
How to Integrate Corporate Volunteering Into Your HR Strategy: A Step-by-Step Guide
October 3, 2025
Measuring ROI and Impact: Volunteer Program Metrics Every HR Leader Should Know
October 6, 2025Top 5 Challenges Companies Face When Managing Volunteer Programs (and How to Overcome Them)
Running a corporate volunteer program can be one of the most rewarding things a company does. It brings employees together, builds a sense of purpose, and helps the community. But even with good intentions, many companies find that managing a volunteer program isn’t always easy. There are challenges that can slow things down or make it hard to keep employees engaged.
Here are the top five challenges companies face when managing volunteer programs — and how to overcome them.
1. Low Employee Participation
One of the biggest problems companies face is getting people to sign up and show up. Employees might be busy, unsure how to get involved, or not feel connected to the volunteer cause.
How to fix it:
Make volunteering simple and fun. Offer different types of opportunities — from short one-day events to long-term projects. Allow employees to volunteer during work hours if possible, and highlight stories of coworkers who make a difference. When people see their peers getting involved, they’re more likely to join.
Also, connect volunteer work to personal interests. For example, if your team loves animals, organize a day at a local shelter. When the cause feels personal, participation increases naturally.
2. Lack of Leadership Support
A volunteer program can’t grow without visible support from leaders and managers. If leadership doesn’t show enthusiasm or talk about volunteering, employees might think it’s not important.
How to fix it:
Ask leaders to set the example. When CEOs, managers, or team leads volunteer themselves — and share their experiences — it sends a strong message that the company truly values giving back. HR can also encourage leaders to include volunteer updates in meetings, newsletters, or social media.
3. Poor Organization and Communication
Even the best volunteer ideas can fall apart without good planning. Sometimes, employees don’t know when or where to volunteer, or details are shared too late. This confusion can lead to frustration and low turnout.
How to fix it:
Create a clear communication plan. Use emails, internal chat platforms, or a dedicated volunteer portal to share upcoming events and sign-up links. Appoint volunteer “champions” in each department to help spread the word and coordinate groups.
Having a schedule or calendar that shows all volunteer opportunities for the year helps employees plan ahead.
4. Not Measuring the Impact
Another common challenge is failing to track results. Without data, it’s hard to prove the value of a volunteer program or show how it benefits both employees and the community.
How to fix it:
Keep track of key numbers — how many employees volunteered, total volunteer hours, and which nonprofits benefited. You can also gather feedback from employees about how the experience made them feel.
Then, share these results with the company. Celebrate milestones like “1,000 volunteer hours completed” or “50 families helped.” Numbers tell a powerful story and help motivate future participation.
5. Keeping the Momentum Going
It’s easy for volunteer programs to start strong and then lose energy after a few months. Without regular engagement, people can forget or move on to other things.
How to fix it:
Make volunteering part of the company culture. Plan events throughout the year instead of just once annually. Recognize and reward employees who volunteer the most or who inspire others.
You can even tie volunteering to employee development — showing that it builds leadership and teamwork skills. HR teams can include volunteer participation in performance reviews or learning programs.
When employees see that volunteering is valued and supported long-term, they’ll stay involved.
In Summary
Corporate volunteer programs can transform both companies and communities, but they come with challenges. Low participation, lack of leadership support, poor communication, missing data, and fading motivation are all common issues.
The good news is that each challenge can be overcome with the right strategy — by making volunteering easy, engaging leaders, organizing clearly, measuring success, and keeping the spirit alive all year long.
When companies care about giving back, employees feel proud to be part of something bigger. And when employees feel connected and inspired, everyone wins — the company, the team, and the community.
xcm