My name is Gergő, and my academic background is in psychology. I’m the director at the European Network for AI Safety and founder of Amplify, a marketing agency dedicated to helping fieldbuilding projects. My journey into communitybuilding started in 2019 with organising EA meetups on a volunteer basis.
I started doing full-time paid work in CB in 2021, when I founded an EA club at my university (it wasn’t supposed to be full-time at least at the beginning, but you know how it is). This grew into a city group and eventually into a national group called EA Hungary. We also spun out an AIS group in 2022, which I’m still leading. AIS Hungary is one of the few AIS groups that have 2+ FTE working for them.
Previously I was a volunteer charity analyst and analysis coordinator for SoGive, an experience I think of fondly and I’m grateful for. I have also done some academic research in psychology.
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Hey Egg, thanks for your comment! Here are my thoughts:
This totally makes sense, I do the same, though I think if people have the opportunity to take a “live” course that is more beneficial. What this post aims to respond to is the notion that, given that Bluedot exists as an organisation, people conclude that there is no need to start local fieldbuilding initiatives (something I come across quite often). Hope that clarifies!
Agreed! However, looking at the many benefits that such initiatives provide (some of which you mentioned, and the others I outline in the post) I think it is justified to run them.
I could concede that the main bottleneck is funding right now. My current guess on funding gaps is that up until now, it was possible to get a small “moonshot” grant from LTFF relatively easily (this might change now that they pivoted to doing funding rounds), but then projects will fail to maintain funding once they need over 100k USD. For orgs that can fundraise from OP, money is less of an issue.
What I mean here is that if you are introduced to a local AIS community through a friend who is also part of that group, you are more likely to give them the benefit of the doubt even if the course is not run as professionally as Bluedot’s. Compared to such a person, I expect it’s better for an experienced professional to take Bluedot’s course instead of one organised by university students or fresh graduates. The quality of materials is important in either case!