Sean Griswold: Volunteering Where It Matters Most
Our Global Volunteer Month spotlight series continues and this week, we're turning the lens on Sean Griswold, Senior Manager at The J.M. Smucker Co., a volunteer whose expertise is quietly making food businesses across Africa stronger.
Some people volunteer out of obligation. Sean volunteers because it just makes sense.
"When the needs of an organization match what you're uniquely equipped to contribute, it creates a powerful opportunity to make a real difference."
For Sean, that match was Partners In Food Solutions. And two years and nine projects later, the fit still feels right.
It's not hard to see why PFS came calling. Sean carries over 15 years of experience across food manufacturing and quality assurance, from the specifics of peanut processing and supplier management to the broader discipline of auditing diverse food production systems. That kind of range is rare. But what makes Sean genuinely valuable isn't just the depth of what he knows. It's what he does with it.
Right now, Sean is juggling not one but two active projects with PFS, and both reflect the same instinct: meet people where they are and leave them better equipped than you found them. One of those projects involves supporting the review and delivery of food safety training, helping client teams move from understanding concepts to actually applying them under real-world conditions. Technically grounded. Practically useful.
And that kind of foundation has a way of multiplying. Strong training rarely stays contained to a single project, it ripples outward, building the kind of capability that shows up again and again long after any one engagement ends.
That ripple effect is something Sean has come to understand intimately through his work with PFS teams across geographies. Collaborating closely with technical leads, he's helped shape resources designed to scale knowledge where it's needed most. And in doing so, he's landed on a truth that many experienced mentors eventually discover: "Some challenges are universal while others are completely unique."
It's that tension, familiar fundamentals meeting unfamiliar contexts, that keeps the work interesting. And honest.
But ask Sean what keeps him coming back, and the answer isn't about systems or frameworks. It's simpler than that.
"The people are what make it so rewarding," he says, "especially the clients who are eager and appreciative of the support."
There's something about that eagerness, the energy of someone who genuinely wants to learn and grow, that's hard to replicate in any other setting. It's what turns a volunteer engagement into something that feels less like giving and more like a two-way exchange.
"It's energizing to connect talented, passionate professionals with solutions that can accelerate their growth."
And that energy, when channeled well, reaches further than any single business. It strengthens supply chains, raises standards, and quietly makes food systems more resilient, one well-trained team at a time.
Because real impact was never just about solving the problem in front of you. It's about leaving people equipped to solve the next one on their own.