Volunteers: Moving From the Outside In
by Marc Miller
University of Michigan School of Information, Community Information Corps
The University of Michigan's School of Information emphasizes the
importance of community. This is done in many ways, including student involvement
with community groups. Students face the challenge of entering a community
as an outsider and gaining the trust of others. There are many obstacles
to gaining this trust, but it is possible to move beyond them and make
valuable contributions to the community.
As a professional, I've worked with many communities over the years.
As a student, I worked extensively on a technology development initiative
with a public housing community. I've experienced the challenge of being
an outsider, sometimes failing, sometimes succeeding, but always learning.
In the following pages, I outline ideas I've found useful in establishing
trust. While they are certainly not definitive, they may provide helpful
to others who face this challenge.
Do a Little Homework
Before you start, learn something about the community. Learn about
its history, the people who live there, demographics, culture etc. Most
community groups have a mission statement and supporting literature; read
them! Learning at the outset may help frame trust building issues that
emerge, and prevent small problems from becoming big ones. Every community
is different, with unique opportunities and challenges. Getting a handle
on them early helps.
Be Yourself
In the beginning, accept a certain level of awkwardness as normal.
Spending time with people you don't know can be initially uncomfortable.
This is true for the community too. Don't try to "make an impression,"
or show you "understand." It can create a negative perception, and kill
trust building at the beginning. If people think you are putting up a front,
they may assume you can't be trusted.
Be Honest
Trust implies being trustworthy. So don't lie. Don't exaggerate. If
you don't know something, say so. If you promise to do something, do it.
If you can't or are unwilling to do something, say so.
Labeling someone honest usually requires time, and honesty over many
incidents. Labeling someone as dishonest only takes a single incident.
People will observe your integrity, and may overtly test you.
Don't Gossip, and Don't Get Involved in Internal Affairs
A community of any size is bound to have differences of opinion. You
may be asked your opinion on matters outside your scope as a volunteer.
You might even be asked to take sides. Resist the urge, unless of course
illegal or unethical behavior is occurring. Stay out of the fray and stay
focused on your goals. If people hear you gossip, they'll wonder whether
you gossip about them when they are not around.
Watch what you say, and who you say it to, especially when you haven't
figured out the power structure. Thoughtless words may come back to haunt
you.
Be Non-Judgmental
Critical words about people or processes are destructive. Most communities
operate within a framework of consensus. If you think things can be improved,
express your ideas about positive change in the appropriate forum. Express
yourself in positive terms, noting the benefit of change, not how bad something
is. This conveys the notion that you are interested in making things better
for everyone.
Listen
When you take the time to listen, it tells people you care about their
concerns, are willing to learn and see things from another perspective.
This is all part of living in a community, and you won't be accepted if
you aren't a good team player.
Demonstrate Empathy
Listening fosters empathy. Once you understand the concerns of a community,
verbalize it back to them. Indicate an appreciation for its significance
to the community, and a willingness to participate in a solution.
Spend Time There
As an outsider, physical co-presence is critical to building trust.
If you aren't there much, you won't be accepted. Determine how much time
is required to meet your personal objectives, how much time you are willing
to spend, create a regular, reliable timetable and stick to it. Let people
know they can expect you at certain times, and be there consistently.
Be Active in the Community
Words without action mean little. Showing up just to listen or talk
usually doesn't help much. Most problems require solutions, and these may
require a tremendous amount of work in understanding, gaining consensus,
creating a course of action, and pursuing it. Be sure that your involvement
with the community includes positive movement towards a resolution of the
problem.
Let Relationships Develop Over Time
Building trust between people simply takes time. It is demonstrated
over many incidents over time. It is a mutual assessment process. If you
try to bypass this process, you risk failing simply because others may
be unwilling to extend assistance. Pursue any activities that are enabled
by the current level of trust, will foster more trust, and gradually increase
activities as necessary.
Build Relationships
Your willingness to invest energy and time in other people is a factor
of trust. If you become too centered on problems, processes or solutions,
you may communicate greater concern for these than people. Relationships
are the bridge over which solutions can travel.
Use Social Skills
Common courtesy goes a long way. Memorize people's names. Use them
frequently. Smile. Always greet people when you see them, and say goodbye
to them when you leave. Look for opportunities to note their strengths,
and don't dwell on their weaknesses. If you can do this with sincerity
and unfeigned, it will open many doors.
Don't Try to Please Everybody
Communities working together to solve a common problem operate on consensus,
not total accord. Discover what the consensus is, find the role that you
will play, and focus on it. Recognize that naysayers exist, note their
concerns, bring them into the process when valuable, but ensure they do
not control the process. Extend courtesy to everyone in order to minimize,
when possible, friction.
Be Patient
It simply takes time to build trust. People will look for many of the
attributes we've discussed, either consciously or subconsciously. The more
positive attributes they see over time, the more willing they'll be to
extend trust and acceptance. The more trustworthy you are, the more you
will be extended trust.
Originated: May 1, 1999 | Maintained:
si.cn@umich.edu
URL: http://www.si.umich.edu/Community/connections
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