For almost to a decade I grew a bespoke software development and IT consultancy, ClinkIT, from a startup to a mid-sized enterprise (from 10 to 150 staff) where I wore multiple hats - from supporting ad hoc administrative work and solving incidents that arise; to project management and doing QA testing for custom software development projects in finance, sports, hospitality and government insurance; to setting up call center operations in the Philippines; to hiring dedicated remote software dev teams for US and AU based clients; to creating proposals and supporting negotiations for major projects; to setting up formal org structures across sales, project management, various engineering teams, HR, finance, and marketing; and finally, navigating consensus of
leadership across these functions to align with overall strategy.
I also navigated the company through the critical phases of the COVID-19 (from
sustaining our client relationships to implementing staffing decisions to budget controls and managing morale during extreme uncertainty) which is probably the most challenging organizational experience and formative leadership experience I’ve gone through to date.
I started engaging with EA ideas in 2020 through ‘The Precipice’ and started working as a part-time community organizer for EA Philippines in 2021. In parallel, I co-founded High Impact Recruitment to address the need for hiring services across impact orgs and started working full-time in EA. I joined Anti Entropy in 2022, thinking that with my broad ops experience, I could create more impact by being able to offer operations support across the board on top of hiring services as well as creating pro-bono operations-related resources for EA. I served as its Executive Director until 2024 and went on a paternity break.
After returning to work in 2025, given the current trajectory of how AI models are getting better as well as the massive developments to compute (and the recent announcements to spend an enormous amount of resources to get
more!), I have updated on the urgency to ensure AGI is developed safely and aligned with human values. Since then, I aimed to focus exclusively on AGI risk mitigation by helping AI safety org founders and leaders run their organizations well.
I was part of the Peregrine Project (in the honor of the fastest animal alive), which was an attempt to get the world's leading minds, execution power, and funding to coordinate on the most promising and ambitious interventions given urgent timelines. Eventually, the founding team went on to pursue other paths but out of this a collection of our learnings were created synthesizing 200+ ideas for AI risk mitigation (riskmitigation.ai) as well as a research commission to systematically estimate the ML research pool among 3 million IT consultancy employees.
After this, given my curiosity on pursuing an unscoped area, I proceeded to explore Asia-related work with AI Safety Asia (AISA), and was instrumental in helping them reorganize their foundations, structure their ToC and strategy, drive hiring and team alignment efforts, and supported their fundraising.
I currently work on some AIS-related projects and as a fractional COO at Singapore AI Safety Hub's (SASH), creating a global AI safety and governance ecosystem - driving strategic projects and supporting its growth. I believe Singapore has an outsized potential to contribute to AIS as a whole and I'm excited to establish positioning it as a bridge for international AI safety coordination. SASH engages government and civil servants through briefings and its co-working space co-located with Lorong AI, run training programs to develop talent, seed research initiatives, and coordinate AI safety activities across the island and beyond.
I hope to meet with potential friends, allies, and partners and help make promising projects to build a more flourishing world.
P.S: Given my context as a member of EA Philippines and my conversations with other 'impact analysis' organizations, I believe that there is a gap on having more rigorous priorities research for potential interventions in the Philippines. I would be interested in speaking with folks who are looking to do these investigations and potentially coordinate with other actors to execute on them.
(1) Validate SASH's theory of change - stress-test the "Singapore as bridge between East and West" framing with people who have China/Asia expertise and see what resonates or needs refining;
(2) Find potential collaborators, especially researchers with a China angle might want to do projects through or in Singapore;
(3) Find someone who might want to relocate to Singapore to anchor SASH's research arm or help run a fellowship;
(4) Learn from people running similar fellowship and capacity-building programs;
(5) Build a pipeline for the AI Security Bootcamp (aisb.dev/singapore);
(6) Learn things that make me a better operator and strategic thinker;
(7) find another Peregrine Project shaped initiative;
(8) find people who are keen on scoping a landscape of interventions in the Philippines (and potentially later do deeper investigations).
(1) If you're interested in AI safety work with a China/East Asia angle - Singapore is uniquely positioned as a neutral ground, and SASH can facilitate research collaborations, residencies, and connections to Singapore government stakeholders;
(2) If you're running upskilling or bootcamp programs - we have infrastructure, partnerships and experience for running programs like our AI Security Bootcamp.
(3) Happy to share learnings or explore co-delivery If you're a researcher looking for a base in Asia - SASH offers workspace, community, and proximity to Singapore's AI governance ecosystem. Come work out of our space If you're thinking about field-building in underserved regions;
(4) I can share operational learnings from standing up SASH in Singapore, including government engagement, and positioning in a new ecosystem.
General professional help: I can provide help on developing org strategy on the operations and execution side, advice and support on setting up an org, forming hiring plans, finding your co-founders, doing the recruiting, setting up team to work together, working with 3rd party vendors and tools, setting up and making sense of finances, driving ops improvements, etc. - overall, I can help as a temporary COO/Ops lead you can throw at anything (assuming I have capacity and I'm also excited about your project!)
Personally, I can share some thoughts coming from my own journey as a former EA community organizer and generally as a service provider in this community from Anti Entropy & HIRe - as well as reflections on navigating this world as a new parent!
I felt strongly that I had to respond to this given my personal experience with Nonlinear (mostly Kat & Drew) were overall positive.
I do not have much knowledge about past Nonlinear employee experience (though we helped run a hiring search for them for an assistant as our first gig with HIRe - which they ended up not hiring for anyway in the end) - but I have a highly positive opinion with Kat and Drew. All my interactions with them have been incredibly positive personally and professionally. I have only met Emerson once so I have no opinion on him related to this post.
I’ve met Kat Woods while Nonlinear was running a search for someone to lead and incubate an EA recruiting agency. I joined and reached the final round (I recall being told there were 4 finalists) but unfortunately, I wasn’t selected as the top pick. Later on, Kat shared with me and the other 2 finalists that the incubatee changed their mind to focus on another career path. While disclosing that the original funding source might not be available, she encouraged us to try taking on this challenge as she believed we would be doing a lot of good in any case.
She also provided a small amount of seed funding for our time. Seeing as we were in a good position to explore doing work to help EA orgs, the other finalists and myself joined forces to what became High Impact Recruitment (HIRe).
While there was a lower level of infrastructure support in Nonlinear than I expected as an incubator (e.g. legal support, software, fundraising support, etc. - I have provided this feedback to Kat as well for improvement), Kat has always been a great brainstorming partner, grant application reviewer, and coach - which were instrumental in our initial work. Nonlinear also provided the initial funds enough for us co-founders to be able to work together while doing proper fundraising. As we got enough resources to run the org on our own, our interactions with Nonlinear reduced.
After several months of doing the recruiting agency work together, the HIRe founders parted ways for other opportunities just before the FTX fiasco. But during the entire time, Nonlinear has been nothing but positive, taking time to catch up with every few weeks as well as get together in EA conferences. In no way were we forced to do anything, and were independent in running the project. There were also no manipulations and confusion regarding “ownership”, etc. as we were encouraged by Kat that it was ours to run (even with some disagreements with her advice.)
[Note that before we decided to take on the recruiting agency work, Kat did not have to spend time and energy encouraging us and at any point could have moved on without much issue as there were no contracts signed (not saying this is a good thing - it would have been better if there were as these are baseline practices). While there was no paperwork and proper governance provided (we were generally quite experienced and entrepreneurial so we didn’t really need that much hand holding) - I can vouch that there was no manipulation, lying, of any kind. Discussions have been genuine and positive.]
Personally, she was able to persuade me to go all in using my time and skills to support EA orgs (which still drives me today). And while that alone isn't necessarily great moral reasoning - taken with all our interactions, results in my positive assessment of her character.
I am happy that this exists.
I think a good way to approach how to build out a good M&E culture in the community will be a guide with a checklist augmented by case studies of how other orgs/project teams implemented M&E at different stages. I have some confidence most will be happy to pick this up and reach out for specific advice. I also particularly encourage that all our EA project leads / orgs "self-require" some baseline level of an M&E system before asking donors for funds so we can be more accountable for our own requests for grants, etc.
Happy to collaborate on the resource building part of this.
Yes, though we weren't able to work on initiatives to actively advocate for this. Looking back, perhaps this is partly due to my beliefs on the matter (I don't believe that those with minimal work experience can be really useful assistants) and my focus (I work mostly with students). While I encouraged EA Philippines students to take on operations-oriented roles in general during career advising in my past role as CB, I did not focus on PA.
While there is a demand for PAs/ExAs - to be a good one, you need to have excellent client management abilities ("Are you the right assistant for client X?") and enough experience with past organizational logistics work to navigate well to be three steps ahead of your client. You also need to be able to "train" your client on how to leverage your skills better to maximize their productivity (some people don't know how to use assistants). Otherwise, you won't be as helpful in your impact and may end up just being additional overhead to the EA leader you have as a client.
Those new to the workforce don't generally have these skills as they mostly get developed and honed over time. I have met some assistants (some from Athena) from our Professionals fellowship who support EAs and, while I'm not privy to their actual work performance, my initial impression is that they all have some decent past work experience.
As EA Philippines invests its energy in Professionals outreach, this could be something to put more time in exploring strategic initiatives that encourage this as a viable career path to pursue more intentionally. CC @Elmerei Cuevas @Alethea Faye Cendaña
I am grateful that this community exists - where one can take seriously trying to contribute in bringing about a better world while staying grounded. Appreciating the truth-seeking folks around me who I can call friends and trust will be honest about their critiques - always with the intent to encourage improvement instead of pulling me down (you know who you are!).
@Vilhelm Skoglund Would you be able to share how much time it took to put together this report at this level of quality. Curious as to its "costs" should it be a regularly updated public good.