Hi, we’re the new management team for the EA Meta Fund . We’re here to answer any questions about our grant making.
We recently made this set of grants, and are planning another set in February 2019. We are keen to hear from donors and potential donors about what kind of grant making you are excited about us doing, what concerns you may have, and anything in between.
Please feel free to start posting your questions from now and we (mostly me, but I'll pull in other team members when I'm missing info) will be available here and actively answering questions between 10am and 6pm UK time on 20th December (tomorrow).
Happy to answer questions about (but not limited to):
• Methodology.
• Our planned time spend.
• Reasons, motivations.
• Considerations for evaluation (suggestions welcome).
• Challenges we face / expect.
• Team backgrounds / experience.
• Decision-making / team structure / governance.
• Improvements to write-ups (suggestions welcome, bear in mind write-ups are public and we are a small part-time team).
• Using this fund for fundraising.
• Specific meta orgs, where appropriate, please be thoughtful.
We will try to use "I" where the view is our own and "we" where we believe we can represent the team's view.
Final post for the day as it's late. Posting this question myself as I think it's a useful one to have addressed:
Why have you chosen to spread your grants across a number of orgs and not given most of it to just the one or two org/s you thought were the most pressing?
Some part of the large potential upside of this fund, and the reason why some of the team are excited to put so much of their time into it, is that if we do a really good job it could grow and attract significant additional capital into the meta cause areas.
Whilst a relatively small cause area, in a more efficient market for non-profits, I would expect that the space was funded to the brim due to the outsized returns available within it. I see moving additional capital into this space as highly valuable and I think it's often a smaller, easier jump fo... (read more)