Might be worth looking into 180 Degrees Consulting, the low cost consultancy for non-profits. Either to use them directly or learn from their model.
My understanding of their model is that they use volunteer university students to do most of the work and they are mentored by the big consultancy firms. Students get experience and career capital, consultancies get exposure to future grads and non-profits get low cost consulting.
I’m not sure what “low cost” is but looking at their 2020 report they ran 550+ projects form 166 branches in 36 countries with $117,300 total contribution from clients.
This seems achievable to replicate this model in some ways for EA. Already have lots of university groups and would be clients.
Yep, always tricky here. I was actually just reading Reversing Advice just before posting this but wasn’t sure how I should manage this.
Advice is like medication. It should come with similar rules, regulations, restrictions and warnings.
Some advice is over the counter and can be used by almost everyone. Advice should be used in moderation, do not take more than the recommended dose. Prescription medicine is illegal to advertise for (in Australia) because it is not useful for everyone and should only be recommended by a health care professional. Some advice does not mix well with other advice and care should be taken when mixing advice. Do not take advice that has been recommended to someone else as it may not apply to you. A particular problem may have several different advice that is helpful for it but each does not work for everyone, so you may need to try a few before you find the one that works for you.
Having said that I think I would default to aiming for the higher thing when you are not sure. If you aim high you may fall short and if you aim low you can still only fall short. So if you’re on the margin, start with a deep RL project. You might quickly find that its hard to do and fall back to doing Spinning Up.
If symptoms persist, please consult your health care professional.