
We invite you to ask us anything about Charity Entrepreneurship’s work. As examples, you might want to ask questions related to:
- Our Incubation Program for starting new high-impact charities:
- The application process (stages, preparation, etc.)
- Who is the best fit for the program (personality traits, relevant experience, etc.)
- Details about the 2-month training and co-founder pairing
- Seed funding and financial support (during and after the program)
- Our new Foundations Program
- Our top ideas for the 2023 Incubation Programs:
- Animal-focused interventions
- Policy-based ideas
- Current research on biosecurity
- The research process we use for selecting the top interventions
- Our track record, knowledge base, expertise, how we do stuff, etc.
- Entrepreneurship-focused, career-advice questions
Our whole team will be engaging with your questions to provide the best answers. Deadline for asking questions is: October 16, 2022. We will try to answer all the questions by October 20, 2022.
How to ask questions:
- Please post each question as a separate comment.
- Don’t be discouraged from asking niche questions. We’re happy to address them, there are a lot of new people on the forum who may benefit from the answers.
Small reward for your time:
We will send out a copy of our Peter Singer endorsed handbook, How to Launch a High-Impact Nonprofit, to the authors of the five most interesting questions (as picked by the CE team).
About CE:
We launch high-impact nonprofits by connecting potential founders with effective ideas, training, and funding. This means we spend thousands of research hours to identify highly-effective interventions in chosen cause areas. We then provide a two-month intensive training program (all costs covered) to teach participants how to run effective charities. We help them pair with a co-founder that will best complement their skills and personality. They finish the program with a proposal for funders that we deliver to our seed network. They grant up to $200,000 USD per project. You can learn more about the program at our Incubation Program website.
Yep - it's true we get very large numbers of applicants. Perhaps 80% are speculative though, and don't even really understand what we do. So the big number is somewhat misleading. Of the two or three hundred relevant candidates we receive, maybe 20 or so will make it onto the program. So for the purposes of those reading the EA Forum (who one would imagine are somewhat or very involved in EA) the likelihood of getting into the later rounds of the application process are actually pretty good.
I will add, however, that it's a little difficult to communicate around this topic. On the one hand we want to ensure people know that it's highly competitive; on the other, we don't want to discourage people. Furthermore, each recent round of applications has been really quite different, so it's not easy to generalize or lay out probabilities.
What we are confident about is that if we could find more excellent candidates we would be able to start more excellent charities. Our experience is that it makes a huge difference to find particularly well suited candidates. They tend to go on to start exceptionally effective organizations.