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Motivational profile, role identity and volunteer embeddedness
Gerry Treuren and Natalie Potter
AOM symposium, San Antonio, August 16
Growing challenges for volunteer managers
Recruiting and retaining the right
volunteers
HRM and OB offers new approaches to volunteer attraction and retention
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
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
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
A message-matching research program
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.
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)
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
Research Questions
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
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
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
Research Questions
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
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
Volunteer Role Identity and tenure
Unclear – how RI develops over time
Volunteering starts
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
Role Identity as moderator of the relationship between Psychological
Contract Breach and Intention to leave
Role of volunteer Role Identity
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
Propositions to be tested
Propositions to be tested
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
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
Moderating role of volunteer embeddedness
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
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
• 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
Propositions to be tested
Highimpact
Highimpact
Lowerimpact
Propositions to be tested
Mediumimpact
Mediumimpact
Mediumimpact
A JET model of volunteer recruitment and retention
Research challenge
Three potential research directions
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