The meetups coming up this week are:
- 21 Sep: Stanford EA
- 22 Sep: Giving What We Can Sweden Pub Night
- 24 Sep: Giving What We Can Glasgow, first meeting
- 25 Sep: Effective Altruism NTNU, first meeting
- 28 Sep: North Carolina EA, second meetup
- 28 Sep: Dot Impact's 26th project meeting
It's great to see two new meetups this week. Last week, we had five meetups - Stanford, Sweden, NYC, London and Dot Impact. You can add meetups here. Alternatively, you may be interested in attending an upcoming LessWrong meetup, most of which are listed here.
This weeks image was from Effective Altruism Melbourne's Cookie Bank on September 13, which raised several hundred dollars for SCI.
Any organisers who announce a new meetup here will recieve my upvote, to encourage this.
Its great to see the number of meetups flourishing. As an "old geezer" I felt perfectly at home at the meetup organised in London last week, which was well attended and buzzing with interesting conversations. The link between the online community turning into a real community (which can reinforce giving behaviour etc) is really powerful in building strength and depth in effective altruism. If organisers of the events could drop quick meetup reports here we could build the knowledge base of what is working and what isn't, what meetups could do etc it would probably also inspire people to start more.
Certainly i am inspired to start a slightly older group in London, with a link to and expertise from the core movement, which would provide two way learning - how to engage with the older mainstream, non-academic community, and start to normalise "making the most difference possible" as a normal, worthwhile thing to do in the mainstream community, and be inspired by an amazing community of young people who are doing exactly that. Thoughts/comments would be appreciated.
Just a thought - a huge number of people get involved in small charities for "self actualisation"/ego-enhancement and do so incredibly ineffectively, with the whole thing turning into an opportunity for self promotion which achieves very little at all - effective or not. Effective Altruists have a real opportunity to offer consulting services and provide guiding lights to doing more and doing it better on that particular cause, and in so doing gently introduce new (highly effective) causes to a broad cross section of the population. For example offering to provide xx hours of consultancy for $xx per hour (to be directly donated to your chosen cause) would:
Thoughts/comments would be appreciated.
Yes, the consulting role is interesting. I guess that to perform consulting, it's most important to have good credentials so our Oxford researchers might be able to contribute here. Using a model where consultancy fees are donated to a great cause seems like a great model to me.
26th project meeting. Please.