There are many things in EA community-building that the Centre for Effective Altruism is not doing. We think some of these things could be impactful if well-executed, even though we don't have the resources to take them on. Therefore, we want to let people know what we're not doing, so that they have a better sense of how neglected those areas are.
To see more about what we are doing, look at our plans for 2021, and our summary of our long-term focus.
Things we're not actively focused on
We are not actively focusing on:
- Reaching new mid- or late-career professionals
- Reaching or advising high-net-worth donors
- Fundraising in general
- Cause-specific work (such as community building specifically for effective animal advocacy, AI safety, biosecurity, etc.)
- Career advising
- Research, except about the EA community
- Content creation
- Donor coordination
- Supporting other organizations
- Supporting promising individuals
By “not actively focusing on”, I mean that some of our work will occasionally touch on or facilitate some of the above (e.g. if groups run career fellowships, or city groups do outreach to mid-career professionals), but our main efforts will be spent on other goals.
One caveat to the below is that our community health team sometimes advises people who are working in the areas below (but don’t do the object-level work themselves). For example, they will sometimes advise on projects related to policy (even though none of them work on policy).
Reaching new mid- or late-career professionals
As mentioned in our 2021 plans, we intend to focus our efforts to bring new people into the community on students (especially at top universities) and young professionals. We intend to work to retain mid- and late-career professionals who are already highly engaged in EA, but we do not plan to work to recruit more mid- or late-career people.
Reaching or advising high-net-worth donors
We haven't done this for a while, but other EA-aligned organizations are working in this area, including Longview Philanthropy and Effective Giving.
Fundraising in general
Not focusing on fundraising is a change for us; we used to run EA Funds and Giving What We Can. These projects have now spun out of CEA, and we hope that this will give both these projects and CEA a clearer focus.
Cause-specific work (such as community building specifically for effective animal advocacy, AI safety, biosecurity, etc.)
As part of our work with local groups, we may work with group leaders to support cause-specific fellowships, workshops, or 1:1 content. However, we do not have any other plans in this area.
Career advising
As part of our work with local groups, we may work with group leaders to support career fellowships, workshops, or 1:1 content. And at our events, we try to match people with mentors who can advise them on their careers. We do not have any other plans in this area.
80,000 Hours clarified what they are and aren’t doing in this post.
Research, except about the EA community
We haven't had full-time research staff since ~2017, although we did support the CEA summer research fellowship in 2018 and 2019. We’ll continue to work with Rethink Priorities on the EA Survey, and to do other research that informs our own work.
We’ll also continue to run the EA Forum and EA Global, which are venues where researchers can share and discuss their ideas. We believe that supporting these discussions ties in with our goals of recruiting students and young professionals and keeping existing community members up to speed with EA ideas.
Content creation
We curate content when doing so supports productive discussion spaces (e.g. inviting speakers to events, developing curricula for fellowships run by groups). We occasionally write content on community health issues. We also try to incentivize the creation of quality content by giving speakers a platform and giving out prizes on the EA Forum. Aside from this, we don’t have plans to create more content.
Donor coordination
As mentioned above, we have now spun out EA Funds, which has some products (e.g. the Funds and the donor lottery) that help with donor coordination.
Supporting other organizations
We do some work to support organizations as they work through internal conflicts and HR issues. We also provide operational support to 80,000 Hours, Forethought Foundation, EA Funds, Giving What We Can, and a longtermist project incubator. We also occasionally share ideas and resources — related to culture, epistemics, and diversity, equity, and inclusion — with other organizations. Other than this, we don’t plan to work in this space.
Supporting promising individuals
The groups team provides support and advice to group organizers, and the community health team provides support to people who experience problems within the community. We also run several programs for matching people up with mentors (e.g. as part of EA Global).
We do not plan to financially support individuals. Individuals can apply for financial support from EA Funds and other sources.
Conclusion
A theme in the above is that I view CEA as one organization helping to grow and support the EA community, not the sole organization which determines the community’s future. I think that this isn’t a real change: the EA community’s development was always influenced by a coalition of organizations. But I do think that CEA has sometimes aimed to determine the community’s future, or represented itself as doing so. I think this was often a mistake.
Starting a project in one of these areas
CEA has limited resources. In order to focus on some things, we need to deprioritize others.
We hope the information above encourages others to start projects in these areas. However, there are two things to consider before starting such a project.
First, we think that additional high-quality work in the areas listed above will probably be valuable, but we haven’t carefully considered this, and some projects within an area are probably much more promising than others. We recommend carefully considering which areas and approaches to pursue.
Second, we think there’s potential to cause harm in the areas above (e.g. by harming the reputation of the effective altruism movement, or poisoning the well for future efforts). However, if you take care to reflect on potential paths to harm and adjust based on critical feedback, we think you’re likely to avoid causing harm. (For more resources on avoiding harm, see these resources by Claire Zabel, 80,000 Hours, and Max Dalton and Jonas Vollmer.)
Finally, even if CEA is doing something, it doesn’t mean no one else should be doing it. There can be benefits from multiple groups working in the same area.
If you’d like to start something related to EA community building, let us know by emailing Joan Gass; we can let you know what else is going on in the area. Since we’re focused on our core projects, we probably won’t be able to provide much help, but we can let you know about our plans and about any other similar projects we’re aware of. Additionally, the Effective Altruism Infrastructure Fund at EA Funds might be able to provide funding and/or advice.
Thanks for sharing this feedback Ozzie, and for acknowledging the tradeoffs too.
I have a different intuition on the centralization tradeoff - I generally feel like things will go better if we have a lot of more focused groups working together vs. one big organization with multiple goals. I don’t think I’ll be able to fully justify my view here. I’m going to timebox this, so I expect some of it will be wrong/confused/confusing.
Examples: I think that part of the reason why 80,000 Hours has done well is that they have a clear and relatively narrow mission that they’ve spent a lot of time optimizing towards. Similarly, I think that GWWC has a somewhat different goal from CEA, and I think both CEA and GWWC will be better able to succeed if they can focus on figuring out how to achieve their goals. I hope for a world where there are lots of organizations doing similar things in different spaces. I think that when CEA was doing grantmaking and events and a bunch of other things it was less able to learn and get really good at any one of those things. Basically, I think there are increasing returns to work on lots of these issues, so focusing more on fewer issues is good.
It matters to get really good at things because these opportunities can be pretty deep: I think returns don’t diminish very quickly. E.g. we’re very far from having a high-quality widely-known EA group in every highly-ranked university in the world, and that’s only one of the things that CEA is aiming to do in the long run. If we tried to do a lot of other things, we’d make slower progress towards that goal. Given that, I think we’re better off focusing on a few goals and letting others pick up other areas.
I also think that, as a movement, we have some programs (e.g. Charity Entrepreneurship, the longtermist entrepreneurship project, plus active grantmaking from Open Philanthropy and EA Funds) which might help to set up new organizations for success.
We will continue to do some of the work we currently do to help to coordinate different parts of the community - for instance the EA Coordination Forum (formerly Leaders Forum), and a lot of the work that our community health team do. The community health team and funders (e.g. EA Funds) also do work to try to minimize risks and ensure that high-quality projects are the ones that get the resources they need to expand.
I also think your point about ops overhead is a good one - that’s why we plan to continue to support 80k, Forethought, GWWC, EA Funds, and the longtermist incubator operationally. Together, our legal entities have over 40 full time staff, nearly 100 people on payroll, and turnover of over $20m. So I think we’re reaping some good economies of scale on that front.
Finally, I think a more decentralized system will be more robust - I think that previously CEA was too close to being a single point of failure.