five directions for volunteer management research

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Motivational profile, role identity and volunteer embeddedness Gerry Treuren and Natalie Potter AOM symposium, San Antonio, August 16

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Page 1: Five directions for volunteer management research

Motivational profile, role identity and volunteer embeddedness

Gerry Treuren and Natalie Potter

AOM symposium, San Antonio, August 16

Page 2: Five directions for volunteer management research

Growing challenges for volunteer managers

Recruiting and retaining the right

volunteers

Page 3: Five directions for volunteer management research

HRM and OB offers new approaches to volunteer attraction and retention

Page 4: Five directions for volunteer management research

1. Message-matching-based approach to recruitment and retention

• First proposed by Clary et al. 1994, 1998• Argued that the motivational emphasis of the

recruitment message attracted volunteers with the same motivational orientation

• The more congruent the recruitment message is with potential volunteer motivation, the higher the intention to volunteer

Page 5: Five directions for volunteer management research

If the message-matching approach is well-founded…

• Organisations can design better strategies for recruiting preferred motivational types

• Can be expanded to include motivationally appropriate retention strategies

Page 6: Five directions for volunteer management research

Limits to the current research

• Only tested using student samples• Has only looked at intention to volunteer, not

actual volunteering• This approach hinges on getting volunteer

motivation right

Page 7: Five directions for volunteer management research

A message-matching research program

Page 8: Five directions for volunteer management research

2. The Associative-Supportive motivation

• Treuren (2009) proposed the Associative-Supportive motivation based on studies of event and sport volunteering

• Associative-Supportive motivation: Volunteer has a strong attachment to the organisation or activity. They participate to (i) be involved and (ii) to ensure its success.

Page 9: Five directions for volunteer management research

Some evidence for the Associative-Supportive motivation

• Strong qualitative and descriptive evidence in event and sport volunteering

• Clary et al (1998) Volunteer Functions Inventory + A-S factor structure works: • Sport event volunteers (N=207)• Health-based volunteering (N=203)

Page 10: Five directions for volunteer management research

Implications of the Associative-Supportive motivation for recruitment and retention

Enables better recruitment and retention strategies:

• Recognition of A-S motivation enables more accurate description of volunteer motivation

• Enables better targeted message-matching

Page 11: Five directions for volunteer management research

Research Questions

Page 12: Five directions for volunteer management research

3. Recognition of volunteer profiles

• Kiviniemi et al (2002) highlighted the multiple motivations of volunteers• Promise of identifying generic volunteer types

• Identifying generic volunteer types will assist message-matching approaches, and thus lead to better recruitment and retention

Page 13: Five directions for volunteer management research

Current volunteer profile research

• Sparked several papers that used cluster analysis and latent class analysis techniques to identify generic volunteer types

• Current research is inductive and sample specific: use of a variety of scales prevents the identification of generic types

• No testing of approach

Page 14: Five directions for volunteer management research

An example of volunteer profiling

• Cluster analysis of motivations of 588 event volunteers drawn from 5 organisations

• 6 distinct types of volunteers• Three varieties of enthusiasts• Two varieties of reluctant volunteers• One variety of instrumentalists

Page 15: Five directions for volunteer management research
Page 16: Five directions for volunteer management research

Research Questions

Page 17: Five directions for volunteer management research

4. Role Identity of volunteers

• Volunteer role identity is that aspect of self-concept that sees ‘volunteering’ as part of their identity and personality• ‘I am a volunteer at ----’

• This belief about self can influence volunteer behaviours and expectations

Page 18: Five directions for volunteer management research

Role Identity of volunteers

• Role identity is negligible at first – people typically volunteer initially for other reasons

• RI emerges soon after commencement• As people continue to volunteer, they develop

a sense of themselves as ‘volunteers’• This identity consolidates their volunteering

involvement

Page 19: Five directions for volunteer management research

Volunteer Role Identity and tenure

Unclear – how RI develops over time

Volunteering starts

Page 20: Five directions for volunteer management research

Organisational benefits of managed Role Identity

• Research has pointed to the importance of volunteer role identity – RI positively correlated with:• organisational commitment• ‘employee’ engagement• organisational identification• reduced intention to leave

Page 21: Five directions for volunteer management research

Role Identity as moderator of the relationship between Psychological

Contract Breach and Intention to leave

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Role of volunteer Role Identity

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Managing Role Identity

• Cultivation of role identity can lead to better retention and - eventually - better recruitment

• How? • Recognising and finding legitimate forms for

volunteer ‘ownership’ • Appreciating the different forms taken by

volunteer engagement

Page 24: Five directions for volunteer management research

Propositions to be tested

Page 25: Five directions for volunteer management research

Propositions to be tested

Page 26: Five directions for volunteer management research

5. The ‘job embeddedness’ of volunteers

• Job Embeddedness Theory (JET) holds that employees are bound to their organisations by an idiosyncratic collage of perceptual, cognitive and structural factors

• Some of these factors can be manipulated by management to increase retention

• Potentially directly applicable to volunteers

Page 27: Five directions for volunteer management research

So what is JET?

• Volunteer attached to organisation by: • Organisational and community fit• Organisational and community linkage• Organisational and community sacrifice

• The greater the embeddedness, the more ‘connected’ and the lower the intention to leave

Page 28: Five directions for volunteer management research

Moderating role of volunteer embeddedness

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Consequences of managing employee embeddedness

• JET research has found that the different elements of embeddedness reliably predict employee outcomes such as:• Employee attachment and engagement• Organisational citizenship behaviours

• Moderator of dissatisfaction and shock

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A framework for volunteer management

• Tools for a framework of volunteer attraction and attachment:• A model of recruitment• A model of retention

• Provides a diagnostic tool for management interventions

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• Volunteers decide to participate for a variety of reasons related to their community connection

• Continuing volunteering can be explained through the growing organisational embeddedness

• Management can adopt practices that integrate volunteers into the organisation

Implications of JET for volunteer management

Page 32: Five directions for volunteer management research

Propositions to be tested

Highimpact

Highimpact

Lowerimpact

Page 33: Five directions for volunteer management research

Propositions to be tested

Mediumimpact

Mediumimpact

Mediumimpact

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A JET model of volunteer recruitment and retention

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Research challenge

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Three potential research directions