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We recently published an interview with Matthew Coleman—another entry in our Career Journeys series. Matthew is the Executive Director of Giving Multiplier, a platform that encourages donations to highly effective charities through donation matching. Before this, he completed a PhD in psychology, researching the psychology of altruism.
The interview covers quite a lot of ground, but a few of the things we talked about include:
The gap between what a career looks like from the outside and what it’s actually like day-to-day.
Advice for people wanting to make an impact through psychology.
The tension between keeping your options open and committing to a path.
Here’s one of our favorite extracts from the full interview:
On engaging with the (often mundane) realities of academic research:
I learned a lot. By the time I started my lab manager role, I was fairly confident I wanted to do a PhD. But my research lab in undergrad, which I loved, was a very small lab where I was working closely with the faculty advisor, and I wanted to try out a larger lab studying different topics to explore a bit more.
As the lab manager of an unusually large lab, I got a bird’s-eye view of a lot of the research projects going on and understood what the day-to-day looked like, whether that was grant applications, hiring and onboarding, or actually conducting research myself alongside my colleagues. I found the experience amazing and fascinating and really intellectually stimulating, which confirmed that I wanted to go the PhD route, so I followed through on my original plan from undergrad.
[…] I was certainly very fortunate to have gotten a lot of hands-on experience in research as an undergraduate, so I think I had a better sense of the day-to-day than many people do. But I do think it’s a very important point, and some related advice I like to give is: when you wake up on a random Tuesday in February, do you actually want to do the things that you have to do? Not just do you like the topics or ideas you’re studying (although that’s of course very important, too). Maybe you read a book, watched a TED talk, or listened to a podcast about some topic you found fascinating, and maybe you do want to pursue work in that domain. But I think the ideas themselves aren’t enough, because you actually have to do the day-to-day work.
So what are the actual responsibilities and tasks you like doing? For example, you may find neuroscience fascinating, but maybe you don’t want to spend a large portion of your workweek interacting with research subjects running brain imaging sessions, or whatever it might be. In such a case, even if you think the subject matter is fascinating, maybe that’s not the best career fit for you. Or maybe you do also enjoy most of the regular responsibilities associated with that career, in which case it could be a great fit. So I think a combination of enjoying the topic itself plus the day-to-day responsibilities is important. I was lucky that, early in my career, I was able to test it out and experiment with which responsibilities I liked more than others.