It's an interesting question, and it's one that I reflected on even in preparing for this, because I don't think about intergenerational volunteering as being something very distinct. There are many collisions and meetings that happen around volunteering, and they all need to be carefully curated and attended to in order to make sure that people have what they need in order to come together successfully.
In terms of volunteer management itself, I'm not in the business of volunteer management. We recruit volunteers and then put them at the disposal of the organizations we serve. The profession of volunteer management would be where those intergenerational challenges and opportunities.... The examples we heard from Madame Campeau today are really inspiring.
Developing those programs and thinking about what is going to make them work and what is appropriate to the specific context is very much the work of the organizations where volunteers are working. Volunteer management is a very specialized, unique kind of human resources management, except you're working to fill 40 hours of work. You probably have a couple of hundred people who are coming in to do a couple of hours every second week rather than a full shift. They're not getting a paycheque, so you have to think very carefully about what their motivations are, what kinds of rewards and recognition they want and what's going to keep them coming back.
Training is always a big thing, and that's something that I think is very specific to intergenerational volunteering around the use of technology and around communications.
One of the challenges we're trying to address is the need for more diversity around board tables in charities and non-profits. That includes youth, the experience that older people bring to a board table, and many other dimensions of diversity in order to make sure that, right at the top of the organization in terms of direction setting, strategy and priorities, those boards are really equipped to set the direction for the organizations in an appropriate way during a time when everything is changing.
I also think that, for youth participation on boards, where we think of that as being something more for older people, a particular challenge is making sure that youth are really welcome at those tables, that they get the support and the mentorship they need and that their voices are really heard.