Employee volunteer leader networks have become an established best practice for companies that want to scale community engagement.
They are often described by the people who participate in them: the ambassadors, champions, or site leads who make volunteering happen and are willing to help bring their co-workers along.
Those individuals matter tremendously.
But the network itself is something bigger. It is the operating system that surrounds those employees — the structures, roles, resources, relationships, and supports that help them move from informal enthusiasm to effective leadership.
When designed well, these networks can become one of the most powerful systems a company has for embedding purpose into culture.
For the past 18 years, Realized Worth has worked with large corporations to assess and strengthen this infrastructure, identifying the operational elements required to enable employee volunteer leader networks to meaningfully scale, sustain engagement, and support employees as they grow into purpose-focused leadership.
But until now, practitioners have had very few ways to understand the component parts of these systems or how their own internal networks compare to what their peers are building inside other companies.
That’s why we created the Networked for Impact benchmark study in partnership with Benevity.
The study looks at the operational structures that support employee volunteer leader networks across eight dimensions:
- Governance & Structure: How the network is configured, who oversees strategic elements, how centralized or distributed the structure is, and whether advisory layers exist
- Roles & Responsibilities: What volunteer leaders are asked to do
- Selection & Onboarding: How employees are identified, approved, and educated about the role
- Training & Development: Whether companies invest in initial training or ongoing development and what topics they choose to cover
- Program Team Engagement: Time spent by practitioners; meeting cadence, annual summits, goal-setting, and development support for employee volunteer leaders
- Resources & Tools: The materials, platforms, and budget available to volunteer leaders
- Measurement: What companies track, from activity counts to business outcomes
- Recognition, Advancement & Network Sustainability: How contributions are acknowledged and whether growth pathways and long-term network health metrics exist
To be clear, this benchmark does not measure whether these elements are effective. It does not tell us whether the volunteerism being led is meaningful, Transformative or community-centered. It simply asks whether these operational structures exist.
The study includes responses from 50 companies, most of them large enterprises. 78% have more than 10,000 employees, and 74% operate globally across multiple regions. In other words, exactly the kind of environment where volunteer leader networks become both valuable and nuanced.
Here are a few high-level findings:
Governance & Structure
Half of companies use a centralized governance model — the most basic network structure, with the program team directly overseeing volunteer leaders — while 32% use a distributed model and 18% are decentralized. Surprisingly, only 38% have a mission statement or charter for their volunteer leader network – a simple yet critical element to fully articulate what the network is designed to enable.
Roles & Responsibilities
The data reveals a clear pattern: volunteer leaders are overwhelmingly deployed to activate, not strategize. Ideally, a mature network includes both Volunteer Activity Leaders, who are trained to plan and run volunteer projects (activation focus), and Volunteer Strategy Leaders, who are trained to provide oversight and mentor peers (strategic focus). Today, 82% of volunteer leaders organize events, while only 4% represent the program in leadership or strategy conversations. The opportunity is not to ask more of these leaders — it is to define the different types of leadership the network needs to thrive sustainably.
Training & Development
Only 57% of companies provide any formal training, and just 27% provide both initial and ongoing training. This is one of the clearest opportunities in the data. Onboarding helps employees enter the role by setting clear expectations, training helps them grow into it. If these networks are systems for developing purpose-focused leaders, then ongoing training cannot be an afterthought.
Program Team Engagement
Most companies are staying connected to their volunteer leaders: 55% meet quarterly and 37% meet monthly. But only 20% have formally documented goals. The signal here is clear: many networks have communication rhythms in place, while alignment and goal setting are still catching up.
Measurement
Most companies are measuring network activity: 82% track both volunteer hours and the number of employees volunteering, and 72% track the number of events. Far fewer are measuring what these networks may enable over time: only 18% track skills or leadership development, and just 12% track retention or attrition. Activity metrics tell us the program is running. They do not necessarily tell us whether the network is delivering meaningful outcomes.
Why this Benchmark Matters
The exciting thing about this data is that it gives practitioners a shared language for the operational elements that make these networks possible.
Until now, practitioners have operated in a vacuum, relying on anecdotes, peer conversations, trial and error, and whatever their own organizations were ready to support.
Now we have a tool and a way to ask more thoughtful questions about these critical internal networks.
Does our governance model match our scale? Are volunteer leaders clear on their roles? Are we onboarding them? Training them? Equipping them? Connecting them to one another? Measuring the right things? Recognizing them? Helping them grow as leaders?
These networks are not just a workaround for small program teams. And they are not just lists of ambassadors or champions.
At their best, they are structural systems that help companies scale community engagement in a way that is more authentic, more relational, more local, and more sustainable. They bring employees into shared ownership. They create channels for peer influence and leadership development. They help embed volunteerism in company culture and keep it connected to strategy.
Download Networked for Impact to explore the complete findings across all eight dimensions, including deeper breakdowns by company size, global footprint, governance model, and network maturity.
And if you want to go deeper into the data, join us at Benevity Live! for a pre-conference workshop focused on employee volunteer leader networks or register for our free RealTalk webinar on June 18th where we’ll unpack the benchmarks and talk through where practitioners can take their networks next.








