The Press

Making volunteeri­ng easier

- RACHEL CLAYTON

‘‘A lot of people think volunteeri­ng is a year-long or lifetime commitment, but it can be an hour.’’ Zandra Vaccarino NZ Down Syndrome Associatio­n

A new online service is helping skilled workers volunteer to help non-profit organisati­ons.

Research by the Who Did You Help Today Trust found workers wanted to volunteer their expertise but didn’t know how.

Yesterday the trust launched HelpTank, an online platform to match non-profit organisati­ons with skilled workers looking to volunteer.

Trust founder Stacey Shortall said: ‘‘There’s a lot of people who want to give back; it’s in our DNA.

‘‘But it can be hard to find an entry point to get involved in an issue you really care about.’’

HelpTank also helped large businesses to promote paid work days for staff to volunteer.

‘‘The enterprise solution is for businesses that have low uptake of days available for their staff to volunteer,’’ Shortall said.

Z Energy gave $100,000 to the trust to launch HelpTank because its own volunteeri­ng programme was not working.

Z Energy community manager Christine Langdon said: ‘‘We had our skills volunteeri­ng programme. We were providing staff with two days of paid skilled volunteeri­ng time, and people were passionate about the idea, but the story we kept hearing was, ‘I don’t know how to find myself an opportunit­y.’’’

The platform was free for people searching for volunteeri­ng opportunit­ies, and for non-profits posting available opportunit­ies.

HelpTank received funding through its enterprise arm, where businesses could sign up for HelpTank to send a company-wide message inviting staff to register, track who registered, what they were interested in, and how many matches they had.

‘‘And because we also can get feedback from volunteers and notfor-profits we can give the businesses stories about the volunteeri­ng,’’ Shortall said.

‘‘There will be a payment for that from corporates. That’s the funding that will help sustain us.’’

Marketing and communicat­ions skills were the most in demand during the pilot scheme.

New Zealand Down Syndrome Associatio­n executive officer Zandra Vaccarino was part of the pilot programme and said HelpTank was a game changer for the non-profit sector.

‘‘It’s a great way for people to share their skills and be able to volunteer the amount of time they want. I think a lot of people think volunteeri­ng is a year-long or lifetime commitment, but it can be an hour,’’ she said.

‘‘It’s really difficult to employ all the people we need to do the work we need to do. We are stretched very short so this is an opportunit­y to get the skills outside our community.

‘‘If you talk to any non-profit organisati­on they will say the projects change but there will always be a project running where they don’t have the financial resources to employ people.’’

 ??  ?? Stacey Shortall founded HelpTank to help not-for-profit organisati­ons access skilled volunteers.
Stacey Shortall founded HelpTank to help not-for-profit organisati­ons access skilled volunteers.

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