Brooke O'Connell 🔸

Creative Strategy, Research, and Operations Professional @ Delft University of Technology
51 karmaJoined Pursuing a graduate degree (e.g. Master's)Working (0-5 years)Delft, Netherlands

Bio

Participation
4

Hi, I’m Brooke! TLDR; I’m interested in strategy, operations, or research in the context of consulting, agency, think tank, non-profit, or related work. I have a lot of experience with EA community organizing strategy and planning I can share and discuss. Currently co-organizer of EA Delft and in the second year of my Strategic Design masters at TU Delft.

How others can help me

  • Network connections with strategy or operations professionals
  • Networking connections with professionals at non-profits, NGOs, development organizations, think tanks, foundations, and similar
  • Open to discussions and insights on EA community building operations and strategy

How I can help others

  • Community building strategy and planning
  • Creative workshops, facilitation or brainstorming
  • Career/impact development and planning

Comments
4

Thanks for your comment Nina! I've definitely kept tabs on and been inspired by what you all are doing at HIP. In fact, we might be using some small pieces as inspiration for a revamp of our career fellowship later this year (more so tailored for current students or recent grads). I'll definitely add a link to the IAP in the 'Activities' tab in the template. 

Thank you James for your kind words!

You make an important point about success metrics. I’ve been exploring some ideas some basic data but haven't settled on which ones yet. Here’s a few ideas I’m looking at:

  • Adoption rate (% of fellowship graduates who create a workbook)
  • Completion rate (% who follow through on at least 3 activities they committed to)
  • Progression metrics (how many members move from one track to the next over time)
  • Qualitative satisfaction data from our check-in conversations

I'd love to eventually track longer-term outcomes like career changes or impact-focused projects launched, but I expect that will take more time to materialize. 

As for a how to guide, I’m hoping this post is a good start, but it would be interesting to explore how to further operationalize this!

Thank you for the thoughtful feedback and suggestions, Alex! Great points about the ordering of the workbook, and the proposed implementation steps. Those resonate with me as well, and I think it’s likely I’ll actually try a couple of those ideas!

So far we have done the 1:1 chat at the end of the fellowship and this has felt useful for guiding members through using it, and helping them to further fill it out. I have also gotten feedback that sharing our own completed workbooks as examples has definitely helped make it a little less intimidating for members, so glad you pointed that out as well.

Regarding failure modes, it’s still early days for us trying it out, but there’s a few ones I might expect could happen:

1. Timing issues: Introducing the workbook when members are overwhelmed (e.g., exam periods for students, etc.) might lead to low engagement. It could make more sense to prioritize the workbook at the beginning of the Introduction Fellowship or at the start of a new semester when people are naturally in a planning mindset.

2. Accountability gap: Not having a structured follow-up process could mean workbooks get filled out but not acted upon. Something like the 2-month and 4-month check-ins you suggested could be useful.

3. Excessive formality: The full workbook intimidating. It may be possible to create a "lite" version for those who prefer a more casual approach, which might increase participation among less committed members.

4. Organizer bandwidth: Tracking and supporting every member could become overwhelming for a small team. Potential solutions could be:

   - Creating peer accountability pairs/groups

   - Training more experienced members to conduct some of the follow-up conversations

   - Using a batch approach where we focus on helping 5-8 members at a time

To answer your question about presentations - yes, I do have a deck that could be used (it’s actually where some of the images are from). It can be found here: https://www.canva.com/design/DAGXSf3cBKc/IJQCkVazb5_vNzWbrHypPw/edit?utm_content=DAGXSf3cBKc&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link2&utm_source=sharebutton

Thank you for your comment and taking the time to read the post! I'm glad to hear that the three distinct paths resonated with you.

I’ve thought a little more about your question and finally have some thoughts. The TLDR is that your question is something I’m considering myself and we're exploring effective ways to track this this semester. Below are a few initial ideas:

What we're already doing—

1. Individual tracking: For those who have done their workbook online, we’ve asked members to share them with us and we keep track of them in a central document (this if of course at their discretion). This allows us to refer back to them during one-on-one check-ins and help members update their plans as they progress.

What we're considering to try—

2. Aggregated insights: Using a simple spreadsheet to track key data points across all workbooks, such as:

  • Which track each member selected
  • Their primary goals
  • Specific activities they've committed to
  • Progress updates from check-in conversations

3. Pattern identification: Every quarter, we could review the spreadsheet data to identify trends, such as:

   - Common interest areas that might warrant dedicated programming

   - Activities with high engagement/completion rates

   - Activities that members struggle to complete (which might need more support)

I’ll emphasis that these are work in progress ideas, and if you have additional ideas for how we can improve this or general feedback, I’m definitely open to it!