Employee volunteering: why it belongs in your people strategy
Employee volunteering has long been tucked neatly under the umbrella of corporate social responsibility (CSR) as a “nice to have”, a reputational boost, a way to show the organisation cares. But that framing undersells its real strategic value. When designed intentionally, volunteering isn’t just a CSR activity. It’s a powerful people strategy that strengthens culture, builds capability, and deepens employee connection to the organisation.
In a time where attraction, retention, and engagement are under pressure, employee volunteering offers a rare win win: meaningful impact for communities and measurable benefits for your workforce.
Why employee volunteering deserves to be in your people strategy
It strengthens engagement and belonging
Employees increasingly want to work for organisations that reflect their values. Volunteering, whether through one off volunteering days or longer term commitments, gives people a tangible way to contribute to causes that matter to them.
When employees feel their employer supports what they care about, they feel valued and consequently engagement rises.
It boosts attraction and retention
Younger generations in particular expect employers to offer purpose driven opportunities. Research consistently shows that employees are more likely to stay with organisations that enable them to make a positive social impact.
Supporting employee volunteering becomes a differentiator in a competitive talent market, a signal that your organisation is modern, socially aware, and invested in more than just the bottom line.
It builds skills
Volunteering can be a powerful development tool. Activities such as mentoring, working on community projects or serving as a trustee expose employees to:
- Leadership in unfamiliar environments
- Problem solving with limited resources
- Communication across diverse groups
- Strategic thinking (particularly in trustee roles)
- Empathy and emotional intelligence.
These are capabilities that directly strengthen organisational performance and they’re developed in real world, high impact settings.
It builds stronger teams
Team based volunteering days create shared experiences that strengthen relationships, break down silos, and build trust. Unlike traditional team building exercises, volunteering has a purpose beyond the activity itself which can make it more meaningful and memorable, with employees feeling more connected to colleagues because they’ve worked together on something that genuinely matters.
It supports wellbeing and reduces burnout
Volunteering has well documented wellbeing benefits. It provides:
- A sense of purpose
- A break from routine
- Opportunities for reflection
- Increased social connection.
Supporting employees to volunteer, especially in causes close to their hearts, can be a powerful antidote to stress and disengagement.
The strategic benefit
Embedding volunteering into your people strategy delivers benefits across the employee lifecycle:
- Attraction – signals purpose, values and culture.
- Onboarding – helps new hires connect quickly.
- Engagement – boost pride, motivation and belonging.
- Retention – strengthens loyalty and emotional connection.
- Development – builds leadership, communication and strategic skills.
- Wellbeing – supports mental health and reduces burnout.
- Culture – reinforces collaboration, empathy and shared purpose.
Volunteering isn’t a CSR add on. It’s a strategic lever for building a resilient, skilled, and committed workforce.
When organisations invest in employee volunteering, they send a clear message – that they care about their people, their communities, and they world we operate in. That message resonates deeply with employees, candidates, customers, and stakeholders. In a world where culture is a competitive advantage, employee volunteering is one of the most human, impactful, and future focused tools available.











