Hey everyone! I'm Ben, and I will be doing an AMA for Effective Giving Spotlight week. Some of my relevant background:
- In 2014 I cofounded a company for earning to give (EtG) reasons (largely inspired by 80k), which was later successfully acquired.
- Since late 2018 I have been doing direct work, currently as Interim Managing Director of CEA.
- (With a brief side project of founding a TikTok-related company which was similarly acquired, albeit for way less money.)
- I've had some other EtGish work experience (eight years as a software developer/middle manager, a couple months at Alameda Research) as well
- Additionally, I’ve talked to some people deciding between EtG and direct work because of my standing offer to talk to such folks, so I might have cached thoughts on some questions.
You might want to ask me about:
- Entrepreneurship
- Trade-offs between earning to give and “direct work”
- Cosmetics and skincare for those who (want to) look masculine
- TikTok
- Functional programming (particularly Haskell)
- Or one of my less useful projects
- Anything else (I might skip some questions)
I will plan to answer questions Thursday, November 9th. Post them as comments on this thread.
See also Jeff’s AMA, which is on a similar topic.
What should an undergrad looking to do earn to give or direct work learn in terms of skills that would be most useful in your opinion?
This is a very broad question! I guess the major debate right now is whether one should focus on a "path" (a la 80k) versus a set of "aptitudes" (a la Holden). I slightly think that aptitudes is a more useful framework if you are very early in your career, but it feels pretty close to me.