Here are some different options for people with technical backgrounds to pivot into policy careers:
Policy fellowships (see our database here) are a great entryway into DC policy careers for technical people (and for many non-technical people!). Fellowships are especially helpful for mid-career technical folks who would otherwise struggle to make the pivot because they’re both (1) too senior for the normal entryways (e.g. policy internships [such as in Congress], a policy-oriented (under)graduate degree, junior policy jobs), and (2) have too little policy experience to qualify for mid-level or senior policy jobs. There are policy fellowships for people from all experience levels.
And there are plenty of great fellowships that, while not specifically targeting technical people, are open to them, such as PMF.
Check out our advice on policy internships(the linked post targets undergraduates, but the internship advice applies more widely), which are the most common way for junior people to test their fit for policy and build policy-relevant career capital, whether they have technical or non-technical backgrounds.
You might also conduct a policy-relevant research project during a summer/winter research fellowships offered by organizations like GovAI, ERA, CHERI, SERI, and XLab.
If you’re currently enrolled in a technical (under)graduate degree, try to gain some policy-relevant knowledge, networks, and skills, via choosing some policy classes if you can, especially in science and technology policy, or choosing a policy-relevant thesis project.
Consider doing a policy-relevant graduate degree, particularly a policy master’s or law degree. You can often get into these degree programs even if you have only done technical work in the past (ideally, you should be able to tell a narrative about how your interest in policy work is connected to your prior technical studies and/or work experience). Even if you already have a technical graduate degree, it might make sense to do another (short/part-time) policy degree if you’re serious about pivoting into policy but are otherwise struggling to make the switch.
One brief comment on mindset: Policy jobs typically don’t require people to have a particular subject background, though there are exceptions. There are plenty of people with STEM degrees and technical work experience who have pivoted into policy roles, often focused on science and technology (S&T) policy areas, where they can leverage their technical expertise for added credibility and impact. There are certain policy roles and institutions that prefer people with technical backgrounds, such as many roles in the White House OSTP, NSF, DOE, NIH, etc. So, you shouldn’t feel like it’s impossible to pivot from technical to policy work, and there are resources to help you with this pivot. We particularly recommend speaking with an 80,000 Hours career adviser about this.
Here are some different options for people with technical backgrounds to pivot into policy careers:
Policy fellowships (see our database here) are a great entryway into DC policy careers for technical people (and for many non-technical people!). Fellowships are especially helpful for mid-career technical folks who would otherwise struggle to make the pivot because they’re both (1) too senior for the normal entryways (e.g. policy internships [such as in Congress], a policy-oriented (under)graduate degree, junior policy jobs), and (2) have too little policy experience to qualify for mid-level or senior policy jobs. There are policy fellowships for people from all experience levels.
Here are several additional fellowships which have a preference for technical people: TechCongress, Mirzayan Fellowship, Presidential Innovation Fellowship, US Digital Corps, Epidemic Intelligence Service (mainly for MDs), National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) Graduate Fellowship Program (NGFP), DARPA innovation fellowship, X-Force Fellowship (DOD), SMART Scholarship Program (DOD), CyberCorps Scholarship for Service (SFS), etc.
And there are plenty of great fellowships that, while not specifically targeting technical people, are open to them, such as PMF.
Check out our advice on policy internships (the linked post targets undergraduates, but the internship advice applies more widely), which are the most common way for junior people to test their fit for policy and build policy-relevant career capital, whether they have technical or non-technical backgrounds.
You might also conduct a policy-relevant research project during a summer/winter research fellowships offered by organizations like GovAI, ERA, CHERI, SERI, and XLab.
If you’re currently enrolled in a technical (under)graduate degree, try to gain some policy-relevant knowledge, networks, and skills, via choosing some policy classes if you can, especially in science and technology policy, or choosing a policy-relevant thesis project.
Participate in policy-relevant online programs, like the AI Safety Fundamentals Course’s Governance Track, speaker series like this, or these AI policy and biosecurity policy online courses.
Consider doing a policy-relevant graduate degree, particularly a policy master’s or law degree. You can often get into these degree programs even if you have only done technical work in the past (ideally, you should be able to tell a narrative about how your interest in policy work is connected to your prior technical studies and/or work experience). Even if you already have a technical graduate degree, it might make sense to do another (short/part-time) policy degree if you’re serious about pivoting into policy but are otherwise struggling to make the switch.
One brief comment on mindset: Policy jobs typically don’t require people to have a particular subject background, though there are exceptions. There are plenty of people with STEM degrees and technical work experience who have pivoted into policy roles, often focused on science and technology (S&T) policy areas, where they can leverage their technical expertise for added credibility and impact. There are certain policy roles and institutions that prefer people with technical backgrounds, such as many roles in the White House OSTP, NSF, DOE, NIH, etc. So, you shouldn’t feel like it’s impossible to pivot from technical to policy work, and there are resources to help you with this pivot. We particularly recommend speaking with an 80,000 Hours career adviser about this.
This is sublime, thank you!