Many of the high school and college students who contacted us at Cognito Mentoring were looking for advice were considering going into academia. The main draw to them was the desire to learn specific subjects and explore ideas in greater depth. As a result, we've been investigating academia as a career option and also considering what alternatives there may be to academia that fulfill the same needs but provide better pay and/or generate more social value. The love of ideas and epistemic exploration is shared by many of the people at Less Wrong, including those who are not in academia. So I'm hoping that people will share their own perspectives in the comments. That'll help us as well as the many LessWrong lurkers interested in academia.
I'm eager to hear about what considerations you used when weighing academia against other career options, and how you came to your decision. Incidentally, there are a number of great answers to the Quora question Why did you leave academia?, but there's probably many thoughts people have here that aren't reflected in the Quora answers. I've also written up a detailed review of academia as a career option on the info wiki for Cognito Mentoring here (long read), and I'd also love feedback on the validity of the points I make there.
Many of our advisees as well as the LessWrong readership at large are interested in choosing careers based on the social value generated by these careers. (This is evidenced in the strong connection between the LessWrong and effective altruism communities). What are your thoughts on that front? Jonah and I have collaboratively written a page on the social value of academia. Our key point is that research academia is higher value than alternative careers only in cases where either the person has a chance of making big breakthroughs in the area, or if the area of research itself is high-value. Examples of the latter may include machine learning (we're just starting on investigating this) and (arguably) biomedical research (we've collected some links on this, but haven't investigated this in depth).
For those who are or were attracted to academia, what other career options did you consider? If you decided not to join, or chose to quit, academia, what alternative career are you now pursuing? We've identified a few possibilities at our alternatives to academia page, but we're largely shooting in the dark here. Based on anecdotal evidence from people working in venture capital, it seems like venture capital is a great place for polymath-types who are interested in researching a wide range of subjects shallowly, so it's ideal for people who like shallow intellectual exploration rather than sticking to a single subject for an inordinate amount of time. But there are very few jobs in venture capital. On paper, jobs at consulting firms should be similar to venture capital in requiring a lot of shallow research. But we don't have an inside view of consulting jobs -- are they a good venue for intellectually curious people? Are there other job categories we missed?
All thoughts are greatly appreciated!
I'd guess people are not aware that other options exist. They see it as a choice between (a) having a job, and (b) unemployment and poverty. The examples you said are not widely known; most people would probably have problem inventing them.
Some examples feel short-sighted. Do you want to be a vagabond all your life? If not, how difficult it will be later to find a job when you write "vagabond" as your previous experience?
I don't know what is typical in USA (there is always a chance that what I see online are just selected extreme stories), but I got an impression that in USA employers pay a lot of attention to your previous jobs. For example I remember people asking in web fora how should they explain at a job interview a one-month gap between their two jobs, as if that were a huge red flag. In Slovakia, my job history has a few gaps and no one asks me about that. (Well, I try not to make it too obvious, so in my job history I only write years, not months and days.) So the difference could be that in USA the employers will punish you for having made unusual choices in the past; in such case making an unusual choice is very unwise unless you want to keep it forever.
Living as a boyfriend feels immoral. We may have emancipation for women, but emancipation for men is nowhere in the plan yet; and probably will never be, because for economy it is better this way.
Working only for a part of year seems great, but it is an option only for people who (a) can make significantly more money than they need, (b) are not dependent on one employer, which might not tolerate them the long vacations, and (c) have enough financial discipline to prevent their expenses growing proportionally to their income. Most people who can do this are probably in IT; but most people in IT probably don't have the skills necessary to do this.