Cause Matters Blog

Archive for July, 2010

Profits in Volunteerism

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Since I was raised as a 4-Her and FFA member on a farm, I’ve always thought volunteerism was just what you did. I don’t really remember a time in my life when I didn’t volunteer for something, nor can my husband. After all, that’s how most things get done in rural communities, right? While traveling the world, I’ve learned that not everyone shares the same perspective on volunteerism, and in the last year, found a group of cynics who have a hard time believing people invest their time, energy and talents without looking for self-gratification.

Have I benefited from volunteering?  Sure, but probably not in the way some people think.  Here are some of the “profits” I’ve experienced from investing time in volunteerism.

  • Satisfaction in watching people grow: We’ve helped with our local 4-H  dairy project for about 12 years. This involves judging practices every Saturday from February til May, educational workshops, showmanship clinics on Saturdays in the summer, fair activities and a few other items.  We won’t have a 4-H member in our family for a few more years, but have taken this on as our major volunteerism effort because we enjoy seeing how young people can grow their work ethic, find a career passion, discover perseverance and learn how cool agriculture can be. There are times when adolescent boys drive me nuts and Saturday morning grumblings after I’ve been on the road non-stop, but the profit is in seeing “our dairy kids” grow into adults who can communicate, know the meaning of work and hopefully contribute to agriculture.
  • Resiliency: While helping to move church budget into the black as an Elder & Finance Chair, and dealing with a pastor who lacked integrity, I discovered questions came from the most interesting places.  I have also found some of the questions and cynicism about why a group of agriculturists would want to start a not-for-profit like the AgChat Foundation very interesting. The truth is, it was started to help farmers in social media – just like the mission says.  That’s the whole story. The good news is that all of this builds resiliency – a necessity in life.
  • Network: Whether it is professional connections or personal relationships, you develop a deeper network by volunteering. We have an outstanding corp of babysitters because of our 4-H, FFA and church volunteerism. Likewise, the connections across agriculture have allowed me to build my business in a way that I never expected. I don’t volunteer to network, but it is a great natural outcome.
  • Importance of stepping back: Many organizations look to their best volunteers to do more. Both my husband and I have stepped back from boards so that we don’t lose our heart for an organization. Unfortunately, people sometimes read “no” as a lack of commitment, but we all have to be comfortable in learning to allow others to fill the gaps – and not bear the burden on our own shoulders.
  • Thought leadership: When I started a weekly conversation on Twitter for those in the food, fuel, feed and fiber business, I never expected it to turn into something that 2500 people from 8+ countries would participate in. Nor did I expect the personal and professional attacks as #agchat grew. Just for the record, the hundreds of hours I’ve invested organizing, moderating & pulling ideas together have been 100% volunteer. Costs include rushed family meals & kid ballgames, missed bedtime stories, a whole lot of time diverted from my own business, strained relationships, sleep deprivation and just a few headaches around a certain whale. I rarely mention these because of a singular upside that transcends the sacrifices MANY have made in growing #agchat; the opportunity to bring together a community around farm and food issues. The conversation is the profit – and the thought leadership that people who are intimately involved have gained from it.  And isn’t about time agriculture is in the thought leadership role?
  • Doing what’s right: This seems simple, but “what’s right” can have many different interpretations. I’ve learned this from a building a community of professional speakers for those in generation X and Y, known as NSA XY.  We’ve have had a singular vision that helped us focus on what was right for the group, regardless of who was trying to derail/devalue. I’ve learned tremendous things from volunteering with my colleagues, including the importance of integrity.

If you’re looking to engage volunteers, consider what’s important to them. Most of the time, it’s not about money, it’s about leaving a “heart print.” If you already volunteer, make sure it’s with an organization that’s providing you “personal profits.” Sometimes our cynical and over-sensationalized world seems to lose sight that it is possible for humans to do the right thing just because they want to help. And now I’m going to get back to our fair to enjoy some more of these “profits.” If that makes me greedy, so be it.


I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream…

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

What's your favorite advocacy flavor?

Ahhh, ice cream.  A rite of summer. Whether a simple cone, a sundae or huge banana split – ice cream is the indulgence of choice for our family. We’ve been known to plan summer trips around where we can sample ice cream.  And ice cream is one of those foods that is even better when eaten with friends…

The same can be said for getting information out there about food, whether you’re on the farm or consumer side of the plate – or somewhere in between.  So, in celebration of National Ice Cream month and a new website, I’m asking readers to share your favorite scoop of advocacy with each other.

Your flavor could be a great recipe, food tips, a quick example of how you tell your farm story, an idea of how we can better “agvocate” in the future, ways you’ve used social media to talk about food/fuel/feed/fiber, programs on food literacy, photos of educational events, a great blog – whatever you’d like to share that’s connected to food or farm.  Let’s make this party worthy of the “I scream, you scream, we all scream” title! I’ll even throw in a $25 gift certificate to a local ice cream shop and an hour of phone time to chat about agvocacy ideas with the person with the most flavorful scoop. Just add your ideas in the “leave a reply box” below prior to the end of National Ice Cream Month (until July 31).

Etiquette for the party is simple.  1) Don’t drip on anyone else – keep it clean.  2) Keep it fun – and real.  3) Share as many scoops as you’d like in separate entries.  4) Enter with a name in case you win the good stuff.  5) Get your friends involved (“like” the new homepage, tweet about this party, share the link).  6) I  may tweet or share your scoop on my Facebook fan page so even more can enjoy, so let me know if you don’t want your name attached.

Truth be told, I can out-eat people twice my size when it comes to ice cream.  I exercise so I can eat ice cream guilt-free. And, it’s my favorite breakfast, though motherhood has sadly limited that practice.  Help me celebrate National Ice Cream Month and a new website in style – share your flavors of advocacy.  Hopefully I won’t eat a scoop of ice cream for every advocacy scoop, but who knows?


Celebrating Small Town America

Friday, July 9th, 2010

The joy of  summer holidays in small towns, complete with parades, community dinners and neighborly visits.  It wouldn’t seem like summer if these weren’t a part of our family/s memories – and a lively part of rural America.  I spend a lot of time writing about travels around the world, North American agricultural issues and  global food needs, so I thought it was time to tip my hat to our hometown.

Thirteen years ago, my husband and I moved to Boone County, Indiana on July 3 – and little did we know that we had arrived in the midst of THE biggest celebration of the year. We’ve since learned that Fourth of July celebrated over a couple of weeks here, complete with sports tournaments, Symphony at Sunset, a huge parade, queens of all ages, concerts & socials in the park – and of course, multiple fireworks shows. Apologies to my international readers, but I hope you can relate as you consider the best parts of your own nation’s festivities. I hope these celebrations will continue for generations, because of the color they weave in the fabric of rural areas. Read More »


Earning the Right to Educate

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Nine states. More than 50 hours of training farmers and ag organizations on social media. 2 tornado warnings during 15+ hours of driving, topped by 5 severe thunderstorms. Gratitude for the way others in ag welcomed new folks. 15+ flights; 1 diverted, many delayed and two cancelled. Tired vocal cords. And outstanding conversations with close to 200 farmers.  That was my June.

farmers need to engage and listen

Are you listening and engaging?

We had great discussions about the necessity of farmers speaking out in a more proactive way. Most people I’ve worked with in the last month agreed agriculture has developed a tendency to be defensive. After all, if you’re backed into a corner, you’re likely to come out fighting, right?   Local food, biotechnology, organic, animal welfare, subsidies, carbon footprint, fuel, etc. are all hot issues that have seemingly put our backs up against a wall.

Rather than looking at this as being put in the corner and constantly defending ourselves, I believe the interest in food and fuel offers an incredible opportunity for agriculture to be a part of the conversation. Read More »


Mindset Matters: How will you agvocate?

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Advanced social media training for farmers. Apply now at http://agchat.org!

Are you adept at adapting? Are your reacting or reaching out? Are you living in 2010 or 1990?  Being adept at reaching out in 2010 looks very different than it did in 1990 (the pre-internet era) . As is the case in any revolution, this means exciting opportunities exist. I believe the 460 million people on Facebook and 50 million tweets per day translate to agriculture’s chance to engage.

Many people reference their birthdate when opportunities around social media are brought up. Let me share a bit of a reality check; thought leadership doesn’t come with a birthyear – nor does the proper mindset to leverage tools that just make sense for farms and ranches.

If you are a person who’s adept at adapting and have reached out to build a community to be an “agvocate”, it may be time to move your skillsets to the next level. Perhaps you have a Facebook, but you’re not sure how to fully use it to share your farm story. Or, you’re on Twitter and have found it interesting, but don’t really “get it.”  There’s been a conference designed just for farmers and ranchers who are ready to move up the technology mindset ladder. The AgChat Foundation just announced an”Agvocacy 2.0 Training Conference in Chicago on August 30-31. The program includes agriculture’s best and brightest in social media, with the training set in a variety of learning formats for 50 selected people. Core areas of interest include: Read More »