Try working on something random with someone cool

I occasionally get referred people. Those messages look something like this.

“From: [Person I respect and trust]

Hey, have you met [Someone]? linkedin.com/​someone

They’re interested in [some biosecurity thing] and have [some relevant qualifications]. They seem really promising, and I thought they might be a good fit for [something I’m doing].

Should I intro you?”

If I’m feeling particularly underwater and/​or antisocial, I have a followup like this.

“Wow cool background. Have you worked with [Someone] on anything? Or do you know anyone who has?”

The answer is almost always no.

And I think this is bad.

Why?

  1. Matching people to high-impact work is really hard.

  2. Hiring by work trust network is the only cheat code I know.

  3. While working together on a very real project very extensively is most informative, working on a random thing is still probably informative.

  4. Working with people on some random thing is relatively easy.

  5. Time spent on the counterfactual-more casual introduction-y conversations- is comparatively less valuable.

If you buy this, the prescription is simple. Find the coolest EAs you know, find some random thing to work on, and work on it together.

. . . .

Appendix 1. Community builders, consider spending more time working on projects with promising people.

I imagine there are lots of good reasons I haven’t thought about explaining the prioritization of volume v.s. depth in the community building funnel, and I don’t know what I’m talking about in general. But in my individual experience, I’d trade at least 5 high-quality introductions like the one above for a single intro from the same distribution, but where the [Person I respect or trust] has direct work experience with whoever they are introing. Say, experience on a project of similar scope to a final project in an intro CS class at a good university.

Appendix 2. Some quick justification, I guess

Matching people to high-impact work is really hard.

Something needs to explain ‘talent bottleneck in EA orgs’ but also ‘loads of talented people seeking direct work’. Lots of posts relevant to this, e.g. here: https://​​forum.effectivealtruism.org/​​posts/​​jmbP9rwXncfa32seH/​​after-one-year-of-applying-for-ea-jobs-it-is-really-really

This is typically called “vetting” from what I know. I think its more like matching, in the sense that vetting for one team and role should be very different from another.

Hiring by work trust network is the only cheat code I know.

Earlier this year I hired a lot of people in a period of several weeks. And I think they’re pretty amazing folks. The only way this could work was by asking people I was working with, or had worked with in the past, to tell me who they had worked with who was a great fit for our needs. Thats what I’ve been calling work trust networks (almost certainly stolen from someone else, sorry)- a sequence of direct work experiences.

This is a general competence filter. But more importantly, if you trust the person giving you their reference to be totally honest, it gives you an oracle to query about the future of a potential candidate at your company. Work experience doesn’t just tell you “good/​ not good”, it tells you how someone likes using slack, whether they tend to procrastinate on longform writing tasks, and how patient they are with a disorganized onboarding process. This information can not only allow you to evaluate whether your team is a match, but also find match(es) between the person and your most pressing needs as an organization.

Notably, when I’ve tried to hire through trust networks, e.g. allowing for connections by reputation or friendship instead of just work experience, it hasn’t worked as well (purely anecdotal, but also makes sense from first principles IMO)

While working together on a very real project very extensively is most informative, working on a random thing is still probably informative.

Yeah, this is probably the weakest link. Most of my work trust network wins have involved multi-month, close-collaboration type work experiences. OTOH, when I think back to college class projects, I feel like I learned a ton about my project partners. And I’m so desperate for any information which looks like a real experience working together that my gut says even a random thing would make a big difference. I feel like I could change my mind quickly on this, tho. Worth a try?

Working with people on some random thing is relatively easy.

I’ve got a computer-y background, so my rapidfire “proof of lots of ideas” brainstorm is gonna be skewed towards that. But here are some things which seem interesting to me, that you can work with people on, which don’t seem that hard to give a try:

  • reproduce an ML paper or the analysis in a compbio paper

  • host a logistically complicated event

  • start a new school club

  • build an app

  • enter a datascience competition

  • take a challenging class together, ideally with a substantial project component

  • turn a small profit with some internet hustle

  • level up your local EA group

  • 3D print a prototype of your own custom PPE

  • Buy a nanopore sequencer and see if you can assemble a DIY version of your own genome, cross check with a commercial service

  • Join a startup together

  • become superforecasters together

  • scrape useful data from the internet and make a pretty & useful visualization

  • launch your own shitcoin

  • publish a peer-reviewed paper

  • make a top-rated restaurant on trip advisor (https://​​www.youtube.com/​​watch?v=bqPARIKHbN8)

  • compete in a memory competition

Shrug. What matters to me here is whether it feels like a toy or not (it should not), whether it seems like you’d learn something valuable even if a collaboration didn’t pan out (you should) and how fun it sounds to work together vs. solo (together, obv).

Time spent on the counterfactual-more casual introduction-y conversations- is comparatively less valuable.

This basically comes down to my bit in appendix 1. The tradeoff is that you probably need to spend more time working with people than having casual intro conversations. However, there also seem to be some globally better moves: e.g. finding things you have to do anyway, like classes, and doing them together with people.

Overall, I’d guess it would be worth experimenting in this direction as long as high-impact teams were reporting that a shortage of promising-seeming candidates was less of a problem then vetting the candidates they have (these are ultimately fungible bc of role scoping, but w/​e).