I would agree with Rebecca here. In my case, attending my first EAGx dramatically changed the course of my career (I’m now doing community building professionally), and if I hadn’t attended, I think there’s a fairly high chance that I’d now be in a totally different non-EA related career, and most likely a less impactful one (but that bit’s harder to measure, of course). In comparison, I attended EAG London this year, which was my second in-person conference. And while it was a really great experience all round—I learned a lot, made a lot of useful connections & strengthened old ones, and also gave (hopefully useful) advice to others—it was definitely less impactful than my first EAGx in terms of how much it directly affected my career path.
I would agree with Rebecca here. In my case, attending my first EAGx dramatically changed the course of my career (I’m now doing community building professionally), and if I hadn’t attended, I think there’s a fairly high chance that I’d now be in a totally different non-EA related career, and most likely a less impactful one (but that bit’s harder to measure, of course). In comparison, I attended EAG London this year, which was my second in-person conference. And while it was a really great experience all round—I learned a lot, made a lot of useful connections & strengthened old ones, and also gave (hopefully useful) advice to others—it was definitely less impactful than my first EAGx in terms of how much it directly affected my career path.