I feel like orgs don’t get many benefits from being “publicly EA”, but they get some costs.
The narrow EA community seems good at knowing which projects are “basically EA”.
I think to non-EAs, the EA brand might be more of a liability for many orgs than a plus. (It also can be a liability for EA, in that if the org does poorly, EA could be blamed, like with FTX)
They probably get the benefit that they are more likely to get a lot of money from EA. I don’t think the “brand” is well known enough to be that much of a cost.
I feel like orgs don’t get many benefits from being “publicly EA”, but they get some costs.
The narrow EA community seems good at knowing which projects are “basically EA”.
I think to non-EAs, the EA brand might be more of a liability for many orgs than a plus. (It also can be a liability for EA, in that if the org does poorly, EA could be blamed, like with FTX)
They probably get the benefit that they are more likely to get a lot of money from EA. I don’t think the “brand” is well known enough to be that much of a cost.