Volunteer wellbeing: adopt a simple policy that prevents burnout

Proposal from group Concorder Association Network
1 Moderator
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Proposal text

Here's the matter we want to address together: click on each paragraph to add your votable contribution

Context

Most associations don’t fail because they lack ideas. They fail because a small number of people carry too much, for too long, and eventually disappear. When that happens, the rest of the group loses momentum, new volunteers hesitate to step in, and the work that once felt meaningful starts to feel heavy.

A “volunteer wellbeing policy” sounds formal, but the goal is simple: protect energy, set expectations, and make it easier for more people to contribute without burning out. This proposal asks us to adopt a lightweight set of norms we can actually follow, not a document that sits in a folder.

What is being decided

We will choose a policy package, and then decide how we want to handle workload visibility and handoffs. The outcome should be practical: something the board and project leads can apply immediately.

What we want to change

  • Too much work hidden in private chats or in one person’s head
  • People feeling guilty for stepping back
  • Projects without clear owners, timelines, or end points
  • New volunteers not knowing where to start

Comments are important here. If you’ve felt overloaded, or you’ve hesitated to volunteer because you feared it would never end, say so. That’s the signal we need to design a healthier culture.

Voting options

Vote on the different proposed options to find the best solution together.

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A clear cap on ongoing responsibilities

What it looks like

Limit how many active roles one person can hold at once, and require a named backup for recurring tasks. Build in an off-ramp, so stepping down is normal and planned.

Why it helps

Protects the people who are most reliable from becoming the default solution to everything.

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👍1 pro👎1 contro
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Pro icon
Reduces silent overload and makes workload distribution visible.
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Cons icon
Requires more people to step into small roles, even briefly.
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Short cycles with planned pauses

What it looks like

Run work in 6 to 8 week cycles, then take a planned pause week. Projects must define what “done” means for the cycle.

Why it helps

Creates breathing room and makes it easier to join without committing forever.

0 No votes yet
👍1 pro👎1 contro
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Encourages sustainable pacing and clearer goals.
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Cons icon
Some long projects may feel slower without good coordination.
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Buddy system for every project lead

What it looks like

No one leads alone. Every project lead has a buddy who can cover meetings, share context, and prevent single points of failure.

Why it helps

People can take breaks without a project collapsing.

0 No votes yet
👍1 pro👎1 contro
Marino avatar
Pro icon
Improves continuity and makes volunteering feel safer.
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Cons icon
Needs enough volunteers to pair effectively, especially in small teams.

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Sources

  • BoardSource

    Nonprofit governance and board practices relevant to sustainable volunteer operations.

  • Charity Commission (UK)

    Governance and good practice context for accountability and organizational health.

Comments