Plans for the coming year May 2015
This report explains our strategy and plans for the next year, and is part of our annual review.
Moving from discovery phase to growth phase
We’ve seen the last three years as our “discovery phase” (as explained in our last business plan). We didn’t immediately focus on growth because first we wanted to answer the following questions:
- Could we make significant progress on the issue of how best to choose a career with social impact?
- Would people listen to our research and change their career plans?
- Would they follow through with these plan changes and actually increase their impact?
- Could we bring about these plan changes scalably and cost-effectively?
- Do we have a working funding model?
Answering these questions took time, especially because it usually takes people a year or so to change their plans, and it takes another year or more to see if they have followed through.
Today, however, we think we can answer “yes” to each question. We believe this means that 80,000 Hours is a project with potentially huge impact: 31% of graduates say making an impact in their work is “essential”, but they have little idea what to do except work in the social sector or give up (“sell out”). So most of their potential impact is wasted.
We can potentially fix that.
As a result,


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)

