This is a good question—we don’t have a formal approach here, and I personally think that in general, it’s quite a hard problem who to ask for advice.
A few things to say:
the ideal is often to have both.
the bottleneck on getting more people with domain expertise is more often us not having people in our network with sufficient expertise, that we know about and believe are highly credible, and who are willing to give us their time, rather than their values. People who share our values tend to be more excited to work with us.
it depends a lot on the subject matter we are asking about. e.g. if it’s an article about how to become a great software engineer, we don’t care so much about the person’s values; we care about their software engineering credentials. If it’s e.g. an article about how to balance doing good and doing what you love, we care a lot more about their values
This is a good question—we don’t have a formal approach here, and I personally think that in general, it’s quite a hard problem who to ask for advice.
A few things to say:
the ideal is often to have both.
the bottleneck on getting more people with domain expertise is more often us not having people in our network with sufficient expertise, that we know about and believe are highly credible, and who are willing to give us their time, rather than their values. People who share our values tend to be more excited to work with us.
it depends a lot on the subject matter we are asking about. e.g. if it’s an article about how to become a great software engineer, we don’t care so much about the person’s values; we care about their software engineering credentials. If it’s e.g. an article about how to balance doing good and doing what you love, we care a lot more about their values