The main reason is I think it’s just a better strategy in general for getting good jobs (e.g. because lots of the best positions are never advertised or even created until the right person is found).
I think it’s then especially important for smaller and newer organisations, which is what predominates in EA. This is because small/new organisations are less likely to have lots of standardised roles (the kinds that are easiest to run broad recruitment rounds for), and are less likely to have had the resources to set up a big open recruitment round (which tend to have lower returns per hour than recruiting via referrals).
Another factor is that many organisations in EA want to hire people who really care about EA, and the easiest way to do this is to hire from the community, rather than try to figure it out in an interview.
Hi there,
I’d say make networking your main focus.
The main reason is I think it’s just a better strategy in general for getting good jobs (e.g. because lots of the best positions are never advertised or even created until the right person is found).
I think it’s then especially important for smaller and newer organisations, which is what predominates in EA. This is because small/new organisations are less likely to have lots of standardised roles (the kinds that are easiest to run broad recruitment rounds for), and are less likely to have had the resources to set up a big open recruitment round (which tend to have lower returns per hour than recruiting via referrals).
Another factor is that many organisations in EA want to hire people who really care about EA, and the easiest way to do this is to hire from the community, rather than try to figure it out in an interview.
Also just double checking you’ve seen this, which is a bit out of date but I still think is useful: https://80000hours.org/career-guide/how-to-get-a-job/