Applying to EA orgs? My thoughts as a new recruiter with AIM

By Amalie Farestvedt 🔸, Ben Williamson @ 2025-10-20T10:22 (+95)

In the spirit of Draft Amnesty Week, and in light of Ambitious Impact currently hiring for staff roles - one recruitment manager (or director) and two researchers - I thought I’d share some of my recent reflections on finding impactful careers as a new recruiter in an EA org.

 

“Why is it so hard to get hired to do good?”

First, I want to validate this point and say that I totally agree; it is (stupidly) hard. I personally applied to 16 EA orgs and spent >100 hours job searching, doing work tests, interviews, etc., before I got this role. This was after having had four EA part-time roles, served on a board of one EA organisation for two years, and been community-building for years. I am not the only person to have this experience, as you can see from a quick search on the EA Forum herehere, and here.

Personally, I’m excited about a world where people approach impact from many angles. It’s easy to get tunnel vision on ‘EA jobs’ - they align with your values and seem like the best way to contribute. But zooming out, the goal isn’t to be hired by an EA org; it’s to have the greatest counterfactual impact. For many people, that might mean roles outside EA, in government, academia, or industry, where their skills fill gaps that EA orgs can’t - or by donating effectively and taking the Giving What We Can pledge to fund more impactful interventions. For a take on this topic that resonates with me, see Lauren Mee’s recent post

 

So…should we give up on getting jobs in EA orgs?

No, I don’t think we necessarily should, and I am not alone in thinking so. I recommend this post for a good write-up to keep you motivated while you’re figuring out where and how you can have the highest counterfactual impact. Resilience paying off is also well exemplified by the founder cohorts of our Charity Entrepreneurship Incubation Program. Many of the applicants who eventually found a nonprofit were previously rejected before being admitted in a later round. It wasn’t that they weren’t competent. 

My post is aimed at people like myself, who still choose to apply for EA nonprofits because of the counterfactual impact they believe they can have (e.g., as a Recruitment Manager with AIM), but struggle to show their fit.

 

What are some things you might consider?

There are multiple ways to improve your chances. I will first focus on what you do before you actually hand in your CV, so your experiences or upskilling, because this is what ultimately changed things for me. While there is more to say, I only have one advice I want to double down on: 

Another area I improved over time is the “technical” improvements, like refining your CV, test tasks, etc. This is a list of some things I now notice with applicants that stand out to me:

 

Some half-baked thoughts from my manager

I ran this article by my manager (Ben Williamson, AIM’s Director of Recruitment) for some additional takes, which I’ve included below…

The good applicant doom loop

Orgs have differing hiring processes, but some key traits and skills matter regardless of what the job is. The independent assessment of multiple hiring managers can be surprisingly similar. This can result in some applicants getting stuck in a bit of a ‘good applicant doom loop’ - good enough to pass through many organisations’ initial selection processes, but lacking a certain skill or trait that is getting them rejected at late stages across the board. 

This is a particularly painful place to get stuck in, given you invest substantial time in many orgs’ application processes with no payoff. In this way, just sending out more applications is not the answer; it’s just going to result in more test tasks to complete.

Some rough examples of gaps that can get people stuck at this stage: 

 

How to solve for this? 

 

Some miscellaneous thoughts


NickLaing @ 2025-10-22T09:14 (+6)

This especially is a great take in a competitive job market which I hadn't thought about before - as much as it might be hard for some personality traits.

"Aim to be a spikier candidate - i.e., someone with some chance of being a fantastic hire, but lower confidence of being an average hire. If you’re getting to the mid-stages of many processes, there’s a chance you’re seen as a ‘good but not great’ candidate across the park. I see many very well-meaning, well-intentioned applicants like this - clearly value-aligned with AIM but without any standout traits that get me excited about their potential as a founder. Like with dating, it’s better to be a perfect fit for one role than a decent fit for every role: it’s much better to be a 2/10 for 5 hiring managers, and a 10/10 for 1 hiring manager, than a 6/10 for every process you go through. Don’t just aim to tick the boxes in your application submissions; highlight what makes you more unique in terms of your experience, knowledge, or approach to working. Can you bring a novel angle to the test task you’ve been presented, that might fall flat, but might also make you stand out?"

Denis @ 2025-10-25T17:06 (+3)

This is a great post!

I've worked in non-EA roles where I was a hiring manager and we had many high-quality applicants for a single role. For example, hiring post-doc chemists is humbling when you see 50 CV's of people who have each done incredible work and are far more qualified than I am. 

At first, it seems like an abundance of choice. But what is surprising is that we almost never reject someone without a real reason. Sure, "there were better candidates" can be true, but usually I can put my finger on a few reasons why we decided this. You are probably a great person, but if you don't get hired, it's very likely that someone can tell you exactly why - what was it that that other candidate had or did differently? 

So feedback is super useful - but only if you can get good, honest feedback - and you'll only get this if you are very receptive, not defensive and totally respectful of the interviewer's time. 

For good, motivated candidates, I often offer to do a 30 minute feedback session after their last interview. I will get quite granular "when we asked you X, you replied Y, and it wasn't a very convincing answer, we would expect a candidate of your calibre to have given answer Z" or "we had 4 applicants who had done full post-docs in small-angle light scattering, which is the core of the role, and it was always going to be difficult for you without this experience." And also very basic things like "If you start to feel tired, have a strong coffee. We're judging you against other candidates who are fully focused, if you're tired, it's just harder."

When I applied for my first job in a full-time EA role, a very helpful hiring manager, Michael Aird, did exactly this, and gave me so much good feedback and tangible advice that it really step-changed my approach to EA job-seeking. 

I still got plenty of rejection though :) - I was even rejected as an attendee for EAG London even while I was doing an incubator with AIM ! So it's also great to get used to rejection and learn from it! 

Bella @ 2025-10-22T17:07 (+3)

This was a really great post — articulated lots of things I've thought but never found the time to properly write up :) Thanks for your work and for helping make it more transparent!

Aman @ 2025-10-22T09:45 (+2)

Crazy stuff! I personally know someone who was reached out to from EA Orgs with jobs but the person decided not to take them and self-rejected! I've always wondered how the recruiters in this highly competitive space can reduce chances of self-rejection (especially for deemed fit candidates). If anyone can discuss a bit here, it'll be great! 

Rachel N. @ 2025-10-30T17:46 (+1)

Thanks for sharing your thoughts! 

Regarding your suggestion to go work outside of EA: I'd be curious if there's data showing that it's easier to get a job outside of EA. Anecdotally, I've found that if you have EA experience, you have a pretty decent chance of at least being called back for an interview or work/test compared to more mainstream fields - probably due to EA still being very niche.