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 Vaidehi!
Open Philanthropy's Effective Altruism Community Growth (Global Health and Wellbeing) program is currently our largest source of funding. Their policy is to fund no more than 50% of the budget for an organisation of our profile (and we also do not want a single funder to be such a large portion of our funding). That leaves us with roughly ~£2.4m to raise between now and December to reach our target runway through to March 2025 (with our current budget which includes various international programs also).
We have a small number of other donors who have generously provided us operational funding in donation greater than $10k USD. We also have about $1.2k of monthly recurring donations to our operations from smaller donors.
Ultimately we'd like to be funded directly by enough small and large donors that we do not need to seek as much institutional funding but can still pursue our plans and reach our impact goals.
However, there is a tension here. We want to be very careful about how we fundraise for our operations from most donors as we don't want to undermine our relationship with donors and be seen as too self-recommending. Not only could this be bad for us but we think this could be bad for the wider community if it's done in a way that undermines trust.
We're currently exploring the option of including an opt-in for donors to support our operations when making a donation which (if done well) would likely increase the amount of baseline support from regular donors and also signal to larger donors that we do in fact need the funding.
We'd like to do a better job with working with larger donors on fundraising for high-impact projects and hope that in doing so they may also see the value of our work and offer to support it.
We'd be excited to see more worldview diverse meta funders as it is harder for worldview diverse meta organisations that are as closely tied to EA to find other institutional funders than it is for cause or worldview specific organisations.
Some of the other difficulties we face when finding operational funding include:
If anyone would like to support our work, you can do so here and I'd be more than happy to chat on a call or respond to questions here on by email (luke at givingwhatwecan.org).