My personal takeaways from EAGxLatAm

This is a personal post and does not necessarily represent the views of Rethink Priorities.

This year I attended EAGxLatAm (6-8 January) in Mexico City.

I thought it would be a very valuable exercise to share my own takeaways from it as well as to encourage other attendees’ to share theirs. My takeaways are based on the 22 1-on-1s I had (not counting casual 1-on-1s that happened during the conference). I talked mostly (ca. 70%) with Latin American students at different levels of their undergraduate degrees.

So without further ado, these are my takeaways:

Things I was rather surprised about

  • Latin American students don’t seem to

    • be aware of the concept of option value and more specifically, they don’t seem to be explicitly considering this a criteria for their career decision-making

    • be considering the “ladder of tests” e.g. when thinking about pursuing a specialization (like a master’s or PhD) often they had not yet considered a “cheaper test” to see if that degree would be the right move for them

    • more broadly, they don’t seem to be aware of the different criteria they are comparing different options with

  • Latin American students seem (internally) to feel really pressured to do a master’s and/​or PhD abroad (e.g. US).

    • When I dug deeper for the reasons for this, they mentioned

      • Job/​financial security

      • A pathway for them “to be taken seriously”

      • (this one really saddened me): That they feel they are “worth very little in EA” if they don’t get these degrees

  • Latin American students seem to have a hard time thinking ambitiously, probably more so than the “average EA”.

    • When these students come from low/​middle income backgrounds then the issue seems to be that they are carrying a lot of “baggage” from their past that makes it hard for them to “think big” about the impact they can have in the future

    • If they come from more high income backgrounds then the issue seems to rather be imposter syndrome.

Things I was more or less aware of but were (mentally) strongly highlighted

  • Founders/​directors of projects usually don’t plan for the changes in the type of work they do as their projects/​organizations grow and therefore find themselves after a couple of years doing a lot of tasks they don’t enjoy doing.

  • Operations management (particularly HR) isn’t well planned (if planned at all) when nonprofit entrepreneurs are drafting project plans and fundraising. As a result, project budgets don’t account properly for these costs.

  • When operations management is planned for a new project it looks something like “we’ll budget an ops person (and that’ll solve our issues)”. The result of this is that by the time that (ops) person is hired, it is expected that one person solves all operational issues for the project.

  • Often by the time projects receive funding they don’t know “what to do with the money” and start looking fast into fiscal sponsors or other ways to receive the funds.

Some things I suggest (or even suggested during my 1-on-1s)

  • For community builders to talk with their community members more about how they are comparing different career options. I suggested to one community builder experimenting with a workshop for doing career weighted factor models

  • For students in particular to seek (career) mentoring opportunities

  • Having a public list of project ideas (for the EA space) for non-programmatic things like operations, HR, management etc. so people that would like to work on these things have a better sense on what ideas to prioritize[1]

  • For a service to exist that offers founders “career check-ins” once a year where they have to take inventory of how their list of responsibilities has changed and consider alternative paths either within their own organizations or outside of them earlier

I know this all sounds rather “negative” but if anything the major takeaway I had is: There’s so many people in the Spanish/​Portuguese-speaking community striving to improve the world in many ways!

(And I’m probably biased because I grew up in Colombia) but I never left an EAGx so energized and happy! :-)

I’d really love for attendees’ themselves to share their own takeaways and possibly even share opposite experiences to those I had!

  1. ^

    Several existing initiatives/​projects can be found in this post.