Summary
The purpose of this post is to summarize the achievements and learnings at Impact Ops in its first two years.
Impact Ops provides consultancy and hands-on support to help high-impact organizations upgrade their operations. We’ve grown from three co-founders to a team of 11 specialists and supported 50+ high-impact organizations since our founding in April 2023.
We deliver specialist operations services in areas where we have deep experience, including finance, recruitment, and entity setup. We have 50+ active clients who we’ve helped tackle various operational challenges. Besides our client work, we’re pleased to have contributed to the broader nonprofit ecosystem in several ways, including via free resources.
We’re also proud to have built a sustainable business model that doesn’t rely on continuous fundraising. We’ll share details about our services, projects, and business model in what follows, including our key takeaways and what’s next for Impact Ops!
What is Impact Ops?
Impact Ops is an operations support agency that delivers services to nonprofit organizations.
Our mission is to empower high-impact projects to scale and flourish. We execute our mission by delivering specialist operations services in areas where we have deep experience, including finance, recruitment, and entity setup.
Our team has extensive experience within nonprofit operations. Collectively, we have:
* 50+ years’ experience working at nonprofits (incl. Effective Ventures, CEA, Panorama Global, Anti Entropy, Code For Africa, Epistea, and the Marine Megafauna Foundation)
* 50+ further years’ experience working in related roles outside the nonprofit community, including COO, recruitment, and accounting positions.
These figures underrepresent our collective relevant experience, as they exclude time spent supporting nonprofit organizations via Impact Ops (10 years collectively) and working for other consultancies (incl. PwC, EY, BDO, and Accenture). If it sounds like we're pr
One thing that confused me about the game/ritual was that I had the power to inflict a bad thing, but there was no obvious upside.
All I had to do was ignore the email, which seemed too easy.
This seems to be a bad model for reality. People who control actual nuclear buttons perceive that they get some upside from using them (even if it's only the ability to bolster your image as some kind of "strong-man" in front of your electorate).
Perhaps an alternative version could allow those who use the "nuclear" codes to get an extra (say) 30 karma points if they use the codes?
I think this correctly identifies a problem (not only is it a bad model for reality, it's also confusing for users IMO). I don't think extra karma points is the right fix, though, since I imagine a lot of people only care about karma insofar as it's a proxy for other people's opinions of their posts, which you can't just give 30 more of :)
(also it's weird inasmuch as karma is a proxy for social trust, whereas nuking people probably lowers your social trust)