Should You Include Volunteer Experience On Your LinkedIn Profile and Resume?
Kathy Caprino
Global Career & Leadership Coach | Speaker/Trainer | 2x Author | Former VP | Trained Therapist | Senior Forbes Contrib | Finding Brave? host - supporting the advancement, success and impact of women in business
Part of the series “Creating Your Own Career Breakthrough”
As a career and leadership coach, part of my work involves helping professionals uplevel their LinkedIn profiles and resumes to share the most compelling information they can about their work, values and accomplishments.
Painting a full and compelling picture of who you are in totality, including what you care about (both in your professional life and personal life) along with the types of outcomes you’re excited to support, helps you land thrilling roles. It also assists in building a robust support network that can open doors for you that you can’t open on your own.
Many people have asked the question, “Should I include my volunteer experience on my LinkedIn profile and resume? From my view, both the short and long answers to that question are a resounding “Yes!”
What is considered volunteer experience?
Volunteer experience encompasses non-paid work you’ve done that not only demonstrates your skills and capabilities but also showcases causes and endeavors that mean something to you personally— initiatives that you are passionate about and willing to dedicate your time to.
As this helpful Mac’s List article touches on, volunteering can move you forward in vitally important ways, including:
As an example, I’m a singer on the side and have performed for over 45 years in various groups and choirs, including in The Cecilia Chorus of New York. In my 20’s, I performed at the United Nations with Liza Minnelli and a small group of backup vocalists, performing her beautiful new single “The Day After That,” in honor of the first World AIDS Day . It was an unforgettable experience. For the past 17 years, I’ve been a member of a local community vocal group The Wilton Singers , and currently serve on the Executive Board as well as support a new Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion committee for the group.
Performing in the past in venues such as Carnegie Hall with amazing professionals and creatives of all ages and demographics, and traveling to Europe to perform, has enriched my life culturally. And helping to expand a DEI focus for the groups in which I participate helps me learn and apply new information that supports my professional endeavors as well.
Tip: Write down all the volunteer and non-paid work you have engaged in over your lifetime that has added meaning, value, skill-building and networking opportunities to your life. What unique skills did you employ for what outcomes? What have these experiences given you that contributed to your personal and professional growth and happiness? How have they impacted and changed you?
When should you include volunteer experience on your resume?
Showcase your volunteer experience on your resume and LinkedIn profile (under the "Volunteering" section) when it helps add perspective and richness to your professional story and sheds important light on what matters to you as a person, as well as additional skills and talents that your paid work may not demonstrate.
This is particularly helpful for new and recent graduates who may not yet have established work experience in their field of choice as well as for those who have been out of the paid workforce for some time. Adding volunteer information can help hiring managers understand your transferable skills. In addition, the outcomes you’ve helped support through volunteer work may be just those types of accomplishments that employers are looking for.
Finally, obtaining great LinkedIn endorsements and recommendations from individuals you’ve worked with in your volunteer roles can be very helpful in landing your next paid role.
I would avoid, however, including just a laundry list of volunteer roles that weren’t substantive or important to your development.
How to list volunteer work on your resume?
There are a number of ways you can list your volunteer work on your resume, based on the degree of work experience you have, and how related it is to the next direction you want to take.
If you have extensive professional experience:
In this case, where you’ve worked for a number of years and that work has a clear connection to what you want in the next chapter of your professional life, consider listing your volunteer experience in a separate section labeled “Volunteer Experience.”
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Share about these volunteer roles in the same way you would if listing out your paid work, with these elements:
Remember, stating clearly the impact of your work is key.
Share the instrumental “needles” you’ve moved and the growth or success you’ve helped the organization achieve through your direct work or your supervision of projects or teams.
If you don’t have many paid work experiences to share:
In this situation, you can add in the volunteer roles in your Professional History section, indicating clearly that the role is a volunteer job .
Highlight the skills and capabilities you’ve leveraged in your volunteer roles that connect directly with the skills you wish to be hired for. Brainstorm the ideal role you wish to land, and find job descriptions online that appear to be a strong fit for where you want to go.
Wherever you can (and whenever it fits the facts), include key words and qualifications that are listed in those paid job descriptions within your volunteer work description, to illustrate your transferable skills.
Remember, though, that whenever and wherever you are communicating about your work or volunteer experience, it’s critical to share only the truth about what you’ve done. Never lie about or embellish your experience. Countless people have lost out on great job opportunities because they’ve “stretched” or misrepresented the truth on their resumes or LinkedIn profiles. Lying is never the way to go.
When we lie on our resumes or profiles, we're doing ourselves a great disservice, reinforcing the negative internal belief that we're simply not smart, talented or deserving enough to succeed just the way we are.
In the end, does volunteering count as work experience?
In my view, absolutely yes! When we volunteer, we typically leverage the same great skills and behaviors that paid work entails, but it can allow us to contribute in new and different ways. And your volunteer work shares volumes about who you are as a person.
For instance, your volunteer work can support:
In the end, don’t let yourself believe that volunteer work has less intrinsic value than paid work. It’s not true. Millions of people around the world who’ve volunteered their time for important causes and movements have shaped life as we know it, and have had a crucial impact on the success, health, well-being and progress of humanity and our world.
Kathy Caprino is a top-rated career and leadership coach , executive trainer, Finding Brave podcast host, and author of The Most Powerful You . Sign up for Kathy's 6-Day Amazing Career Challenge and download her free Career Path Self-Assessment to understand clearly your great talents, abilities and accomplishments and how you want to leverage them going forward.
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Student Engagement and Events Assistant
4 个月With regards to getting 'recommendations' for volunteer roles, LinkedIn only allows this for roles listed under Experience, so currently it's worth considering which section to put a volunteer role under if you want a recommendation.
Writing to move money, power, and opportunity from where they are to where they belong.
8 个月Yes. Yes. Yes. ALL experience has value- paid or unpaid. Volunteer or pro bono work is a helpful distinguishing factor, adds a character dynamic, and when relevant, can augment one’s chronology. (Yes, please don’t bury volunteer or pro bono experience at the end of your resume. This work should not be positioned as an afterthought or page filler.) Across a landscape pockmarked by poor hiring practices, dedicated and engaged job seekers don’t wait around. They invest their time, talent, and treasure in volunteer or pro bono opportunities in order to give back, build community, and keep learning.
Arabic-French-English Global HR Strategist | HR Transformation & Digitization, Bridging Cultures & Talent across borders | Capacity Builder & Lifelong learner | RARE: Rational - Agile - Resilient - Empathetic
8 个月This is a great reminder that many candidates feel shy or concerned about when discussing life journey with hiring managers. Volunteering, of all things, is the one selfless act one person feels invested in giving without asking for tangible returns back. Well written article. Thank you!
Software Engineer with 5 years of experience in crafting web applications, educational programming courses, and advanced software tools, seeking to leverage these skills to further enhance your team.
8 个月Check out https://resumeboostai.com to create a professional resume using AI
Head of Global Order Management bij Roche Diabetes Care GmbH
8 个月Definitely yes it will say a lot