Susan J. Ellis was a trainer, presenter, researcher and consultant regarding volunteerism. She founded the largest publisher of volunteer-related books, Energize, Inc., which has published more than 25 books and provided consultancy and training services for organizations worldwide that involve volunteers, including the Everyone Ready Online Volunteer Management Training Program. She wrote or co-wrote 14 books, wrote more than 100 articles for various publications and is cited in more than 150 articles and books re: volunteerism. She was frequently called on by national media outlets for commentary regarding volunteerism and was quoted in stories in The New York Times,Fortune Magazine, the Chronicle of Philanthropy and many others. She is considered a pioneer regarding the promotion of the management of volunteers as a profession. She was based in Philadelphia.
Ellis is the author or co-author of fourteen books, several of which have been translated into Japanese, Taiwanese, French, and Italian. Since 2005, her best selling book is From the Top Down: The Executive Role in Successful Volunteer Involvement, 3rd Edition, which has sold more than 6000 copies in print and e-book. She gave speeches regarding recruiting and supporting volunteers in more than 26 countries. Ellis co-authored, with Katherine H. Campbell, By the People: A History of Americans as Volunteers, New Century Edition, originally published in 1978, and published in a third, updated version in 2005. She became a proponent of virtual volunteering in 1996 and was an advisor for the Virtual Volunteering Project, the first effort to document and promote online volunteering efforts. She is a co-author with Jayne Cravens of The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook: Fully Integrating Online Service into Volunteer Involvement, published in 2014. She was frequently cited in various national and international publications regarding volunteerism-related topics, such as
a 1995 article in The Baltimore Sun regarding funding and accounting for the Points of Light Foundation,
a CNN Money / Fortune Magazine article in 2000 about millions of retiring baby boomers having different, disruptive expectations about volunteering than previous generations,
a 2009 article in The New York Times about the launch of Mandela Day
a 2017 article in The Chronicle of Philanthropy about the surge in volunteering numbers after the 2016 Presidential election and
a 2018 article about a decline in volunteering among young people in Education Week.
Ellis received the Harriet Naylor Distinguished Member Service Award from the Association for Volunteer Administration in 1989. She was a passionate fan of the original Star Trek television series and once taught a community college course in the Romulan language derived from a program by science-fiction authorDiane Duane. Her company name was derived from the phrase "Energize" frequently said on the show.