Your best board member, program staff, and leadership team members often started as volunteers. The pathway from volunteer to leader isn't accidental; it's designed. Organizations that intentionally develop volunteer leaders scale their impact while creating meaningful advancement for supporters. This lecture teaches you how to build that pathway.

Why Volunteer Leaders Transform Capacity

One full-time volunteer coordinator managing 50 volunteers is stretched thin. Five volunteer leaders each managing 10 volunteers is sustainable and scalable. More importantly, volunteer leaders bring credibility that staff don't have. New volunteers trust other volunteers who've been in the role; they listen to peer mentors differently than they listen to staff.

Volunteer leaders also become organizational ambassadors. They recruit friends, refer programs, donate, and serve on committees. Their investment deepens over time.

The Volunteer Leadership Pathway

Level 1: Contributor (First 3 months)

  • Role: Execute assigned tasks, learn role and organization
  • Commitment: 2-4 hours/week typical
  • Leadership expectations: None; focus on mastering their role
  • Development: Clear onboarding, regular feedback, skill-building in their area

Level 2: Skilled Contributor (Months 3-12)

  • Role: Execute tasks with independence, start mentoring peers informally
  • Commitment: 4-8 hours/week
  • Leadership expectations: Assist with onboarding new volunteers; help troubleshoot; model good work
  • Development: Skill development in their role; introduction to broader organizational context
  • Recognition: Spotlights, milestone recognition, inclusion in volunteer events

Level 3: Volunteer Lead (Year 1+)

  • Role: Manage 5-10 volunteers; train and mentor; quality control
  • Commitment: 6-12 hours/week
  • Leadership expectations: Own volunteer team performance; conduct check-ins; report on team progress; escalate issues
  • Development: Formal leadership training (communication, conflict resolution, delegation); involvement in volunteer program planning
  • Recognition: Public recognition; possible small honorarium or benefits (professional development fund, priority event invites)
  • Advancement path: Advisory board, staff role, or board membership

Level 4: Volunteer Program Leadership (Year 2+)

  • Role: Oversee multiple volunteer teams; strategic volunteer program planning; recruitment
  • Commitment: 10-20 hours/week
  • Leadership expectations: Vision-setting for volunteer program; policy recommendations; ambassador role
  • Development: Deep involvement in organizational strategy; board meeting attendance; mentoring other volunteer leads

Identifying Who Has Leadership Potential

Not every volunteer should or wants to lead. Look for these signals:

Consistency: Shows up reliably, on time, prepared. Leadership requires reliability first.

Quality work: Produces excellent output. You can't promote someone who doesn't do their own work well.

Curiosity about organization: Asks questions about strategy, programs, and impact. Not just "what's my task?"

Natural mentoring: Other volunteers gravitate toward them. They explain things, help peers, answer questions without being asked.

Willingness to give feedback: Suggests improvements, doesn't just complain. Shows they're thinking about systems.

Initiative: Notices what needs doing and does it. Doesn't wait to be asked.

Expressed interest: When you ask "Are you interested in helping train new volunteers?" they say yes, not "I'm fine doing what I'm doing."

Recruiting Volunteer Leaders

The ask matters. You can't say "want to be a volunteer leader?" and expect clear commitment. Be specific:

"Maria, you've been with us for six months and you've become an essential part of our team. You mentor new volunteers naturally, your data entry is flawless, and you understand our mission deeply. We want to ask if you'd be interested in formally leading our Monday shift. That would mean:

  • Mentoring the 5-8 volunteers who come on Mondays
  • Doing a 30-minute check-in with each one monthly
  • Handling basic troubleshooting and escalating issues to me
  • Helping with recruitment if we need more Monday volunteers
  • This would be roughly 8-10 hours/week of your time

In return:

  • You'd get formal leadership training in volunteer management
  • We'd feature you in our newsletter as a volunteer leader
  • You'd join our monthly volunteer leadership team meeting
  • You'd be considered for our volunteer leadership award
  • This role would be a pathway toward board membership if you wanted to go that direction

Would you be interested in exploring this?"

This is specific, shows why you want them, and explains what's in it for them.

Training Volunteer Leaders

You can't assume people know how to lead volunteers. Provide training:

Core training modules (4-6 hours total, can be delivered over time):

  • Volunteer program overview (mission, goals, culture)
  • Your organization's volunteer roles and expectations
  • Onboarding and mentoring skills (how to train someone)
  • Communication and feedback (giving praise, addressing problems)
  • Delegation and time management
  • Conflict resolution basics
  • When and how to escalate issues to staff

Ongoing development:

  • Monthly volunteer leader meetings (coordination, problem-solving, learning)
  • Quarterly all-hands volunteer meetings (connection, impact updates)
  • Annual review and goal-setting
  • Optional: external trainings (Taproot Foundation, Volunteer.com, local nonprofit association)

Resources to provide:

  • Volunteer handbook (written guide to role expectations, policies, procedures)
  • Communication templates (welcome messages, check-in scripts, feedback examples)
  • Troubleshooting guide (what to do if volunteer is late, quality drops, conflicts arise)
  • One-page quick reference on your org's structure, key contacts, emergency procedures

Managing Volunteer Leaders

Volunteer leaders need oversight and support, not micromanagement.

Monthly check-in: 30 minutes with you or coordinator. Updates on team, challenges, wins. Use this to coach them and catch problems early.

Clear performance expectations: "A healthy volunteer lead has:

  • 100% of their team volunteers onboarded within 1 week
  • Team first-to-second return rate of 70%+
  • Team retention at 6 months of 60%+
  • Monthly feedback to each team member
  • Escalation of issues within 48 hours

Support when struggling: If a volunteer leader's team is struggling, that's a coaching moment, not a failure moment. "Your team's retention dropped. Let's talk about why. What support do you need?"

Recognition: Celebrate public ly. Feature volunteer leaders in newsletters, mention them in meetings, highlight their team's achievements.

Advancement Beyond Volunteer Leadership

What happens when a volunteer leader is ready for more? Create clear pathways:

Committee leadership: Volunteer program committee chair, recruitment committee lead.

Board pathway: Volunteer leaders often become excellent board members. They understand the organization deeply and have proven leadership.

Staff roles: Volunteer coordinator, program coordinator, or other positions where volunteer background is valuable.

Advisory roles: Volunteer advisory council that shapes volunteer program strategy.

Make these pathways explicit. "Success as a volunteer leader could lead to board membership. Would that interest you in the future?"

Recommended Leadership Structure

SizeVolunteer CoordinatorVolunteer LeadsMeeting Cadence
10-25 volunteersPart-time coordinator OR staff member with volunteer duties1-2 leadsMonthly coordinator + leads meeting
25-75 volunteersFull-time coordinator3-7 leads (by program/shift/skill)Biweekly leads meeting; monthly all-hands
75-150 volunteersFull-time coordinator + 0.5 FTE assistant8-15 leadsWeekly leads meeting; monthly all-hands; quarterly strategic
150+ volunteersFull-time director + team15-30 leads; possibly assistant leadsWeekly leads meeting; monthly all-hands; quarterly strategic; annual planning

What to Do Next

Identify your three most engaged, capable volunteers right now. Have a coffee conversation with each: "I've noticed you're becoming a natural leader in our volunteer program. Have you ever thought about taking on a larger role?" Listen to their answers. Even if they say no, you've planted the seed. For the ones interested, draft a specific leadership role proposal tailored to their strengths and your needs.

For more on retention and development, see Lecture 2.5.5: Volunteer Retention Strategies and Lecture 2.5.7: Volunteer Communication Plans.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do we handle a volunteer leader who's not performing well?+
Address it directly but supportively: "Your team's onboarding process is getting backlogged. What's getting in the way? Do you need different tools, clearer processes, or additional support?" Coach them. If they can't improve after coaching and support, you may need to step back their role: "Let's move you to a contributor role for now so we can get the team back on track. No shame in this—not everyone wants to lead."
Should volunteer leaders be paid?+
It depends on scope and your budget. Some small orgs give honorariums ($50-100/month). Some give benefits (free training, priority event access, recognition). Some are purely volunteer. The key is being clear upfront about whether this is paid or volunteer. If you can't pay, emphasize other benefits: leadership development, board pathway, public recognition.
Can we have volunteer leaders manage staff volunteers?+
Generally no. Staff should have staff supervisors. But volunteer leads can mentor, support, and coordinate with staff volunteers. Clear reporting lines: staff volunteers report to staff supervisor; volunteer volunteers report to volunteer lead. They coordinate but don't directly supervise each other.
How do we prevent volunteer leader burnout?+
Set clear hour limits ("8-10 hours/week max"), have backups so they can take breaks, provide leadership support and training, recognize their work publicly, and have honest conversations about capacity: "You seem stretched. Let's talk about how we redistribute your work or bring in support."