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FOR VOLUNTEERS

Remote help that can genuinely strengthen the fund

If you want to support War Victims Fund not only through donations, but also through your time, skills, or network, there are remote ways to help. We are looking for people who can strengthen defined areas such as fundraising, communication, outreach, research, and content quality.

See where help is most needed
Woman working at a laptop in a bright office with documents, notes, and a coffee cup while a colleague works in the background.

INTRO

Not symbolic support, but useful remote contribution

For us, volunteering is not a vague offer to help with anything. It is clear remote support in defined areas, with practical tasks, realistic expectations, and a useful next step. Even a few hours a week or one strong professional skill can make a real difference.

CORE VOLUNTEER ROLES

Where volunteers can help

Online fundraising

Support fundraising efforts, donor outreach, and peer-driven campaigns that help the fund reach more people.

Help with fundraising

Social media support

Help shape posts, maintain publishing rhythm, and strengthen the fund’s visibility across social platforms.

Help with social media

Writing and editing

Create or refine strong copy for the website, email outreach, campaigns, and public communication.

Help with writing

Sharing and outreach

Amplify useful updates through your communities, professional circles, chats, and personal networks where appropriate.

Expand the reach

Research and contacts

Find relevant media, creators, partners, or opportunities that can help the team move faster and smarter.

Help with research

Design and visuals

Support the fund with visual materials for social media, campaigns, presentations, and other digital needs.

Help with visuals

PARTICIPATION FORMATS

A format that can fit your time and strengths

You do not have to be available every day to be useful. Remote volunteering can be one-time, project-based, or ongoing. Some people prefer a single task when they have time. Others prefer to support one direction more steadily. The goal is to match the format to your time, strengths, and reliability.

WAYS TO PARTICIPATE

Ways to participate

One-time support

Best for people who want to take on smaller tasks when time allows without a fixed weekly schedule.

Steady contribution

Best for people who can support one area calmly and consistently for a few hours each week.

Skill-based help

Best for people who want to contribute where their professional strengths can create the most value.

Network-driven help

Best for people who can open doors through introductions, reposts, communities, or trusted personal contacts.

HOW IT WORKS

How volunteering usually begins

We try to make the process clear from the start. First, you tell us how you can help. Then we align the role, the level of involvement, and the most useful starting point. After that, you receive a clear next step and a working contact.

THREE STEPS

Three simple steps

Tell us about you

Share the area where you can help, the time you have, and the format that feels realistic.

Define the role

Together, we identify where your contribution can be most useful and what level of involvement makes sense.

Start the work

You receive context, a clear task, and the next step without unnecessary confusion or overload.

WHAT MATTERS

What matters most in volunteer work

We value reliability more than big promises. It is better to take on a manageable amount of work and do it well than to start too broadly and burn out quickly. Care with facts, consistency in communication, and respect for the fund's tone all matter.

LONG-TERM IDEA

Why this matters beyond short-term tasks

We do not see volunteer work only as help for urgent needs. Strong communication, better outreach, stronger fundraising support, and better content also build capacity that can serve the fund over time. That is why remote digital support can carry real long-term value.

TRUST AND SAFETY

How to help safely

If you are helping share information about the fund, use only official pages, official contacts, and verified links. Do not ask people to send money to personal accounts, do not forward unverified payment details, and do not change donation routes in private messages. If something feels unclear, ask the team first.

FAQ

Common questions

Good volunteering begins with clarity: how you can help and how that help will be used.

Do I need to volunteer on a regular schedule?

No. You can help once, on a project basis, or more regularly. What matters is choosing a format that is realistic and clear for both sides.

Can I help only by reposting and sharing information?

Yes. If you have strong communities, professional circles, chats, or contacts where the fund can be shared appropriately, that can be genuinely useful.

Do I need professional experience to volunteer?

Not always. Some roles benefit from experience, especially in social media, copywriting, design, or research. Other formats are more flexible and do not require narrow specialization.

Can I help only with writing or only with social media?

Yes. We do not need one person to do everything. It is often more useful when a volunteer supports one clear area well.

How do I share the fund safely?

Use only official WVF pages, official contacts, and confirmed donation routes. If you are unsure which page or link to share, ask the team first.

If you want to help through real work, let's find the right role

If the mission of War Victims Fund speaks to you and you want to support it remotely through writing, social media, fundraising, research, outreach, or digital help, contact us. We will try to find a format where your contribution can be genuinely useful.

Primary contact: contact@warvictimsfund.com