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Learning Paths

How to Partner with Nonprofits to Maximize Impact

Tips for working with nonprofits to ensure a mutually beneficial relationship.

📍 Where you are

You have a nonprofit partner and a team ready to volunteer. This module is about making sure the partnership actually works for them as much as for you. The difference between a one-time event and a lasting relationship comes down to how you show up, communicate, and follow through.

Great nonprofit partnerships require clear communication, realistic expectations, and a consistent rhythm. The quality of your partner relationships matters far more than the quantity.

💡 THE STARTUP REALITY

The most common mistake: Treating nonprofits as service providers rather than partners. Most nonprofits are under-resourced. Be a low-maintenance, high-value partner.

Onboard a New Nonprofit Partner

  1. Set expectations in writing. A simple email covering: what you’re committing, what you need from them, and how you’ll communicate.
  2. Introduce their day-to-day contact (e.g., volunteer ambassador, social impact team member).
  3. Co-create your activities together. Have a prep call before you show up.
  4. Brief your employees before the event. Prepared volunteers are more engaged and more effective.
  5. Debrief after each activity. A quick 15-minute call or short survey covers what worked and what to improve.

🤖 AI DRAFT PROMPT

Draft our nonprofit onboarding email & employee event brief

Generate the partnership confirmation email to your nonprofit and the employee briefing note before a volunteer event.

Copy this prompt into your preferred AI assistant (like Claude or Gemini), then fill in the [brackets]:

Please write two short documents:

DOCUMENT 1 — Nonprofit partnership onboarding email:
We are writing to confirm our Pledge 1% partnership with [nonprofit name].
What we are committing: [e.g., 2 group volunteer days per year + 10 hours of pro bono design support].
Our primary contact for this partnership: [name, email].
We'd like to schedule a 30-minute planning call — suggest [date/time options].
Tone: warm, professional, partnership-oriented. Under 200 words.

DOCUMENT 2 — Employee briefing note before a volunteer event:
Event: [activity description, e.g., sorting donations at a food bank].
Nonprofit: [name] — their mission is: [one sentence].
Date, time, location: [details].
What to bring / wear: [details].
What employees will accomplish: [specific outcome, e.g., help pack 500 meal kits].
Why this connects to our impact mission: [brief connection].
Length: one page. Tone: informative and energizing, not bureaucratic.

The Ongoing Partnership Rhythm

Touchpoint Who Leads What to Cover
Pre-event call Your ambassador Logistics, volunteer count, prep needed, outcomes they want
Post-event debrief Your ambassador What worked, impact achieved, ideas for next time
Quarterly check-in You (impact lead) Relationship health, upcoming needs, changes in their program
Annual review You + CEO Total contributed, impact summary, renew or evolve partnership

✓ DO

  • Show up prepared and on time
  • Ask what they actually need — not what you want to give
  • Give them one reliable point of contact
  • Share their story with your audience (LinkedIn, newsletter)
  • Treat them as partners who will grow with you

✗ DON’T

  • Demand custom impact reports without notice
  • Bring volunteers who are unprepared or uninterested
  • Cancel or reschedule activities at the last minute
  • Require excessive branding for small donations
  • Go silent between volunteer events

💡 PRO TIP

Amplify your partners: A LinkedIn post about what they do can drive awareness, donations, and volunteers they’d never reach otherwise. It costs nothing and means a lot to them. Even better, have it come from your CEO!

Finding Volunteer Activities

If your company doesn’t want to partner with specific nonprofits, or wants to give employees flexibility to volunteer based on their own interests, several free platforms make it easy to find and sign up for activities independently.

Platform Best For URL
Idealist Discover new causes alongside jobs and internships idealist.org
All for Good Aggregates listings from multiple sources in one search allforgood.org
Catchafire Skills-based projects — design, legal, marketing, finance catchafire.org
Taproot Plus One-day pro bono projects matched to nonprofit needs taprootplus.org
Local volunteer center Search for volunteer opportunities in a defined local area Search “volunteer center [city/county/state/region/country]”

Reduce the friction: Share these links in your #social-impact internal community and let employees self-organize. The less distance between ‘I want to volunteer’ and ‘here’s how to do it today,’ the higher your participation rate will be.

And remember — encourage your employees to show up prepared and on time, ready to ask or do what the nonprofit actually needs, not what they want to give.

3 Quick Actions

  • Send your nonprofit onboarding email (use the AI prompt above).
  • Co-create your first volunteer activity and schedule a planning call.
  • Schedule a post-event debrief within a week of your first activity.

Your partnership is running. Now let’s measure what it’s achieving and share the story.

Next: Measure and Share Your Volunteering Impact →