Hey @Kat Woods 🔶 ⏸️
I am curious how this project went! I also have noticed that while EA job boards surface strong candidates, many small EA-aligned orgs (e.g. Ashgro, Safe AI Forum, and similar teams) simply don’t have the bandwidth to run a full recruiting process—timely follow-ups, structured screening, proactive sourcing, etc. That can create avoidable friction for both candidates and teams, even when there’s real mutual interest.
Because of that, I’m exploring whether there’s room for a small, opt-in recruiting/sourcing service that sits downstream of these job boards—focused on execution and candidate experience for hard-to-fill roles at capacity-constrained orgs.
Not thinking of this as a replacement for the job board or advising, just a complement. I see that this was already attempted and looks like nothing stuck, so curious to understand what the failure points were. There seems to be a strong need for this within the community in my opinion.
I also think this ties back to the broader question I was raising. If a large share of motivated people end up defaulting to earn-to-give not because it’s their best fit, but because pathways into direct impact work are bottlenecked or unclear, that may still point to a structural issue—even if earn-to-give remains net positive in expectation.
So yes, I think the question of “would you be satisfied with a normal job and donating 10%?” is a crucial one. My concern is less about whether that option is impactful in theory, and more about whether the ecosystem is doing enough to help people find durable, high-fit ways to contribute—whether through direct work, earning to give, or something in between.