Diversity of worldviews is better. Two research orgs might develop different schools of thought that lead to different insights. This can lead to more ideas as well as avoiding the tail risks of bias and groupthink.
Easier criticism. When there’s only one org doing A Thing, criticizing that org feels sort of like criticizing That Thing. And there may be a worry that if the org lost funding due to your criticism, That Thing wouldn’t get done at all. Multiple orgs can allow people to think more freely about the situation.
Competition forces people to shape up a bit. If you’re the only org in town doing a thing, there’s just less pressure to do a good job.
“Healthy” Competition enables certain kinds of integrity. Sort of related to the previous two points. Say you think Cause X is real important, but there’s only one org working on it. If you think Org A isn’t being as high integrity as you’d like, your options are limited (criticize them, publicly or privately, or start your own org, which is very hard. If you think Org A is overall net positive you might risk damaging Cause X by criticizing it. But if there are multiple Orgs A and B working on Cause X, there are less downsides of criticizing it. (Alternate framing is that maybe criticism wouldn’t actually damage cause X but it may still feel that way to a lot of people, so getting a second Org B can be beneficial). Multiple orgs working on a topic makes it easier to reward good behavior.
In particular, if you notice that you’re running the only org in town, and you want to improve you own integrity, you might want to cause there to be more competition. This way, you can help set up a system that creates better incentives for yourself, that remain strong even if you gain power (which may be corrupting in various ways)
There are some special caveats here:
Some types of jobs benefit from concentration.
Communication platforms sort of want to be monopolies so people don’t have to check a million different sites and facebook groups.
Research orgs benefit from having a number of smart people bouncing ideas around.
This means...
See if you can refactor a goal into something that doesn’t actually require a monopoly.
If it’s particularly necessary for a given org to be a monopoly, it should be held to a higher standard – both in terms of operational competence and in terms of integrity.
If you want to challenge a monopoly with a new org, there’s likewise a particular burden to do a good job.
I think “doing a good job” requires a lot of things, but some important things (that should be red flags to at least think about more carefully if they’re lacking) include:
Having strong leadership with a clear vision
Make sure you have a deep understanding of what you’re trying to do, and a clear model of how it’s going to help
Not trying to do a million things at once. I think a major issue facing some orgs is lack of focus.
Probably don’t have this be your first major project. Your first major project should be something it’s okay to fail at. Coordination projects are especially costly to fail at because they make the job harder for the next person.
A few reasons for I think competition is good:
Diversity of worldviews is better. Two research orgs might develop different schools of thought that lead to different insights. This can lead to more ideas as well as avoiding the tail risks of bias and groupthink.
Easier criticism. When there’s only one org doing A Thing, criticizing that org feels sort of like criticizing That Thing. And there may be a worry that if the org lost funding due to your criticism, That Thing wouldn’t get done at all. Multiple orgs can allow people to think more freely about the situation.
Competition forces people to shape up a bit. If you’re the only org in town doing a thing, there’s just less pressure to do a good job.
“Healthy” Competition enables certain kinds of integrity. Sort of related to the previous two points. Say you think Cause X is real important, but there’s only one org working on it. If you think Org A isn’t being as high integrity as you’d like, your options are limited (criticize them, publicly or privately, or start your own org, which is very hard. If you think Org A is overall net positive you might risk damaging Cause X by criticizing it. But if there are multiple Orgs A and B working on Cause X, there are less downsides of criticizing it. (Alternate framing is that maybe criticism wouldn’t actually damage cause X but it may still feel that way to a lot of people, so getting a second Org B can be beneficial). Multiple orgs working on a topic makes it easier to reward good behavior.
In particular, if you notice that you’re running the only org in town, and you want to improve you own integrity, you might want to cause there to be more competition. This way, you can help set up a system that creates better incentives for yourself, that remain strong even if you gain power (which may be corrupting in various ways)
There are some special caveats here:
Some types of jobs benefit from concentration.
Communication platforms sort of want to be monopolies so people don’t have to check a million different sites and facebook groups.
Research orgs benefit from having a number of smart people bouncing ideas around.
This means...
See if you can refactor a goal into something that doesn’t actually require a monopoly.
If it’s particularly necessary for a given org to be a monopoly, it should be held to a higher standard – both in terms of operational competence and in terms of integrity.
If you want to challenge a monopoly with a new org, there’s likewise a particular burden to do a good job.
I think “doing a good job” requires a lot of things, but some important things (that should be red flags to at least think about more carefully if they’re lacking) include:
Having strong leadership with a clear vision
Make sure you have a deep understanding of what you’re trying to do, and a clear model of how it’s going to help
Not trying to do a million things at once. I think a major issue facing some orgs is lack of focus.
Probably don’t have this be your first major project. Your first major project should be something it’s okay to fail at. Coordination projects are especially costly to fail at because they make the job harder for the next person.
Invest a lot in communication on your team.