Summary of our annual review May 2015

We’ve just published our annual review for the period ending April 2015.
In case you’re new to 80,000 Hours, this is what we do: we advise talented graduates on how to maximise the social impact of their careers. Currently, we do this through our online guide and one-on-one coaching. We help graduates find the meaningful careers they want, while moving more talent to the world’s most pressing problems.
The key documents in the review are:
- Our review of progress
- Our plans for the next year
- An update on our progress while in Y Combinator since May
In brief, this year we made major improvements to our online guide, leading to 400% growth in the monthly rate of significant plan changes (our key impact metric). Our President wrote a book that Steve Levitt described as “required reading for anyone interested in making the world better,” we quickly met our fundraising stretch target, and we were admitted to the world’s top startup accelerator, Y Combinator. We did all this despite a smaller budget and two staff with long-term illness.
We also made plenty of mistakes.
In total, to date we’ve caused 188 significant plan changes. As a result of our help, these people:
- Have founded five professional non-profits that likely wouldn’t exist without us.
- Have entered careers such as research and politics.


Wealth inequality globally is incredibly high. Perversely, this can be an argument in favour of working in finance.



When I was an undergraduate I came to fully understand the depth of the world’s problems: tens of billions of animals were suffering in factory farms, humanity faced the risk of catastrophic nuclear war, billions continue to live in horrendous poverty, and that was just the start. I wanted to solve these problems, but when I tried to take concrete steps I mostly felt powerless and frustrated.
Pooja Chandrashekar is a good demonstration that sometimes the best way to show people you can achieve amazing things is just to achieve amazing things. (Photo by J. Lawler Duggan/For The Washington Post)