I find it funny people think questions about the Chinese Room argument or induction are obvious, tangential, or silly. xD
Anyway: What is the best algorithm for deciding between careers?
(Rule 1: Please don’t say the words “consult 80,000 Hours” or “Use the 80K decision tool!” That is analogous to telling an atypically depressed person to “read a book on exercise and then go out and do things!” Like, that’s really not a helpful thing, since those people are completely booked (they didn’t respond to my application despite my fitting their checkboxes). Also I’ve been to two of their intro workshops.)
I want to know what object-level tools, procedures, heuristics etc. people here recommend for deciding between careers. Especially if one feels conflicted between different choices. Thanks! :)
Write your assumptions about the alternatives career paths that you see down.
Talk to other people. If you have multiple options talk with your friends about those and get their feedback. If your friends don’t include people who are in those careers reach out for people inside those careers. Cold approaching people over LinkedIn is one way you can get in contact with people and there are likely also networking events.
I don’t know what the best algorithm is, but what I did was something like the following.
Step 1. Make a list of the things you enjoy doing. Attempt to be specific where possible- you want to get at the activity that’s actually enjoyable, so “making up stories” is more accurate for me than “writing” is, since it’s the storytelling part that’s fun for me instead of the sitting down and typing specifically. Sort the list in the order that you most enjoy doing the thing, with an eye towards things you can do a lot of. (I do like chocolate, but there’s a sharp limit in the amount of chocolate I can eat before it stops being fun.) There’s no exact length you need, but 10~15 seems to be the sweet spot.
Step 2. Line up the things you enjoy doing with jobs that do them a lot. Make a list of those jobs, putting under each job the different things you would like about them along with things you know you’d dislike about doing the job. Talking to people in that field, reading interviews with them, and good old fashioned googling are good steps here. Sort the jobs by how many of your favourite things to do are in them and how few things you don’t want to do are in them.
Step 3. Take the list of jobs, and look up how much money each job makes, along with how much demand there is for that job and how many qualifications you’d need to earn to reasonably expect to get the job. Hours worked per week and health risks are also good things to think about. (Note: Sitting at a computer for nine hours straight should really count as a health risk. I’m not joking.)
Step 4. You now have a good notion of enjoyment vs practicality. If there’s a standout winner in both of them, do that. If not, then consider your tradeoffs carefully. You will probably enjoy things less when you have to wake up every morning and do them, but it also caught me by surprise how little time it feels like I have to work on personal projects after eight or nine hours plus commuting.
Step 5. Think about UBI and cry a little, then dedicate a side project towards ushering in the glorious post-scarcity future.
There is a reason people say 80k. And it’s because they did the research already.
If not 80k. Read deep work, so good they can’t ignore you and maybe others booms that suggest a “strategy” for employment. (short version—get a job in an area on purpose. Ie if you are a vampire, a job in a factory making garlic free whole foods.)
Ask people around you. Maybe 10. Why they chose their career, and if they like it. Ignore their answers and double check by observing them work.
I find it funny people think questions about the Chinese Room argument or induction are obvious, tangential, or silly. xD
Anyway: What is the best algorithm for deciding between careers?
(Rule 1: Please don’t say the words “consult 80,000 Hours” or “Use the 80K decision tool!” That is analogous to telling an atypically depressed person to “read a book on exercise and then go out and do things!” Like, that’s really not a helpful thing, since those people are completely booked (they didn’t respond to my application despite my fitting their checkboxes). Also I’ve been to two of their intro workshops.)
I want to know what object-level tools, procedures, heuristics etc. people here recommend for deciding between careers. Especially if one feels conflicted between different choices. Thanks! :)
Write your assumptions about the alternatives career paths that you see down.
Talk to other people. If you have multiple options talk with your friends about those and get their feedback. If your friends don’t include people who are in those careers reach out for people inside those careers. Cold approaching people over LinkedIn is one way you can get in contact with people and there are likely also networking events.
I don’t know what the best algorithm is, but what I did was something like the following.
Step 1. Make a list of the things you enjoy doing. Attempt to be specific where possible- you want to get at the activity that’s actually enjoyable, so “making up stories” is more accurate for me than “writing” is, since it’s the storytelling part that’s fun for me instead of the sitting down and typing specifically. Sort the list in the order that you most enjoy doing the thing, with an eye towards things you can do a lot of. (I do like chocolate, but there’s a sharp limit in the amount of chocolate I can eat before it stops being fun.) There’s no exact length you need, but 10~15 seems to be the sweet spot.
Step 2. Line up the things you enjoy doing with jobs that do them a lot. Make a list of those jobs, putting under each job the different things you would like about them along with things you know you’d dislike about doing the job. Talking to people in that field, reading interviews with them, and good old fashioned googling are good steps here. Sort the jobs by how many of your favourite things to do are in them and how few things you don’t want to do are in them.
Step 3. Take the list of jobs, and look up how much money each job makes, along with how much demand there is for that job and how many qualifications you’d need to earn to reasonably expect to get the job. Hours worked per week and health risks are also good things to think about. (Note: Sitting at a computer for nine hours straight should really count as a health risk. I’m not joking.)
Step 4. You now have a good notion of enjoyment vs practicality. If there’s a standout winner in both of them, do that. If not, then consider your tradeoffs carefully. You will probably enjoy things less when you have to wake up every morning and do them, but it also caught me by surprise how little time it feels like I have to work on personal projects after eight or nine hours plus commuting.
Step 5. Think about UBI and cry a little, then dedicate a side project towards ushering in the glorious post-scarcity future.
There is a reason people say 80k. And it’s because they did the research already.
If not 80k. Read deep work, so good they can’t ignore you and maybe others booms that suggest a “strategy” for employment. (short version—get a job in an area on purpose. Ie if you are a vampire, a job in a factory making garlic free whole foods.)
Ask people around you. Maybe 10. Why they chose their career, and if they like it. Ignore their answers and double check by observing them work.
Figure out what satisfies the three criteria:
You like doing this
You are good at doing this
Other people value this (aka will pay you money for doing this)