Power dynamics between people in EA

I work at CEA as a community liaison /​ contact person for the community.

In any field, including EA, power differences affect how people interact.

Sometimes power differences are obvious, like between a manager and their report or a grantmaker and grantee. Organizations should have policies around some things here, like on conflicts of interest within an organization.

But there are a bunch of smaller power differences that subtly affect a lot of interactions. Formal policies would be too heavy-handed here, but we can all adjust how we handle these situations.

This post is meant for people who have relatively more power within EA — though who that is changes with the circumstances!

EA is complicated

EA is both a social community and a professional field. In the words of one HR person at an EA organization about handling this dynamic, “Boy, is it complicated and strange.”

For many of us who work in EA, it will be well worth it to have friendships, housemates, and/​or partners within the community, not just our professional contacts. But that also introduces more complexity, and we should expect to need to tread carefully.

Some factors in how people influence each other

Funding

  • Being an actual grantmaker

  • Having grantmakers in your network who listen to you

  • Being a major donor to an organization

In organizations

If you work at or are on the board of an EA organization, you can affect the outcome of other people’s interactions with the organization. This affects hiring, grantmaking, etc even if you aren’t directly involved in hiring or funding. Your impression of a colleague can matter for promotion and other decisions, even if you’re not directly managing them.

Network

Who you can introduce people to, who you’re friends with, etc.

Gatekeeping

Ability to get people in or keep them out of events, retreats, office spaces, parties, etc.

Age

This won’t be true of everyone, but my impression is that people under about 25 often weigh others’ opinions more heavily and have a harder time expressing clearly when they’re uncomfortable with something.

History

If they looked up to you when they were first getting involved in EA, you may still have a kind of influence over them even if you’re now peers in other ways.

Demographics and culture

Some of this is big obvious categories like race and gender, but some is subtler things like accent, sharing more background knowledge with the cool kids, etc. People from cultures with higher power distance may be more reluctant to question authority figures.

How this affects things

Relationships that feel equal aren’t always equal

If I ask a community member for a favor, I don’t feel like I’m pulling rank or anything. But because of various advantages I have over them, their perception of the interaction will probably be slanted by those things. So maybe they’ll go along with things that are more costly for them than I intended.

Possible steps: Ask fewer favors from people who might feel uncomfortable refusing. Try to make clear when things are truly optional, and provide easy ways to decline.

It’s harder for junior people to give their real opinion

Opinions that junior people express will often be shaped (maybe unintentionally and unknowingly) by what they perceive senior people’s opinions to be or what they think the senior people want to hear.

Possible steps:

  • Ask junior people to share thoughts before you give yours. Listen openly and show interest.

  • Give them more time and encouragement to lay out messy thoughts.

  • Set the stage for welcoming messy /​ unformed thoughts by sharing some of your own.

  • Give encouragement and appreciation when they offer opinions and especially when they disagree with you—make it a good experience for them.

  • Point to any tangible changes made based on critical feedback, so people can see you take it seriously.

  • Volunteer criticisms of your own work that you think are valid.

  • State cruxes: “I wouldn’t expect agreement if you have a different view on consideration X.”

It’s harder for junior people to establish boundaries

A senior EA I know notes that she’s effusive with hugs at work. She realized after a long time that one of the junior staff she was working with prefers less physical contact than most people, and that she was probably making this person uncomfortable by offering hugs that they didn’t feel comfortable turning down.

Social situations are also assessments

When junior people are in the same space with senior people, they often correctly feel that they’re being evaluated as potential future grantees or hires. Every lunch feels a bit like a job interview. The good aspect of this is that they would probably like to have a foot in the door, but the bad aspect is that it can make time in EA spaces pretty anxious because even minor social interactions feel high-stakes.

The flip side is that some junior EAs don’t realize this is happening.

People might need different nudges depending on where they are: people who feel like they’re being trialed might benefit from more casual interactions and talking about non-work topics. People who don’t realize they’re making an impression that affects them professionally might benefit from a heads-up about this.

Shifting sands

Although I’ve written about “junior” and “senior” people, there often isn’t a clear hierarchy between two people. One may have more influence via their job, another via their network or reputation in the community, or via their ability to fund projects. At times each of them may feel less advantaged than the other.

Over time, power levels can shift. For example, I know a pair of EAs where each of them has hired the other.

People who start out feeling like peers can end up on different levels. I know two EAs who worked at the same organization and considered hooking up casually, but decided not to. Later the organization shifted so that one of them was managing the other, and they were relieved that they’d decided to keep things simpler. Even if you never work at the same organization, one of you may end up as an advisor, board member, or grantmaker to the place where the other works.

Romantic relationships

I’m including the full range from hookups to casual dating to long-term relationships. A lot of this is relevant both during the relationship and after it ends.

For dating in the same organization or where there is a grantmaker/​grantee relationship, there should be an organizational policy. But there will also be situations where no formal policy applies, for example with people from different organizations.

Upsides of relationships within EA

A lot of us really value having a partner who’s also involved in EA!

  • Being close with someone who shares our values

  • Understanding each other’s work and why it’s important

  • Sharing advice, knowledge, networks, etc.

  • There are lots of interesting, thoughtful people here

Complications

  • Makes confidentiality harder. Which work-related things can you talk about at the dinner table? It can sometimes be hard not to subtly let on something confidential, even via conspicuous silence. And normal things like talking about your day at work are different when your partner is familiar with your employer and coworkers.

  • If you work at an organization, how does that affect the other person’s relationship with that organization? For example, my husband and I have established that I don’t want to be caught between my workplace and him as a community member. If he has a complaint or request for an organization I work for or am on the board of, he should use whatever process for contacting the organization anyone else would use, rather than going through me. (I also need to tell my coworkers to handle his requests the same as they would for anyone, rather than assuming I’ll answer his question at home.)

Risks of dating across power levels

One standard concern is that resources will be misallocated or people inappropriately elevated due to personal relationships. Maybe a junior person dating a senior person gets more opportunities than they actually should, and that takes away resources from places they’d be better spent.

But it can also have downsides for the junior person:

  • If the senior person is being very careful not to favor their partner professionally, and ends up actually disfavoring them.

  • If the junior person doesn’t want to appear to take undue advantage of the relationship, and so doesn’t apply for opportunities like funding or jobs where their partner would be involved.

  • If organizational conflict of interest policy limits where they can work, e.g. if the junior person can’t work at an org because their partner runs it.

  • If other people will view the junior person as getting ahead via the relationship rather than their own abilities, this might cause other people to see them as less talented or hardworking than they really are.

  • Even if they enter the relationship fully consensually, it may be harder for them to set boundaries, or to leave.

There are also risks to the more senior person, for example:

  • Perception (justified or not) that they have acted unethically.

  • Receiving more blame if the relationship goes poorly.

  • Professional consequences if they are seen as handling a conflict of interest poorly.

Inside and outside view

Some people have an inside view that dating across power levels won’t be a problem for them. They believe they’ll be responsible about it, and it won’t affect work. Some people are more or less right about that, and others turn out to be wrong. Don’t treat your inside view as entirely reliable here.

Poly relationships

If you’re dating multiple EAs, consider the dynamics between those people along with the factors mentioned above. You might not be able to fully rely on open communication flagging any problems to you. For example, some people in EA have expressed that they’re not comfortable applying for opportunities (e.g. funding) to their partner’s partner.

Mitigation steps

When considering a relationship, have a talk early on about how this might affect each of you. Will it make it hard or impossible to work at the same organization? If one of you is involved in funding, what will the process be if the other applies for funding? And given that you won’t have thought of every weird situation that could come up, are you generally OK with having more complexity because of being in the same field?

It may be hard to approach people you’re interested in dating without them feeling some pressure to accept. Possible steps:

  • Take it slow, and let both people have time to think over the decision to get together.

  • Various ways of sussing out interest without directly asking the person:

    • Reciprocity.io—you and your Facebook friends can indicate if you’re interested in dating, etc (which they only see if they’re interested in you too)

    • a “date me” document that outlines what you’re looking for in a relationship. A thread of such profiles.

    • Using a friend as a high-school-style go-between: “Jenny says she’d go out with you if you like her too,” etc

More conservatively, you might decide not to start new sexual or romantic relationships with EAs. Reasons that might push you toward this:

  • if some of your past relationships have ended poorly /​ involved drama

  • if your position makes things especially complicated (for example, heading an EA organization or grantmaking project)

  • if you don’t want to think about potential complications and power dynamics

Once a relationship is underway:

  • Take it slow, and encourage the junior person to take their time and think it over before moving to a new level.

  • Don’t move to a new level at a time when either of you are drunk /​ high /​ particularly emotionally vulnerable.

  • Be meticulous about consent.

  • Ask a trusted person to be another set of eyes on the situation and help flag things you should be aware of or steps you should take.

This stuff is weird and hard, and I’m available to try to help

Both in social work and in EA work, I’ve talked to people in a lot of weird and hard situations, and I’m not easy to freak out. Feel free to email (julia.wise@centreforeffectivealtruism.org) or book a call with me if there’s something that might be helpful to talk over confidentially.

Examples:

  • I talked separately with two EAs who were considering a relationship. The more senior EA worked at one of the main sources of funding in an area where the more junior EA hoped to work. We talked about what the process would be if the junior person applied for that source of funding: the funding source’s policy was that the senior person would remove themself from the decision. And in case the junior person didn’t want to apply there because of the personal connection, I offered to help them identify other possible sources of funding for their work.

  • Two people who had a friendship with some romantic/​sexual elements years earlier ended up with one supervising the other at work. The junior person felt very uncomfortable about the way the earlier relationship had gone and worried that it was affecting their current treatment at work. The junior person spoke about it with me, and then at their request I spoke with the senior person and with some of their colleagues. The junior person and senior person spoke directly about it with each other, and the senior person apologized. They synced up about their memories of what had happened and how they each interpreted it, and both came away feeling relieved to have finally dealt with it.

  • In many cases where someone wanted to give feedback to a person or organization but were worried this would affect their future job or funding prospects, I’ve been a conduit to pass on the feedback in an anonymized way.