The following story is fictional and does not depict any actual person or event...da da.
(You better believe this is a draft amnesty thingi).
Epistemic status: very low confidence, but niggling worry. Would LOVE for people to tell me this isn't something to worry about.
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I've been around EA for about six years, and every now and then I have an old sneaky peak at the old LinkedIn profile.
Something I've noticed is that there seems to be a lot of people in leadership positions whose LinkedIn looks a lot like Profile #1 and not a lot who look like Profile #2. Allow me to spell out some of the important distinctions:
Profile #1:
- Immediately jumped into the EA ecosystem as an individual contributor
- Worked their way up through the ranks through good old fashioned hard work
- Has approximately zero experience in the non-EA workforce and definitely non managing non-EAs. Now they manage people
Profile #2:
- Like Profile #1, went to a prestigious uni, maybe did post grad, doesn't matter, not the major point of this post
- Got some grad gig in Mega Large Corporation and got exposure to normal people, probably crushed by the bureaucracy and politics at some point
- Most importantly, Fucked Around And Found Out (FAAFO) for the next five years. Did lots of different things across multiple industries. Gained a bunch of skills in the commercial world. Had their heart broken. Was not fossilized by EA norms. But NOW THEY'RE BACK BAYBEEE....
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If I had more time and energy I'd probably make some more evidenced claims about Meta issues, and how things like SBF, sexual misconduct cases or Nonlinear could have been helped with more of #2 than #1 but don't have the time or energy (I'm also less sure about this claim).
I also expect people in group 1 to downvote this and people in group 2 to upvote it, but most importantly, I want feedback on whether people think this is a thing, and if it is a thing, is it bad.
Thanks for writing this, and for liberating the draft!
As someone who's closer to category #2 than #1 (I worked in the corporate world for a long time before starting at an ea-aligned and -founded biosecurity nonprofit) I'm, as you say, naturally inclined to like this post. But considerations in the other direction:
People who didn't spend 5+ years in the corporate world and instead spent them doing altruistically useful things probably got a bunch of altruistically useful things done.
If you're advising young EAs on what to do after graduating this is effectively suggesting they wait 3-10y before substantially contributing, which is time during which they might drift away from EA (or AI might end the world as we know it, etc).
People who went to grad school (ex: my PhD biosecurity coworkers) are already pretty far into their career by the time they fully finish school. But maybe you're mostly thinking about college grads?
To the extent that you're thinking about where to recruit EAs for direct work, though, if you can find people with more experience in a wide range of work that's certainly valuable!