I care deeply about making an impact in the animal welfare space. I have a background as a vet (small animals), and I’m pivoting towards EA-aligned roles — ideally in research or think tank settings. I would also be open to other suggestions. I often find the roles advertised are quite senior (e.g. project manager or director), and I struggle to see how I can bridge the gap between my clinical experience and the kind of experience these roles seem to require.
Beyond the common advice around networking or browsing job boards, are there concrete ways to become competitive for these roles? For example, are there skills or kinds of experience that are particularly valued but often overlooked by applicants coming from adjacent sectors like clinical practice? Or are there entry-level roles or fellowships in the space that might not be widely advertised?
And are there mistakes you commonly see from applicants — where they have the right potential or values, but don’t frame their background in the right way?
First, your vet experience is likely way more expansive than you think. I suspect you’re not fully accounting for some critical aspects of your work: you’ve been doing project management, people management, and administrative work this entire time, even if you haven’t been calling it that. Every treatment plan is essentially a complex project with multiple stakeholders (e.g. owner, specialists, staff), budget constraints, timeline pressures, and success metrics. I’m sure you’ve been analyzing data, communicating technical information to non-experts, managing resources, and supervising people. These are important skills that research orgs and think tanks need. Your challenge is drawing that clear, credible line between what you’ve actually been doing and what these job descriptions are asking for. Don’t make hiring managers do the translation work—spell it out for them.
At the same time, there genuinely aren’t really shortcuts to getting jobs you’re not demonstrably qualified for, especially at the senior level where organizations are understandably risk-averse. But you can (somewhat, and maybe) help bridge experience gaps by your alignment with the org’s mission and values. If you can show a deep, specific understanding of why their work matters (not just “I care about animals” but “I’ve seen how X policy gap affects animal welfare outcomes in ways that your Y initiative directly addresses”), hiring managers may become more confident that you’ll spin up quickly.
There aren’t secret entry-level roles floating around, but many orgs do closed recruitment rounds where they only invite people already on their radar. The way onto that radar isn’t mysterious—if you volunteer with target organizations, show up to EAGs, join relevant communities, and submit thoughtful applications even when you don’t get the role, your name is more likely to percolate and stick. The goal is becoming someone they think of when the right opportunity emerges.
As for proper framing, a common missed opportunity I’ve noticed is writing resumes that list responsibilities instead of highlighting impact on the organization’s mission, e.g. “Implemented protocols that reduced average treatment time by 15%” over “responsible for patient care”. I’d also recommend resisting the everything-and-the-kitchen-sink approach—craft something lean where every single line directly supports your case for a specific role. For me, at least, an exaggerated, 10-page resume inflates away credibility rather than establishes it.
Your clinical background is genuinely valuable here, you just need to translate it in ways that make the value obvious to people who’ve never worked in veterinary medicine. Animal Advocacy Careers will prove to be a very useful resource here!
Hi Antonia, I’m not an expert in the animal space, but my soft sense here is:
as Evan wrote, your prior exp is likely more relevant than you think and you should use your CV to explain how in the way Evan mentioned—titles are a bit less important than types of things you did (e.g., I imagine being a vet did involve a bunch of planning and juggling priorities and optimising processes).
The animal welfare space even more so than other spaces does thrive on connections and relationships—going to conferences and connecting e.g. via Hive can be really beneficial both to get information and hear about opportunities
Internships and volunteering are particularly common I’d say and super useful ways to move into the space and new types of roles. Given the effective animal advocacy space is so small, having a great reference from a known org doing a project for them or e.g. organising a meetup or mini-conference can open many doors and puts that recent experience on your CV
Personally, at AIM we get a lot of people with (human medicine) clinical backgrounds. To us, clinical backgrounds generally indicate 1. altruism/impact drive, 2. empathy, 3. ability to juggle and fix difficult, potentially high pressure situations, 4. general competency, from finishing the education and getting the job.
If you haven’t already, it can also be useful to spend a bit of time figuring out what types of roles are a really great fit for you. I’m mentioning this because a lot of the human medicine clinical background folks we get at AIM end up on average being better fits for smaller, more early stage orgs where they can be a generalist, things are pretty urgent, and they see the impact of their work more directly. A “project manager” role at a small org will end up being a very different role, and look for quite different traits and amounts of experience (spoiler: much less), than a “project manager” role in a 50+ people org.
Hi, thank you so much for being here.
I care deeply about making an impact in the animal welfare space. I have a background as a vet (small animals), and I’m pivoting towards EA-aligned roles — ideally in research or think tank settings. I would also be open to other suggestions. I often find the roles advertised are quite senior (e.g. project manager or director), and I struggle to see how I can bridge the gap between my clinical experience and the kind of experience these roles seem to require.
Beyond the common advice around networking or browsing job boards, are there concrete ways to become competitive for these roles? For example, are there skills or kinds of experience that are particularly valued but often overlooked by applicants coming from adjacent sectors like clinical practice? Or are there entry-level roles or fellowships in the space that might not be widely advertised?
And are there mistakes you commonly see from applicants — where they have the right potential or values, but don’t frame their background in the right way?
Any input appreciated, thank you!
Hey Antonia—thanks for the thoughtful questions!
First, your vet experience is likely way more expansive than you think. I suspect you’re not fully accounting for some critical aspects of your work: you’ve been doing project management, people management, and administrative work this entire time, even if you haven’t been calling it that. Every treatment plan is essentially a complex project with multiple stakeholders (e.g. owner, specialists, staff), budget constraints, timeline pressures, and success metrics. I’m sure you’ve been analyzing data, communicating technical information to non-experts, managing resources, and supervising people. These are important skills that research orgs and think tanks need. Your challenge is drawing that clear, credible line between what you’ve actually been doing and what these job descriptions are asking for. Don’t make hiring managers do the translation work—spell it out for them.
At the same time, there genuinely aren’t really shortcuts to getting jobs you’re not demonstrably qualified for, especially at the senior level where organizations are understandably risk-averse. But you can (somewhat, and maybe) help bridge experience gaps by your alignment with the org’s mission and values. If you can show a deep, specific understanding of why their work matters (not just “I care about animals” but “I’ve seen how X policy gap affects animal welfare outcomes in ways that your Y initiative directly addresses”), hiring managers may become more confident that you’ll spin up quickly.
There aren’t secret entry-level roles floating around, but many orgs do closed recruitment rounds where they only invite people already on their radar. The way onto that radar isn’t mysterious—if you volunteer with target organizations, show up to EAGs, join relevant communities, and submit thoughtful applications even when you don’t get the role, your name is more likely to percolate and stick. The goal is becoming someone they think of when the right opportunity emerges.
As for proper framing, a common missed opportunity I’ve noticed is writing resumes that list responsibilities instead of highlighting impact on the organization’s mission, e.g. “Implemented protocols that reduced average treatment time by 15%” over “responsible for patient care”. I’d also recommend resisting the everything-and-the-kitchen-sink approach—craft something lean where every single line directly supports your case for a specific role. For me, at least, an exaggerated, 10-page resume inflates away credibility rather than establishes it.
Your clinical background is genuinely valuable here, you just need to translate it in ways that make the value obvious to people who’ve never worked in veterinary medicine. Animal Advocacy Careers will prove to be a very useful resource here!
thank you so much Evan!
Hi Antonia, I’m not an expert in the animal space, but my soft sense here is:
as Evan wrote, your prior exp is likely more relevant than you think and you should use your CV to explain how in the way Evan mentioned—titles are a bit less important than types of things you did (e.g., I imagine being a vet did involve a bunch of planning and juggling priorities and optimising processes).
The animal welfare space even more so than other spaces does thrive on connections and relationships—going to conferences and connecting e.g. via Hive can be really beneficial both to get information and hear about opportunities
Internships and volunteering are particularly common I’d say and super useful ways to move into the space and new types of roles. Given the effective animal advocacy space is so small, having a great reference from a known org doing a project for them or e.g. organising a meetup or mini-conference can open many doors and puts that recent experience on your CV
Personally, at AIM we get a lot of people with (human medicine) clinical backgrounds. To us, clinical backgrounds generally indicate 1. altruism/impact drive, 2. empathy, 3. ability to juggle and fix difficult, potentially high pressure situations, 4. general competency, from finishing the education and getting the job.
If you haven’t already, it can also be useful to spend a bit of time figuring out what types of roles are a really great fit for you. I’m mentioning this because a lot of the human medicine clinical background folks we get at AIM end up on average being better fits for smaller, more early stage orgs where they can be a generalist, things are pretty urgent, and they see the impact of their work more directly. A “project manager” role at a small org will end up being a very different role, and look for quite different traits and amounts of experience (spoiler: much less), than a “project manager” role in a 50+ people org.
All the best! :-)
thank you so much Judith!