Passive Impact (You Can Optimize For That)

Some of the popular use cases of AI agents are to build custom software for other people, and sell it cheaper than big corporate software but still giving you a really good return on your time. A lot of people are quickly making good chunks of money doing that, and automating their workflows so they can make money while they sleep, so to speak. It’s often referred to as passive income, whether that’s investments or a product or business that can generate income for you without you having to do everything.

Some of us, though, are taking a different approach. Not a new one, though, although AI is helping us scale our efforts. This type of approach has been common through open source software for decades. The idea is that you can build something that will help other people…including yes, while you sleep. Instead of passive income, it’s passive impact. 

We can think about using our time, skills, and output of our work not for financial profit, but for people’s benefit, by reaching more people and being useful to people we don’t even know. The goal isn’t making money, it’s to help more people.

Some people do pursue financial income to make an impact. I’m not saying not to do that, if that’s your path of choice. You can maximize your income, then donate to causes you care about. It’s a great strategy for a lot of people who have lucrative careers, and there are a lot of causes (like Life For a Child, which we estimate is the most cost-effective way to help people with diabetes worldwide) that can scale their work with your help through financial donations.

Other people maybe don’t have the same income earning potential or have chosen less financially lucrative careers where their work makes a difference, or they volunteer their time and elbow grease outside of their work to make a difference.

Both of those are great. Yet, I’m saying “yes and” there’s a third option we should talk about more in general society: scaling impact asynchronously and building things for passive impact.

These are things that don’t just solve a one-time problem for one person. They can solve a one-time problem for a lot of people, or a recurring problem for other people.

They scale.

They persist.

What are some examples of passive impact? Think about things that can run without you.

They don’t require a calendar invite or a Zoom link. They don’t need a customer service rep. They just… work. For someone. Somewhere. Every day.

Note that these tools don’t have to work for EVERYONE. Most of my stuff is considered “niche”. I was asked countless times early on why I thought OpenAPS would work for everyone with diabetes. People were surprised when I said I didn’t think it would work for everyone, but it would probably work for everyone who wanted it. (Then we did a lot of research and proved that). Not everyone needed or wanted it, but that doesn’t mean that it wasn’t worthwhile to build for me, or me plus the first dozen, or me plus the now tens of thousands of people using the OpenAPS algorithm in their AID system. But that’s “just” a “small fraction” of “only people with type 1 diabetes” who are “a tiny part of the population of the world”. It doesn’t matter; those people still matter and they (and I!) benefitted from that work, so it was worth doing. The impact scaled.

(You don’t have to quantify it all, but some metrics are helpful)

As someone who builds a lot of things with passive impact, it’s helpful to have data or some kind of analytics to see use of what I built over time. It’s useful for identifying where there are areas to improve, such as if people are stuck when using a feature or finding a bug, but also reinforcing the scale of your impact.

I love waking up and seeing the volume of meal data that’s been processed through Carb Pilot or PERT Pilot (measured via API use metrics), to know that while I was sleeping on the west coast of the US, several people woke up in (likely Europe or elsewhere) and used one of my apps to estimate what they had for breakfast. It’s great reinforcement and you can also see whether you’re gaining exponential growth (in terms of overall usage or new users) over time, and perhaps consider whether you should do a little more sharing about what you’ve built so it can reach the right people before it takes off on its own. Again, not for profit, but for helping.

(But passive impact doesn’t mean passive effort)

Creating something helpful is not passive in the beginning. It takes work, and elbow grease, to understand the problem you are (or someone else is) facing. To be able to determine a useful solution. To build, or write, something that other people can use, without needing to explain it every time. To deploy or share or host it in a way that is accessible and usable long-term. Of course, there are increasing numbers of tools (like LLMs – here are some of my tips for getting started if you’re new to prompting) that can help you get started more quickly, or find a fix to a bug or project blocker, or try something new you didn’t know how to do before.

But once it’s live, the math changes. One hour of your time can help hundreds of people, without requiring hundreds of hours. A lot of times it may be more than one hour, but nowadays, it’s often a lot less than it would have been otherwise. And more likely, you may find yourself spending multiple hours building something and be frustrated (well, I often get frustrated) at “how long it’s taking”, then realize that if you don’t build it, no one will. And without this effort, it wouldn’t get built at all. So it’s worth the >one hour time it’s taking to build it, even if it’s longer than expected.

That’s how a lot of my projects started: I needed something, I built it, and then I realized others needed it too. So I built (or wrote) it and shared it.

That’s passive impact, and it adds up.

Passive impact: Creating and building to help people you don’t know in ways that persist without always requiring your time or presence

I’d love to see more of this in the world. And I’d love to see an understanding that this IS the goal, not financial outcomes, and that’s a valid and celebratable goal. (This comment is motivated by having someone ask me in recent weeks asking how much royalties I’m getting from the open source code we released 10 years ago, intentionally free, with the goal of companies using it!) But preferably not followed with “I could never do that”, because, of course, you could. You can. You…should? Maybe, maybe not. But hopefully you think about it in the future. It’s not “either or” with financial income, either. You can do both! Society spends a lot of time talking about how to earn money passively. But not nearly enough time thinking about how we can create value for others passively. Especially in health, technology, and research spaces (fields where gaps are common and timely help matters), this way of thinking can change not just how we build, but who we build for. We can bring more people into using or building or doing, whether it’s active or passive. And we all win as a result.

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