Help Others, Help Yourself: How Employee Volunteerism Can Build a Better Workforce

This month, a group of eight Twitter, Salesforce and Adobe employees will trek to Malawi—where nearly 10 million people live on less than $1 a day—to support CARE learning centers for adolescent girls. I’m excited for them, as many of the volunteers are about to have a life—changing experience.

Professionals in the tech industry are eager to do work that makes a difference. And that’s particularly true of millennials, who are set to become the majority of the U.S. workforce by 2020. Surveys show that millennials care about their companies’ social responsibility programs and want to play a part in effecting positive social change. Beyond contributing money, they want to utilize their skills, team with their colleagues,and work globally to make a difference.

Companies are striving to respond to these employees by implementing pro bono programs and other corporate social responsibility efforts that engage employees directly. Not only can such efforts help attract and retain employees, but studies show that they are also in their economic interest, as these programs boost employee engagement and ultimately contribute to the bottom line. (Indeed, an SAP study found that each percentage point increase in employee engagement contributed $40 million per year to operating income.)

[To learn about other ways in which businesses are doing well by doing good, see Fortune’s 2018 Change the World list.]

But how to engage employees in a way that utilizes their skills to make a significant impact is not a straightforward question. How can pro bono projects best be structured so employees deliver the capacity-building that social impact clients need, at the right time and in the right way? Just connecting the two sides can be challenging enough, let alone providing a rewarding experience for both parties.

Energized by volunteerism

This was the challenge we set out to address with Team4Tech, the nonprofit I co-founded five years ago to engage technology professionals in productive pro bono projects focused on improving the quality of education for underserved students around the world. Our approach has earned partnerships with technology companies including Adobe, Autodesk, Box, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, and VMware, and collaborations with respected nonprofits like CARE, the Consortium for School Networking (CoSN), and the LEAP Science and Math Schools in South Africa.

A Team4Tech volunteer from Pure Storage teaching students at Orphan Impact, a computer-based education program for children in state-run orphanages in Vietnam.
A Team4Tech volunteer from Pure Storage teaching students at Orphan Impact, a computer-based education program for children in state-run orphanages in Vietnam.

We partner primarily with growing technology companies that want to provide rewarding engagement opportunities for their employees but need help finding the right projects and structuring the work to make it a win-win proposition. For example, we started working in 2017 with Pure Storage, one of the fastest-growing enterprise IT companies, to help its Pure Good foundation identify pro bono projects that are aligned with its focus on education and where employees can contribute their varied skillsets to make a positive contribution.