Home > Case Studies > Helping a Community Services Nonprofit Navigate Difficult Conversations Across Staff, Volunteers, and Stakeholders
Organization
180+ employees
Length of Project
Multiple Cohorts
Expertise
De-escalation Skills
Student Care Practices
Mediation Training
Leadership training
Group coaching and facilitated workshops
Our Team
4 Trainers
2 Assistant Trainers
The Context
A community services nonprofit was experiencing a challenge that many mission-driven organizations eventually face: the growing gap between community needs and available resources.
Program staff regularly worked with individuals and families seeking support during difficult periods of their lives. Volunteers donated their time because they cared deeply about the organization’s mission. Donors wanted to see meaningful impact from the programs they supported.
Everyone involved was committed to helping.
Yet as demand for services increased, difficult conversations became more common.
Staff members found themselves speaking with community members frustrated by eligibility requirements or limited program capacity. Volunteer coordinators were navigating disagreements about expectations and responsibilities. Leadership teams were managing sensitive conversations around funding priorities and resource allocation.
These situations weren’t the result of bad intentions or poor communication skills.
They were the natural result of caring people trying to solve complex problems with limited resources.
The organization wanted to equip its team with practical tools for handling emotionally charged conversations while preserving the trust and relationships that were essential to its mission.
Our Approach
We met with organizational leaders, program managers, volunteer coordinators, and frontline staff to better understand the situations they encountered most frequently.
Together, we identified several recurring challenges, including:
- Community members frustrated by service limitations and eligibility decisions
- Volunteers experiencing conflict around roles, communication, and accountability
- Donors seeking greater clarity around organizational priorities and program changes
- Staff members managing emotionally intense conversations while experiencing their own workplace stress
- Internal tensions arising from difficult decisions involving limited resources
Based on these discussions, we customized a nonprofit-focused de-escalation training workshop built around realistic situations participants faced in their day-to-day work.
The interactive training included:
- De-Escalation Skills for Mission-Driven Organizations
- Active Listening and Empathy-Based Communication
- Emotional Self-Regulation During Difficult Conversations
- Managing Volunteer, Donor, and Community Stakeholder Conflict
- Recognizing Early Signs of Escalation
- Boundary Setting While Preserving Relationships
- Scenario-Based Practice Using Real Nonprofit Challenges
Participants practiced applying these skills through guided roleplays and discussions designed specifically around nonprofit environments.
Results
- More than 180 staff members, volunteer leaders, managers, and directors participated in the training
- Training satisfaction averaged 96% across participant evaluations
- Post-training assessments demonstrated a 61% improvement in participants’ ability to identify escalation patterns and apply de-escalation techniques effectively
- 89% of participants reported feeling more confident handling emotionally charged conversations with community members, volunteers, donors, and colleagues
- An eight-week follow-up revealed that participants continued using the skills regularly in their daily work
- Volunteer coordinators reported more productive conversations around expectations, accountability, and team collaboration
- Leadership observed fewer situations requiring executive intervention and more concerns being resolved successfully at the program level
- Staff members reported feeling better prepared to navigate difficult conversations without damaging important relationships







