I’m Luke Freeman, and I currently serve as the executive director of Giving What We Can (GWWC). You’re welcome to ask me anything! I’ll start answering questions on Thursday June 15th.
Logistics/practical instructions:
- Please post your questions as comments on this post. The earlier you share your questions, the easier it will be for me to get to them.
- Please upvote questions you'd most like answered.
- I’ll start answering questions on June 15th. Questions posted after that are less likely to get answers.
- I’m excited about this, but can’t commit to answering all the questions. If you want to share many questions, consider sharing and/or upvoting which ones you’re particularly interested in.
- (This is an “AMA” — you can explore others here.)
Some context:
- I’ve been leading the team at Giving What We Can since 2020.
- I’ve been giving based on EA principles myself since about 2011 (pledger at both GWWC and Founders Pledge) and actively engaged with the EA community since 2016.
- GWWC is a community of effective givers who are on a mission to create a culture where giving effectively and significantly is a norm.
- GWWC hosts several giving pledges (best known for The Pledge to give 10% of lifetime earnings to effective charities), hosts a multi-country cause-diverse donation platform, provides advice on effective giving, and hosts popular tools and resources such as the How Rich Am I calculator, Giving Games and Charity Elections.
- GWWC does work to help support the broader effective giving community (e.g. information sharing, coordination and incubation of projects, research projects like evaluating the evaluators).
- GWWC helped to found the EA community and what is now called Effective Ventures Foundation (formerly Centre for Effective Altruism). I can speak about my experience running a project housed within EV.
- Read more about GWWC’s direction and strategy
- I’ve advocated for “big tent” effective altruism.
- I feel that EA could learn a lot from other sectors and could benefit from engaging more deeply with them.
- I feel strongly that effective giving should be a key part of effective altruism and likely has a broader appeal and accessibility.
- Prior to GWWC I worked predominantly in tech entrepreneurship and marketing (across private and public sectors) with a focus on growth.
- Outside of Giving What We Can I’ve been in leadership positions in Effective Altruism Australia, EAGxAustralia (organised two conferences) Good Ancestors Project & Good Ancestors Policy, Global Shapers Community (Sydney chapter), EA Sydney, Heart for the Homeless, Australian Skeptics, advised or volunteered with various other social-impact focused projects, and once ran for parliament.
- My academic background is in media and communications (did my thesis on political communication focusing on deliberative democracy and voting reform).
- Other than these things I’d be happy to talk about:
- Managing or working in a remote international team (based outside of EA hub cities) based in Australia.
- My experience going from employee #1 to larger teams (multiple times in different contexts).
- My experience volunteering and/or managing volunteers
- My experience in for-purpose entrepreneurship.
- Challenges and strategies for mental/physical health and wellbeing (e.g. recovering from and mitigating burnout, managing EA/non-EA life, starting a family etc).
- My experiences coming from a non-typical academic background for EA leadership (e.g. not a major in philosophy, economics, or science).
- My views on EA topics/cruxes.
- Dropping out of school at age 15 and pursuing non-traditional career paths
- Anything else that takes your fancy based on GWWC’s work, my post history, my LinkedIn or personal website.
This post is part of EA Strategy Fortnight. You can see other Strategy Fortnight posts here.
Thanks Jeroen! This is a great – and timely – question.
We ❤️ them! We're truly delighted to see these organisations. Witnessing effective giving (EG) grow globally is a joy for us. Anyone who is helping with our mission (to create world where giving effectively and significantly is a norm) is an ally. Even more than that, these specific effective giving national fundraising organisations are close partners. We exchanging knowledge and support on a regular basis. By pooling our resources and talents, we believe we can do a much better job. In fact, we've just hired Lucas Moore to spearhead our Effective Giving Global Coordination and Incubation initiative to help with this and our team recently helped initiate and organise an Effective Giving Summit that brought together representatives from these organisations.
Each of these partnerships is unique. For example:
Brand partnerships also make it easier to share things like marketing materials, introduce pledgers to them, and have shared public advocates.
For many of them, we're also involved in the grantmaking/regranting processes (e.g. receiving funds that they're raise and regranting them to fund programs delivered by our charity partner).
On the brand front:
The context is crucial here. How the GWWC brand presents itself through national partners varies, largely depending on the country. For instance, the idea of having significant impact as an median income earner in your country resonates and makes sense in Germany, but less so in India.
We're actively working with our partners to strike a balance between local and international community building within the effective giving sphere. This approach helps us foster a global community that operates smoothly and raises the profile of effective giving everywhere.
On the research front:
This largely depends on available resources, local context, and areas of specialisation.
Research capacity is often limited, not just for these organisations but for GWWC as well (funding for this is pretty limited). That's why we hope our Evaluating the Evaluators initiative will be valuable for translating the work of evaluators (like GiveWell, ACE, Founders Pledge etc) to donors and fundraising organisations. Several national regranting partners (and other fundraising organisations like High Impact Athletes) have shown interest in using this information in their charity partner selection process.
Local research on poverty alleviation could make sense in places like India and the Philippines, while policy research related to climate and existential risks might be more suited to countries like Germany (a key player in the EU) and Australia (a major source of coal/uranium and potentially renewables). If these organisations (or other organisations in new places/causes/worldviews) begin to conduct more specialised evaluations, we'd be thrilled to review their findings and share our reviews with the wider community.
Indeed! I've always believed that we're only just beginning to uncover the most effective interventions and organisations. However, we're constrained by our research capacity. Since 2016 we no longer conduct direct evaluations of charities/programs/grants ourselves but rely on specialised evaluators and grantmakers. We don't plan to undertake direct evaluations in the near-to-medium term, but we're eager to see more evaluation work that we can review and decide how best to incorporate into our recommendations.
Despite these constraints, we're quite confident that our current recommendations are amongst the best options available for donors. We believe that most regular donors could make a far greater impact by following these recommendations rather than donating based on a specific cause or region they're familiar with or live in. We think the field has a long way to go and are excited to see it grow.