follow-up Interviews for the Board members.
Board Members
Qualitative organisational
benefit Altruism
Qualitative community benefit
Enabling
Qualitative individual benefit
Responsibility
The results in Table 4.15, above demonstrate that as a result of the themes from the
follow-up interviews, the board members altruism enabled the organisation to
comply, the community was enabled as a result of this and the board members
themselves had the return of increased responsibility as a result on their voluntary
contributions. The following combines the interpretation of the qualitative data from
the questionnaires and the follow-up interviews. It also includes the quantitative data
of the time contributed by the board members in an initial thematic map.
Table 4.16 below, presents the initial thematic map as advocated by Braun and
Clarke, (2006 p.99) for the board members:
Table 4.16The Initial Thematic Map as Advocated by Braun and Clarke, (2006 p.99) for
the Board members.Quantitative £99,303.84
Qualitative organisational benefit Due
diligence and altruism
Qualitative community benefit
Achieving and enabling
Qualitative individual benefit Reputation and responsibility
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Table 4.16, above demonstrates that as a result of the interpretation of all the data,
the consultants contributed £99,303.84 per annum and the organisation is able to
ensure due diligence as a result of the board members altruism. The community
achieves cohesion that is enabled as a result of the services that the board members
ensure comply with the regulators. While the board members themselves have the
benefit of their own enhanced reputations through their responsibility.
In summary of the findings from the data for all four stakeholder categories, there
were both tangible and intangible benefits to the organisation, the community and
the individual stakeholders themselves. This was the recurrent theme throughout the
initial thematic maps for all categories. The next section is a review of the secondary
data from the organisational documentation to establish if it is being reported on.
4.5 A Review of Organisational Documentation
Following the collection of a number of organisational documents, a content analysis
(Table 4.17) of the SWWales Charity’s reports and written material was undertaken.
This method was advocated by Bryman, (2012, p.289) as, “… an approach to the
analysis of documents and texts (which may be printed or visual) that seeks to
quantify context in terms of predetermined categories and in as a systematic and
replicable manner. It is a very flexible method that can be applied to a variety of
different media”. This method was used because of its approach to interpretation
which consisted of putting the material into categories. The research question was,
‘are stakeholders’ contributions referred to or accounted for, either qualitatively or
quantitatively, in any of the organisation’s documentation?’
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All the reports that were investigated were already in the public domain so they
presented no confidentiality issues. They included, for example, annual reports,
project reports, and the IIP Gold Report. These documents were scrutinised by the
author by hand to establish if there were any voluntary contributions being reported
on. All these reports culminate in the annual report which is traditionally only
concerned with volunteer costs in the Statement of Financial Activities, (SoFA), as it
is the only requirement requested by the regulators at present.
In order to begin the examination of organisational documents, first the data was
divided into stakeholder categories; Consultants - the source of the reports included
the IIP Gold Report, November 2013. The reports were scrutinised to establish if
there was any information in there about the voluntary contributions of the
consultants. Traditional volunteers - the source of the reports that were examined
included; volunteer time as match funding for Communities First, WEFO and project
quarterly reports. Paid employees - the reports examined were appraisal reports,
work plans and weekly reports. The board members reports included board minutes,
a due diligence test, an annual report and social clauses in contracts. Reports are a
source of information which provided more data to identify what was actually being
reported on. They were investigated to establish if there was any information in the
reports about intangible contributions such as the levering in of funding, any
voluntary activity or any appreciation in recognition of the voluntary activity of all
the stakeholder categories. Table 4.17, below is the content analysis of the data from
organisational reports:
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Table 4.17 A Content Analysis of the Data from The SWWales Charity’s Organisational
ReportsStakeholder category and the source of
the reports.Evidence of voluntary
contribution?Evidence of any
benefit?
Consultants - IIP Gold Report 17th
October 2013 Scrutiny of this document was undertaken to establish if there is
any evidence of recognition of any voluntary contributions by consultants or
any publicity of their contribution, i.e. photographs or names.
Yes, but not reported on. Yes, but not accounted for.
Stakeholder category and the source of the SWWales Charity’s
quantitative/qualitative reports.
Evidence of voluntary activity?
Evidence of any benefit?
Traditional volunteers - volunteer time as match funding (C1st, WEFO,
Engagement Gateway quarterly reports), social clauses in contracts.
Yes Yes, and used for match funding but not fully accounted
for.Stakeholder category and the source of
the SWWales Charity’s quantitative/qualitative reports.
Evidence of voluntary activity?
Evidence of any benefit?
Paid employees - Appraisal reports, workplans, weekly reports.
No Yes, but not accounted for.
Stakeholder category and the source of the SWWales Charity’s
quantitative/qualitative reports.
Evidence of voluntary activity?
Evidence of any benefit?
Board members - Board minutes, Community Involvement Plan, Due
Diligence test, Annual Report.
Yes, by the amount of volunteer expenses
claimed.
Yes, compliance with funders terms and conditions, but not accounted for.
As can be seen from Table 4.17 above, there is little reporting of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions to the organisation. However, there were found to be many
examples of its existence, in the data from the responses to the questionnaires and
follow-up interviews. The consultants’ IIP Gold Report found no mention of their
input apart from their names as the author of the document. Scrutiny of this
document was undertaken to establish if there is any evidence of recognition of any
voluntary contributions by consultants or any publicity of their contribution and
there was found to be none.
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The documents scrutinised for the traditional volunteers did show that their time is
being used as match funding and in reports to funders, but it was not being fully
accounted for. The appraisal and supervision documents for the paid employees
showed no incidence of any unpaid work, although staff often spoke of it. While the
annual reports that are associated with the board members show the amount of
money in the accounts that are claimed as volunteer expenses, there is no evidence to
show fully how their voluntary time allows compliance. It is suggested that the
benefit of this significant contribution is currently going unreported, which is a
business limitation on behalf of the SWWales Charity. The next section combines
the summary of all the findings from this research.
4.6 A Summary of all the Findings
Having interpreted all the tangible and intangible data from the questionnaires and
follow-up interviews, the following, Table 4.18, below, presents a summary of all
the intangible data contributed by all stakeholder categories:
Table 4.18A Summary of all the Intangible Data Contributed by all Stakeholder
Categories.Stakeholder
categoryOrganisational
benefitCommunity
benefitIndividual benefit
Consultants Survival and gift Services and opportunities
Self-gratification and improved performance
Traditional volunteers
Outcomes and involvement
Cohesion and knowledge
Belonging and self-assurance
Paid employees
Sustainability, humility and pride
Relationships and occupation
Development and promotion
Board members
Due diligence and altruism
Achieving and enabling
Reputation and responsibility
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The table above demonstrates the interpretation of the qualitative responses to the
questionnaires and follow-up interviews. The interpretation shows that the
organisation, the community and the individual stakeholders themselves can describe
how their voluntary contributions allow many benefits to the organisation, the
community and themselves. Next, the qualitative value of time contributed by all
stakeholder categories is presented.
Table 4.19 below, summarises the tangible value of the time contributed by all
stakeholder categories:
Table 4.19The Tangible Quantitative Contribution of the Voluntary Time Contributed by all
Stakeholder Categories.Consultants
Traditional volunteers
Paid employees
Board members
Total
Total hours per month
40 348 1,100 380 870 hours per month
Divided by number of respondents
40 divided by 4
348 divided by 6
1,100 divided by 17
380 divided by 6
33 total number of respondents
Average number of hours per respondent per month
10 average hours per respondent
58 average hours per respondent
65 average hours per respondent
63.5 average hours per respondent
196.5 hours per respondent
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Method of calculating hourly rate
£360 per day divided by 7 hours was £51.42 per person per hour
WEFO’s guidance for in kind match funding @ administrators’ rate of £10.13 per hour
Average organisational wage totalled and divided by the full number of staff was £12.00 p.h.
WCVA’s hourly rate of board members’ time @£21.72 per hour
(£95.27 average divided by 4 categories = £23.81 on average per hour)
X no. of hours per month per respondent
£51.42 x 10 = £541.20
£10.13 x 58 = £587.54
£12.00 x 65 = £780.00
£21.72 x 63.5 = £1,379.22
£3,287.96divided by 33 = £99.63 on average per person per month
X 12 months
£6,494.40 £7,050.48 £9,360.00 £16,550.64
£39,455.52
X number of respondents
£6,494.40 x 4
£7,050.48 x 6 £9,360.00 x17
£16,550.64 x 6
£327,550.64
Total £24,681.60 £43,302.88 £159,120.00 £99,303.84
£326,408.32
Dividing £326,408.32 by the 33 respondents = £9,900 per respondent per
annum.
The table above shows a significant tangible value to the organisation that is not
being measured or reported on at present. If it was shown, annually it could enable
benchmarking with other organisations in the sector as well as showing funders its
value for social clauses, for example. In relation to the benefit of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions, however small, there is a tangible amount that can be put on
to people’s time.
Although most respondents said that they gave relatively little time, there is a
significant annual benefit. There was a cost to a consultant, for example of giving
free time but some definite benefit back to themselves, the organisation and the
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community. One also mentioned the bigger picture of governments benefitting from
voluntary contributions too, yet only traditional volunteers contributions are
measured for GDP. The existence of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and its
benefits has been shown and the following table presents all the data for all the
stakeholder categories.
Table 4.20, below summarises the interpretation of all the intangible and tangible
data for all the stakeholder categories and is the developed thematic map, described
by Braun and Clarke, (2006, p. 100):
Table 4.20The Developed Thematic Map for the Intangible and Tangible Data for all
the Stakeholder Categories from Braun and Clarke, (2006, p. 100).Consultants - £24,681.60 per
annum
Consultants Qualitative
organisational benefit
Survival and gift
Consultants Qualitative
community benefit
Services and opportunity
Consultants Qualitative
individual benefit
Self-gratification and improved performance
Traditional volunteers -
Traditional volunteers
Traditional volunteers
Traditional volunteers
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£43,302.88 per annum
Qualitative organisational
benefit
Outcomes and involvement
Qualitative community benefit
Cohesion and knowledge
Qualitative individual benefit
Belonging and self-assurance
Paid Employees - £159,120.00 per annum
Paid employees Qualitative
organisational benefit
Sustainability, humility and pride
Paid employees Qualitative
community benefit
Relationships and occupation
Paid employees Qualitative
individual benefit
Development and promotion
Board members -
£99,303.84 per annum
Board members Qualitative
organisational benefit
Due diligence and
altruism
Board members Qualitative
community benefit
Achieving and enabling
Board members Qualitative
individual benefit
Reputation and responsibility
Virtual Annual
Contribution £326,408.32
Organisational Benefit
Sustainability
CommunityBenefit
Participation
Individual Benefit
Wellbeing
Organisational sustainability, it is suggested, is partly achieved by the virtual
financial contribution of consultants and is shown to be £24,681.60 to the
organisation per annum. This is a significant amount, which could provide evidence
to other stakeholders, such as funders. It is suggested that highlighting it could also
help to lever in other funds. Consultants also enabled organisational survival through
the gift of their voluntary contributions. The traditional volunteers’ outcome was
£43,302.88 per annum and was as a direct result of the involvement of their
voluntary contributions. The total value of the paid employees’ time was the highest
at £159,120.00. Their voluntary contributions enabled sustainability through their
humility and pride and the board members contributed £99,303.84 through their
altruism that resulted in organisational due diligence. This shows a significant
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amount of both qualitative and quantitative contributions. However, none of the
approaches from the literature has identified a way of presenting this total virtual
contribution to the SWWales Charity of £326,408.32, that was made possible by the
voluntary contributions of all stakeholders identified by this research.
Community participation should also be identified as a result of reporting on the
benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. Reporting on it would show the
positive benefit it is having on the community through the relationships and
occupation of paid employees, for example. The community benefits from the
voluntary contributions of the consultants were shown to be services and
opportunity. One respondent indicated that, ‘charities, voluntary and community
groups and social enterprises need people with the right skills to be able to make a
difference to the people and communities they serve’. However, it was discussed that
there may still be some negativity around any category of stakeholder, not just the
traditional volunteers’ roles in the delivery of services in times of cuts. Yet it was
found that the traditional volunteers brought cohesion and knowledge to the
community. This may assuage the detrimental effect of how the organisation is
perceived in the community, as it may be seen to be using traditional volunteers
instead of paid employees. This however, has been dispelled as there have been
shown to be many benefits to traditional volunteers themselves who contribute
voluntarily. Reporting on this voluntary activity would market the organisational
success achieved by all voluntary activity, including that of board members who
enabled to the community’s achievement. Success would lead to extra effort and
ownership, through quality relationships that continue to provide occupation, paid or
otherwise.
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Individual wellbeing is the result of voluntary contributions and its benefits include
the development and promotion of paid employees. Also, individual self-
gratification and improved performance are the traits associated with consultants.
The board members’ voluntary contributions included the return to themselves of
their enhanced reputations through their responsibility of ensuring that the SWWales
Charity complies.
It has been established that there are definite outcomes from traditional volunteers
which include their belonging and self-assurance. It was also found that volunteering
is also good for the volunteer, whichever stakeholder category they belong to. It is
suggested that it helps improve health and wellbeing and provides opportunities for
individuals to acquire skills and knowledge that can enhance career development or
employment prospects. The similarities between all four stakeholder categories are
that their voluntary contributions enable the organisation’s sustainability. As well as
this, community participation is happening through individual wellbeing as a result
of their contributions. The following is the conclusion of this chapter.
4.7 Conclusion
The data shows a threefold benefit of organisational sustainability, community
participation and individual wellbeing that is supported by £326,408.32 of tangible
time as a direct result of the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions.
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Chapter Five analyses, interprets and reflects on the data in more detail to inform the
contribution to knowledge.
Chapter Five
Analysing, Interpreting and Reflecting on Findings
5.0 Introduction
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I will use the first person from this point forward, as it is, “important to emphasise
your own idea or contribution”, as suggested by Ruger, (2013, p.17). Having
undertaken the literature review in Chapter Two, I now analyse the results from my
research in Chapter Four and present my analysis of the findings that support my
contribution to knowledge. The findings of my study indicate that there is a
significant amount of volunteering being contributed by all stakeholders of the
SWWales Charity and that there are benefit the organisation, the community and the
individual stakeholders themselves. I also found that this is not currently measured
or reported on.
5.1 Review of Findings
All the respondents were very positive to about their many voluntary contributions
and the threefold benefit that resulted from their altruism. For example, one
respondent suggested the existence of this threefold benefit by stating that, ‘although
most of my work with The SWW Charity is behind the scenes in relation to people
management etc., there is evidence which indicates that commitment based HR
policies and processes coupled with strong leadership result in improved
performance of employees and volunteers which inevitably impacts on the
organisation's community work’. However, there is no existing way of measuring or
reporting on what all the stakeholders of the SWWales Charity voluntarily contribute
to the organisation. This significantly benefits the organisation by a tangible
£326,408.32 worth of time annually. One of the interviewees recognised the need to
be able to capture the contributions saying, ‘… in principle I think it is extremely
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important to be able to demonstrate the benefits of volunteering (both to the
receiving organisation and to the volunteers) to offset society’s obsession with
evaluating everything in purely financial terms’. Finances are not enough on their
own, as in Drucker’s, (2012, p.1) criticism of businesses reporting too narrowly on
the, (financial) “bottom line”.
There are also many benefits that I found that include survival, gift, involvement,
outcome, humility and pride as well as due diligence and altruism to the
organisation. Typically, respondents said that they did it just, ‘… to know that it is
appreciated and that it is beneficial to the company’. As evidenced in this research,
the organisational benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions lead to
benefits to the community and individual stakeholders as well, which gives a
threefold benefit. This supports the work of Moretti, (2005) as well as Bourdieu and
Wacquant, (1992) who advocate the multiple benefits of volunteering to social
capital. These threefold benefits are termed, “benefit multipliers”, by Haldane,
(2014, p.15). Haldane’s work on benefit multipliers is supported by my findings that
the community benefits from services, opportunities, cohesion, knowledge,
relationships and occupation as well as, achievement and enabling, which contributes
to community participation. Stakeholders themselves gain increased resources
themselves such as skills and wellbeing as a direct result of their contributions as
found by Moretti, (2005). The work of Putnam, (1995) Browne, (2003), and Cots,
(2011) found similar results in their research, as did O’Donnel et al, (2014).
In regard to wellbeing, a report by O’Donnel et al, (2014, p.10) presents a way to,
“define ‘overall wellbeing’. One solution is to use measures of subjective wellbeing
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(sometimes expressed as SWB) by which we mean the answers to questions about
people’s happiness and satisfaction with their lives. This approach fits with a
utilitarian view of the world where governments try to maximise the sum of
everybody’s happiness (or utility or ‘hedonic experience’). So in this report we focus
on subjective wellbeing – or what, for short, we shall often simply call ‘wellbeing’”.
With regard to my thesis, most respondents they described their measure of
wellbeing as, ‘… my confidence has increased and I also made new friends’. Most
respondents talked of the benefits of wellbeing to themselves, for example, one said,
‘… yes, I feel more confident to speak in front of people’. The individual
stakeholders benefit from, self-gratification, improved performance, belonging, self-
assurance, development and promotion as well as their own reputation and
responsibility, which contribute to their individual wellbeing. A typical response
from one of the paid employees was, ‘I hope to pass on what I have learned myself
over the years’ and, ‘I am giving the others confidence in what they do’ through their
own development. This sense of wellbeing comes from the respondents helping
others and is supported by O’Donnel et al, (2014) and Fujiwara, (2002), among
others as some paid employees said that it was a, ‘great place to work’.
As discussed, I found that there is a tangible contribution to the organisation in time
worth £326,408.32 annually that enables the organisation’s sustainability, yet it is
not accounted for or reported on by the SWWales Charity. The WCVA, (2011, 2013,
2016) publish various documents on the contributions of traditional volunteers in
Wales which show how volunteering contributes to GDP, but their records ignore
any other stakeholder category and this, it is suggested, is a limitation of their
reporting. Three respondents said that their voluntary contributions had some sort of,
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‘monetary value’ and one said that it helped, ‘financially when applying for bids’.
Yet, as has been found, there is no current measure for its benefits. The contribution
of the third sector is also advocated by the WCVA, Mahdi, (2006) and Kane, (2014,
p.2) who describes a new way of measuring the vast contribution of volunteering to
GDP and argues that, “this doesn’t mean the voluntary sector will be responsible for
an economic recovery, as the changes are retrospective corrections to previous years,
but it does mean we’ll be better at quantifying the contribution it makes to the
economy”. One respondent in my research, for example, said that their contributions
could be translated into a, ‘monetary value for increased consideration for
contracts/funding’, and it was also suggested by this respondent that it could be used
for match funding. This is just one example of how quantifying the monetary value
of time could be utilised and it is already being used by the WCVA, but only for
traditional volunteers.
The WCVA has a way of measuring voluntary contributions but this does not
consider informal or micro volunteering, or any of the contributions of any of the
other stakeholder categories. This is a limitation of the existing evidence and
literature as none of the approaches that I reviewed consider everything that is being
contributed. This is potentially a real business limitation for the organisation as I
found that all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions are significant and it is its
benefits that lead to organisational sustainability, community participation and
individual wellbeing. A stakeholder said that they do it, ‘... because I believe in and
am passionate about what people are trying to achieve and I like to give something
back to the third sector, I have a social conscience and enjoy improving things’. It is
this social conscience, I suggest, which leads to volunteering and as a result
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contributes to the threefold benefit of all stakeholders’ annual voluntary
contributions to the SWWales Charity, see Table 5.1, below:
Table 5.1The Annual Voluntary Contribution of all Stakeholders to The SWWales
Charity (The Final Thematic Map as described in Braun and Clarke, (2006, p.101).
Annual Total - £326,408.32
Organisational Benefit
Sustainability
CommunityBenefit
Participation
Individual Benefit
Wellbeing
Threefold Benefit
Table 5.1 above outlines this threefold benefit from my findings in an adaptation of
the final thematic map as described by Braun and Clarke, (2006, p.101). The
questionnaires from my research were devised from the approaches from the
literature. The approaches of quality marks, CSR, human capital, for example were
used as the topic codes for the questions and provided the themes that formed the
basis of voluntary contributions in my research. My research was much wider than
traditional volunteers as it was based on identifying the voluntary contributions of a
range of different stakeholders of the SWWales Charity. A sample of each the four
categories included in my research drawn from the organisation were: consultants,
traditional volunteers, paid employees and board members. Most felt that they
contributed because of their loyalty to the SWWales Charity. For example, one paid
employee said that, ‘as an organisation we need to be ahead of the game to ensure
that we are able to deliver on contracts, offer new and unique services to ensure that
we have a place in the market’. My results established that all four stakeholder
categories voluntarily contributed time to the organisation and reporting on their
voluntary contributions in a new way could be a, “significant driver to influence
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policy,” as Haldane (2014, p.15) suggests. It would also ensure that its regulators are
presented with full and accurate accounts of all the SWWales Charity’s activities.
Table 5.1 above, could be used to report annually on the benefit of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions.
Reporting on these findings annually would ensure that the benefits of time to the
organisation enable its sustainability; community participation and individual
wellbeing are properly reported on in future. However, as has been discussed, these
benefits are not presently acknowledged through the current reporting methods. A
new approach could be adopted to make these invisible contributions visible through
reporting on them. As can be shown, each of the stakeholder categories contributed a
significant amount of time to the organisation which resulted in an annual virtual
increase of 20% on top of turnover at £326,408.32. Yet most respondents said that
they are not concerned with the monetary value of volunteering.
A board member said that, ‘it is not something I do every day but I am not surprised
how much a consultant would cost. I am not bothered by that because I have done it
for the past fourteen years and not claimed a penny. It is about giving back to the
community, not what is in it for me’. The same consultant said that he had been
given the opportunity to work in a wide range of sectors as a result of his voluntary
work. The SWWales Charity benefitted from the gift of time that the consultants
gave which contributed to its survival. Even though one consultant said that his
contribution was, ‘negligible’, overall their category’s contribution was significant.
The traditional volunteers were also involved by their contribution of time and one
said that they did it, for example, ‘... not only for the community but for personal
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satisfaction and development. This enabled the organisational outcome of
sustainability, as well as them contributing to their own wellbeing. The results of this
research suggest that all stakeholders, as a result of their voluntary contributions,
have equal power and levels of interest in the SWWales Charity. They are all key
players, and are even more powerful according to the respondent who suggested that
they ‘have the freedom to withdraw it at any time’. There is also the quote from a
consultant who was ‘highly interested’ in the organisation, but according to
Mendelow, (1991) consultants have low power and a low level of interest. It can
now be suggested that in contrast to the work of Mendelow, (1991) and his
stakeholder, ‘Power/Level of Interest Matrix’, another version could be considered,
which shows all stakeholders having equal power and levels of interest in an
organisation. This could be updated as a result of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions and benefits, (ASVCB):
Figure 2: Equal Power/Level of Interest Model as the result of ASVCB:
In my research I examined the literature around organisational improvements and
performance; accreditations and corporate social responsibility as well as non-profit
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High Level of Interest
High
Power Level of interest
HiHigh
Key Players – All Stakeholders:
Consultants
Traditional Volunteers
Paid Employees
Board Members
approaches; traditional volunteering and its impact. As well as this I researched
human resource management that value and measure paid employees’ contributions
and examined the literature around accounting for and measuring contributions. I
also used the themes of Quality Marks and Corporate Social Responsibility, (CSR)
for all stakeholder categories. These themes informed all the questionnaires for the
mixed research methods in Chapter Three.
The literatures that were examined demonstrate that volunteers contribute a range of
resources to organisations and Danes et al, (2009), Drucker, (2012) and Fujiwara,
(2012) are among many who have reported the various ways that voluntary
contributions are made. Communities benefit from stakeholders’ altruism according
to, Browne et al, (2013) Putnam, (1995) and Cots, (2011). For example, Browne et
als research discusses micro-volunteering, which are short time bursts of
volunteering with bare minimum formality. The stakeholders themselves gain
increased resources such as skills and wellbeing as a direct result of their
contributions as found by Moretti, (2005), Browne et al, (2013), Haldane, (2014) and
O’Donnel et al, (2014). I suggest that it is this involvement that contributes to the
outcome of a threefold benefit. Yet, some of the approaches from the literature only
measure tangible money as an outcome, while others attempt to measure intangibles
such as goodwill, capability, loyalty, entrepreneurship, motivation, commitment or
innovation. None of the approaches that were examined in the literature currently
measure all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to an organisation in one all-
encompassing approach. The threefold benefit that all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions bring to the organisation, the community and back to the volunteers
themselves can now be analysed.
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5.2 The Threefold Benefit that All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions bring
to the Organisation, the Community as well as back to the Volunteers
Themselves
I have established that each of the stakeholder categories gives a significant amount
of time and effort for the benefit of the organisation, which in turn benefits the
community. I also found that each stakeholder category received a return from these
benefits to themselves as individuals. The wellbeing from their voluntary
contributions motivates them to contribute again, which has been well documented
by the WCVA, O’Donnel et al, (2014) and Haldane, (2014). Haldane, (2014) for
example, suggests that there is enhanced wellbeing arising from their volunteering
and this indicates that there needs to be a better way of reporting on it. Health
benefits of this kind are also referred to by O’Donnel, et al, (2014). They advocate
the positive effects of volunteering on the health of traditional volunteers. In support
of this, one volunteer suggested their feeling of wellbeing was enhanced by them
transferring their knowledge to others and corroborates O’Donnel et als research.
Traditional volunteers felt that their wellbeing had increased and said, ‘… yes, it has
increased and I also made new friends’ and, ‘yes, I feel more confident to speak in
front of people’. They were asked about the benefit to themselves by them passing
on their skills to others. Most answered, very positively, for example one said, ‘I
hope to pass on what I have learned myself over the years’ and, ‘I am giving the
others confidence in what they do’.
5.2.1 Organisational Benefits
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However, examples of this have never been accounted for in the organisation’s
annual reports and I suggest that organisational boards, in general, are not presently
being given the full information on which to base their decision-making. Fully
reporting on all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions could show the positive
benefits of performance, as advocated by Cornforth, (2012, 2015). In agreement with
this, I also found that the board members enabled due diligence to be met through
their altruism even though they described themselves as. ‘... laymen’. Cornforth,
(2012, 2015) discusses the necessity for strong boards as well Liddle, (2003) who
agrees that partnerships between local authorities and the third sector enhance
organisational performance. Cornforth, (2012, 2015) also undertook research into
boards and their governance and found that organisational reporting should include
much more than it currently does.
Currently all stakeholders, including the unpaid governance provided by board
members, contribute to the SWWales Charity in a variety of different ways that are
not acknowledged in any of the organisational reports at present. The time that is
contributed voluntarily to the organisation is supported by the typical answers from
the respondents, which included paid employees giving accounts of having, ‘no
doubt that giving my time to the organisation has benefitted both myself and the
organisation’. The same respondent continued, ‘I am committed to the organisation
and therefore take pride in completing my responsibilities’. While another said, ‘for
me it is about taking the organisation forward irrespective of the value of the time’.
This is the culture of the organisation and people said that they act in this way
because ‘everyone does it’. This may be one of the reasons that volunteers act in this
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socially responsible way, yet there is also payback on their volunteering. O’Donnel
et al, (2014, p.54) continue that, “… governments should develop new methods of
analysis where wellbeing is taken as the measure of benefit”. There was no mention
in their work of any unpaid work that may be given by paid employees or
consultants, for example. So, it is suggested that there is a limitation in O’Donnel et
als, (2014) argument about the need to measure the contribution of volunteering to
wellbeing.
For example, in some cases, the organisation’s consultants benefitted from more
work with other organisations as a result of their voluntary contributions. However,
the total value of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions may be worth, ‘potentially
hundreds of thousands of pounds by an organisation’, according to one consultant.
This is supported by Banks, (2016), on discussing traditional volunteering at an
annual voluntary sector council conference. He argued that his organisation would
not be able to survive without the voluntary contribution of £625 million alone to
replace the voluntary contribution of volunteers, including £156m to replace board
members. It may cost a lot more to replace paid employees’ voluntary contributions.
This threefold benefit to organisations, the community and the stakeholders
themselves is aligned with the, “benefit multipliers” identified by Haldane, (2014,
p.15) who states that, “... the evidence here, however imperfect, suggests some
significant benefit multipliers from volunteering, economically, privately and
socially”. Haldane’s research for The Bank of England is based purely on traditional
volunteers and argues that the benefits outweighed any costs associated with
volunteering. If there was a way to report on all stakeholders’ voluntary
290
contributions, and its benefits, then it would be a way to influence policy, as he
proposes. My findings suggest that the consultants’ felt that their activities helped
the, ‘credibility of the organisation’. As well as how doing it, ‘saves money’. They
also said that by contributing it would help to, ‘lever in funding’. This is supported
by Haldane, (2014, p.15) who argues that traditional volunteering alone creates,
“each year an economic value of at least £50 billion and potentially higher”. His
measure of that contribution is the tangible involvement of time, and it has been
established that there are also intangible inputs that are not being currently measured.
This is a limitation of the literature as none of the approaches from the literature,
such as ROCE, IIP, Social Capital and HRA that I examined in this thesis are
compulsory for organisations to adopt, but all promise to offer some sort of
competitive advantage over organisations that do not embrace them. The promoters,
or benefactors, of the approaches have argued that adopting them will make
organisations better. Some are standards, strategies, matrices, ratios, audits, cultures,
frameworks, measures, clauses but all are resources, such as frameworks, that are
used to benchmark how good or bad an organisation is at either managing money,
people or the community in which the organisation is based.
The approaches from the literature such as Return on Talent, VIVA and CSR attempt
to enable the organisation to reflect on, and measure some of the contributions that
are made to organisations. All use key performance indicators, (KPIs) and the
organisation’s mission statement to drive the approach, and therefore the
organisation forward, according to the literature. All offer a degree of sustainability
over those that have not adopted all or some of them. The different literatures all
recognise that the additional information gained by measuring these different
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contributions can be used for positive promotion, image and reputation to favourably
market how well the organisation is doing to its stakeholders. This, in turn, may
attract more business, funding, or the propensity for even more voluntary
contributions. Nevertheless, not one of the measurement approaches from the
literature offers a comprehensive examination of all functions or contributions that
may be fundamental to organisational survival, particularly in the third sector. Nor
do they fully quantify the wellbeing or social benefits back to individual
stakeholders, or the community, that enable organisations to have competitive
advantage over others that may not have as many stakeholders voluntarily
contributing throughout the year. It is this human and social capital that may give
organisational sustainability and competitive advantage, yet it is not fully reported
on.
5.2.2 Organisational Sustainability and Competitive Advantage
I interpreted that the paid employees helped organisational sustainability because of
their, humility and pride through being associated with the organisation and,
‘wanting it to be the best it can’. This is suggested in the work of Whyte, (1956)
Chum et al and (2013) Danes et al, (2009). Whyte, (1956, pp.8-9) called it, “habits
and dispositions”. Employees acquired new skills as a result of them working unpaid
hours which can be aligned to their human capital. Discussing Social Capital, Wang
et al, (2016, p.5) argue that, “in addition to formal memberships, an individual’s
connection to local communities and personal networks could influence the
likelihood of being asked to volunteer as well as obtaining information on
opportunities to volunteer, thereby increasing the propensity to volunteer for
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organizations and help others”. A paid employee responded with the fact that doing
work that they are not paid for, ‘…gives you a sense of achievement’. It is this
propensity to volunteer, as part of social capital, which can lead to benefits for the
stakeholders themselves, society and organisations, for a threefold benefit and is
defined by Bourdieu in Bourdieu and Wacquant, (1992, p.2) as, “…the sum of the
resources, actual or virtual, that accrue to an individual or a group by virtue of
possessing a durable network of more or less institutionalized relationships of mutual
acquaintance and recognition. This is also known as community cohesion and plays
an important role in the delivery of key public services. Volunteering is also good for
the volunteer: it helps improve health and wellbeing and provides opportunities for
individuals to acquire skills and knowledge that can enhance career development or
employment prospects”.
In support of the benefits of volunteering, Danes et al, (2009, p.211) argue that,
“during financially difficult times, it could be that human and social capital sustain
small firms”. Yet, there is no evaluation in the literature for how it actually sustains
small firms because there is no comprehensive measure for everything that is being
contributed. For example, a paid employee said that in order to help sustainability,
‘you must be willing to give above and beyond to support the organisation … to give
that little extra support when needs be’. They said that it, ‘... shows that as an
employee you are willing to put in hours over and above to ensure the organisation
achieving what is set out in their business plan and what is expected by funders’.
While another said, ‘… work would not be completed otherwise!’ This activity is
undertaken as the norm throughout the organisation and contributes to its
sustainability without being acknowledged. Most respondents agreed that
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sustainability through voluntary contributions was a good thing and that, ‘it was
good to know that it was appreciated and that it also benefits the organisation’.
Although there is no current way of measuring its benefits, I found that reporting on
all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions could enhance the SWWales Charity’s
sustainability, as well as its benefits to competitive advantage, as I found that it has a
quantitative value that can now be measured.
The findings of this study indicate that that the SWWales Charity could be reporting
on all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, and showing an extra virtual benefit of
20% on top of its annual turnover. One respondent said that, ‘… it is voluntary, if it
causes me any difficulties or I stop enjoying it, I can always walk away. I do it
because I chose to, not necessarily because I need to’. This does not mean that if it
was withdrawn that the organisation would only be operating at 80%, it may mean
that it now operates at 120%. It is 20% extra benefit through all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions that I am arguing exists. But this is not being acknowledged
anywhere and could help the organisation gain bids and tenders, with local
authorities for example, which is aligned to the work of Liddle, (2003) and
Cornforth, (2012, 2015). I found many examples of all categories of stakeholder
contributing time to the organisation that were not just traditional volunteers. Yet, all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions to the organisation, or its benefits, are not
presently accounted for or even mentioned in the current way of annual reporting.
This is not giving a complete picture of the organisation’s actual turnover. A new
approach could report on everything that is being contributed to the organisation by
all categories of stakeholder. It could utilise a method based on the SWWales
Charity’s current turnover of £1.6m. I can now show that from the sample of
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stakeholders who responded to my research, there is potentially an additional
unmeasured contribution of 20% on top of turnover that is not being reported on. It
is this that enables the threefold benefit of organisational sustainability and
community participation, as well as individual wellbeing. If a new method was
utilised widely it could also be used to benchmark against other organisations.
I found that there were many other benefits such as the benefits of increased skills as
advocated by Leitch, (2006). Increased skills are gained through human and social
capital and individuals, society and organisations gain a threefold benefit,
particularly in austere times. I argue that this enables organisations to survive if only
until the economy improves and then the traditional volunteers have the skills to
enable them to undertake paid work. In support of other categories of stakeholder,
not just traditional volunteers, volunteering in austere times, Chum et al, (2013,
p.410) found that, “… some organizations volunteers replaced paid employees, and
in others paid employees replaced volunteers”. This was found in my research and
one paid employee said that, ‘it shows that the employee is dedicated to the
organisation and prepared to give up their time, for free, for the benefit of the
organisation’ and, ‘yes as I want the SWWales Charity to be the best it can’. While
another said, ‘I think it shows commitment to one’s job and company as well as
demonstrate passion in ones work’. This is confirmation of their positive habits and
dispositions, as described by Whyte, (1956). In support of this, Chum et al, (2013,
pp.411-412) found that, “volunteers represent a primary human resource for
nonprofit organizations”. It is volunteers, or even paid employees working
voluntarily who sustain firms in austere times according to Danes et al, (2009). The
value of volunteers is also supported by Banks, (2016), as has already been
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discussed. He argued that his organisation would not be able to survive without the
voluntary contribution of £625 million alone if he had to replace the voluntary
contribution of volunteers. This was including the £156m it would cost to replace
board members. Using this assumption it may be a lot more to replace the benefits
brought by all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. Associated with this, Chum et
al, (2013, p.413) found that organisations that rely on volunteers will, “find it
impossible to substitute total volunteers with paid staff. In contrast, in some
organizations providing very specialized services (such as for medical services in
hospitals), it would be legally impossible to substitute paid staff with volunteers for
particular roles (Handy et al. 2008)”. This is also true of the SWWales Charity.
While discussing their voluntary work, one paid employee, for example, said that he
enabled the sustainability of the organisation and that, ‘I am committed to the
organisation and therefore take pride in completing my responsibilities’. While
another said, ‘for me it is about taking the organisation forward irrespective of the
value of the time’. A fourth paid employee respondent said that extra support had to
be given in order to help sustainability. Respondents also spoke of the benefit of
their contributions to the community. They acknowledged that, ‘it can often take
over and above the time allocated within a working week to establish’. As well as,
‘… community work takes commitment and dedication to achieve aims and
outcomes’.
This is supported by Hebson et al, (2003, pp.481-501) who identified that, “among
workers, certain traditional values – especially a concern for working in the public
interest – continue to inform the way they identify with, and understand, their work
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in delivering public services”. However, Hebson et al described the work that paid
employees were paid to undertake, he did not consider all stakeholders.
In support of delivering public services, another paid employee said that, ‘it shows
that the employee is dedicated to the organisation and prepared to give up their time,
for free, for the benefit of the organisation’ and, ‘yes as I want the SWWales Charity
to be the best it can’. This is confirmation of their positive habits and dispositions, as
described by Whyte, (1956). I suggest that it impacts on the, humility and pride that I
found in my research, as individuals as well as the sustainability of the organisation.
In relation to the sustainability of the organisation through his voluntary due
diligence; a board member said that his altruism, ‘definitely emphasises how good an
organisation the SWW Charity is within the community’.
Conversely, another respondent stated that they were grateful for, ‘the help that the
organisation had given them’. This is a good point of discussion as this benefit back
to the individual is what I suggest is a direct benefit of their contribution. Another
respondent was assured by the organisation and that their contribution was valued, ‘it
was good to know that it was appreciated and that it benefits the organisation’. The
involvement of all categories of stakeholders is essential in enabling organisational
survival through the benefits of volunteering. Aligned to this I also found that the
community benefitted from the SWWales Charity’s sustainability that leads to
enhanced services for community participation and it is to this area of the benefit to
the community that this chapter now turns to.
5.3 Enhanced Services for Community Participation
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As well as benefits to the organisation, I found the benefit of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions to the community to be that there are much needed services
that continue to be provided. This is as a result of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. If more people are volunteering in the community it leads to more
participation in democracy and less crime and that results in social capital. The
benefits of stakeholders volunteering in a community is also linked to the work of
Moretti, (2005) who found a positive effect on civic behaviour as a benefit of
education, such as increased voting. Some stakeholder categories, such as board
members have increased Social Capital through the skills they gain by volunteering
for an organisation. This increase in skills and education can lead to an impact on
wider social goals such as enhanced participation and can be measured by the
numbers that votes in an election, as has been discussed. Community services are
advocated by Putnam, (1995) and Banks, (2016). The consultants helped to provide
services and opportunities for the community as a result of their unpaid
contributions.
Many of the examples included stakeholders volunteering when there was a lack of
paid employees to deliver courses and their increased skills are promoted by Danes
et al, (2009). They received increased skills as a result and helped to provide
community cohesion through the transfer of their knowledge, Fujiwara, (2012). My
research found that the paid employees gained relationships through their occupation
with the SWWales Charity in the community. This is supported by a paid employee
who contributes to the success of the organisation and wanted the organisation to be
the best that it could be, which concurs with the work of Hebson et al, (2003). While
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another said, ‘I think it shows commitment to one’s job and company as well as
demonstrating passion in ones work in the community’. It is this passion which is
currently unmeasured that increases feeling of happiness and wellbeing which also
needs to be measured according to O’Donnel et al, (2014) and Jones-Evans, (2018).
The board members, who are drawn from the community, through their endeavours
enable achievement, which is satisfying the regulators and is due diligence, as
advocated by Cornforth, (2012, 2015). Without their voluntary contribution of time
due diligence could not be achieved and the organisation would not legally comply.
I interpreted community participation from the traditional volunteers’ responses as
can be found in Table 5.1. One respondent said that his involvement, ‘definitely
emphasises how good an organisation the SWW Charity is within the community’.
Another said that it ‘helps the organisation achieve its outcomes aligned to the
performance measures in its business plan’. The SWWales Charity’s business plan’s
critical success factors reflect that the organisation is committed to providing
services in the heart of the community. It can only do this through its own
sustainability. To date, only financial sustainability is measured and gives
information through GDP, which is particularly relevant in an economic downturn.
However, I have shown that this is not the complete picture. There are many
contributions from all stakeholders during austere times, as my research has
presented. By utilising the organisation’s facilities in the community, people gain a
sense of belonging and self-assurance, leading to community cohesion. Putnam
(1995) describes people voluntarily manning outposts, branches of institutions or
organisations to provide groceries locally and run by volunteers, in newer
democracies, particularly the USA, but throughout the world. Their Social Capital is
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similar to the approach from the literature of Mass Collaboration as it includes the
voluntary contribution of people to enable citizen-centric goods and services to be
produced and delivered.
I found that all stakeholders acted as volunteers for the organisation, but it enhanced
the benefit to the community as a result of their relationships and occupation.
Alternatively, the two volunteering categories, of traditional volunteers and board
members said they gave their contributions to enable community achievements, ‘this
shows willing and belief in the product that the organisation provides for the
community and that we are unpaid laymen have faith in what we are trying to do’.
The community benefitted from all these contributions and board member called
themselves, ‘laymen’ and may not have had any professional qualifications. Yet,
they all gained knowledge, either through professional qualifications or through
mentoring in the community. I found that there was a direct benefit to all
stakeholders. In fact, all individual stakeholders responded with anecdotes of how
they benefitted from their own contributions to the community. I have now
established that there are benefits to the SWWales Charity as well as the community
through all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions. I will now present my findings to
support the return of wellbeing to individual stakeholders.
5.4 Wellbeing as a Return on Individual Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions
This section presents the benefit of wellbeing to individual stakeholders. Each
category that I examined received indirect benefits of their contributions back to
themselves, as individuals. For example, the consultants gained more work as a
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result of their improved performance, for which they were grateful and gave them
the propensity to do it again.
A paid employee supported this feeling of wellbeing by saying, ‘being a full team
member while supporting colleagues when needs be and this in itself is a rewarding,
and is also allow you to gain more skills, knowledge and experience which is always
a benefit to myself’. This can be aligned to the approach of expectancy theory,
Vroom, (1964, 2004) in that one good thing will lead to another such as the free
marketing of the organisation by word of mouth by its volunteers. ‘It is important to
offer up to date and effective provision both for the benefit of participants and also to
compete in a developing and changing market’, stated one respondent. In their
responses the consultants were complimentary about how the organisation is a,
‘sophisticated organisation’ and said that they openly spoke favourably about their
volunteering in the SWWales Charity to external stakeholders. Schramm, in (1973,
p.12) called it the, “apostle like behaviour of convincing others”. The individual
benefits to traditional volunteers were that they had more self-assurance as a result of
their sense of belonging that led to paid employment for some of them and Law,
(2001, p. 1) describes it as, “… emotional engagement”. Five traditional volunteers
were recently employed by the SWWales Charity. This was based solely on their
knowledge, which was gained by their unpaid volunteering work and its positive
impact on the organisation. There was no need for them to undertake probationary
periods in their new jobs. They could achieve outcomes immediately, as paid
employees, with little supervision.
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This is supported by The Charter for Strengthening Relations between Paid
employees and Volunteers, jointly published by Volunteering England, (2012) and
The TUC (2012). The Charter states that, “the involvement of volunteers should
complement and supplement the work of paid employees”. The individuals
themselves said that they gain a feeling of wellbeing from their ‘belonging and self-
assurance’. I found that, even if people employed by The SWWales Charity were
made redundant, a high proportion continued to volunteer to learn new skills, which
shows that they trust the organisation to re-employ them in more affluent times. One
respondent said that, ‘without my contribution as a volunteer, it would be more
difficult to stretch staff resources’. This is also true of the paid employees who
contributed voluntarily to the organisation and gained increased skills.
The paid employees, through their development and hard work, achieved
recognition. Reward and recognition is advocated by the IIP approach by Devoy,
(2015). This led to more pay, through promotion, for some within the organisation.
One respondent recognised that work, ‘... can often take over and above the time
allocated within a working week to establish’. However, they were rewarded with
the recognition when there were opportunities for promotion. In relation to the
individual benefits of the board members, they said that they benefitted from their
enhanced reputations as a result of their responsibility, both within the SWWales
Charity and the community. One responded, ‘… the value that I gain, is to know that
I am trying to offer the best possible support. It is obviously for the benefit of the
organisation but also for my personal satisfaction’. This is a direct benefit even
though most said that they did not contribute for their own gain. Another stated that,
‘in my previous employment in the Civil Service I had no job satisfaction, I have
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now’. Van der Wiele et al, (2002) Hoque, (2003) and Smith, (2014) discuss job
satisfaction in relation to IIP, but IIP is sometimes seen as a badge or plaque as has
been discussed in the literature review. I agree because it does not recognise the
voluntary contributions of all stakeholders. However, neither do any of the other
approaches from the literature.
I suggest that it is the result of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions that provides
all categories of stakeholder with the benefit of personal wellbeing that is not
acknowledged in the current literature. I have shown that all stakeholder categories
stepped in and gave their time for no financial benefits, yet I have shown that they
did benefit individually and gained a sense of wellbeing and satisfaction that is
supported by Moretti, (2005). This in turn leads to organisational sustainability and
community participation. However, there was not one piece of the literature that I
examined that acknowledged this in one all-encompassing approach. This is found to
be a limitation of the literature as well as the current models of reporting. The return
on individuals’ stakeholder voluntary contributions is shown by one response from a
board member who stated that, ‘the value that I gain is to know that I am trying to
offer the best possible support to people. It is obviously for the benefit of the
organisation but also for my personal satisfaction’. The board member is referring to
the board being able to achieve due diligence through the altruistic acts of its
members.
Alternatively, the consultants enhance their self-gratification by being able to attract
more personal funding through their improved performance. While the traditional
volunteers may contribute to stand them in good stead for any future opportunities,
as part of expectancy theory as advocated by Vroom, (1964 and 2004). One
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traditional volunteer supported this and said that they contributed, ‘… not only for
the community but for personal satisfaction and development’. I found examples of
this satisfaction throughout all stakeholders of the SWWales Charity, not just the
paid employees. Yet, the benefit of going the extra mile is also presently unreported.
Responses from board members to why they did it included that, ‘it portrays a
professional and efficient company who is not afraid of change and one which takes
its valued employees with it’ and, ‘yes it enables better engagement with the
community’. This free time enables even better benefits in the community. I have
established that it is the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions that lead
to organisational success in the community, for the benefit of community. The
additional contributions of paid employees also add to organisational success. This is
supported by Law, (2011, p.1) who states that, “employee engagement has been
hailed as the key to organisational success”. She found that paid employees of the,
“not-for-profit are more engaged at work than those in the public and private sectors.
The key contributing factor to higher levels of employee engagement in the third
sector has increased emotional engagement”. This can also be applied to the
voluntary contributions of paid employees.
I also found evidence to support this statement in my research as the paid employees
described strengthened relationships through their occupation. Blackadder and
Jackson, (2011, p.2) continue, “when employees believe that their work genuinely
‘makes a difference’ they find it more meaningful and enjoyable, which encourages
them to perform at high levels and ‘go the extra mile’ without additional pay”.
However, there may still be some negativity around any category of stakeholder
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taking the work of paid employees. This was associated with the traditional
volunteers’ roles in the delivery of services in times of cuts. This may have a
detrimental effect on how the organisation is perceived in the community. In my
research I found no evidence to support this and there was no bad feeling by using
traditional volunteers instead of paid employees. In fact it was viewed as very
positive and gave the volunteers opportunities, as there are many benefits of helping
to provide services back to the traditional volunteers. The paid employees, through
their development, achieved promotion that led to more pay, for some. While the
board members said that they benefitted from their enhanced reputations. This, it is
suggested gives all the volunteers new skills which gives them the propensity to
voluntarily contribute year after year.
In support of the benefit of skills, The Leitch Review of Skills, (2006) advocated
training to build the economy. In alignment with this, a respondent said that related
to increased skills, “continuous improvement can only be a benefit as it improves
performance (through skills) for the benefit of the community.” Organisational
continuous improvement though people is also advocated by IIP and people who are
well trained and upskilled may have competitive advantage over those who are not.
A paid employee said that, ‘they have my time, commitment, skills, knowledge and
support whenever needs to be I am always willing and ready to help my colleagues
as I believe that team work is crucial to what we do on a daily basis’. Many who
volunteer do so in the third sector, but the contribution of the third sector has no
measure for the increased skills of individuals that are transferred back to the
community in the same way that some approaches from the literature measure the
impact of the investment of training to paid employees. There is also an impact of
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the increased skills of volunteering but it is not measured in the same way. Also
linked to the impact of skills is the work of Fujiwara, D, (2012, pp.1, 2 and 9) who
found that adults, participating in a part-time course leads to, “a greater likelihood
that people volunteer on a regular basis, which has a value of £130 to the
individual”. Fujiwara, (2012) also found that, “participating in adult learning is
found to have significant positive effects on individual health, employability, social
relationships, and the likelihood of participating in voluntary work”. This value is
worth £130.00 to the individual but there is no measure for the impact of increased
skills to the organisation or the community and this benefit is a limitation of the
literature.
This benefit is linked to the feelings of belonging and self-assurance of the
traditional volunteers through their increased skills and the self-gratification of the
consultants who provide them. As well as this development and promotion of paid
employees, there is the enhanced reputation and responsibility of the board members.
This is linked to the board members achieving due diligence through their altruistic
acts. They are not paid, yet they are responsible for all organisational compliance,
while protecting the individual board members’ reputation and responsibility. The
contribution of the individual stakeholders enables the organisation’s
accomplishment and the community to meet its potential. One responded with, ‘free
time can help to create a valuable resource helping others to freely add their time to
create a sustainable resource for generations’. The individual stakeholders benefit
from their own voluntary contributions by achieving wellbeing. The benefits are that
each and every contribution affects organisational sustainability, community
participation and individual wellbeing which have also already been discussed. Yet, I
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found that there was no evidence of all any of these stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions being quantified in the literature or organisational reports. Neither was
the wellbeing that resulted from the significant amount of time that was being
regularly, voluntarily contributed. It is here that the new model for All Stakeholders’
Voluntary Contributions, (ASVCB) is introduced to fully account for all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and its benefits.
5.5 Capturing All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions and its Benefits
through the ASVCB Augmentation Model
There is generally no comprehensive measure for intangible outcomes such as
connectivity, networks or empowering people. I found that all stakeholders of the
SWWales Charity voluntarily contribute a significant amount of time to the
organisation that result in the threefold benefits, which augments the organisation,
the community and the individual stakeholders themselves. Augmentation brings it
all together and shows that the individual sums can be greater than the individual
parts for synergy. I now present the new All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions’
and Benefits, The ASVCB Augmentation Model. ASVCB is the contribution that all
stakeholders of the SWWales Charity make that augments its sustainability.
I am now able to argue that organisations may not be fully accounting for the
threefold benefit of ASVCB in annual reports, because there is no literature that
considers all the contributions of all its stakeholders, or indeed the benefits back to
themselves. Because there was not one single all-encompassing approach to show
what I found, I now present a method of considering ASVCB, and the augmentation
that it brings in one approach. It is not suggested that by not having a method to
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present it up until now has been non-compliance or misappropriation on the part of
organisations. Reporting on ASVCB is not legally required at present because
organisations do not know of its full existence. Some probably know of its existence
but there has not been a mechanism to capture it until now. Regulators such as the
Charity Commission and Companies House currently only require quantitative
accounts of an organisation’s annual activities. The SWWales Charity’s financial
auditors undertake the preparation of these annual accounts; they also expect to see
some qualitative account of the activities that have been undertaken during the
previous year. Whilst there is an expectation that some of the qualitative background
is provided, there is no requirement to report on any voluntary activity, let alone
ASVCB. Apart from volunteer’s expenses being shown as a cost, no ASVCB are
currently reported on.
The present requirement by Companies House is that the board adopts the provisions
of the Statement of Recommended Practice, (SORP). This is laid out in its
‘Accounting and Reporting by Charities’ document issued in March 2005. This
method of accounting and reporting, I suggest, does not fully reflect the benefits of
the significant contributions of all the organisation’s stakeholders. This is important,
as I also suggest that in austere times it is ASVCB that is helping to shore up the
organisation as more people are unemployed and have more time on their hands in a
recession. During an economic downturn, Haldane, (2014) suggested that there may
be a glut of volunteers. He suggests that there are more people unemployed with
more time on their hands, because they may have been made redundant. The
majority of the SWWales Charity’s board members are not in paid work. By this
statement I mean that they are unpaid for the work that they do for the organisation.
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This was also true of paid employees and for example, one respondent who
contributed a significant number of hours of unpaid work said that, ‘…community
work takes commitment and dedication to achieve aims and outcomes’. Their
voluntary labour helps to ensure organisational survival until the economy improves.
To date, none of these voluntary contributions are being accounted for. Indeed, the
current requirement for annual reports does not necessitate complete information on
all stakeholders’ voluntary contribution, or its benefits. Therefore, I suggest, it is not
a true reflection of all the essential voluntary contributions, through the mass
collaboration of all stakeholders. This is people power and Hof, (2005, p.1) defines
mass collaboration as, “the power of us” by the sharing of resources such as their
personal computers for, “no central capital investment – just the willingness of its
users to share”. This cooperation and participation is a force that may be contributing
to the economy through Public Value or GDP, but it is suggested that the outcome of
participation is not measured fully at present. It also attracts more funding, but that
increased funding is not measured either.
It is suggested that there is a significant amount of different voluntary contributions
that are being missed, particularly around the budgeting considerations made by
boards. The Contribution of the Third Sector also measures the (virtual money, not
real) contribution of the impact of volunteering to the output of GDP. Kane, (2014,
p.2) describes a new way of measuring the contribution of volunteering to GDP and
argues that, “this doesn’t mean the voluntary sector will be responsible for an
economic recovery, as the changes are retrospective corrections to previous years,
but it does mean we’ll be better at quantifying the contribution it makes to the
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economy”. This argument is valuable but the literature does not consider informal or
micro volunteering or any of the contributions or any of the other stakeholder
categories, only traditional volunteers. The work of O’Donnel et al, (2009, p.362) is
also partly associated with traditional volunteering. Also, that the benefits of micro-
volunteering, “for the individual volunteer and the organisation can be significant”,
argue Browne et al, (2013, p.65) but are not measured in Kane’s work. It has been
established that Deloitte, (2015) has presented a measure for intangible outcomes
and combined with tangible GDP this partially helps to quantify the contributions
but the literature does not consider all stakeholders in Kane’s measurement.
This is a significant shortfall on behalf of the SWWales Charity, and possibly other
organisations, not just those in the third sector, in South West Wales. There is a
consequence, I suggest, of not fully reporting on ASVCB, particularly in these
austere times. If it was fully reported on it could provide a benchmark against other
organisations. The literature does not consider the benefits of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions because it has been fragmented, until now. I suggest that
engaging with all stakeholders and evaluating their contributions through holistic
reporting, is likely to have a positive effect on the sustainability of the organisation,
the participation of the community and the wellbeing of the individual stakeholders
themselves. There is a great deal of effort being contributed to the SWWales Charity
which is not being reported on because it is presently unquantifiable. It now needs to
be made quantifiable by showing it in annual reports. If ASVCB was withdrawn, the
SWWales Charity may not exist, at least not in its present form.
5.5.1 Measuring and Reporting on ASVCB
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I have established that there is currently an incomplete picture of ASVCB, and its
resulting augmentation, from the literature. The picture could now be completed by
measuring ASVCB to fill the gaps in the current ways of reporting on both tangible
and intangible contributions. A more accurate representation can now be shown of
what is being contributed. As can be seen the total contribution combined across all
categories has a value of a significant £326,408.32 per annum. Most respondents
agreed that if this were withdrawn for any reason it would have a devastating effect
on the organisation, as well as themselves. Adopting a new method of reporting on
the virtual value of an additional 20% would show ASVCB’s existence and make it
visible. For prediction, this figure could also be multiplied by any given figure, if all
stakeholders contribute in this way, not just the ones who responded to the
questionnaires. According to Haldane, (2014, p.15) (traditional) volunteering alone
creates, “each year economic value of at least £50 billion and potentially higher”.
This figure is significant but it does not consider ASVCB.
There is now the recognition that the current ways of measuring the benefits of the
voluntary contributions of all stakeholders, or ASVCB, do not go far enough as there
is no all-encompassing measure for it. Yet, there is a significant amount of literature
around traditional volunteering and Kane, (2014 p.1) argues that, “the sector’s
contribution to the UK is about much more than just finances”. This is in support of
Drucker’s, (2012, p.1) stance on the “bottom line” being only concerned with
finances. Kane was discussing intangible contributions and the fact that there were
some gaps in fully reporting on everything that is being voluntarily contributed by
traditional volunteer stakeholders. He does not recognise all stakeholders’ traditional
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voluntary contributions in his work around volunteering. Most of the literature refers
to traditional volunteering and Haldane’s, (2014) work refers to volunteering where
unemployed, retired, or those people who work and volunteer in the evening.
Economically inactive people may also give their time freely but there is very little
work on the benefits that all stakeholder categories may bring to organisations,
individuals or the community.
Organisational survival, community participation and individual wellbeing measures
in the literature currently gives an incomplete picture of what is being contributed to
organisational performance. Drucker, in (2012, p.1) states that, “nonprofits are, of
course, still dedicated to doing good but they also realise that good intentions are no
substitute for organisation and leadership, for accountability, performance and
results”. It is suggested that this performance is being enhanced by the voluntary
contributions of stakeholders, but the current literature does not consider this. My
new ASVCB Augmentation Model does consider the voluntary contributions of all
stakeholders and therefore gives an all-encompassing model of everything that is
currently being missed from the literature.
Using the results in Table 5.1 as its origin, below, is my presentation of the benefits
of ASVCB all-encompassing model, to the SWWales Charity, which I suggest,
provides the amplification and intensification of the augmentation of the
organisation, the community and the individuals who contribute it. Figure 3 below,
presents The ASVCB Augmentation Model:
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Figure 3: The ASVCB Augmentation Model:
313
£326,408.32
The SWWales Charity -
Sustainability
TheCommunity
- Participation
Individual Stakeholders -
Wellbeing
ASVCB
ASVCB produces the
Augmentation of the organisation,
the community and the individuals who
voluntarily contribute it.
Even though these calculations are not based on all the possible stakeholders of the
SWWales Charity, it can now be shown in a model that ASVCB enables the
augmentation of the organisation, the community and the individuals who contribute
it. Including ASVCB could enhance the economic value of GDP and GVA even
more. In this regard, the percentage of annual turnover in Wales increased to £2.2bn
in 2013, according to the WCVA, (2013). "If we combine the value of volunteers
with the income of the third sector in Wales, the third sector generates 7% of the
GDP of Wales. This is similar to the construction industry in Wales”. In 2016 GVA,
which does not currently measure the benefits of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions, states that the voluntary sector contribution was calculated at £12.2bn,
according to the UK Civil Society Almanac, (2016). In support of this, the WCVA,
(2016) only considers formal volunteering and published figures of £3.7bn, which is
equivalent to 6.8% of GDP in Wales 2016 and agrees that if informal volunteering
was counted as well it would be far higher, which is in direct alignment with this
thesis. The value of a virtual 20% on top of the organisation’s annual turnover is
being contributed by just a small sample of respondents. This may well have been
increased if all stakeholders responded. Making it mandatory could give the
regulators a full account of the augmentation that is happening as a result of all
stakeholders volunteering across Wales.
In contrast to a full account of what is actually happening across Wales, Chorley,
(2013, p.1) stated that the, “Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary
Organisations representing 2,000 charities warns pace of reform is ‘glacially’ slow”
and that “critics say PM’s flagship, (Welfare Reform) concept is vague and a cover
for cuts”. This is in direct correlation with struggling charities, including the
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SWWales Charity, that are already stretched due to cutbacks. However, if there are
more cuts, the void may be able to be partially filled by reporting on ASVCB to
show organisations’ full potential for the wider public benefit through Public Value,
for example. This would also show its effect on GDP and GVA, as discussed earlier.
5.6 Conclusion
To summarise this chapter, there is a lack of measurement or meaningful reporting
on both tangibles and intangibles in one all-encompassing approach and it is this that
is missing from the existing approaches from the literature. Reporting on finances
are not enough on their own, as argued by Drucker, (2012), for example. He thought
that reports should include voluntary contributions as well as money. Wellbeing also
needs to be measured according to O’Donnel et al, (2014) and the fact that GDP does
not tell the whole story as has also been discussed. There is no one clear approach or
method for calculating human value through models such as Public Value, for
example, and researchers have failed to take account for the mediating effects of
intangible resources, according to Surroca et al, (2010, p.463).
It would be useful then, to adopt a method to present a fuller description of the
SWWales Charity’s ASVCB, alongside its financial turnover. It could take account
of the augmentation that is the virtual value of ASVCB and help complete what was
found to be omitted from the present methods of reporting. ASVCB may not be a
legal requirement, but if adopted would give a comprehensive account of all the
SWWales Charity’s activities. This figure could be shown alongside turnover to
summarise ASVCB in any given year. The current balance sheets show a 100% of
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what can presently be counted. ASVCB could show a virtual 20% on top of its
current turnover as I have shown that it exists. In conclusion of this chapter, even
though it is not real money it does show the contribution of all its stakeholders to
organisational sustainability, community participation and individual wellbeing.
Chapter Six
Conclusion
6.0 Introduction
The threefold benefit to organisations, communities and individual stakeholders that
was found in my research can now be recognised and reported on. My findings
highlight how much more important it is to think in a new way about what
stakeholders contribute annually to organisations across Wales and further afield.
The new approach can be applied to any organisation, but I suggest that the
augmentation that ASVCB produces may occur more widely in the third sector at
present because of its association with traditional volunteering. It could possibly
exist in all organisations and it would be an interesting piece of future research to
find out.
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This thesis presents a way to understand more about All Stakeholders’ Voluntary
Contributions, and its Benefits, (ASVCB), which was found to exist in the SWWales
Charity. Many examples of ASVCB were found in this research, but it was not
acknowledged in its entirety anywhere within the organisation’s reports or in any of
the literature that I examined. Yet, it was found that ASVCB not only benefitted the
organisation but the community and individual stakeholders too, giving a threefold
benefit. This, I suggest, will have an effect on reporting the future performance of
the organisation to the community. It also highlights the efforts of its stakeholders
and why they may have provided the input of their contributions, as there was found
to be the benefit of wellbeing back to those who voluntarily contributed themselves.
The original aim of my research was only concerned with identifying stakeholders’
contributions,
‘to identify the tangible and intangible voluntary contributions made by all
stakeholders of a third sector organisation – a case study of a SWWales
charity.’
It was changed early on to include the words, ‘… and report on’. While more
recently, following the analysis the words, ‘… the benefits of’ was also added. The
final aim is,
‘to identify and report on the benefits of the tangible and intangible voluntary
contributions made by all stakeholders of a third sector organisation – a case
study of a SWWales charity’.
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The aim of my research has been met as prior to this as only, ‘traditional’
volunteering was able to be identified in third sector annual reports until now. Even
then the altruistic activity of traditional volunteers has only appeared as a tangible
cost through such headings as travel expenses or subsistence. Their intangible
contributions were also seldom reported on fully as in my experience, there were
only photographs of them smiling and helping out at events or receiving awards.
There was no evidence of the significant threefold benefit that their contributions
bring.
There is no legal requirement for fully accounting for all their contributions, as the
regulators do not currently require such detail. It was this gap in reporting that led
me to believe that there was a need to undertake further research into traditional
voluntary contributions. As well as this, it would be useful to identify if any other
stakeholder categories contributed to organisational success in the same way. This
research contributes to theory and practice, which culminates in my contribution to
knowledge by means of the new model in Figure 3, The ASVCB Augmentation
Model, which demonstrates the results of my research.
The structure of this thesis could be repeated in any future research as this thesis
evolved from my interest in the contributions of all stakeholders of the SWWales
Charity, as was introduced in Chapter One. Organisational sustainability through
people has been always been my primary focus as a practitioner in the third sector. It
was a definite positive to discover that there were benefits to community
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participation and individual wellbeing too. I did this by means of the literature
review in Chapter Two.
I examined a number of approaches in the literature on the various categories of
stakeholders, both paid and unpaid, and found that that they were fragmented. They
each only described one stakeholder category and none of them referred to all
stakeholders, or the benefits of all of their voluntary contributions to an organisation.
However, this is not what the authors intended to do, so it is not fair to criticise them.
There were a number of authors who did advocate ways of measuring contributions,
but I found that there was so much that was not being currently measured. It was this
that I found to be missing from the literature. In order to undertake the research in
the SWWales Charity I adopted a pragmatic research position, which is aligned to
case studies methodology. I took a pragmatic standpoint, which underpins the choice
of research methods. This standpoint provided the best fit for this research which has
a practical, social need using mixed methods in a single case study.
Chapter Three described how the single case study, which complemented my
pragmatic research position, would utilise the mixed methods of both qualitative and
quantitative research. The case study was undertaken to establish if all stakeholders
of the SWWales Charity contributed to its sustainability and, if any voluntary
contributions were found, to establish if they were being reported on. A
questionnaire was the method that I chose for collecting the primary data. This
included a pilot questionnaire, the main questionnaire, interviews and the scrutiny of
secondary data from organisational documentation for triangulation. The primary
data was collated by hand and I presented the results in Chapter Four.
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In Chapter Four, I coded the primary data by my own hand without aid of
computerised packages. I drew out the codes from the responses to inform my
results. The findings did confirm that there was a threefold benefit of organisational
sustainability, community participation and individual wellbeing that is supported by
£326,408.32 of tangible time as a direct benefit of all stakeholders’ voluntary
contributions. Yet, none of these contributions are currently measured or reported on.
Chapter Five analysed, interpreted and reflected on the findings from the data from
the case study, together with the findings from the literature to inform my
contribution to knowledge.
I found that all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, and the resulting benefits, do
exist and I presented my conclusions in Chapter Six. I thought that it would be
interesting if there was a new all-encompassing model that included all stakeholders
and all their contributions, from the data that was found. I suggested that the
organisation may have been missing an opportunity to account for benefits of the
significant contribution made on an annual basis by all its stakeholders. I found that
it would be useful then, if the benefit, which is currently invisible, could be shown.
All the data from the initial thematic maps, the developed thematic maps and the
final thematic map culminated in a new ASVCB Augmentation Model to give a
fuller description of the SWWales Charity’s full performance. This new model could
therefore, take account of the whole picture of the value gained by stakeholders’
tangible and intangible contributions by making them visible. The augmentation that
I found, as a result of my research, goes far beyond what can be captured in the
financial terms by translating volunteers’ time to money. This is the only type of
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voluntary activity that is measured and accounted for at present by the WCVA and
others. It is now important, through the augmentation that is brought by ASVCB, to
give a fuller description of what is actually contributing to an organisation’s
sustainability.
6.1 Findings
I am now able to demonstrate that ASVCB exists with the SWWales Charity and that
it contributed 20% on top of turnover during the year that this research was
undertaken. Not all of the SWWales Charity’s possible stakeholders were
respondents to this research, and if they were their contributions may have been even
higher than 20%. Now it can be captured, the information could be used to
benchmark against other organisations who may have more or less ASVCB annually.
It is also possible that all stakeholders have equal power and levels of interest in the
SWWales Charity, because their voluntary contributions could be withheld at any
time. As Freeman (2004) argues, stakeholders are vital to the survival of an
organisation. My findings suggest that their voluntary contributions are also vital to
the community and the individual stakeholders themselves.
I found that the SWWales Charity benefitted from ASVCB from the gift of the free
time that the consultants gave which enabled it to survive. The traditional volunteers
were involved by contributing their skills which enabled organisational outcomes by
targets being met, for example. I found that the paid employees helped sustainability
through their humility and pride in being associated with the organisation. I also
found that the board members enabled due diligence to be met through their altruism.
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These are the benefits of ASVCB to the SWWales Charity that annually contributes
to its survival.
While the benefit to the community is that there are much needed services that
continue to be provided, as a result of ASVCB. I found that the consultants helped to
provide services and opportunities for the community as a result of their
contributions. Many of the examples included stakeholders volunteering when there
was a lack of paid employees to deliver courses. They helped to provide community
cohesion through the transfer of their knowledge. Alternatively, the paid employees
gained relationships through their occupation. The board members, through their
endeavours enabled achievement. All stakeholder categories stepped in and gave
their time for no financial benefits, yet I have shown that they did benefit
individually from wellbeing. This is, I suggest, helping participation in communities.
However, each category also received indirect benefits of their contributions back to
themselves, as individuals. For example, the consultants gained more work as a
result of their improved performance, for which they were gratified. The traditional
volunteers had more self-assurance as a result of their sense of belonging that led to
paid employment for some of them. The paid employees, through their development
and hard work, achieved recognition. This led to more pay, through promotion, for
some. While the board members benefitted from their enhanced reputations as a
result of their responsibility, both within the SWWales Charity and the community.
This is a direct benefit back to them, even though most said that they did not
contribute for their own gain. I suggest that it is the result of ASVCB that provided
all categories of stakeholder with personal wellbeing. The final aim of this thesis has
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been met, because what has been found has been greater than just identifying the
voluntary contributions of stakeholders to a SWWales Charity.
The significance of my findings to organisations, communities and individuals
themselves is that there are a substantial amount of voluntary contributions that exist
but are not being reported on that now can be captured. The benefits of this activity
also exist but are not being fully reported on. I have discussed the benefits of all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions and what they mean to an organisation, also
what is different now that my research has taken place. It is now known that there is
no current way of reporting on the voluntary contributions of all the organisation’s
stakeholders and this is at least a business limitation.
ASVCB is a way to show all of an organisation’s activities and I could show other
organisations how the new approach works and consult with them on how they could
easily measure it themselves. This will give their stakeholders far greater insight into
how organisations are actually sustained, or otherwise. I can talk to other
practitioners and coach them on how to gather the information annually, using my
new approach. The transfer of this new knowledge has already been discussed with
the WCVA and IIP and could potentially be rolled out across the sector. My time
could be given voluntarily initially, but as it becomes larger a new organisation could
be formed that would attract funding for this kind of reporting.
The question now needs to be asked if there is any appetite for third sector
organisations to put themselves under the spotlight by undertaking an evaluation of
ASVCB in their organisations, communities through their individual stakeholders.
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They could be part of a pilot and the results can now be identified both quantitatively
and qualitatively and benchmarked against for each county borough or region. It
must have the caveat that although I calculated a figure of a virtual 20% that could
be shown as an annual benchmark of the benefits of ASVCB to the SWWales
Charity’s annual turnover, it is not real money but is an indication of how the
organisation treats its stakeholders and a way of reporting on its existence. It could
also show growth. Conversely, if these contributions were provided commercially,
then organisations would have to pay £326,408.32 per annum, resulting in a loss of
20% in their annual reports that leads to organisational sustainability, community
participation and personal wellbeing. There has never been any concern raised by the
charity’s regulators, or the charity itself, to recommend providing an all-
encompassing model that takes the augmentation of ASVCB into account. Applying
and recommending the ASVCB model would merely capture the contribution of a
range of stakeholders to organisations.
I intend to recommend the application of the ASVCB model to the WCVA and IIP
as a new method of capturing voluntary contributions in the sector, as I found that
All Stakeholders’ Voluntary Contributions and the benefits it provides exist in the
SWWales Charity. ASVCB may also be found in any other sectors but the WCVA
has already shown some interest in my work and has accepted me as a partner. In
order to quantify the value of the work contributed to enable a more complete
picture, the unit of measurement for ASVCB to an organisation annually could be
time multiplied by the amount of money each stakeholder category contributes to
give it a tangible value. Alternatively, the amount of time contributed annually could
be gathered from all stakeholders and the value of each unit averaged out.
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The annual value of ASVCB also has an intangible value to individuals that includes
their skills, knowledge and commitment, for example. The same method of
calculation could be used for the model, not only to the organisation but the
community and individual stakeholders too. Most of the benefits are intangible but
anecdotal evidence could also be testified in annual reports to support photographs at
meetings and events. Reporting on tangible and intangible ASVCB in this way
would fill the gaps in the current literature to show what is being contributed, as well
as its threefold benefit. The WCVA, for example, could then report it as an
additional unit of productivity that could be added to their existing method of
calculating volunteer hours to GDP. While IIP, as another example, could show how
ASVCB contributes to business growth. Once an organisation has this annual
measure then it would enable benchmarking with other organisations who could
undertake the same exercise as part of their annual reporting. The GDP figures could
be benchmarked nationally as well as internationally and also help to complete the
limitations of the existing literature on a greater scale.
As suggested, fully reporting on ASVCB may enhance any organisations’ turnover
and now there is a new model to show it. Converting the tangible measure of the
time that was contributed by ASVCB into virtual money resulted in an annual figure
of £326,408.32. This contribution may have been what has helped to augment the
sustainability of the SWWales Charity because without it, this sum would have been
a cost. As a result of the tangible benefits of time, I found that there were the benefits
of organisational sustainability, community participation and personal wellbeing as a
direct benefit of ASVCB. In order to frame this new contribution to knowledge I will
now present my work as two separate contributions to theory and practice.
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6.2 The Contribution of this Thesis to Theory and Practice
I have combined my findings and shown all the data in my ASVCB Augmentation
Model. This model includes my interpretation of both the qualitative and quantitative
data, using each stakeholder category. This is how it could be implemented by the
SWWales Charity, but it could easily be adapted for other organisations in any
sector. Any sector could show how ASVCB contributes to organisational
sustainability annually. In theory, it can now be shown how ASVCB enables
community participation, while giving a level of personal wellbeing back to each
individual that contributes ASVCB. Each benefit is dependent on a degree of
voluntary activity and any organisations’ contribution can now be measured and
presented for competitive advantage in my new model. In order to apply my new
model, I recommend that a section of future annual reports includes an accurate
survey of the ASVCB brought by all its stakeholders and all their voluntary activity
throughout the year. I have shown that the value of this significant contribution has
enabled the organisation the sustainability to deliver its services in a time of
diminishing income from grants. The community has more participation as a result
of the value brought by such altruistic acts. At the very least, I found that individual
stakeholders enjoy contributing to the organisation and the community, as well as
receiving the benefit back to themselves of wellbeing.
As I have identified, in the theory that there was not one approach in the literature
that referred to all stakeholders, or all of their voluntary contributions to
organisations. I have highlighted that ASVCB exists and that it should be measured
and reported on in a new model, particularly as it amplifies or augments what is
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happening in organisations. My new ASVCB model could be the subject of an
academic paper that would contribute to theory. It has implications for current ways
of reporting on the contribution of the third sector which could be piloted it the
WCVA, for example. The current literature has been developed by academics and
professionals in the world of practice in the social science field. Some of the
existing approaches such as quality marks, CSR, human capital and ROCE that I
analysed were found to have some limitations that ASVCB could help to complete.
If the ASVCB model was utilised as a method of calculating the annual voluntary
contributions to organisations, communities and individual stakeholders, then my
research would also contribute to practice.
In practice, this new model could be rolled out across other sectors that would
highlight the benefits to organisations, communities and individuals themselves. The
threefold benefit of ASVCB can now be written about alongside the existing
approaches from the literature. A new model has now been developed, which allows
the annual contributions from a range of stakeholders to be considered and
quantified. This can be used in other organisations, not only in the third sector but in
the public and private sector too. The organisation, the community and the
individuals themselves all benefitted from the benefits of ASVCB and reporting on it
is my contribution to practice. In practice, the ASVCB Augmentation Model could
be promoted to other organisations, as organisations may now want to do things
differently, as a result of my research. The model is a tool that can be used to
describe that the benefit of the existence of all stakeholders’ contributing their time,
skills and commitment to the sustainability of the organisation. This benefit can also
be shown to benefit the participation of the community and the potential wellbeing
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of all its stakeholders. As a practitioner, reporting on ASVCB can augment the
business in the future and help to fill the void in current business reporting.
It would be relatively easy to survey all stakeholders to gather qualitative data from
standard questions around their contributions, aligned to additional scores for
participation and wellbeing annually. The tangible contribution of time could be
recorded in a similar way and the model in Figure 3 produced on one page in annual
reports with supporting information to substantiate it. It could even show where the
organisation is now, with a projection of where it wants to be in the future as part of
organisational ambition. This survey could be undertaken by paid employees and
recorded in a database set up for the purpose. The resources needed would include a
cost, but the return on the investment would be worth the effort. It could potentially
help to lever in more funding. It could be used to inform match funding requirements
of WEFO, for example. Organisations that are high performing in relation to
ASVCB could contribute to case studies or act as ambassadors to show others how it
could work in their organisations.
It may not ever be a mandatory or compulsory requirement for reporting to
regulators in practice. It could, if adopted, show them added value by reporting on all
the organisation’s activities through ASVCB, which is now visible and has a new
model to validate it. This new model frames the contribution to knowledge in
relation to the literature review along with my interpretation of the data. The results
support the work of the existing literature around the voluntary contributions of
stakeholders. The ASVCB Augmentation model has implications for practice by
reporting on the threefold benefit.
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The practice of reporting by organisations as a method of calculating the benefits of
all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions can now be shown in annual reports. Using
the method of annually surveying stakeholders and analysing the results would show
exactly how much ASVCB is generated by individual organisations. The resulting
augmentation could be used as a benchmark against other organisations in any
sector. This could enhance the perception of the organisation’s work with all external
stakeholders such as funders and regulators, as well as potentially leading to
competitive advantage over organisations who do not have as much annual ASVCB.
In theory ASVCB has implications for current ways of reporting on the contribution
of all stakeholders. In future, it could be used to market the organisation in the
community to attract even more voluntary activity by stakeholders, giving them the
propensity to generate even more ASVCB. It would also allow internal stakeholders
such as staff and board members to fully appreciate the benefits of their own
altruistic contributions both in the organisation and in the community throughout the
year. It may further enhance their wellbeing and encourage more voluntary
contributions. However, as well as the benefits there may also be costs associated
with ASVCB.
6.2.1 The Costs of ASVCB
As well as the threefold benefit of ASVCB, there is also the argument about the costs
associated with volunteering which is also supported by Blackadder and Jackson,
(2011, p.2). They draw attention to the negativity associated with successful
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volunteer programmes. They are however undertaking work with The TUC to turn
the negative perception of volunteering in austere times where volunteers may be
used to replace volunteers to the positive of the benefits, which were found in
ASVCB. I found that if a paid employee felt compelled to contribute then it cannot
be classed as volunteering. It must then be something else such as fear or pressure of
losing their job, which is a potentially negative payback on their volunteering. It
really matters if one of stakeholder did not feel good about volunteering and this is a
cost that should be highlighted. The organisation could then do something about it
such as better planning around deadlines or sharing workloads more evenly. As well
as the converse of ASVCB there were other limitations of this study.
6.3 The Limitations of this Study
The main limitation of my finding of ASVCB is that this work was undertaken on
just one organisation. There is also the limitation that some organisations may not
survive if they did not have high amounts of ASVCB. The 20% that I found may be
high, but unless other organisations are researched I do not know if the SWWales
Charity’s ASVCB is high or not. There were also limitations around the number of
approaches from the literature that could be used for my research, which were the
constraints of my time to read everything as there is a vast amount of literature
around volunteering. My study would have been more comprehensive to have
involved funders such as WG, WEFO, the local authority or other regulators of the
organisation. The data from the organisation’s reports found that they lacked any
evidence of the reporting of any ASVCB. I analysed each piece of data myself for
reliability and validity. On reflection, it would have been better to have had the same
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number of respondents across the categories, but the staff list resulted in more people
coming forward to become involved. This, it is suggested, is because they are the
most confident at consultations, but is a limitation by not having equal numbers
across all the stakeholder categories.
I found that there is an incomplete picture in the current literature. It does not
acknowledge all stakeholders and their contributions to an organisation in one all-
encompassing study. ASVCB was found to exist in the SWWales Charity and many
examples of it were found in this research, but it was not acknowledged anywhere
within the organisation’s reports or in any of the literature that I examined. However,
ASVCB may exist in other organisations and this study was constrained by it only
being undertaken in one organisation. It would have been even better if I could have
undertaken the same research in at least one other organisation, so that I could have
compared the results. I found that the contribution of increased social capital during
difficult times is supported by the fact that during a recession, Taylor and McAdam,
(2003) more people are made redundant and paid work is scarce. During austere
times people may have more time to volunteer and the fact that volunteering is a
good thing for people and society is argued by Hof, (2005), Haldane, (2014) and
Kane, (2014). Now that this intangible contribution can be given a value, it could be
used as competitive advantage for all organisations, as advocated by Porter, (1985)
and cited by Thompson, (2001, p.343). The model could be positively promoted to
organisations that do not have as much augmentation that ASVCB brings. I found
that this augmentation may be what is supporting the SWWales Charity by shoring it
up in the present economic downturn. However, it is not used in any way to show
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what could be a significant contribution to the GDP figures such as those presented
by the UK Civil Society Almanac, (2016) and the WCVA, (2016).
To illustrate my point, in their research, O’Donnel et al, (2014) suggest that the
current measure of economic success, GDP, does not tell the whole story. They
argue for a method that goes beyond the simple figures associated with GDP, for a
worldwide measure of success that includes ‘subjective wellbeing’. Their measure
uses, among other things, a wellbeing cost benefit analysis, as opposed to a financial
one and a framework to enable international standardisation. O’Donnel et al,
continue that, (p.54) “… governments should develop new methods of analysis
where wellbeing is taken as the measure of benefit”. However, the work of
O’Donnel et al, only partly concentrated on traditional volunteering activities that
enabled increased wellbeing. There was no acknowledgement of the voluntary
unpaid work given by employees through ASVCB, for example. However, in
fairness, they did not set out to examine paid employees. This is relevant to my
notion that a recession is not always a bad thing for organisations. It can be turned
into a positive if it is balanced out by more volunteers’ intangible contributions
because they have more time on their hands, Danes et al, (2009). These voluntary
contributions may well be helping to shore up the SWWales Charity during this
economic downturn through the augmentation that ASVCB brings. It may be
happening in other organisations as well but we do not know because no one has
tried to measure ASVCB in this way until now.
Another argument for measuring ASVCB is that some people work at a slower pace
than others. An example of this is a paid employee who starts work an hour before
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they are paid and finishes an hour later than everyone else. She said it was so that,
‘everything would be perfect’ and her satisfaction is an example of her payback on
volunteering. Another employee spends most of his day talking to colleagues, but
completes his tasks, to an equally high standard in less time. They are both highly
regarded employees by the SWWales Charity. However, there may be limitations
and the converse of volunteering, where people receive benefits from the
organisation without giving anything in return because they are lazy or unmotivated.
There may be a downside to formalising ASVCB, as people may not be prepared to
be measured or counted. I propose that despite the high level of research into
stakeholders, not one of the authors identified the benefits of ASVCB in one
approach. However, a standardised model that could be used by the stakeholders
themselves to report on the limitation of not reporting their ASVCB is now crucial.
The aim of this research was to examine the contributions of all stakeholders and this
was found to be ASVCB. Its existence can now be publicised annually and the
results used as a benchmark of organisational success. It can also identify failures
too, before they become damaging to the organisation. There is also the opposite
effect if the stakeholders who did not respond and say that they did nothing to
contribute but, in fact, take resources from the organisation by not contributing.
Factors in this scenario include paid workers not performing, consultants not
marketing the organisation effectively or traditional volunteers being overly critical
and board members taking detrimental risks and could be the subject of a future
piece of research.
6.4 Future Research
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There are many benefits of reporting on ASVCB, as has been shown and this
contribution to knowledge demonstrates how the added value of all stakeholders’
voluntary contributions can be captured and reported by organisations in the future.
In order to take this work forward, a paper has been submitted to the Welsh Council
for Voluntary Action, (WCVA) and the Welsh Institute of Social and Economic
Research, (WISERD). I have been contracted by IIP and have started their
practitioner development programme. Once qualified as a registered practitioner, I
may be able to take this work forward into organisations myself.
I suggest that the augmentation that ASVCB produces may occur more widely in the
third sector at present because of its association with traditional volunteering.
However, this new approach to measuring stakeholder contributions is positive and
significant in a period where much of the reform in public services is focused on co-
producing services with citizens. It would be an excellent piece of future research to
find out how the new model could be used to measure their voluntary contributions
to co-producing services, for example. Initially just one organisation, from the third
sector, could be examined. In that way at least it would identify if ASVCB exists in
other organisations. Using exactly the same methods, the results could be compared
with mine before rolling it out to all sectors.
My new ASVCB model shows that all categories of the SWWales Charity’s
stakeholders contributed a significant amount of time and effort which benefitted the
organisation, the community and themselves. This indicates that they may all have
equal power and levels of interest and has implications for all sectors, not just the
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third sector and this could also be a piece of future research. There could be paid
employees working over and above their contracted hours in all organisations,
particularly in these austere times, that if it was withdrawn organisations may not
survive at all. There may, however, be some stakeholders, particularly those who are
paid such as employees, who do not even do the full day’s work that they are paid
for. Likewise, this would be an interesting piece of future research. I found that some
employees do over and above what they are paid for the organisation while others
never stay late or help out when there are deadlines. Perhaps the productive ones
balance the unproductive ones out? This may well negate ASVCB.
I suggest that reporting on ASVCB will definitely be useful in the SWWales Charity
because, as a practitioner, it would solve the business limitation of not accounting
properly for all the organisation’s activities. So much excellent work is going
unreported at present in the SWWales Charity and possibly other sectors. It could be
recommended for use to the Charity Commission, Companies House, WCVA and
other external bodies. It could potentially inform WG policies with regard to
regulating tackling poverty through accounting for ASVCB and the augmentation it
brings to organisations, communities and the wellbeing of the contributors. It could
also be applied to any sector as a method for capturing the contribution of a range of
stakeholders to organisations whether in the statutory, voluntary or commercial
sectors.
6.5 Conclusion
335
As discussed in the introduction to this chapter, I found that the literature around all
stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, and its benefits to organisations, communities
and individuals is limited, which is my contribution to theory. Secondly is that there
is presently no way of reporting on ASVCB which is my contribution to practice. I
also found that there were benefits to individuals and the community as well as the
organisation. My research set out to identify, through a literature review, whether or
not there were any approaches in the literature that referred to the contributions of all
stakeholders. I found that there were not any references made by any of the authors
of the approaches examined in the literature to ASVCB, or its augmentation of
organisations, communities or individuals, in one all-encompassing model. I also
found that all stakeholders of the SWWales Charity have equal power and levels of
interest, as opposed to the model presented by Mendelow, (1991). These are my
findings, which are the limitations of the literature and this is my contribution to
theory.
The second notion was to establish, through a case study, if there were any tangible
contributions, made by all stakeholder categories to an organisation. I found a virtual
contribution of £326,408.32, or an augmented virtual 20% on top of turnover. I also
found that as well as there being the augmentation that ASVCB brings that enables
organisational sustainability, there were benefits to the community of increased
participation. As a consequence of this I found that the individual stakeholders
themselves benefitted from their own wellbeing as a direct result of their ASVCB.
This was unexpected because the aim of my study was only really interested in the
benefit to the organisation at the outset, and the voluntary contributions of all
stakeholders.
336
I found, for example, that if there are economically inactive older people or young
mums they would not be contributing to the economy anyway in the measure for
GDP. But with my new ASVCB model, all their contributions, however small can
now be identified and this is my contribution to practice. This could be used to
inform external stakeholders of the SWWales Charity’s accomplishments annually,
alongside the statutory financial reports. By multiplying the £326,408.32
contribution per annum in the county borough alone by the number of charities, for
example, would give a virtual amount to the economy that is not presently being
captured or reported on. Translated across Wales, the UK and Europe that figure
could potentially be highly significant. The augmentation of ASVCB could be given
the status to inform an accurate account of the true state of any sector in the future.
Therefore, ASVCB enables the augmentation of the organisation, the community and
the individuals who contribute it. Augmentation brings it all together and shows that
the individual sums can be greater than the individual parts for synergy. This is my
contribution to knowledge and what can now be presented in annual reports. It is the
full account of what may have been the augmentation or the shoring up of the
SWWales Charity. This augmentation is a direct result of ASVCB. The benefits of
ASVCB are the result of the goodwill of all the SWWales Charity’s stakeholders and
their altruistic contributions. It may be that the people who contributed it have more
time on their hands during the recent recession. However, I suggest, it is something
that is intrinsic to them because as a result of their contributions they gain positive
outcomes back to themselves as well.
337
So, who would want to know this? There may be a downside to formalising ASVCB,
as people may not be prepared to be measured or counted on. The stakeholders want
to do it on their terms and not be depended on for an annual measure. 35.8% of
people in the community where the SWWales Charity is based are claiming some
kind of income related benefit and this may have a negative effect on the number of
permitted hours they are able to contribute. So, there are real reasons why some
people may not want to be acknowledged, but it would be completely confidential.
They said that measuring their contributions would have a negative effect because it
would detract from the true altruism of their acts. They also thought that there would
be a problem if people were claiming state benefits. However, a standardised model
that could be used by the stakeholders themselves to report on their altruistic
activities may be worth pursuing in future. Of course it would be completely
confidential, in the same way as the WCVA and IIP publishes their data.
One of the aims of this research was to address the limitations of the literature and
report on the benefits of ASVCB, which is augmentation. Its existence can now be
publicised annually and the resulting augmentation used as a benchmark of
organisational success. It can also identify the dangers of not having as much
ASVCB as others, before they become damaging to the sustainability of the
organisation and its stakeholders in the community.
The question now needs to be asked if there is any appetite for third sector
organisations to put themselves under the spotlight by undertaking an evaluation of
ASVCB in their organisations and communities by surveying individuals. The result
would be various levels of augmentation, which can now be identified both
338
quantitatively and qualitatively. There has never been any concern raised by the
charity’s regulators, or the charity itself, to recommend providing an all-
encompassing model that takes the benefits of ASVCB into account, but reporting on
it will now give a true state of an organisation’s sustainability through community
participation and individual wellbeing.
Finally, all stakeholders’ voluntary contributions, ASVCB and the augmentation it
brings can now be shown. It was not shown in any of the current literature that was
examined, or in any of the organisational documentation previously. If it does exist
in one organisation, it may well exist in others and that would be a satisfying piece
of work to undertake in the future. It could even inform a quality mark to benchmark
against other organisations. It definitely could be shown as part of GDP, because a
value can now be placed upon ASVCB. These contributions and benefits have been
largely undiscovered, unreported on and unmeasured until now. However, the
augmentation that it produces in organisations, communities and individuals
themselves can now be fully demonstrated. Identifying ASVCB shows where it
exists and it can now be mapped in other organisations too. This is the true value and
the ASVCB Augmentation Model completes the missing piece of the jigsaw that
tangible financial accounting and the literature on intangibles such as pride,
commitment and loyalty currently ignore. My new approach to measuring
stakeholder contributions, and its benefits, is positive and significant in a period
where much of the reform in public services is focused on co-producing services
with stakeholders from all sectors, and this is my contribution to knowledge.
339
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Appendices
xxix
Appendix 1 – Suggested Questions for the Pilot Questionnaire
Appendix 2 – Pilot Questionnaire
Appendix 3 – Covering Letter to all Stakeholders
Appendix 4 – Consultant Questionnaire
Appendix 5 – Traditional Volunteer Questionnaire
Appendix 6 – Paid Employee Questionnaire
Appendix 7 – Board Member Questionnaire
Appendix 8 – Follow-up Interview Questions
xxx
Appendix 1
Suggested Questions for the Pilot Questionnaire
xxxi
Appendix 1
Suggested Questions for the Pilot Questionnaire
In order to commence the research, stakeholders were first identified and potential
questions were outlined, aligned to the appraches in the literature.
Consultants:
Quantitative - How many hours are you involved in quality marks?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of reputation, goodwill and branding, in your opinion that
is not being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Traditional volunteers:
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in formal volunteering?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of people volunteering their help in our activities, in your
opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual
reports?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in meetings?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of everyone working together for the benefit of the
community, in your opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales
Charity’s annual reports?
xxxii
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in informal volunteering?
Qualitative – Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of volunteer time, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in learning?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of volunteers’ knowledge, in your opinion, that is not
being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Paid employees:
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in increasing your knowledge of
new technology or ways of working?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of improved technology, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in work that you are not paid for?
Qualitative – Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of paid employees working over and above the hours they
are paid for, in your opinion, that are not being reported on currently in the
SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in developing new management
systems?
xxxiii
Qualitative – Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of the improvement to our human resources, in your
opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual
reports?
Board members:
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in promoting the work of our
organisation?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of peoples’ social intangible contribution, in your opinion,
that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in governance training?
Qualitative – Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of increased knowledge, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual reports?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in the delivery of services?
Qualitative - Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
Mixed - What is the value of money saved by people giving freely to our
organisation, in your opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales
Charity’s annual reports?
xxxiv
Appendix 2
Pilot Questionnaire
xxxv
Pilot questionnaire (piloted on 27th February 2014 with a selection of
stakeholders):
Dear Stakeholder,
I am currently studying for a Doctorate in Business Administration (DBA) at the
University of South Wales. As part of my research I have to complete a thesis. I have
decided to undertake my study on a sample of SWW Charity’s stakeholders and their
intangible contribution to our organisation’s success. Part of the research involves
collecting data by means of a questionnaire to gain views and opinions and I would
be grateful if you would spend some time completing it for me. The timeframe for
your answers is for a year from 1st April 2013 to the present day. If you need any
help in completing it, please do not hesitate to contact me. All information will be
treated in complete confidence, unless you have anything that you particularly want
to draw my attention to. Adding your name is optional but I will also be conducting
follow-up interviews with some stakeholders to gather further data. I look forward to
sharing the results with you at a future Stakeholder Day.
Thank you, Christine Esposito.
Name (optional)………………………………………………………………………
Please enter your name if you are prepared to give more information or be
interviewed.
1. Status – as a stakeholder of the SWWales Charity, please tick the box if you
are:
xxxvi
1.1 A Consultant/Assessor? If you have ticked this box please answer
questions 2.1, 2.12, 3, 4, 5 and 6.
1.2 B Community member/resident/voluntary group/partner? If you
have ticked this box please answer questions 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.12, 3, 4, 5
and 6.
1.3 C Staff member? If you have ticked this box please answer questions
2.1, 2.6, 2.7, 2.8, 2.12, 3, 4, 5 and 6.
1.4 D Board member? If you have ticked this box please answer questions
2.9, 2.10, 2.11, 2.12, 3, 4, 5 and 6.
2. Do you undertake any voluntary work at the SWWales Charity that
includes any of the following?
All categories:
2.1 How are you involved in Quality Marks:
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in quality marks?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
xxxvii
Mixed - What is the value of reputation, goodwill and branding brought by our
achievement of quality marks, in your opinion, that is not being reported on currently
in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
Category B only:
Category B only:
2.2 How do you contribute to social/community benefit (Altruistic Capital):
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in formal volunteering, doing
things for social/community benefit?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of people volunteering their help in our community
activities, in your opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales
Charity’s annual accounts?
xxxviii
2.3 How are you involved in partnership working/meetings (Mass
collaboration)?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in meetings?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of everyone working together for the benefit of the
community, in your opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales
Charity’s annual accounts?
2.4 How many voluntary hours do you contribute informally, as a third sector
stakeholder?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in informal volunteering?
xxxix
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of volunteer time, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
2.5 How many hours are you involved in learning to benefit the organisation
(Payback on volunteering/Volunteer Investment and Value Audit)?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in learning?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
xl
Mixed - What is the value of volunteers’ knowledge, in your opinion, that is not
being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
Category C only:
2.6 How do you improve your performance (Human Capital/Virtual Human
Resource Development)?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in improving your performance,
through technology or new ways of working?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
xli
Mixed - What is the value of improved technology, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
2.7 Do you spend working that you’re not paid for (Voluntary labour of paid
employees)?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in work that you’re not paid for?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of paid staff working over and above the hours they are
paid for, in your opinion, that are not being reported on currently in the SWWales
Charity’s annual accounts?
2.8 How are you involved in new management systems (Human Resource
Accounting)?
xlii
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in improving new management
systems?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of the improvement to our human resources, in your
opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual
accounts?
Category D only:
2.9 How do you actively promote our organisation (Return on Capital
Employed)?
xliii
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in actively promoting the
performance of our organisation?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of peoples’ promotion, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
2.10 How are you involved in governance training?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in governance training?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
xliv
Mixed - What is the value of increased knowledge, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
2.11 How are you involved in social clauses to enable us to deliver contracts and
services (Social value)?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in the delivery of services?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of money saved by people giving freely to our
organisation, in your opinion, that is not being reported on currently in the SWWales
Charity’s annual accounts?
xlv
All categories:
2.12 How are you involved in safeguarding the environment?
Quantitative – How many hours are you involved in ensuring that our natural
environment is safeguarded?
1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4+hours
Qualitative - Why, in your opinion, does this benefit the SWWales Charity?
Mixed - What is the value of good CSR, in your opinion, that is not being reported
on currently in the SWWales Charity’s annual accounts?
3. Do you think that the organisation is supported by voluntary contributions?
Yes No
Why?
xlvi
4. Do you think that your voluntary activity should be acknowledged?
Yes No
Why?
5. Do you think that the organisation would be less successful if it was not for
voluntary contributions?
Yes No
Why?
6. Anything else you would like to add?
Thank you for completing this questionnaire. I will be contacting you again
shortly, if you have put your name on this questionnaire, to inform you of my
findings and ask you if you would like to take part in a follow-up interview.
xlvii
Appendix 3
Covering Letter to all Stakeholders
xlviii
Dear Stakeholder,
Re: Doctoral research aim - ‘To identify the tangible and intangible voluntary
contributions made by all stakeholders of a third sector organisation – a case
study of a SWWales charity.’
I am currently studying for a Doctorate in Business Administration, (DBA) at the
University of South Wales. As part of my research I have to complete a thesis. I have
decided to undertake my study on a sample of SWWales Charity’s stakeholders’ that
include you and your contribution to our organisation.
Part of my research involves collecting data by means of a confidential questionnaire
to gain your views and opinions. I would be grateful if you would spend some time
completing the attached for me. I will ensure that you have plenty of support to
complete it, if needed. If you are willing to have a face to face follow-up interview
with me, please ensure that you add your name to the questionnaire. All results will
be anonymous and there will be no way of knowing who gave a particular answer or
comment. I will share all my findings with you as I analyse the data but in the
meantime, if there’s anything you’re not sure of please do not hesitate to let me
know.
Thank you,
xlix
Christine Esposito, Director.
Appendix 4
Consultant Questionnaire
l
Consultant Questionnaire
Name (optional)………………………………………………………………………
Please enter your name if you are prepared to give more information or be involved
in a follow-up interview.
1.0 How are you involved with the SWWales Charity?
1.1 Do you contribute any time to the SWWales Charity, that you’re not paid for?
Yes No
1.2 If you ticked, ’yes’ to 1.1, approximately how many hours do you contribute per
month?
0 hours 10 hours 20hours 30+hours
2.0 Are you involved in Quality Marks or continuous improvement?
li
Yes No
2.1 How many hours per month are you involved in quality marks or continuous
improvement for the SWWales Charity that you’re not paid for?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.2. Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
2.3. What is the value of reputation, goodwill and branding brought by our
achievement of quality marks and continuous improvement?
Category B only:
3.0 How are you involved in safeguarding the SWWales Charity’s
environment?
3.1 How many hours per month are you involved in ensuring that our natural
environment is safeguarded?
lii
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
3.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
3.3 What is the value, in your opinion, of good Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR), being considerate of the environment?
4.0 Do you think that the organisation is supported by voluntary your
contributions?
Yes No
4.1 Why?
liii
5.0 Do you think that your voluntary activity should be measured in some way?
Yes No
5.1 Why?
6.0 Do you think that the organisation would be less successful if it was not for
your voluntary contributions?
Yes No
6.1Why?
7.0 Anything else you would like to add?
Thank you for completing this questionnaire. I will be contacting you again
shortly, if you have put your name on this questionnaire, to inform you of my
findings and ask you if you would like to take part in a follow-up interview.
liv
Appendix 5
Traditional Volunteer Questionnaire
lv
Traditional Volunteer Questionnaire
Name (optional)………………………………………………………………………
Please enter your name if you are prepared to give more information or be involved
in a follow-up interview.
1.0 How are you involved with the SWWales Charity?
1.1 Do you contribute any time to the SWWales Charity, that you’re not paid for?
Yes No
1.2 If you ticked, ’yes’ to 1.1, approximately how many hours do you contribute per
month?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.0 Are you involved in Quality Marks?
lvi
Yes No
2.1 How many hours per month are you involved in quality marks?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.2. Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
2.3. Do you think that there is a value of reputation, goodwill and branding brought
by our achievement of quality marks, if so why?
3.0 How do you contribute to social/community benefit?
3.1 Do you give any hours per month doing things for community benefit?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
lvii
3.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
3.3 Do you think that there is a value of people volunteering their help in our
community activities?
4.0 How are you involved in partnership working/meetings?
4.1 Are you involved in SWWales Charity meetings, if so how many hours?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
4.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
lviii
4.3 Do you think that there is a value of everyone working together for the benefit of
the community?
5.0 How many voluntary hours do you contribute informally?
5.1 Are you involved in informal volunteering, if so how many hours?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
5.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
5.3 What is the value of your volunteer time?
6.0 How many hours are you involved in learning to benefit the organisation?
6.1 Are you involved in learning, if so how many hours?
lix
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
6.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
6.3 What is the value of volunteers’ gaining knowledge?
7.0 How are you involved in safeguarding SWWales Charity’s environment?
7. Are you involved in ensuring that our natural environment is safeguarded, if so
how many hours?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
7.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
lx
7.3 Do you think that good Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), being considerate
of the environment, has a value?
8.0 Do you think that the organisation is supported by your voluntary
contributions?
Yes No
8.1 Why?
9.0 Do you think that your voluntary activity should be acknowledged?
Yes No
9.1 Why?
10. Do you think that the organisation would be less successful if it was not for
your voluntary contributions?
lxi
Yes No
10.1Why?
11. Anything else you would like to add?
Thank you for completing this questionnaire. I will be contacting you again
shortly, if you have put your name on this questionnaire, to inform you of my
findings and ask you if you would like to take part in a follow-up interview.
lxii
Appendix 6
Paid Employee Questionnaire
lxiii
Paid Employee Questionnaire
Name (optional)………………………………………………………………………
Please enter your name if you are prepared to give more information or be involved
in a follow-up interview.
1.0 How are you involved with the SWWales Charity?
1.1 Do you contribute any time to the SWWales Charity, that you’re not paid for?
Yes No
1.2 If you ticked, ’yes’ to 1.1, approximately how many hours do you contribute per
month?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.0 Are you involved in Quality Marks?
Yes No
lxiv
2.1 How many hours per month are you involved in quality marks?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.2. Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
2.3. What is the value of reputation, goodwill and branding brought by our
achievement of quality marks, in your opinion?
3.0 How do you improve your performance?
3.1 How many hours per month are you involved in improving your performance,
through technology or new ways of working?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
lxv
3.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
3.3 What is the value of improved technology, in your opinion?
4.0 Do you spend any time working that you’re not paid for?
4.1 How many hours per month are you involved in work that you’re not paid for?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
4.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
4.3 What is the value of paid staff working over and above the hours they are paid
for, in your opinion?
5.0 How are you involved in new management systems?
lxvi
5.1 How many hours are you involved in improving new management systems?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
5.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
5.3 What is the value of the improvement to our human resources, in your opinion?
3. 2.12 How are you involved in safeguarding the environment?
6.0 How are you involved in safeguarding the SWWales Charity’s
environment?
6.1 How many hours per month are you involved in ensuring that our natural
environment is safeguarded?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
6.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
lxvii
6.3 What is the value, in your opinion, of good Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR), being considerate of the environment?
7.0 Do you think that the organisation is supported by your voluntary
contributions?
Yes No
7.1 Why?
8.0 Do you think that your voluntary activity should be measured in some way?
Yes No
8.1 Why?
lxviii
9.0 Do you think that the organisation would be less successful if it was not for
voluntary contributions?
Yes No
9.1Why?
10.0 Anything else you would like to add?
Thank you for completing this questionnaire. I will be contacting you again
shortly, if you have put your name on this questionnaire, to inform you of my
findings and ask you if you would like to take part in a follow-up interview.
lxix
Appendix 7
Board Member Questionnaire
lxx
Board Member Questionnaire
Name (optional)………………………………………………………………………
Please enter your name if you are prepared to give more information or be involved
in a follow-up interview.
1.0 How are you involved with the SWWales Charity?
1.1 Do you contribute any time to the SWWales Charity, that you’re not paid for?
Yes No
1.2 If you ticked, ’yes’ to 1.1, approximately how many hours do you contribute
overall per month?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.0 Are you involved in Quality Marks?
Yes No
lxxi
2.1 How many hours per month are you involved in quality marks?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
2.2. Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
2.3. What is the value of reputation, goodwill and branding brought by our
achievement of quality marks, in your opinion?
Category B only:
3.0 Do you ever talk to/explain to external people or organisations about the
work of the SWWales Charity?
3.1 How many hours are you involved in actively promoting the performance of our
organisation?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
lxxii
3.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
3.3 What is the value of peoples’ promotion, of the SWWales Charity, in your
opinion, that is not being reported on currently?
4.0 How many hours are you involved in governance training?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
4.1 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
4.2 What is the value of increased knowledge, in your opinion, that is not being
reported on currently?
lxxiii
4.3 What is the value of money saved by people giving their knowledge freely to our
organisation in your opinion?
5.0 How are you involved to enable us to deliver contracts and services?
5.1 How many hours are you involved in the delivery of services?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
5.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
5.3 What is the value of money saved by Board members giving freely to our
organisation?
lxxiv
6.0 How are you involved in safeguarding the SWWales Charity’s
environment?
6.1 How many hours per month are you involved in ensuring that our natural
environment is safeguarded?
0 hours 10 hours 20 hours 30+hours
6.2 Do you think that this benefits the SWWales Charity? If so why?
6.3 What is the value, in your opinion, of good Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR), being considerate of the environment?
7.0 Do you think that the organisation is supported by your voluntary
contributions?
lxxv
Yes No
7.1 Why?
8.0 Do you think that your voluntary activity should be measured in some way?
Yes No
8.1 Why?
9.0 Do you think that your voluntary activity should be acknowledged?
Yes No
9.1Why?
lxxvi
10.0 Anything else you would like to add?
Thank you for completing this questionnaire. I will be contacting you again
shortly, if you have put your name on this questionnaire, to inform you of my
findings and ask you if you would like to take part in a follow-up interview.
lxxvii
Appendix 8
Follow-up Interview Questions
lxxviii
Follow-up Interview Questions
Consultants:
1. If you knew the benefit to the organisation of your contribution, would you still
give it freely?
2. How has your personal recognition and reputation been enhanced by your
involvement with the SWWales Charity?
3. How do you think that community members benefit from your contribution?
Traditional Volunteers:
1. If you knew the benefit to the organisation of your contribution, especially in your
support of paid employees, would you still give it freely?
2. Has your personal satisfaction, (knowledge, confidence, development and meeting
new people) increased through your voluntary work?
3. What do you think is the value to others of you passing on your skills?
Paid Employees:
1. If you knew the benefit to the organisation of your contribution, would you still
give it freely?
lxxix
2. Have you benefitted personally through your voluntary activity or has there been a
detrimental effect?
3. What is the value to others of you working over and above your contracted hours?
4. Have community members benefitted from your voluntary contribution?
Board Members:
1. If you knew the benefit to the organisation of your contribution, how would you
feel about still giving it freely?
2. Do you feel powerful by being a member of the Board of the SWWales Charity, if
so, please explain in which ways?
3. What exactly is it that you get personally by contributing to the community?
lxxx
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