The Benefits of Having a Well-Structured Volunteer Program in Corporations
September 23, 2025Recommendations to Foster a Culture of Volunteerism in Your Company
September 23, 2025
How to Effectively Get a Return on Investment from Your Employee Volunteer Program
Employee volunteering is no longer a “nice-to-have” corporate perk — when structured and measured properly it becomes a strategic investment that drives talent, brand, community impact, and measurable business value. But “doing volunteering” and “getting an ROI from volunteering” are very different things. Below is a practical, research-backed playbook to help you design, measure, and optimize a volunteer program that returns value to your company and community.
Start with clear goals (and align them to business outcomes)
Every ROI journey begins with a clear destination. Decide whether the primary objective is talent development (leadership, teamwork, retention), brand and reputation, operational support for nonprofits, ESG reporting, or a mix. Program design, KPIs, resource allocation, and partner selection should all flow from that strategic choice. Research and practitioner guidance emphasize aligning volunteering with HR and corporate goals to translate activity into business outcomes.
Define measurable KPIs up front
Avoid measuring only inputs (hours volunteered). Good ROI measurement mixes employee, corporate, and community metrics. Typical KPIs include: participation rate (% of workforce that volunteers), volunteer hours, volunteer retention, employee engagement or eNPS change, skills gained (self-reported or manager-rated), nonprofit capacity outcomes (beneficiaries served, program improvements), and media/brand lift. A robust dashboard ties these metrics to financial outcomes where possible (reduced turnover cost, productivity gains, PR value). Several practitioner guides provide useful KPI frameworks you can adopt.
Put a dollar value on benefits (carefully)
To calculate ROI you’ll need to estimate monetary benefits and program costs. Benefits can be direct (value of volunteer labor to nonprofits, PR equivalency, volunteer grants leveraged) and indirect (lower turnover, higher productivity, better recruiting). A common ROI formula is:
ROI (%) = (Total Monetary Benefits − Program Costs) ÷ Program Costs × 100.
Several organizations provide methods to convert volunteer hours and engagement outcomes into monetary terms; use conservative, well-documented assumptions and disclose them in reports.
Short numeric example (step-by-step)
Use real examples to make ROI tangible. In a documented case, UPS volunteers delivered $341,577 of volunteer services in one month across 1,141 volunteers. If your program costs for that month were $50,000 (coordination, staff time, supplies), calculate:
1. Benefits − Costs = $341,577 − $50,000 = $291,577.
2. Divide by Costs: $291,577 ÷ $50,000 = 5.83154.
3. Multiply by 100 to express as percent: 5.83154 × 100 = 583.154% ROI.
That means every dollar invested returned approximately $5.83 in value that month — a dramatic example of the value volunteerism can create when measured and captured. (Numbers and methods come from published ROI tracker case studies and practitioner calculations; adapt assumptions for your context.).
Focus on skills-based and measurable activities
Skills-based volunteering (SBV) — where employees apply professional skills (marketing, IT, finance, HR) to nonprofit needs — consistently produces higher, easier-to-measure ROI: nonprofits gain capacity, employees gain demonstrable development, and the company can quantify learning outcomes and brand benefits. Deloitte and others have shown strong links between volunteering and leadership/skill development when projects are structured and supported.
Integrate volunteer programs with HR and talent systems
To translate volunteering into retention and talent ROI, integrate activity data with HR systems. Track volunteers’ participation against performance reviews, leadership pipelines, mentoring programs and internal mobility metrics. When volunteering becomes an explicit development pathway (with clear learning objectives and manager buy-in), its impact on promotion, retention and productivity becomes measurable and defensible. Guidance from HR and CSR practitioners stresses this integration as a core lever for ROI.
Choose partners and platforms that deliver data
Platforms (e.g., Benevity, VolunteerMatch-type services) and measurement partners can automate tracking, matching, and reporting. They also help with legal, insurance, and background-check needs — reducing risk and administrative cost. Use vendors that export clean data for analysis and can connect to your HR/analytics stack so you can demonstrate cause-and-effect over time.
ROI isn’t only about percentages; it’s also about credibility and narrative. Combine hard metrics with strong qualitative stories: testimonials from beneficiaries, employee narratives about skill application, case studies showing nonprofit capacity gains. Storytelling amplifies perceived value and helps secure continued executive support and budget. Volunteer program guides emphasize mixing numbers with stories for the best internal persuasion.
Pilot, iterate, scale — and run controlled experiments
Start small with pilots tied to specific KPIs. Use A/B-style tests where possible (e.g., compare retention or engagement among volunteers vs. non-volunteers controlling for other variables). Learn fast: what causes participation? Which activities produce measurable development? Scale the formats that show clear business impact and sunset those that don’t. Continuous improvement is key to sustaining ROI.
Account for costs honestly (and include “hidden” costs)
Don’t forget to include staff time, paid volunteer hours, management of partnerships, technology fees, travel, and recognition costs. Transparent costing makes your ROI credible. Many organizations also include the value of volunteer grants, matched giving and PR exposure as part of benefits — but be conservative and transparent about how those values are estimated.
Governance, recognition, and sustainability
Build governance (clear ownership, metrics cadence, data responsibilities) and formal recognition programs. When leadership champions volunteering, participation rises and benefits compound (better recruitment, stronger employer brand). Long-term ROI comes from making volunteering a sustainable, strategic part of your company’s talent and CSR ecosystems.
Conclusion
Getting ROI from an employee volunteer program is entirely possible — but it requires strategy, measurement, honest accounting, and integration with talent systems. By setting clear goals up front, using rigorous KPIs, valuing the right activities (especially skills-based projects), and telling a mixed quantitative/qualitative story, you turn volunteering from a feel-good activity into a measurable business lever that builds people, brand, and community impact.
xcm