Community Building: Micro vs. Macro

post by Chris_Leong · 2022-04-02T07:10:57.216Z · LW · GW · 0 comments

We can identify two different[1] approaches to community building. The micro approach involves deeply engaging[2] with individuals in order to change their views or to assist in their journey. When adopting this approach, programs tend to be flexible, with guidelines rather than rules and decisions sometimes being driven by the needs of individuals. This approach puts participants at the center.

The macro approach involves a level of standardization in order to ensure consistency and to keep the program manageable. While exceptions may be made to rules there is more of an effort to limit these exceptions in order to limit deliberation time if nothing else. Individual accommodations will likely need to be limited given that organizers only have so much time. This approach is typically is centered more around the needs of organizers.

Here are some examples of decisions that would make more sense from a micro approach than a macro approach[3]

Here are some examples of decisions that would make sense from a macro approach:

A natural question is to ask in what circumstances would one approach make more sense than another:

With the Sydney AI Safety Fellowship, I initially leaned more towards the macro end of the scale in order to establish the baseline at higher level of commitment. I then shifted further towards the micro end of the scale as I realised that this would be necessary to hit critical mass. My plan for next year is to emphasize flexibility, but if we start receiving many more credible applications than slots then I would aim to increase the expected commitment for future years.

My expectation is that community building will generally involve more focus on the micro early in the game, but over time if the community grows then it'll be important to shift more towards macro-style strategies.

  1. ^

    Obviously, it's more of a spectrum.

  2. ^

    Not with every individual as different individuals will desire different levels of engagement, but engaging deeply with people who would appreciate and benefit from such engagement.

  3. ^

    Some of these example are based on things I did or wish I had done in relation to the Sydney AI Safety Fellowship; others are purely hypothetical.

  4. ^

    This would probably be a bad idea if you thought the other participants would hate it/get nothing out of it, but let's assume you think they'd gain some benefit too.

  5. ^

    This may make sense if you have access to additional funding beyond what the program will cost, where you may have originally have want to avoid spending if it wasn't required.

  6. ^

    There are some very specific circumstances where the perception of success or failure can be even more important than actual success or failure. For example, for the Sydney AI Safety Fellowship because the idea came to me quite late, by the time we'd secured funding many potential fellows had already committed to other opportunities, so it was hard to find participants. It was quite plausible to me that the program could fail in a way that wouldn't provide strong evidence about whether the program would be viable in future years and that such a failure could result in an attempt to run the program next year from also failing. I'm not suggesting that people should engage in deceptive behavior or dishonesty in these circumstances, just that in these circumstances it is even more crucial to achieve at least a moderate level of success and to do so visibly.

     

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