Hi everyone,
I'm Ben from 80,000 Hours. We do careers advice for effective altruists.
If you have any questions about your career, please post them here and I'll do my best to answer them.
In the meantime, you can check out our online career guide: 80000hours.org
Ben
PS Feel free to ask whatever's most pressing to you - don't worry about whether it's relevant to other readers or not.
Update Jan 2016: We're no longer checking this thread for new questions!
Please ask on our Linkedin group instead: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/5057625
Say someone has decided they want to work on a problem directly, rather than earn to give. How do you suggest they find projects?
What do you think of "How Important is Marginal Earning to Give?"?
What do you see as the best opportunities to do EA direct work as a full-time career? Which considerations might one use to decide between full-time EA direct work and earning to give?
Are there opportunities to pursue EA goals in fields/environments that aren't competitive? I work best in collaborative, supportive environments.
I've been thinking about how to weigh the direct impact of one's career (e.g., donations) against the impact of being a model for others. For example, imagine option A is a conventional, high-paying salaried job, and option B is something less conventional (e.g., a startup) with a higher expected (direct) impact value. It's not obvious to me that option B has a higher expected impact value when one takes into account the potential to be a model for others. In other words, I think there might be a unique kind of value in doing good in a way that others can emulate. I'm curious whether you agree with this, and if so, how one might factor it into the analysis.
80k advice often seems geared to people with quite a particular educational background. I'm keen on earning to give even if my earnings can only be moderate (a different course seems better if they might end up lower than that). But while I'm unusually smart I don't like school, don't have very good A levels (Bs and Cs), and prefer to be self-directed - so I decided to skip university to do self-employed start-up business work. However I figure I could go back, or perhaps do an accelerated business course. How can someone in my general situation best get an outside view of their expected mean/median earnings, if they're willing to do any job to maximise these?
When would it make sense for someone to leave a successful earning-to-give tech job to try to work on creating a start up (with the goal of earning to give)? Which considerations are at play? How might someone create a framework for making this decision?
Hi everyone,
Just a note to say I'm still working on replies - trying to do at least one a day!
Sorry if I didn't get to you yet.
Hi,
I often see references to the value of an economics PhD in the EA community and at the 80k hours site.
I find it incredibly hard to relate those cost/benefit assessments of the econ PhD to my situation, because I am now a little over 29 years old, have already done a bunch of study (3 bachelors, 1 masters - around econ, maths, business), and have built 5 years of career capital in government economics roles (which might lose much of its value if I take 5-6 years off to do an econ PhD at a top school).
I am trying to build the greatest amount of career ... (read more)
Which careers give you the best public platform to spread important ideas like effective altruism, cosmopolitanism, antispeciesism, or accounting for the interests of future generations?
To put it another way, which individuals have the most influence over the ideas of society (accounting for difficulty in getting those positions)?
I'm a High School Senior; my interests are very much concentrated in the arts, but those don't seem like a promising route in terms of effective altruism. I have skills in the areas of math and science, but very little personal interest in them. Any advice on finding the balance for a career that's effective, that I also enjoy sufficiently?
I have a degree in computer science and experience with explosives. I am not brilliant at research and poor at interacting with people. My current COA is to become a software engineer for the money. Do I appear to be making some dumb oversight.
What are some pressing problems that would benefit from having someone focus on them for a few years?
I'm in an earning to give career, but am considering taking a break for a few years, after having pulled some very long hours for many years on end now. I'm looking for opportunities to contribute through labor. I could work full-time hours (which would be a significant reduction of workload compared to what I'm doing now) for no salary. Skills: management, legal, data analysis, basic coding (but could spend some time getting up to speed on this one). Some language skills as well.
What do you think is the most promising graduate degree(Masters) for (pure) Math undergrads pursuing earning to give? And maybe more general; how would you structure the answer to the question of what graduate degree one should pursue given that he/she is commited to EtG? Maybe to give you some ideas, I'm currently looking at: computer science(machine learning), econometrics, economics, applied mathematics, financial mathematics, statistics, something related to data science.
Any idea how quickly career capital gains diminish in software engineering? I'm going to graduate with a degree in computer science and 3 internships. I'm curious if the best way to improve my career capital would be by switching fields into something like data science or economics.
Hi, Ben. :)
What about Bioinformatics?
I think something informatics-related would be a good carrer for me. Since I have no formal education on informatics but have a Biology's degree I'm thinking about doing a Masters on Bioinformatics. But I'm afraid that after finishing it I could only get a job with no great i... (read more)
I wonder if anyone here can help me with my university course choice? I'm between two minds trying to choose an undergraduate degree - I think I'm going to pick either a finance course, with an aim towards earning to give, or a more humanities-focused course - philosophy, politics, economics and sociology. The latter is at a more prestigious university, and is apparently a fairly well respected degree among employers, but doesn't show the same clear route to effective altruism that finance does, though I would imagine it is reasonably strong in terms of ad... (read more)
80k now has career profiles on doing Software Engineering, Data Science and a Computer Science PhD. I'm in a position where I could plausibly pursue any of these. What is the ratio of effective altruists currently pursuing each of these options, and where do you think adding an additional EA is of most value? (Having information this information on the career profiles might be a nice touch)
This site is a great idea, but its frustrating that people in situations like myself seem to be unaccounted for. I'm looking for ethical job ideas that someone like myself could actually obtain out there in the world. I'm 36, and not in a financial position to return to school, nor do I want to. I'm low income and working a seasonal factory job at the moment. I make about $10,000-12,000 a year (yes, I actually live on that) so donating money is out of the question (I do however donate my time when I can). I had a good laugh when this website suggested I co... (read more)
Are there any reasons why a humantiies graduate considering trying out software engineering ought not consider data science instead?
i.e. if you have a non-technical background and would initially by doing online courses with the aim of applying to a bootcamp if you liked it / seemed to be progressing well.
What about people who are re-entering the workforce as adults after an extended hiatus? This might include taking time off to raise kids, for health reasons, because finding work after getting laid off didn't pan out, etc. I haven't looked at the site in detail but so far what I've seen seems mostly geared to people whose careers never took any breaks or are just getting off the ground.
In my case, I had to drop out of my bachelors program (senior standing as a Sociology major) for health reasons, and have had some service industry and retail positions sinc... (read more)
Why is management consulting not in the list of top careers anymore?
Have you thought much about how to tell if you can attribute to your actions an improvement you've been advocating for? Do the most successful people at direct work even bother with this or do they just get on with it and accept that they won't really be able to tell / optimistically take the credit?