S4 Ep 6 - Meet Cynthia Scott, CEO, ANZ of Zip Co.

Cynthia's career didn't turn out quite as planned. Eyes on the stage with the ambition to be a ballerina, Cynthia has had a wild ride that has taken her through interesting career shifts from investment banking, to the telecommunications industry and now to her position as the CEO, ANZ of Zip Co. Hear Cynthia’s story on episode 6 of Shares Not Shoes.

  • Cynthia Scott

    You have to reframe how you think about the word no. If you think about the word no as actually an incredible opportunity to open a door so that you can ask why, then actually you might look for the no.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Lowe, founder of F3, Future F females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories. We'll be open and honest and will inspire you.

    Camilla Love

    So….Let's go.

    Camilla Love

    We have another amazing episode today for Shares Not Shoes. And in our CEO series, we are definitely moving on to a high with today's special guest. Today, I have the pleasure of chatting with a managing director that I've known for not very long, but I have admired from afar for a very long time. She cut her teeth in investment banking, going on to be the CEO of Barclays here in Australia. She then spearheaded strategic finance at Telstra and ran their overseas operations and has more recently become the Managing Director of Australia and New Zealand at Zip. Welcome to Shares Not Shoe's, Cynthia Scott.

    Cynthia Scott

    Thank you, Camilla. It's great to be here. Thanks for.

    Camilla Love

    Having me. I'm glad that you said yes. I'm very glad that you said yes. I thought it was going to be a bit of a risk for me to ask, but I tell you what, I'm super excited to get into the nuts and bolts of your career and what you've learned and get some great stories from you today. So maybe we can start and kick off with tell me a little bit about what you do and a little bit about you and who you are.

    Cynthia Scott

    Thank you. No, it's great to be here. Well, look, as you said, I'm the Managing Director for Zip in Australia and New Zealand, and I've been in that role for about a year. And for me, being part of Zip is fantastic because it combines financial services, which is something I've had quite a bit of experience in, but also technology and disruption. And so over my career, as you said, I spent nearly 20 years or just over 20 years, actually, in investment banking in a number of different companies doing different roles. And then had a complete career change going into telstra, where I was not a subject matter expert at all. And that was incredibly challenging and invigorating. And then I spent a couple of years at centre group in retail and real estate and then joined zip, as I say, a year ago. So I've got responsibility for all of our operations in Australia and New Zealand. So it's about 550 people. So it's a good sized business and it's a really exciting thing to be doing.

    Camilla Love

    Great. And I love the nexus of finance and technology because particularly this day and age, the customer and the consumer is looking for so much more from financial services. And technology is just an enabler of that. And we see it in other areas of our lives. And I love the fact that you already highlighted that nexus. So tell us a little bit about why you chose Zip, really?

    Cynthia Scott

    Yeah. It's a good question because I've made some interesting career shifts through the, frankly, more than 30 years now that I've been working. And often people will say to me, Why did you do that? Why did you leave a role as a CEO of Barclays and go and take a role in a telecommunications company two levels down from the CEO? And similarly, people would say to me, Well, why did you take the role at Zip? Because all the roles I have done up until this point, arguably, were in much bigger, more mature, stable businesses. However, for me, a little bit as you said, what really interests me is that intersection of technology and customer experience. And doing that in a financial services setting for me was just frankly too good to refuse because Zip's a business where... I mean, it's a product and technology company. The actual product, of course, is a financial product. But actually what the business is all about is helping people live their best lives or change ideally changing people's lives. One of the great examples I use about how our customers use Zip that I love, and it's incredibly not well known.

    Cynthia Scott

    Most people think about Zip as a buy now, pay later, and they think about Zip as a product that's used for short term purchases. We definitely have that in our product suite. But actually the bulk of our customers and the bulk of our products are used for longer term, more thoughtful purchasing for want of a better term. And so the example I love to use is that more babies are born in Australia because of zip. That is awesome. Most people go, What do you mean? Why? And I say, Well, we are the largest financer of IVF. That's one Australia. So if you're going through the IVF process, it's a really expensive process, and not every individual and couple can afford to pay for that outright. So we work with all the key IVF providers to enable people to go through the IVF process and then have the funding and the credit to pay that off over a period of time. And so I love that example because for me, it brings home why I like being in organisations like zip. And I think as we talk about the different things that I've done over my career, there's definitely a theme of innovation and change.

    Cynthia Scott

    But there's also, I hope, a theme of community and having an impact on individuals and consumers. And so that's why I'm really enjoying the zip role.

    Camilla Love

    And think about it, reflecting on that story about IVF and the partnership with zip, I think about the joy that comes to lives with that service.

    Cynthia Scott

    Yeah, absolutely. And that's just one example. The other areas where our business is really strong is things like people who want to put solar on their roofs. Or one of my one of my other favourite examples, because I will confess, I'm a bit of an animal tragic. I've got cats and dogs in my house, so I'm a bit of a bleeding heart when it comes to rescuing animals. But there's a great example, a great customer example that we talk about at Zip, where we have a customer who has quite a few cats and she likes to buy premium cat food for her cats, but she can't actually afford to buy it each week because it's more expensive. And so she buys it in bulk. And to buy in bulk, she needs to use her Zip account so that she can make the one-off payment to buy the cat food and then she pays it back over a period of weeks. That's letting her live her best life. Totally.

    Camilla Love

    And the cat's best life.

    Cynthia Scott

    And the cat's best life. So she wants to do the right thing. And so that's what I like, where I really get that satisfaction from the role that I've got now at Zip. And I've had other roles through the course of my career, whether it's working at Telstra Health in the digital health business, or one of the great roles that I had when I was at Telstra was being involved in the build of the third mobile network in the Philippines, a country that just desperately needed another mobile network. So I do tend to gravitate towards roles and opportunities and just being involved in things where you really will have an impact. Absolutely. That's what I'm drawn to.

    Camilla Love

    And I think we talk about it a lot in She's not just she is about the purpose of financial services. So I think that a lot of that gets lost in a lot of myth conceptions.

    Cynthia Scott

    Out there.

    Camilla Love

    About what financial services entails, particularly as a career. But there is so much purpose in it. And whether that be financing the transition to renewable energy, whether that be rolling out the Philippines' telco network, I mean, there is so much purpose in that stuff.

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, I mean, there's purpose in big things like infrastructure. So I'm still involved very much in infrastructure and infrastructure financing through a non executive role I have on the board of UD group. But you're right. I'm there because of my finance knowledge. And anywhere where there's either a lot of capital or a need for capital, finance is at the heart of that. I don't think that there's an example. I think about different companies. I think about not for profits countries, communities. Finance is a core part of everything, really. And that's why for me, having a finance background has... Clearly, I had the first 20 years very much in debt and capital markets and finance. So that's really my technical skill set. But having a familiarity with finance and being comfortable talking about the key aspects of finance across everything from consumers to small business, large businesses, governments as I've done, it's absolutely a foundation that you can then take your career wherever you want. And did you.

    Camilla Love

    Always know you wanted to be in finance?

    Cynthia Scott

    No, not at all. Not at all. Is that the right answer? Maybe I should say, oh, I woke up. I was born to be a banker. No, quite the opposite. So if I could just digress for a minute. I was going to be a ballerina. Oh, were you? So I left school at 15 to train as a professional ballerina. Wow. And so no, I definitely did not think I was going to have a career in finance. I did not think I was going to have a corporate career at all. I was one of those little girls who, from the age of three, did ballet and then just became completely obsessed that that was what I was going to do with my life. So I dropped out of school after year 10 and trained as a ballerina. And then I have a back injury that I got as a result of ballet. And so I stopped dancing when I was 18. So I was still really young. But I didn't have the high school certificate, so I hadn't completed school. So then I went to tech. And I did the HSC as a mature age student at 18, and then went to uni.

    Cynthia Scott

    And look, I think people liked or would like to hear that I was really strategic in thinking about going into finance or going into commerce, but I was not. Honestly, I have an incredibly talented and capable older sister, and she did an arts degree. And so when I didn't know what I wanted to do with my life, because as I said, I wanted to be a ballerina, the advice that everybody gave me was, Well, if you don't know what you want to do with your life, you should either do commerce or art. And like a good second sister, younger.

    Camilla Love

    Sister, yours, the other sister. You chose the.

    Cynthia Scott

    Other one. My sister was doing art. So I said, There's no way I'm doing that. I'm going to do commerce. And then again, I'd love to say that as soon as I started my commerce degree, I was just smitten with finance. And this is actually quite an ironic story now, given what's happened in the last 30 years. But I actually started my commerce degree as a marketing major. And in my first year, I was told that if you pursue a career in marketing, you have to do a lot of public speaking. And I was so frightened by the idea of public speaking that I changed my major from marketing to finance in first year.

    Camilla Love

    Even though you were happy to stand on a stage in a two two in.

    Cynthia Scott

    Front of thousands of people. It's different, Camilla, you don't speak when you're dancing. But you speak in different ways. You do. So yes, I was a performer, but I just didn't like the idea of public speaking. And so I changed my degree, but I but to be fair, in first year, I really did gravitate more towards the finance subjects. And I was at University of New South Wales, and they introduced a new degree, which was a double major in finance and Japanese studies. And I was fascinated by Japan. And so I was able to actually do honors in both. And so I did the language, Japanese economic history, and Japanese business studies. And I think that also, in combination with finance, gave me a real curiosity about Asia. And so a lot of my subsequent career, I lived in Hong Kong for a number of years. And over the course of my career, I've had responsibility for businesses in Asia, and I've traveled extensively. And I think a big part of that curiosity came from having completed the degree with the Japanese angle?

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Not that you know this, but I also did.

    Cynthia Scott

    Asian.

    Camilla Love

    Studies as my major in my arts, and I did also commerce. So I.

    Cynthia Scott

    Got the two.

    Camilla Love

    Sisters merged together.

    Camilla Love

    But I did also Japanese politics, Japanese history as well. So it gives you so much respect for culture, history, and all the different politics associated with it. Each country within Asia is very different to the next. And a lot of people, particularly put them all together and say, That's Asia. But actually, they're very, very different. And there's so much. It's so interesting in that segment.

    Cynthia Scott

    Yeah, very much so. So when I was at Barclays and I took the role as the Asia Pacific Head of Capital Markets, and I was moving to Hong Kong, I was really interested as a senior female, I was a managing director at that point, I was really interested in how I would be perceived as a senior woman operating. I had teams in five countries. We operated in 15 countries. I was fascinated about how would our clients in Japan and Korea and Vietnam and Indonesia and Thailand, how would they feel working came with me as a senior female? I actually spoke to each of the country heads at the time and I just asked them, Is there anything I need to be aware of? Are there certain sensitivities? Are there certain ways I should conduct myself in terms of cultural expectations.

    Camilla Love

    The two big.

    Cynthia Scott

    Things in terms of feedback that I got, in case anyone listening finds themselves in a similar situation, I suspect it's probably still culturally similar. The first one was that particularly in Japan and Korea back then, maybe this is a little different now, but back then, senior male clients or senior male executives were not particularly comfortable doing heavy price negotiations with women. What we agreed was in certain countries when we were at the pointy end of negotiations, I would let my colleagues complete the negotiation, even though if I was the more senior person in the room, it would be natural for me to do it, rather than make our clients uncomfortable. It was just easier. I was very happy to defer to them to complete the negotiation. The other cultural nuance I learned that I learned the hard way was in Thailand. I barrel into a meeting in Thailand and shoved out my hand and said, Hi, I'm Cynthia. T hey looked really uncomfortable, but they shook my hand. I was like, What's going on? T hen I realized that generally, women don't shake hands. They bow. You just do a little bow when you greet one another.

    Cynthia Scott

    Again, I just adopted that cultural behavior because that's how people behave in Thailand, and I was very comfortable to do that.

    Camilla Love

    What did you learn? When you're going around and talking to the senior people within your teams within Asia, and they told you one thing, what else did you learn on the ground there that you definitely would not have learned I'll.

    Cynthia Scott

    Tell you the single biggest lesson I learned. Just to give you some context, Camilla, I had been working probably 12, 15 years at the point at which I went to Hong Kong. My leadership and management capabilities had been built up in Australia with Australian teams. I've been in Guy Ball businesses, but largely they were Australians in Australian teams. I thought I'll just pack my little management and leadership tools into my great hand bag and I'll go to Asia and I'll just unpack them and I'll use them there. And I'll give you an example. When I landed in Hong Kong, I was in a dealing room. I had my team in the dealing room. And two really interesting things happened that made me realise that my management and leadership capabilities didn't automatically transfer. My style is very authentic and open and I want to get on well with the team and I want to get to know the teams as individuals. So I landed in Hong Kong and the first thing I said to the team was, Wow, there's so much fabulous diversity in this team. Why don't we have a dinner once a month and we'll all just get together and we can go to a different restaurant and why that'd be great.

    Cynthia Scott

    And they're all looking at me like.

    Camilla Love

    And.

    Cynthia Scott

    I kept suggesting this for seemingly a couple of months. And the dinners and anything social was never forthcoming. And I began to realise that they were doing the dinners. They were getting to eat out of you. But I wasn't being invited. And I was like, Exactly. I did the sharp intake of breath, Whoa is me, don't they like me, all these things. And one of my wonderful teammates pulled me aside and said, You're the boss.

    Camilla Love

    No one wants to hang out with you.

    Cynthia Scott

    Actually, they don't want to be your friend. They don't want to hang out with you. And I was.

    Camilla Love

    Like, Oh.

    Cynthia Scott

    Got it. Oh, really? But once I overcame the personal like, but I'm nice, why don't they always bring my friend? I realised that actually there is a hierarchy and an expectation of bureaucracy in... Not bureaucracy, just but of leveling in some Asian markets that I found that it just is what it is. And so I will say over the three and a half years that I was in Asia, it only took about a year for me to break them down and let me arrange dinners and whatever. But it was always there a little bit that there was, you know, they wanted to get to know me and let me get to know them. But at the end of the day, I was still the boss.

    Camilla Love

    Regardless of whether you were in the office or not.

    Cynthia Scott

    Yeah, exactly. And so similar really, the other funny story was we had a group chat so that we could all talk to each other on the dealing room desk. But you had to, every morning when you get in, you have to be invited into the chat. I would come in, I'm like, Hey, I'm here. Can someone invite me? And they're like, Uh huh, yeah, just a minute. I'd get invited into the chat and there'd be no history. I'm like, Oh, they've started a new chat because I've joined. So it just, like, things like that where you go, there just, there was much more caution about my seniority than I experienced in Australia. In Australia, I was the boss, but I was very much one of the team and an equal. Whereas in Asia, I just found, and particularly in places like Korea, there was much more... I mean, respect is the wrong word because I don't want to suggest that my AUS teams didn't respect me, but there was a lot more importance placed on your position in an organization than I was used to. I had to adjust my Australian management leadership thought process.

    Camilla Love

    I reflect on this sometimes, and maybe this is a too deeper question to ask for today. But coming on from that, do you find sometimes leadership can be quite a lonely place?

    Cynthia Scott

    Yes, without a doubt. But I think that the thing that I found out about leadership that I didn't know before I found myself in this position was it is such a privilege. It's such a privilege to get to know people and to be the custodian of their future and their development. I don't take that privilege and that responsibility lightly. But what it does mean, to your point, is that sometimes you can't talk to people about things. And so it can be really lonely because you have to make decisions, or you have information, or something happens that it's on your watch and it's yours to manage, and you can't talk to people about it. I reflect back on I was CEO of Barclays in Australia when Barclays globally went through quite a lot of challenges, the old liveable crisis, for those who remember. I was responsible for the business that was further away from that. But I was on the executive team in Asia Pacific, and we lost our CEO, and then our chairman, and then our COO on three consecutive days. And this is globally. So you imagine that in an Australian context, a company losing those three people, it really shakes the foundations.

    Cynthia Scott

    And I knew at least 24 hours ahead of everybody else in Australia what was going to happen. But I had to front the team every day and talk to them about what was happening. And of course, in those situations, the team always say to you, Is this it? Is there anything more? And that's a really hard question when you know, yes, there's more coming, but I can't tell you. And so in those instances, it can be incredibly lonely because you don't have anyone that you can actually have as a sounding board.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, absolutely. I've been in those circumstances a few times and it is lonely. There is no one to talk to about it. There's no one who understands. And you do want to do the best for your team, right? So you.

    Cynthia Scott

    Have.

    Camilla Love

    This juxtaposition of mindset on you want to do.

    Cynthia Scott

    The best by.

    Camilla Love

    Your team, but you also need to do the best by the business.

    Cynthia Scott

    I think the thing that's really important for everyone is to recognise the value of network. I probably came to the idea of networks a bit late in my career because I just was head down getting on with it. And when I got back to Australia in about 2010, I remember a fabulous woman who's a mentor of mine saying to me, Now, who do you know here? Who's in your network? And I was like, Wow.

    Camilla Love

    I don't need other people.

    Cynthia Scott

    No, it wasn't that at all. It was more like, I haven't had time to do that. I'm like, Really? I've just had three kids and I'm going to see... I haven't got time. And she gave me a metaphorical bit of a way back and said, You have to have a network and I will help you and you need to invest in it. And so I really proactively began from that point to think about, Well, how do I build a network? Who is valuable in my network? How can I be a valuable member of other people's networks? The reason I raised that is because I think about the COVID period, I wasn't working. During COVID, I was... Well, it sounds like I was lying on a beach. I was doing no one was consulting. No one was going to get outside of the whole.

    Camilla Love

    Five.

    Cynthia Scott

    Days. Exactly. I was walking round and round my block in 5 K. But I wasn't a full-time executive. I was doing consulting work. But actually what I thought was just fabulous was during that period, the old y old leadership team from when I was at Telstra, reformed. And by that, I mean, everyone was in different roles, different jobs. There were a couple that were still at Telstra, and I'm sure I hope they don't mind me saying this. But we started speaking again once a week. And we just got on the phone to talk about what was happening, to share perspectives and support. And I didn't have a team that I was responsible for at that point. And some of those executives had moved on to very different roles, very big roles. But having a forum where we could safely bounce things off one another was really important. And so the benefit of developing a network and fostering a network, I think, is something that people shouldn't forget about.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, we definitely talk about it a lot here. And it's one of what I would call my super powers, my networking. But it's the whole that's a whole another story which could go on for another half an hour. Hey, but I wanted to talk and you mentioned Telstra, I wanted to talk about how you made that jump between Barclays and Telstra. Totally different segments. Was there a safe platform that you could jump from and into, or did you just go and say, Whatever is out here, A and B? How did it work?

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, a couple of things. It's actually really interesting. A couple of things happened. I'd been at Barclays for nearly 10 years. I'd been the CEO for four. Two quite important things happened to me that year. One was that I went to Oxford and did a strategic leadership course, which was really self reflective. Who am I? What's my leadership style? What do I want my leadership future to be? And then the second thing that happened was, ironically, I was nominated for a Telstra Business Women's Award, which I actually went on to win. T But as part of that process, you have to fill in all these forms about yourself and your leadership and what have you. And so I found myself in my early 40s at this point, really reflecting on, well, what am I going to do with the rest of my life? And I'd been a banker for 21 years, and I knew I didn't want to go on to boards at that point because I was still very much enjoying a hands on, running a P&L leading team. And so I actually spent a couple of months working with a career coach. And it was just like when you were back at the end of in school, e where they let you think about anything.

    Cynthia Scott

    You can do anything with your life. And so we had this really open conversation about what are the possibilities? What might you want to do with the rest of your life? And the second thing that she helped me do, which was really important, and I think lots of people don't do this or haven't really thought about doing this, is I found a way to articulate my experience in a narrative that transcended industries. And the reason why I said a lot of people do that is because you could have quite easily looked at my CV at that point and said, Well, you've been an investment banker for 20 years. You're a deal junky. You just do deals and generate revenue. So that's what you're going to do for the rest of your career. Whereas we were able to articulate a narrative that said, I'm a manager of capital. And managing financial capital is my technical skill set. But managing human capital is my passion. And so if you have an opportunity where either you have a lot of capital or you need some capital, and where you have people, and ideally they're going through change, I'm your girl.

    Cynthia Scott

    And that actually is who I am. But it doesn't put me into a pigeonhole. Just serendipitously, I met Andy Penn, and we were having a conversation. He was a client of mine. We were having a conversation about Telstra, and it ended up being this really long conversation of a couple of hours about what Telstra needed and what I had done. Andy and David, though he backed me and were willing to effectively create a role for me to move from being the CEO of Barclays to where I absolutely was a subject matter expert, where everybody deferred to me, to being the head of strategic finance, which was a big enough role that leveraged my technical skills, but it wasn't so big because I had never covered telecom co. I didn't understand telecommunications. My friends at the time were like, You can't even use the remote. How is this going to work?

    Camilla Love

    Getting your kids to fix the internet, that stuff.

    Cynthia Scott

    Yes. But you know what I did? You e people talk about the imposter syndrome. I honestly, I said to people at the time when I was announced that I was making the move to Telstra, I said to people, I want to do something that gets me out of my skis. I want be challenged. I want to wake up in the morning and think, what on earth have I done? I can tell you, for the first six months, I was like, what on earth have I done? But not in a bad way. Just that I would sit in meeting after meeting. Let's be honest, when you're in a meeting, typically you're sitting there thinking, when can I say something that sounds good? Or when can I ask a question and interject in a way that's going to make a positive contribution to this discussion? And having been the CEO and the subject matter expert, I could do that until the cows came home when I was in finance. I sat in meeting after meeting at Telstra for six months, and I would be laughing to myself because I was not thinking about, what could I interject that would make me seem clever?

    Cynthia Scott

    I was thinking, what the hell are they talking about? I don't even understand this. I'm not following this conversation. I don't even understand what they're saying. And that's it. And so I realised that actually they were speaking another language. It was all acronyms, and I had largely no idea what they were saying. And so I remember in my first review after about six months, I think this is a bit too much information. But Andy said to me, You're a bit quieter than we expected. That's what I said, Well, I'm struggling a bit with the acronym. And so I got myself a guru. And I got this fantastic guy who was a bit younger than me, hadn't been around for quite as long, but he'd spent all his career in telecommunication. And I would literally text him.

    Camilla Love

    In the.

    Cynthia Scott

    Middle of meetings, And I would go, What is a top hat? I know what it is in a Fred Astaire context, but in a telko context, I didn't used to know what it is. I do now. And he would just write back, and in case you're wondering, it's the box that sits on top of the NBN boxes. It's an extra piece on top of the telko boxes. It's an extra piece that they had to put on for the NBN. So he would go back, Oh, it's a box, blah, blah, blah, that. And he'd give me some context. And then I realized that actually I was understanding the meetings. And what's more, even though I hadn't spent my whole career in that industry, I had some really relevant experience and perspectives that was valuable because I had seen so many different industries in my finance career, and I began contributing. And from that moment, I thought, I'm not going to do that again. If I make another shift into a different industry, I'm going to have the confidence to back myself and just learn the language and dive right in.

    Camilla Love

    And then you did that for center. So you've gone.

    Cynthia Scott

    From.

    Camilla Love

    Te lco into property, essentially.

    Cynthia Scott

    Yeah. Well, I mean, so even when I was at Telstra, I had responsibility for... We started up a telstra energy business I had telstra Health, the digital health business. Managing doctors is another interesting family in the heart of my career. But yeah, then I went to center group. Now, I did have some experience in real estate in so far as when I was an investment banker, my industry specializations were financial institutions and real estate. So I at least had a bit of a head start on their language and their acronyms. But again, yeah, you're right. I think I developed a strength in terms of being able to move between industries because I wasn't a subject matter expert in any of them, but had a breadth of experience through finance candidly that I could then bring to different industries.

    Camilla Love

    And having the confidence in backing yourself, too, I think is critical.

    Cynthia Scott

    Absolutely. I mean, if I could go back to the beginning of my career, it wasn't that I was shy or retired hiring, and it wasn't that I was lacking confidence. But I actually would, and I would say to anyone listening who's in the earlier part of their career, absolutely have the confidence to take calculated risks. I was quite risk averse through the early parts of my career. And if I'd known then what I know now, I probably would have taken more calculated risks.

    Camilla Love

    So then, what keeps you up at night, right now, thinking about your current role and things like that?

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, the thing that generally I worry about more than anything as a CEO is usually the people. And it's just that idea that I just feel a real responsibility that I want them to have great careers. I want the business to be successful. I want to be successful for our customers, et cetera, et cetera. But right now, probably the biggest thing that keeps me up at night in relation to our business is that it is not well understood. Even the IBF example, I can say I worry about rising interest rates, I worry about inflation, I worry about the consumer balance sheet because of the negative impact that that can have on our business. But those risks, we can manage and we can see them and you can mitigate them. But actually, the lack of real understanding of our business and what we do and who we are, I mean, it's on me and it's on us to fix that. And just every time we do something, it seems we just get hit again. So I feel like we're waiting through treaty a little bit at the moment. But I really will be focusing on that next year in terms of just getting a much clearer narrative and a better understanding from all.

    Camilla Love

    Of our stakeholders. Yeah, indeed. And I guess you get swept up in other competitors and their perceptions as well, where you're running your own business, doing your own thing with your own purpose, and you cannot be swept up with your competitors either.

    Cynthia Scott

    No. But I think if you think about our industry, so by now, Palette has only been around for less than 10 years. And honestly, if you were our founders, up until about 18 months ago, being part of such fast growing, successful industry was great. But one of the things that I was very proactive in doing in the last few weeks when you will have seen this when I treasury released their options paper in relation to the regulation of Buy Now, Pay Later is that was our chance to break from the pack. We are different. We do operate already with an Australian credit licence. We do already run our Buy Now, Pay Later product as though it was a regulated product. So all of the consumer protections that they're talking about, we.

    Camilla Love

    Already do.

    Cynthia Scott

    And we are different than any other competitor in our market. And so I understand that is a bit controversial because we are breaking from the pack from an industry perspective. But from my view, we are the high watermark in terms of how we behave. And so when we engage with treasury, they've given us that feedback. So I'm keen to see the bar raised for the whole industry because it's protecting consumers. And at the end of the day, anything that protects consumers is a good thing. It's a good thing. Absolutely. Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    So we've talked a lot about the journeys of your career and your role at the moment, but you do so many things outside of your day job. And if you weren't busy enough, your diary will be more full once you put all these other stuff in. So tell me about some other roles that you're involved with and why you do these things.

    Cynthia Scott

    I've always taken great pleasure from what I would call skills based volunteer learning, for want of a better term. I've got an ability to understand a balance sheet. I've got an ability in capital raising and fundraising. I understand developing strategy, etc. And of course, I largely deploy that in my day job. But being able to use that skill set to have an impact on organisations or communities where they may not have access to that quite so naturally is what really drives me and gives me the satisfaction that I need holistically. I've always combined executive work with non executive work. I've always been involved in things like, I was on the board of Fox tel. I earned at Fox tel. I was on the board of a company for auto home in China. I've always done that executive and governance work. But the other thing that I've always been really keen on pursuing is not for profit work. Having a rounded career. So over the years, I've been involved with organisations like the Sydney Women's Fund, which is helping women and children in Greater Sydney. I was on the Board of Room to Read for eight years, which is a global not for profit helping eradicate illiteracy in developing countries and building schools and libraries and providing girls with scholarships.

    Cynthia Scott

    I just love being involved in organisations like that that are incredibly impactful. The other organisation I've been involved with for a long time is Adara. And Adara is a fantastic example where about 15 executives and non executives in Australia, we use our corporate finance skills and we make them available pro bono for Adara to then actually generate fees. And 100 % of the fees that are made by Adara go to their not for profit, which helps women and children in Uganda and Nepal. So there that Adara is the leading provider of neonatal intensive care in places like Uganda and Nepal. And one example that I just find mind blowing is when they built the first neonatal intensive care hospital for maternal care, it was a 25 day walk to get to the hospital. So Adara is the specialist globally. They're the world leader in NICUs where you don't have reliable energy. So can you imagine building a NICU without electricity? Phenomenal anyway, I love being able to use my skills a little bit to generate income or fees that can power an organization like that.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, absolutely. And as a mother of a child who was in the NICU for at least two and a half weeks, so my eldest Henry was in the NICU for a bit, and this is in a developed country, let alone a developing country. You're right. Using the skill set that you already have in a meaningful way that has much more impact than necessarily getting a wage, but actually changing the lives of others, it provides a greater purpose.

    Cynthia Scott

    And I think it would be my, I guess, my provoc or my challenge to anyone that's listening, think about what else can you do with your skill set? What are you passionate about? And what can you do with your skill set to help others? So whether it is, if you've got finance skills, there's a multitude of different organisations who would love to have you help them. And the other thing that I'm incredibly passionate about, as I think you and I have talked about, is diversity. And there's probably some method in the madness that in almost every organization I've been in, I've been involved in setting up the women's network. Or when I was in Asia, I established with the great girl a women's industry network called Women in Finance Asia. I'm passionate about this. And I don't know, everyone always says, How do you find time? You just find time. It's a question of prioritisation. If it's important to you.

    Camilla Love

    You find time. Totally.

    Cynthia Scott

    And I.

    Camilla Love

    Get asked that all the time, How do you fit this all in? I'm like, well, if you have passion and you have purpose, you absolutely, you're right. You definitely find time.

    Cynthia Scott

    And I don't sit on the couch all that much, except when I'm watching rubbish TV with my kids. And now.

    Camilla Love

    I've been watching Wednesday, which has been great tip for the year.

    Cynthia Scott

    Oh, I can have. I've got a list. I'll add it to my list. Very good. Very good.

    Camilla Love

    So I ask this question on all of my podcast to all the guests because everyone has a different answer. And I find the answer quite fascinating about the timing of when it was delivered. So the question is, what's the most valuable advice you've been given and why it was so important to you at the time that you received it?

    Cynthia Scott

    That's a relatively easy one for me. And I'll give you the context because you're right, the timing of receiving the advice was important. I was acting CEO of Barclays for six months before I was able or willing or prepared to put my hand up and throw my hat in the ring. I self selected out of being in the process because I didn't think I was ready. I had, as I mentioned to you, a fantastic mentor. And I rang her one afternoon on the home from work and I said, I've met all the blokes that they're interviewing for this job, and I actually think that I've got the skills, I've got better skills than them. And I said, But I still don't want to put my hat in the ring. And she said, Why? And I said, Because honestly, I'm afraid that they'll say no. And so if you think about any time where you're concerned about asking the question because you think that they're going to say no, she said to me, You have to reframe how you think about the word no. If you think about the word no as actually an incredible opportunity to open a door so that you can ask why, then actually you might look for the no.

    Cynthia Scott

    I've used that time and time again. A ctually, she and I then role played it, and she said, Okay, you pitch to me why you want the job. T hen she said to me, No? Oh, my.

    Camilla Love

    Gosh.

    Cynthia Scott

    How devastating. No, but then that then enabled me to say, Well, I respect that you've said no. Help me understand, what is it that I would need to do for the behaviours you would want to see from me, or what you think is missing in my skill set, so that you would say yes. And the reason why that reframing is so important is because it gave me the confidence, frankly, to go and have the conversation with my chairman, and he didn't say no. But it also is a skill that I've then deployed in lots of different scenarios. So you think about a performance review or asking for a promotion, or asking for a pay rise. The reason often why people, and frankly, often why women, are nervous about doing that is because you've already decided in your own mind you don't deserve it, and the answer is probably going to be no, and you don't want to hear the no. So I've used it time and time again to rephrase it, to actually then say, if you do get the no, or you don't get the answer you want, to then say, ask a really specific why.

    Cynthia Scott

    What is it that I would need to do, or would need to have done, so that you would promote me, or give me a pay rise, or whatever it is that you're asking for? It's such a powerful tool. And I wish more.

    Camilla Love

    People used it. What have you learnt from your why answers?

    Cynthia Scott

    I.

    Camilla Love

    Could have only imagined.

    Cynthia Scott

    I've learned so much about the impact that I have on others. You know how they say we judge ourselves by our intentions and others by their impact. Actually asking a really specific question, what is it that I would need to do or need to have done? You'll get the feedback that you actually need that's actionable. That's what's been so incredibly valuable about that. But I will say, I've also had at least one instance where the person on the other end of that conversation couldn't actually articulate the answer.

    Camilla Love

    That's devastating.

    Cynthia Scott

    But it made them realise that actually they were...

    Cynthia Scott

    I don't want to say it was an unfair decision, but that they were not being... They were not clear in their mind as to why they'd made the decision. And so it actually encouraged them to think more deeply about the decision that they'd made or the feedback that they'd given me.

    Camilla Love

    Well, that is such an amazing lesson. And thank you for imparting it onto everybody. So that's the gauntlet if anyone out there is listening. So anyway, at the end of our podcast, we do this quick fire round. So what it is is that I say something and then you got to do, say whatever's in your head.

    Cynthia Scott

    Okay. Right.

    Camilla Love

    Shoot. Yeah. So you're ready to go? Yeah? Well, I'm ready. Okay. I think you might have already answered this one already in our conversation. But what is the one piece of advice you'd give to your 20 year old self?

    Cynthia Scott

    Oh, yeah, definitely. Be confident in your abilities and take more calculated risks.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, great. I think that's only to reiterated and reiterated.

    Cynthia Scott

    Absolutely.

    Camilla Love

    If I wasn't doing this job, I'd be.

    Cynthia Scott

    A ballerina.

    Camilla Love

    You would be, definitely. How would your friends describe you?

    Cynthia Scott

    Calm and trusted.

    Camilla Love

    That's lovely. Wish my friends had described me as that.

    Cynthia Scott

    I.

    Camilla Love

    Will.

    Cynthia Scott

    Have a quick confession. I did actually ask my best friend, and she wrote back, Hard. And I said, What? And she goes, That's a hard question. And I said, Oh God, I don't know you're describing me as hard.

    Camilla Love

    She goes, Do you want the real truth or the truth? Yeah, exactly. I love those friends that can tell you anything doesn't matter. Absolutely. What's the most important money lesson you've learned?

    Cynthia Scott

    I would say be judicious about when you take risks. So I bought a house very young, but that was a calculated risk, and I was quite judicious. But then I'm very careful about not spending beyond my means. So my advice would be be judicious about when and where you take those risks.

    Camilla Love

    I think that's a good one. My hidden talent is?

    Cynthia Scott

    Cookier.

    Camilla Love

    Are you? Baker? Or a reaser? Or what's your? I'm a reasonable person.

    Cynthia Scott

    Or savery? No, I'm a savery girl. My eldest daughter is a baker, so lockdown was a real challenge for us because she was relapsing quite a bit. Too much. Yeah. So basically the way our lockdown worked was she would bake trays of cinnamon scroll every day. And then I would walk them in a 5K radius and leave them at friends front doors.

    Camilla Love

    Getting everybody else fat and not.

    Cynthia Scott

    Getting fat. Exactly. No, I'm more of a Savory, I'm more at a traditional roast dinner girl.

    Camilla Love

    Great. Okay. On my bucket list is?

    Cynthia Scott

    To go to the Maldives.

    Camilla Love

    I've been there and it is seriously amazing.

    Cynthia Scott

    I know, but everybody tells me that. And every time I think about a holiday, then you look at how you have to hop to get there. Anyway, it's absolutely on my bucket list.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, the diving, definitely. If you've got your diving certificate, it's seriously amazing. Tell me something that no one else knows about you.

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, it will not surprise you. I don't wear open toed shoes.

    Camilla Love

    At all?

    Cynthia Scott

    Because not if I can avoid it.

    Camilla Love

    Even because.

    Cynthia Scott

    My feet are like, mangled from being a dancer.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, I could imagine.

    Cynthia Scott

    Okay, yeah, got it. And I just have a thing about how mangled my feet are from being a ballerina. But people would never expect that because they don't really think of me as a ballerina these days.

    Camilla Love

    Do you still dance?

    Cynthia Scott

    Yeah. Here's another little thing. So in 2018, I read an article about the link between early onset dementia and how you can stave it off through dance. And I convinced my best friend, the one who said I'm calm, I convinced her that after a 30 year year hiatus, it was time for us to get back in the studio. And we went back to ballet. And so I do a ballet class every Sunday morning.

    Camilla Love

    Wow.

    Cynthia Scott

    Which I love. And I love the endorphins and I love... I'm not particularly good anymore, if I'm honest, but I love it.

    Camilla Love

    So is it you at the front with all the jealous people behind you? Is that how it works? I wish we'd still do it.

    Camilla Love

    I.

    Cynthia Scott

    Will confess, I do do a beginner class, but because I just don't want the stress of it being too hard. And I love the music and I love the endorphins. So there's a little bit of that where sometimes the teacher will be like, You should be doing doubles. I'm like, Okay, all right, I'll do doubles.

    Camilla Love

    And it's like the teacher is telling you what to do is coming back to your seven year old self.

    Cynthia Scott

    No, actually, what happens is there's a lot more of... The mind is really willing and the body is like, Are you kidding me? N o, we're not.

    Camilla Love

    Doing that. Because you remember like, Oh, I could do that Demi Point.

    Cynthia Scott

    Oh, you have.

    Camilla Love

    Muscle memory? Yeah.

    Cynthia Scott

    Then my back is I can't walk or my knees. My ostopath keeps saying, Do not do the jumps in ballet. Stop it. And then every class, they put on a really good piece of music. And I'm like, Don't tell my ostia I'm going.

    Camilla Love

    To do the job. I love that you have gone back. I think that's awesome.

    Cynthia Scott

    Do you know why, though, Camilla? You have to feed your soul. Totally. It feeds my soul. Honestly, every Sunday morning when I drive away from that class, I am on the biggest endorphin high.

    Camilla Love

    Great.

    Cynthia Scott

    And that's fine. What it is that feeds your soul.

    Camilla Love

    And it's the best start for a Sunday morning. What else is there?

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, yeah. And the likelihood of me getting early onset dementia is low.

    Camilla Love

    Totally.

    Cynthia Scott

    We'll take that one, I hope.

    Camilla Love

    If you had a superpower, what would it be and why?

    Cynthia Scott

    I'd like to say something really fabulous, like I'd love to be able to heal illness. But the reality is I would love to not have to sleep. Really? Because sleep will sleep is my nemesis. And so if I could just have a power nap and that'd be it, that'd be great.

    Camilla Love

    Think about all the things you could pack into your day then. I don't know.

    Cynthia Scott

    Ten minutes. Recharge. And then I could heal lots of illness better. That's true.

    Camilla Love

    Buy my toothpick. Either that or more ballet.

    Cynthia Scott

    Exactly.

    Camilla Love

    If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

    Cynthia Scott

    This is a real personal one. So my mom died in 2008, and she was my world. And I would love, I miss her desperately, I would love to have dinner with her. She has just missed so much. And I just feel like we have so much to catch up on. So if I could ever get that opportunity, I would do that.

    Camilla Love

    Two tonight. Absolutely. Oh, my God. I'm tearing up.

    Cynthia Scott

    No, I'm sorry. I mean, that's the truth. If I had one wish, it would be that she could meet her grandchildren. Seriously.

    Camilla Love

    My favourite book is.

    Cynthia Scott

    The Great Gatsby. It's my favourite book, too. Oh, really? I was thinking about the language, it is so evocative. It's like you can pick it up and just read a chapter and go.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, my God. And the imagery, and the timing, and the love, and the loss, and the yep.

    Cynthia Scott

    Oh.

    Camilla Love

    My God.

    Cynthia Scott

    And I will say, so I'm also slightly horse mad, like a typical girl who did ballet. I had a horse called Gasping. Did you?

    Camilla Love

    Do you still ride? Is your next question.

    Cynthia Scott

    I do. Oh, my God. I do. And I'm going, just to digress, I'm going in April, I'm going to Scotland to.

    Camilla Love

    Do a.

    Cynthia Scott

    Ride in Scotland because that's always been on my bucket list. And I got an email earlier one Sunday morning of six months ago saying, we have one seat that's become available April next year. And I just wrote back, I'll take it. And then I thought, oh, my goodness, now I've got to get fly.

    Camilla Love

    And then you got to practice again.

    Cynthia Scott

    And you got to get used to it. So I'm writing each week just to get back in the Saturday, as they say, because it's six days of writing, so I need to get my saddle fitness back.

    Camilla Love

    Great. Absolutely. What really bad movie do you absolutely love?

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, at this time of year, all the ones like... No, no, no. Like Holiday and love, actually, I don't know. But actually, if I'm going to be very vulnerable, if you ask my children, they will say Blades of glory. Now, for those of you, if anyone hasn't seen it, it is just a ridiculous movie. Will Ferraro. But it just.

    Camilla Love

    Seriously, you.

    Cynthia Scott

    Can't help but laugh. Seriously, it's really bad but absolutely hysterical.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, it's pretty funny actually. Okay, last question before I... Oh, my God. I'm going to laugh. This is a serious question. A career in finance is?

    Cynthia Scott

    Well, I'd say two things. It is never predictable, which is good, but it is also the greatest foundation that you can build your dreams on. Whether that's your personal dreams, your career dreams, your life dreams, a career in finance will give you that strongest foundation ever.

    Camilla Love

    My gosh, that is just wonderful. And thank you. We've come to the end and oh, my God, we could be here forever, I reckon, talking about stuff.

    Cynthia Scott

    But I know it's so much we could talk about. It's been so much fun.

    Camilla Love

    It has been. And thank you very much for your authenticity, your stories. I love the fact that you're a ballerina back then and then you fell into finance by default. And now you're still a ballerina. I love that. I love the stories about your mentor and pushing you into taking those calculated risks and actually giving you that safe environment to do that. And your passion about the business that you're in now and that nexus between the consumer and the and technology and actually allowing the crazy cat ladies to live their best lives and have a fabulous purpose. And it's been seriously awesome. And the same, it's been great to see you. Thanks for it. Really appreciate you coming on to Cheers Not Cheers.

    Cynthia Scott

    I've loved it. Thanks for having me. It's been my pleasure.

    Camilla Love

    Bye, everybody.

    Speaker 3

    The information that is in this podcast, we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually.

    Camilla Love

    Really.

    Speaker 3

    Careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances.

    Camilla Love

    With that.

    Speaker 3

    But this is all about careers advice and how finance would be a fabulous career for you.

S4 Ep5 Meet Emma Quinn, President of Cboe Australia

Meet Emma Quinn, the recently appointed President of Australia's newest and most innovatve stock exchange, CBOE Australia.

  • Emma Quinn

    I've done trades, hundreds of millions of dollars in a transaction.

    Camilla Love

    Is that exciting?

    Emma Quinn

    It's exciting. No matter what. And daunting? It is exciting and daunting.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of F3, Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people all with one thing in common, they work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories. We'll be open and honest and will inspire you. So, let's go.

    I knew I loved this person as soon as I met her. No nonsense, straight to the point, knows her stuff. Normally, I'd say knows her shit, but knows her stuff. Pragmatic, driven, and has grit. But yet, she is warm, friendly, welcoming, acts with integrity and honesty, and has a huge heart. She's my girl. So when I heard that she had nailed this huge new role as President of Australia's newest and most innovative stock exchange, CBOE Australia, I was totally not surprised. So I had to nab her as one of my special guests this season because you know we're doing this CEO program. And this is the bonus episode. So welcome to Shares Not Shoe's Emma Quinn.

    Emma Quinn

    Wow, you're going to make me cry. Don't cry.

    Camilla Love

    I've never had a cryer on my program yet.

    Emma Quinn

    That is so sweet. Thank you.

    Camilla Love

    Well, I'm glad you said yes. And I'm very happy to say no to. And I'm so proud and excited for you for your new role. Thank you. This is super, super exciting. But we'll get into that in a second. And you do know that you've had your ex colleague, Jen Driskill, CEO of AllianceBernstein Australia, on this podcast. So that's big shoes to fill, right?

    Emma Quinn

    Very much so, because she is awesome.

    Camilla Love

    No pressure. She is awesome, but no pressure. So let's start from the top. Emma, tell me a little bit about what you do and why you do it and who you are as a person.

    Emma Quinn

    Well, I'll start with the last question first because it explains a lot. So I'm half Texan, half English. I was born in Australia. I'm a vegetarian non drinker, so I'm the party person of the trading desk in the past. Great. Obviously, that person goes straight into trading. I am a mother of three children. I've got two daughters, 17 and 14, and a son, and have been married to a police officer who turned up at my doorstep one day for almost 22, 23 years. You'll kill me.

    Camilla Love

    If I don't say that. Can I ask why did he turn up at your doorstep?

    Emma Quinn

    That's a story for maybe over a drink, but let's just say in my backyard, like in friends, I had an ugly naked man.

    Camilla Love

    As.

    Emma Quinn

    A neighbour. And so I called the police and the police.

    Camilla Love

    And bonus.

    Emma Quinn

    Exactly. He turned up to work one day and went home with a wife. That's how I describe it. I think he did okay. And then my role here, I started as a CEO at Seabow. I've been a trader for prior to this, for close to 23 years, both A&P and Alliance Bernstein, and decided to take a new challenge. As you say, the most innovative exchange, I hope in the world, but definitely in Australia.

    Camilla Love

    Definitely in Australia. So I'll give you that. And you were at AB for a very long time. And I have also been in my role for a long time as well. What makes you stay?

    Emma Quinn

    I think for me it was that I was given so many different challenges over my time there. If I had just stayed as a trader of Australia and New Zealand, which is what I started out as, I don't think I would have stayed. I think for me, it was that I was given different opportunities over that period of time. And they weren't opportunities that I necessarily asked for. It was that people had singled me out for. And over that time, I say I had different careers at AB. I probably had five or six different roles over that period of time. And that's what made me stay. I had that end, the people. In the end, I was able to be the master of my own destiny, and I built diverse, talented teams, and I stayed because of them. I stayed because of people like your previous interviewee, people like that, highly talented people that I got to work with every day.

    Camilla Love

    And talk to me about... Because a life of a trader is something that people assume a lot about. Tell me actually what it is really like.

    Emma Quinn

    I'd say there's definitely a distinction between being a buy side trader and a sell side trader. When I first went into trading, I thought I wanted to be a sell side trader and quickly and I fell into buy side trading. And then I realised that was actually meant to be. That was where I was meant to be. I'm not a salesperson, I'm comfortable with it, but I'm not. I couldn't sell something that I didn't necessarily believe in. And on the buy side, I did. There's no sales part of that. You got to tell your opinion, with which I'm pretty good at doing and share that. And then people would either take that or they didn't. Whereas on the sell side, I felt like there's more pressure to tow the company line on research and things like that. So from my perspective, buy side trading is different. For me, it was really about being part of the investment process. It was really being part of that investment team. And so from a day to day perspective, it's taking the orders from portfolio managers of how they want to do and what they want to do and working with them on how they want to achieve that outcome.

    Emma Quinn

    And it's large. I've done trades, hundreds of millions of dollars in a transaction.

    Camilla Love

    Is that exciting?

    Emma Quinn

    It's exciting. No matter what anyone told you, it is exciting and daunting. But that adrenaline rush that you get from doing that and seeing it work out and seeing what sometimes weeks, months worth of analysis achieves and how that affects the the end portfolio is always really interesting, which was another thing that always excited me about buy side trading is because you can see that decision a month, two months, a year in portfolio performance.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, because the turnover in the portfolio might actually be minimal, really. And so that your execution of the trade from your portfolio manager, you're right, can come out two years in a trade down the track. And the value that you can provide as a trader is critical. So then you ran... So prior to this current role, you ran Asia Pack trading. And the team there, talk to me a little bit about that.

    Emma Quinn

    I actually was, so I was global co head of trading. I was actually responsible for Asia and Europe. So I always laughed that my co head had five markets and I got the others. 20,000. Five fun markets like Bangladesh, Vietnam, Pakistan, exciting markets.

    Camilla Love

    But tricky markets.

    Emma Quinn

    Very tricky. Nothing's ever straightforward. I did that. And then obviously with Mifit and things like that in Europe, all of the regulatory rules in Europe, that was always an exciting place to learn. And that's where I think I have my love of market structure and things that are really helping me in this current role. And so I've always manage teams that were not really next to me because we had traders in London, Hong Kong, Taiwan, China, and Sydney.

    Camilla Love

    We all live in the virtual world these days, and we do have members of our team everywhere. How did you manage that even before this period?

    Emma Quinn

    It takes a lot of time. And I think as a manager, you need to spend the time. But I was a very good trader and I loved the trading part, but I had to at some point just step back and say, What am I actually being paid for? And I'm not being paid to trade BHP. I'm being paid to actually manage this global team and build a strategy for how best to use our client's commission dollars. And so from my perspective, it was about stepping back. And so I spent a lot of time originally, it used to be one on ones on the phone. I moved to Hong Kong for five years because that was the best place to be there to restructure the trading post GFC. Then when I left, there's a lot of negative things that came out of COVID, and it was a very sad incident. But from my perspective, it helped level the playing field in terms of being able to use Zoom and being the person who wasn't necessarily in the room when decisions were being made because I chose to live in Sydney.

    Camilla Love

    So then as a leader, as a team leader, because you need to get the best out of your team members, right? How do you go about doing that? Is there any tips that you.

    Emma Quinn

    Can give? I think when I reflect back on leadership, and I said this when I left AB, the most important thing is authenticity. I think what I didn't realise I was doing, and I n through all of my career, I've done this, and it wasn't until later on, I worked out that I was supposed to be playing a political game, is that I actually am just this is me. And so with my team, anybody who works with me, I'm honest, I'm authentic. I come to work just as me. I don't play games, I don't do the politics. I've never done politics. It's too hard. Yeah, I just don't have enough time in my day to think that strategically about it. And so, yeah, I worked out probably, I don't know, maybe 10 years ago that when someone said to me, You actually said that to me. We had a new global cohead come in. And I was actually on maternity leave and he called me to introduce himself and just said, Have you got half an hour to tell me what you think? And so I was on maternity leave. I had half an hour.

    Emma Quinn

    So I told him what I thought. And it wasn't until later someone said to me, You didn't tell him that. And I said, Yes, I did. He asked me what I thought, so I told him what I thought. That actually, with him, brought me into his inner circle because he actually found somebody who was actually going to tell him what they thought rather than what he wanted to hear. As a leader, now I appreciate those people who tell me, I don't want to know down to some nitty gritty details, but for the most part, tell me if I'm asking you what you think, I actually genuinely want to hear it. And so I didn't realise I was doing it because that's just me. But eventually, you work out that that's just part of your style and how important authenticity is. And if you lose authenticity, at least for me, if I think someone's not authentic, that's when they tend to lose me.

    Camilla Love

    And a lot of people think about it as career risk telling somebody the truth, particularly a person who is there as a leader and manager. And most people are yes people. They tell you what you want to hear. It's difficult to weed those people out, right?

    Emma Quinn

    Yeah. And I think it's a balance, like I said, I don't want to be hearing every little, tiny little complaint, and you certainly don't want to be seen to be the person who whines about everything. But if you can come to a leader and say, Look, I've noticed this, or these teams are working in this way, and I just don't think it's effective. But maybe if we move the meeting to include these three people, it might be more effective. If you come with a solution as well as talking about what the issue is, that's really helpful to anybody who's managing. And so I gravitate to those people. Look at 8B, I was there for 21 years. I knew the people like that. Here, I'm learning who those people are.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, it's We talk about authenticity here a lot because it is the buzzword at the moment. But it's something that I've struggled with, particularly in my early part of my career. But now, I found my voice and found who I am. And so therefore, it's much easier to be a little bit more authentic. But it's difficult when you're starting out.

    Emma Quinn

    I think it's the texting in me that just didn't know that you weren't supposed to. You weren't supposed to not say what you thought.

    Camilla Love

    Shout out to all those Texans out there because it is a beautiful state. It is a beautiful state.

    Emma Quinn

    It's a wonderful state.

    Camilla Love

    So let's step back a little bit and talk about, did you always know it was going to be finance, or did you fall into it? How did you how? I told you I.

    Emma Quinn

    Was going to surprise you because I don't think you know this. I went as... I don't know if I've told you this story. The first day after my HSE exam, I went to work. I worked as a receptionist at a building company. I saved up all my money. Six months later, I went on a one way ticket to the US to go to New York to be an actress.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, get out.

    Emma Quinn

    Yes, I did.

    Camilla Love

    Seriously? Yes, seriously. Did you land any roles?

    Emma Quinn

    No, that's why I'm here. I will say, self awareness is something that I think I'm pretty good at because within about three months I realised that maybe maybe I am talented, maybe I'm not, but I'm really not set for the poverty line. And myself, I just.

    Camilla Love

    Do not. Maybe it was the eye of the beholder. They didn't realise the talent that they had in front of you.

    Emma Quinn

    I could.

    Camilla Love

    Get a role in. Nicole Kidman? Yeah.

    Emma Quinn

    Kate Blanchett? Exactly. I could get a role in. No, I was serious. I was only going to do stage. It wasn't about the money, it was about stage. Got it. About the performance. And so then I realised pretty quickly that that wasn't for me, that I could get stardom in a year and it could be 10 years, and it could be never. And I'm not a good waitress. I'm a terrible waitress. It was probably this career wasn't meant to be. And I thought about, I was in the States, obviously had some time, and I traveled around, met some wonderful people, spent some time with some of my cousins. And then I just realised that if it really was a passion of mine, that I should study something and have something behind me. And if I really wanted to continue with acting, I would and I could do it. And if my time was to come to be a star, it would come. But I really needed an education behind me. And so I came after a year of staying with my aunt and uncle for a while in the terrible place of Greenwich, Connecticut, in a very nice house.

    Camilla Love

    Very nice house.

    Emma Quinn

    I then decided to come back to Sydney to study. But then realised that this could take up the whole podcast, how I got into finance, so I'll try and cut it down. I then realised that my HSC results when you study things like drama don't really give you... And it was the first year that it was ever an HSC subject. It doesn't really give you the best scores to get into university that I needed to do something else. And so I actually had a really good mentor who actually owned the building company that I'd worked for before I left to go to the US. She had gone to university and she had suggested some courses and I couldn't get into that. So I ended up going to do... I did open learning and I did about six courses through there. I got high distinctions in law and accounting. And then finally went to UTS, I think, at the age of 20 and said, Please take me in. And they said, Yes, you're a mature age student. Mature age.

    Camilla Love

    Student at 20.

    Emma Quinn

    At 20, I was, yeah. Now I look back, I'm like, Yeah, I know, crazy. And so they took me in as a mature age student. So I ended up, I was doing accounting and then just realised that accounting... I thought I wanted to be a production accountant. I thought I could get my acting part.

    Camilla Love

    The.

    Emma Quinn

    Juggle. Yeah, the juggle and still be part of the film world or the acting world, but from an accounting perspective. And then I changed to finance and I did two submajors in law at UTS. And in the end, I did that at night. But I think from my perspective, it was more that I hadn't really studied economics or anything like that going through high school because I'd focused on the arts. When I got interested in economics and things like that at uni, that's when I decided I wanted to be in finance.

    Camilla Love

    Did you utilize your arts outlet at all?

    Emma Quinn

    No. Really? Nothing. I used to do a lot of dancing. My kids now tell me, Please don't dance.

    Camilla Love

    You're embarrassing me, mum.

    Emma Quinn

    Exactly. I don't do any of that anymore. Bummer. I know.

    Camilla Love

    You should get out there just for a bit of fun.

    Emma Quinn

    Yeah. No, I've lost my touch, I feel. I think they're probably right, the kids. I try and hide them.

    Camilla Love

    So jumping to today, so you've gone from global head of trading to CEO of CBO here in Australia. That's a big jump. How did you make that decision? What attracted you to the role? What are you most excited about in doing the role? I just want to hear all about it.

    Emma Quinn

    What made me think about the role? I was actually approached to consider the role. Originally, I had said, I just don't think the typical female, I don't think that's for me. I've always.

    Camilla Love

    Thought that. Did you call yourself out?

    Emma Quinn

    I did. I went. I went on leave. A lso, the person who approached me called me out on it, too. When I eventually called back and said, Look, actually, I think yeah, maybe I'll consider it. He said, I had a speech ready to tell you why you should be considerate. I really took me some time to say, Actually, no, I'm going to call myself out. And if I am going to leave AB in a role and a firm that I've been with and loved the people for a long time. It has to be the right role. And I'd obviously been approached about other roles previously, and this one I just said, This is my time. This is the right role for me. This is the right firm for me. Every time I met somebody from Sibo, I told the story. Once I got here, I kept waiting for somebody to come in that I went, I really don't think I could work with that person, or they've given me something where I've gone. This is just not the right thing. There's something not right with the culture of this firm. But every time I met somebody, I just really liked the people.

    Emma Quinn

    They were very genuine. We talked a lot about diversity. They were very open about where they feel that they can do better better in that respect. And then just the opportunities in the Australian market. There's so much that CBO does overseas that will work in Australia. And so I really am really excited about the opportunities that we'll have. We've just gone through my first day as CEO, I was CEO or co CEO with Vik, who was the CEO prior to me. We did a big tech migration, probably the biggest financial markets changes in Australia's history that went off pretty much without a hitch.

    Camilla Love

    And a shout out to the team because they.

    Emma Quinn

    Did it. They did. Wonderful job. They did. It was 18 months of hard work. And it just shows the power of CBO in terms of this wasn't five people sitting around in a room doing it. You're talking about hundreds and hundreds of engineers working 24 hours around the clock where they're handing over work to get this done. And the power of that, the new system and what we can bring to Australia is just really exciting. So knowing that that was coming, knowing that the migration would be successful, or hoping it would be, and having faith in that, it gave me the want to come here.

    Camilla Love

    The big nudge.

    Emma Quinn

    Yes, it was.

    Camilla Love

    Great. They've got the right person, right? So I'm super excited for you. And you said you're only week three, so the seats not warm yet. And you're learning a lot, which I am excited for you.

    Emma Quinn

    I thought I was going to learn a lot, but I forgot how much I enjoy just learning something new and how tired that makes you.

    Camilla Love

    But also how extends your brain and how extends the people that you're with because they're all different.

    Emma Quinn

    And the skill set. I think that, and I'm sure you do this too, where you think about, I don't really have that skill set. And then you actually look when you actually break down what your skill set is, you realise what you like and what you're good at and what you don't.

    Camilla Love

    So are you good with change? Because this is big change.

    Emma Quinn

    Normally, no, I don't like change. I like to play have my very much a routine person. So it was a big jump to do it. But once I made the decision, I actually felt really it was weird because I felt really at peace with making the decision. Every day, I walk in here, I'm excited about the opportunity. So no, not usually good with change, but in this instance, it's been great.

    Camilla Love

    And I've asked this to all the CEOs that I've interviewed. And maybe your answer will be different because of the situation and timing of where you are today. Is there anything particular that keeps you up at night right now that you are thinking about, whether it be bringing new product down or whether it be feeling comfortable in who you are in the new role, whatever, what keeps you up at night?

    Emma Quinn

    Not much because I try and I've been sleeping like a baby at those times. I said, When you send your children off to their first day of kindergarten, that first week, and they come home as a five year old and they sleep, that's when me and my children have been putting me to bed the last three weeks. Look, I think it's about this. There is so much opportunity in Australia for CBO. What keeps me up at night is what do we want to attack for?

    Camilla Love

    Your priorities. Yeah.

    Emma Quinn

    Where do we want to go? And what does that look like? And what does that roadmap look like? And so that's really what... It's not so much keeping me up at night, but when I'm on my walks and those things, that's what's.

    Camilla Love

    Going through my head.

    Emma Quinn

    The cogs were... Yeah. That's definitely going through my head.

    Camilla Love

    And because priorities is difficult because there are so many opportunities, and you can probably only do two or three in a certain period of time. And then making sure those three are the right three, or at least if one's wrong, you can flip and pivot and change. That's a lot of worrying.

    Emma Quinn

    It is. But it's one of the great things about CBO is that you have the... It may be a team of 75 in Australia, and some of those are working on regional roles as well. But you also have the global... There's a workforce of another 4,000 in other places, and nothing that we've done or plan to do in Australia really isn't something that CBO hasn't done somewhere else. So I get it. I get some comfort in the protection from a global having a global business.

    Camilla Love

    And the reputation of CBO globally is amazing. So it is good to have them here and bring the technology, as you say, the skill set, the product set, and to really shake up the industry down here.

    Emma Quinn

    And to be able to offer people things that they deserve to be offered. We have one of the largest superannuation markets in the world. People deserve diversity in offerings and things that they may want to invest in. And so being able to help, whether it be brokers or asset managers, facilitate that is exciting and what Australia deserves.

    Camilla Love

    Totally.

    Emma Quinn

    So I.

    Camilla Love

    Always ask this question, too, on every single one of my podcast, because everyone has a different answer. And I always take something away, which is looking back on your career, is there a moment where there's been a sliding doors or something that you've really learned and taken away and it's changed you as a leader or as a team member?

    Emma Quinn

    So many. But I'd say probably one of the most defining was when I was at AB and they asked me if I would take on fixed income. Now, I'd been an equity trader my whole life. I knew nothing about trading fixed income. And I remember that was one instance where I didn't say to them, Are you sure? I just went, Okay, sure. I'll run with it. All of the trading had been centralised in New York, and they said, We want to start. They'd hired an APAC team and they said, We want to start trading in APAC hours. Can you help out with that? And I said, A trade is a trade. I'm happy to do that. And so I set that up and I ended up being an equity trader and then running Asian fixed income as well. E ventually, I did all of Asian trading. For me, that was probably a defining moment in terms of it pushed me to do something completely out of my comfort zone and actually focus on what are my skill sets, what am I good at, and really hone in on those. And so I think that then gave me the courage to then do other things because I look back on that and say, even in taking this job, I look back and say, well, I didn't know anything about fixed income trading, and I ended up hiring some really talented traders who knew everything about fixed income trading, and I could help them with all of the systems and market structure and where, you know, making things more efficient.

    Emma Quinn

    But I didn't necessarily have to know how to trade those individual instruments or be the expert in that. And I think that helped me to learn about how to build good and great teams. And that you don't have to... I always was one of those people I had to know the minutiae of how everything was done and say I could sit in one of my team members seats. Now I'm comfortable that I'm there to be expert. I don't need to be the expert. I need to know enough, but I don't need to know it in detail.

    Camilla Love

    And you need to be able to know enough to ask the right questions. That's my view. And as you move up the ladder and now in your new role, that's exactly right where you can't have and be all over the detail in every second of every day. But you need to have confidence in the team members and their strengths.

    Emma Quinn

    And you need to be asking, like you said, enough questions that you can get comfort in yourself that they're the right person and that you can trust that what they're saying and what they're doing, you can't know their whole role inside out.

    Camilla Love

    And be there when mistakes happen, because inevitably mistakes do happen. And you need to be a supportive leader who gives them that framework to be able to come forward.

    Emma Quinn

    That is particularly important, I found, in trading. There's humans involved. Errors are always going to happen. A head trader's worst nightmare is worth nightmares if someone hide something from you. And so setting up an environment where people are not afraid to tell you that they've made a mistake, or even better, you find out they're willing to come to you and say, Look, I think this could potentially be an issue, and you can help them work through it. And sometimes you can solve it before it actually is an issue. Great.

    Camilla Love

    The confidence in the team. Wow, that's amazing. Tell me about the most valuable piece of advice that you've ever been given, and why did it resonate?

    Emma Quinn

    I think it was a saying once. When I was on my holiday in the US, I read a book, and it's not for everybody, and I'm not even sure it's in print anymore. It was by a woman called Dawn Steele, who was the first woman ever to run a motion picture, a major US motion picture company. I read her book when I was in the US, and it inspired me in terms of she said, Don't try and teach a pig to sing, you waste your time and annoy the pig. I've taken that through because a lot of the time, you do things that sometimes you're just not going to change. You're not going to change people. You need to pick your battles. I tend to pick battles around things that are important to me, which is usually, they're usually ethically related, is where I pick my battles. And then sometimes it doesn't have to always be your way. People may get to the same spot, but it doesn't have to be in the way that you do it. And so for me, I've always taken that with me. And then sometimes you've got to pick your battles and let people have their own path.

    Emma Quinn

    And they may not get there as fast as you and they may not get there in the same way as you, but they'll get there in the end and you just support them through that.

    Camilla Love

    It's one of my favourite sayings, pick your battle, win the war. Two choose it wisely. Let people feel like they're having their say, doing it their way, whatever it is. But get to the overall end point together. And we're all e're all winning, the business is winning, the team is winning. Everybody has their ego and humility intact. And it's important.

    Emma Quinn

    And that's how people learn. They have to be able to do that.

    Camilla Love

    But I love the pig analogy that's awesome. It is, right. Okay, so towards the end of our episodes, we do this quickfire round. Do you know about this?

    Emma Quinn

    I know a little bit, but I have not prepared.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. So you have to say whatever first comes to your mind for the next question.

    Emma Quinn

    I'm in a potato in my mind. That's okay.

    Camilla Love

    They're swearing aloud. Okay. So you're ready? What is the most important money lesson you've ever learned?

    Emma Quinn

    That it won't make you happy, but it does give you choices.

    Camilla Love

    That's a good one. That is a good one. One piece of advice I'd tell my 20 year old self as a mature student.

    Emma Quinn

    As a mature two years old student at UTS, I would tell her don't sweat the small stuff, everything will be fine. I spent too long worrying about the future instead of just embracing and having fun.

    Camilla Love

    That's a good one. I think I'm doing that right now in my 40s, let alone my 20s. What movie do you absolutely love that's embarrassing to admit?

    Emma Quinn

    It's a BBC production of Pride and Prejudice. I can watch that over and over.

    Camilla Love

    With.

    Emma Quinn

    Mr. Darcy? With Mr. Darcy coming out of the water. I am there. I see Pemberley.

    Camilla Love

    That is hilarious.

    Emma Quinn

    That is my...

    Camilla Love

    You're romantic at heart.

    Emma Quinn

    I am.

    Camilla Love

    Do you read the books as well or just the BBC?

    Emma Quinn

    I read them. I'm very particular about which production. I do read Pride and Prejudice at least once a year.

    Camilla Love

    Wow.

    Emma Quinn

    I like Elizabeth, too. She tells him off.

    Camilla Love

    Totally. I can see her in you.

    Emma Quinn

    I see me in Pemberley more.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, sure. Okay. What's your biggest, hariest personal goal?

    Emma Quinn

    I don't really set myself goals. I just try and be consistent with things. For me, personal goal at work is to listen more. I'm a good talker. It's really hard. It's really hard.

    Camilla Love

    That's why I do a podcast because I talk.

    Emma Quinn

    I know on a personal level, look, my personal goal is to just continue. I think especially when you take on a new role like I am. I thought about this and talked to people, particularly people like Jen, who I speak to a lot, around, When I take on this new role, what are some of the things that I want to achieve? And part of it is that I need to keep me happy and healthy. And so things around my personal goal is to keep up the things that I know make me a better mother, wife, employee, CEO, is making sure that I keep up my exercise, make sure I keep up the things that are important to me. So my biggest, probably here is personal goal is to make sure that I don't let work consume me as much as I say on my walks. I'm thinking about things is just to make sure that having more of a focus on myself and my personal health as well, because if I don't have that, I'm no good to anybody.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. I say that a lot. I say that a lot to a number of people. If I wasn't doing this job, I'd be a?

    Emma Quinn

    Actress.

    Camilla Love

    I thought you might answer that. On my bucket list is?

    Emma Quinn

    There's a lot. I want to go with family to Greece, Italy. My children are into history. I want to do all of that.

    Camilla Love

    Greek and Roman mythology and all the ruins and stuff.

    Emma Quinn

    And I want to do it at a point where they remember it because they spent a lot of time traveling when they were young when we lived in Hong Kong, and they tell me that they don't remember a thing about it. I wasted a lot of time and money.

    Camilla Love

    On trips. It was good for you.

    Emma Quinn

    It was. I should have gone without them.

    Camilla Love

    I say exactly the same thing because I'd really love to go to Egypt, but I think it needs to be at a point where the kids.

    Emma Quinn

    Appreciate it. Absolutely. And they can fit it into their learning and reading.

    Camilla Love

    Tell me something that no one else knows about you.

    Emma Quinn

    Like I said, I'm an oversharer. There's very little that no one... Nothing? Nothing. No. Everybody, I can't.

    Camilla Love

    No. Favourite colour?

    Emma Quinn

    No, I'm a red. I love red. I wear black a lot, but my favourite colour is red. No. Everyone knows. I don't tend to hide. Okay, great. I don't get embarrassed by much.

    Camilla Love

    Okay, next question. If I was a superhero, I'd be?

    Emma Quinn

    Again, my children are very much into it and say this could get me in trouble because if I choose the wrong superhero set, I'm in trouble. But black widow, I'm quite a fan of.

    Camilla Love

    Great.

    Emma Quinn

    Black Widow.

    Camilla Love

    She's.

    Emma Quinn

    Strong. Yeah, exactly. And I think she's on the right, whatever that... I don't know.

    Camilla Love

    Marvel versus...

    Emma Quinn

    Yeah, so I'm in trouble for Black Widow.

    Camilla Love

    Dc? Yeah, got it. Okay, my biggest investment mistake?

    Emma Quinn

    I've got a rule, I don't know what you... I have a rule that I never chose baby names while I was pregnant, but I actually made the decision to buy a house while I was pregnant, which I still try to work out. It turned out to be not a huge financial mistake, but it was definitely one where I went. When I looked back, I go, Why did I buy a house there that ended up increasing my commute and just made my life a little bit harder as a working mother.

    Camilla Love

    Most people do that and then go, Yeah, I'm going to renovate too and try and get.

    Emma Quinn

    It before the baby comes out. I did that one too. My husband's now a builder, and so he was responsible for that. That was so interesting.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. So you outsource the problem. And did you deliver on time as a question?

    Emma Quinn

    I moved into the house with a 10 week old baby, and he still questions why I got upset because I was washing dishes on the back deck in a bucket.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, my God. With a baby?

    Emma Quinn

    Yeah, with a baby. Yeah. I think I had every reason to be.

    Camilla Love

    That's an investment mistake in time, let alone the.

    Emma Quinn

    House as well. Exactly.

    Camilla Love

    Okay, last question. Describe in three words why a career in finance is awesome.

    Emma Quinn

    The people investing in others, I'd say.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. I think that's a really great... And particularly as a leader of teams, you're only as good a leader as you have followers.

    Emma Quinn

    Absolutely.

    Camilla Love

    I think that's a really great way to end it. I love that you're an oversharer. I love that you're an actress. I love that you describe yourself as the text of an art because you just like, this is how it worlds.

    Emma Quinn

    I.

    Camilla Love

    Love that you talked about authenticity because I think it's really important. And we always, and we talk about it a lot here, and taking risks and backing yourself, even though... So it was great to hear your story about I'm taking on fixed income trading and I'll yes, but yet when you get asked to put yourself forward for the CEO role here, it's like, can I do it? But you proved it, definitely. And so Emma, so excited and thank you very much for your time with me on Shares Not Chews. And good luck. And I look forward to seeing and watching you grow and watching CBO here in Australia flourish under your leadership.

    Emma Quinn

    Thank you. And thank you for being one of the... I think one of the things that's changed so much in the industry is how much female support females. When I first started, it was very much I did it the hard way, you do it the hard way, but you're such an inspiration in everything that you do. You put your money and time into the industry for women. So thank you. I look forward to seeing.

    Camilla Love

    Where you.

    Emma Quinn

    End.

    Camilla Love

    Up. Yeah, watch this space.

    Emma Quinn

    You.

    Camilla Love

    Inspire me a lot. So I'll see how we go in the next little while. I look forward to seeing you soon.

    Emma Quinn

    Yes, definitely. See you. Bye.

    Camilla Love

    The information that is in this podcast, we.

    Speaker 3

    Always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice.

    Camilla Love

    It's actually really.

    Speaker 3

    Careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance would be a fabulous career for you.

S4 Ep 4 Meet Jo Townsend, CEO of Funds SA

Meet Jo Townsend. Jo left school in year 10 and fell into a career in finance. Now, she's the CEO of Funds SA. Hear her fascinating story on the latest episode of Shares Not Shoes.

  • Jo Townsend

    Particularly when you're a CEO, everyone watches everything you do and say. And sometimes I just think, Oh, I wish I hadn't said that, or I wish I'd asked that question a different way. And there's absolutely nothing you can do about it in the moment. But what you can do is just think, Oh, if I had my time over, I would frame that question differently, or I wouldn't have had that reaction.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of F3, Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people all with one thing in common, they work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories. We'll be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go.

    Camilla Love

    I am really pleased to have today's guests on Shares Not Shoes and to share her wisdom with you all today. Not only has she been the CEO for the South Australian Government Investment Management Firm Funds SA, and is responsible for, I don't know, millions of people's retirement plans, but she's been the CEO there for eight years and she has worked as a fixed income portfolio manager, which I'm going to delve into a lot later, and headed operations at Rest Super. She has just announced she is taking a break from Funds SA and stepping out a little bit and doing some new things. So let's delve into that. So I thought it'd be a great way just to nab her as part of our CEO series to get her insights and wisdom for her time as CEO and obviously a real reflection and look back on her career. So welcome to Shares Not Shares, Jo Townsend.

    Jo Townsend

    Thank you very much.

    Camilla Love

    Really glad that you could join us today. I'm super excited to put a spotlight on your career at this point, as I said in my introduction. So maybe you can tell me a little bit about who you are personally and professionally and what you do from a day to day perspective.

    Jo Townsend

    I am a mum. I've got my son, Jake, who has just finished his university degree, a husband, a cat and a dog.

    Camilla Love

    Do the cat and dog get along?

    Jo Townsend

    The cat is very much the bully. We have to lock the cat in the laundry when we feed the dog, despite the fact that the dog is six times as big because the cat will bully the dog out.

    Camilla Love

    Of its food. Fair.

    Jo Townsend

    We're currently living in Adelaide, which has been fabulous. We moved here eight years ago for me to take the role at Funds SA. We actually don't have any family here. My husband and I come from Tasmanian originally. So between doing jobs in Tasmania, Sydney, and Adelaide, we've moved around quite a lot, so that's probably a family life. The opportunity to take the role here at Funds SA was really the driver for moving to Adelaide. That was an opportunity for me to lead an organization. Funds SA is not that large, but we have grown from 30 to about 70 people over the eight years I've been here. And for me, it's a really nice sized organization, and it's got a nice vibe with it. So I feel very blessed that I've had the opportunity to lead such a great organization for the past eight years.

    Camilla Love

    And thinking about the impact that you and your team have on the retirement of a huge number of South Australian government employees, how does that make you feel?

    Jo Townsend

    Well, I do have to correct you because it's not the millions that you use in your interest. Hundreds of thousands? Yeah. There's a couple of hundred thousand public sector employees. And it's a very important job managing other people's money. It doesn't matter whether you're managing 4 million or the 40 billion that we are managing. It's an incredible honour to be able to do that. We're quite a unique organisation because we're not just managing superannuation monies. We've actually got some clients in charitable organisations, and also we're managing money for insurance funds. So right across the public sector, which is really interesting because all the different clients will have different drivers behind their investment objectives and what they actually need to achieve.

    Camilla Love

    What gets you out of bed every morning to go to work?

    Jo Townsend

    My giant dog that I have to walk at 5 30 to.

    Camilla Love

    Start with. Totally. They're scratching at.

    Jo Townsend

    The door. I actually really like what I do. Not only do I work with a great bunch of people, but we're very lucky being able to do such an important job out of Adelaide. We sit in our boardroom and we have meetings and we look out over the Adelaide Hills, and I think everyone just really appreciates how lucky we are that we can do the job we do from Adelaide. It's not Sydney, it's not Melbourne, but it's the same flying time, Adelaide to Melbourne as it is Sydney to Melbourne. And now that everyone's starting traveling again, we've got a lot of international fund managers. They come in from London into Perth, and then they stop off in Adelaide, and they go to Melbourne and Sydney. So it's not like we're cut off at all. We travel quite a lot. I encourage everyone at Funds SA to travel, to meet people in the industry, to see what other people are doing. So it's a really quite a unique circumstance to be able to do what we do from Adelaide.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. So tell me a little bit about what the day in the life of a CEO looks like for you.

    Jo Townsend

    So I talk to people a lot.

    Camilla Love

    Yes. Is it lots and lots of meetings?

    Jo Townsend

    Yes, lots of meetings. I've had to learn over the years not to tell people what to do because that's my natural inclination. So when you're a CEO, you very much have to guide people and ask a lot of questions and just keep in touch with them rather than necessarily telling them what to do. So I have a lot of meetings with my staff at Funds SA. My role, from an investment perspective, I'm not the person who's making the recommendations and doing all the implementation anymore, but my role is very much a governance role. And so for example, I chair the Internal Investment Committee, which is the internal body that does a lot of the asset class reviews and strategy recommendations up to the board. In a typical day, I'll probably have meetings with some of our stakeholders. So there I'm talking about our board members, the different committees that we have. It might be someone inside of government that we're doing some work with. It might be one of our clients. Even if I'm working on something, I always say to everyone at FundsSA, my door is always open. So it's more about just being there and responding to whatever happens on the day.

    Jo Townsend

    So I don't always have my day planned out, except for the meetings. But yeah, I think just have to go with the flow more than anything else.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, being flexible and making sure that you're putting out fires and supporting staff when you need to.

    Jo Townsend

    There's been a... Hopefully not too.

    Camilla Love

    Many fires. No, thankfully not too many fires. And so you said you mentioned that your staff has doubled, if not a little bit more than doubled under your watch over the last eight years. Tell me what other transformations did have happened in the organization through you and your governance.

    Jo Townsend

    Well, we basically really went back to basics when I first arrived. So we went through an exercise where the staff who were there at the time developed a set of values for the organization, and then we developed a set of behaviours that underpined that. And so I was very keen to ensure that the culture that we had within the organization was very client focused and very open and transparent. And so we did a lot of work just talking amongst ourselves, deciding what we wanted the organization to look like. And when we were recruiting people into the organization, we were very much recruiting for the mindset that they would bring and the approach that they would bring in terms of collaboration, for example. It was very explicit that we were not just going to hire people with strong technical skills. We were also looking for those soft skills and so I have a saying that I share with recruiters fairly early on, and it's that I only hire people who can play nicely in the sand pit with others. There's not.

    Camilla Love

    A lot of those out there. So is there a needle in a haystack?

    Jo Townsend

    So early on, it was very much around establishing the culture that we were looking for and to build upon that over time. There's a lot of administrative operational things that we had to do. We had to do a custodian transition. We wanted to do a big piece of work around data and analytics, but we had to have the foundations in place before we could do that. Probably the biggest growth within the organization has been within the investment team. And so that went from 7 to about 20 people, which looks as if it's really big growth. But we are not managing money internally. We don't think that we would have a competitive advantage of trying to attract people who were, for example, managing equities directly into Adelaide because that's a very competitive marketplace. So we are operating on a manager of managers basis. But nonetheless, we have been able to introduce additional capabilities into the investment function. For example, some co investing activities in private equity, more of a focus on trying to engage in direct property transactions. So that thing.

    Camilla Love

    And when you look back on your time, is there anything you're most proud of?

    Jo Townsend

    Look, Funt us A is a really nice place to work, but of course, I would say that. But it is a great place to work. So for such a small organization, I'm incredibly proud of everything that we have been able to achieve over the past eight years. So I think it'll be quite a shock when I don't have my office to go to every day and don't have people to talk to. So we'll see how that goes.

    Camilla Love

    Well, yeah, it is a bit of a shock to the system, but obviously there'll be so many new opportunities that are coming your way. It'll be great to see how you progress over the next little while because I guarantee you you're not finished yet, right?

    Jo Townsend

    So my plan, I keep telling people my plan is to not have a plan. I've never really had a break. I've never really had a decent break. I had six weeks off when I got married 33 years ago.

    Jo Townsend

    Shoot. Wow. Even when my son, Jake, was born, I think I had Matt leave of three or four weeks. Then I was back in the office because I was working for a small fixed interest manager at the time. I used to take him into the office and he used to sleep for three hours at a time.

    Camilla Love

    At least he was a good sleeper.

    Jo Townsend

    He was. Not so much these days, but he was back then. So I feel like I deserve a bit of a break. So my plan is to actually not commit to anything much for a period of time and then decide what I'm going to do. I can honestly say I'm actually not sure whether or not I'll take on another exact role or potentially just do some boards and investment committees and things. But I'm looking forward to actually thinking about that and making that decision further down the track.

    Camilla Love

    Well, that's exciting. Well, I hope you get some travel in or.

    Jo Townsend

    Some.

    Camilla Love

    Fun stuff. So stepping back a little bit, was it love at first sight for finance with you, or was it a slow burn?

    Jo Townsend

    Well, I fell into the finance industry completely by accident. So to go right back when I was growing up, school in country Tasmanian, the accepted wisdom was that you finished your 10 and you got yourself a job. I used to study really hard. I won the shorthand and the typing prize when I was in high school. Great.

    Camilla Love

    For the typist, Paul? Back in the '70s and '80s, seriously?

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah. I was a really good secretary.

    Camilla Love

    I was a really good secretary. Well, I'm so glad you were never a secretary.

    Jo Townsend

    No, I was. I was a really good secretary. I moved from Tasmania to Sydney a week after the '87 crash. He wasn't my husband, but he was soon to be my husband. Everything that we had was in the back of our hatchback S elica. We got on the boat, we went to Melbourne, we drove to Sydney. Within a week, we both had jobs and somewhere to live. I was doing temp jobs because I used to find that I was always looking for the next thing to do. So it suited me that I do jobs three months at a time or something and then just move on to the next one. And in the early 1990s, I got myself a job as a secretary in the marketing department at Rothchart. The job that I originally had, it wasn't exactly what I was looking for. And so I decided I was going to leave. And just after I'd announced that, one of the investors who was there at the time, they said, Oh, look, we've got this spare role on the treasury dealing floor working in the economics department. Would you like to go do that for a while?

    Jo Townsend

    And so I took on that role and I just t's like I was in love once I got there.

    Camilla Love

    Once you got there.

    Jo Townsend

    But it just took me a while to get there.

    Camilla Love

    Had to kiss a few frogs first.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah. So that was great. And the lady I was working with at the time, she was very supportive. I realised when I was 24 years old or something that I'd actually left school far too early. And so because I'd left school at year 10, I couldn't automatically get in to do a degree part time. And so I had to do... It was then called the Securities Institute of Australia. I had to do a SIA course to prove that I was capable of studying at a tursury level. So I did that for two years part time whilst I was studying. And then I was able to apply for and got accepted into a mathematics and finance degree at UTS.

    Camilla Love

    And.

    Jo Townsend

    So while I was studying at Rothschild, and I was working as a secretary in the economics department, and obviously, because it was the economics department, there was lots of numbers. And I used to go down to the Bureau of Statistics at 11 30, and wait. These are the days when the ABC TV cameras used to be there, and used to fight to be the first person to...

    Camilla Love

    I don't know, but I'm sure.

    Jo Townsend

    It happened. And it was quite a bit of numerically based work. It wasn't just shorthand and typing, but I actually quite enjoyed that. So that's when I decided to do mathematics and finance. So then I was working and studying. I ended up working full-time, studying part time for 10 years. At the end of that, my husband said to me, You are going to take a break now, aren't you? And I said yes. Because I quite enjoyed studying once I started doing it properly. And I said, Yeah, I'll have a break for a while. I've done bits and pieces of short courses since, but I've actually never gone back to it. I think the whole 10 years of working and.

    Camilla Love

    Studying probably. Maybe this is the time to go back, do something different fun.

    Jo Townsend

    Well, yeah, I don't know what I would do, though. If I had my time over and I'd gone to university straight from school, I actually would have probably chosen something like architecture. But of course, when I was at high school, we used to do tech drawing with a ruler and a pencil. And these days, it's all...

    Camilla Love

    It's all CAD drawing on computers.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah, so very different.

    Camilla Love

    So then you went into the treasury desk, right? How did you get into being a fixed income analyst and portfolio manager? And the reason why I ask this is because when I look around the market, there isn't a lot of females in fixed income. But fixed income, and a lot of people know this, is like the market itself is like three times the size of the equities market. So I don't understand why there isn't so much demand or willingness to go into that fixed income segment, particularly if you're a female, for example. So what was it about it that you loved?

    Jo Townsend

    Bonds are probably not seen as being as.

    Camilla Love

    Exciting as equities. Not sexy?

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah, not sexy. So that's probably part of it. I was in typical style back those days. I'd done that job for a while, and then I was starting to look for the next thing to do, and it wasn't coming. So I was thinking about going somewhere else to work. Then they offered me a job as a trainee, fixed interest dealer. And so it was a case of, yes, I was in the right place at the right time. And there was some people there who were willing to give me an opportunity and support me. But I used to work really hard as well to actually have that opportunity. And so they gave me a trainee dealer role, which I did, I think, probably for I don't know, I can't remember, it was too long ago, maybe 18 months or something. And then one of the gentlemen I was working with, he spent out and set up a boutique funds management company. So I went to work for him and another lady out of Rothschild. And by that stage, I was the fixed interest dealer. I was actually a director of that company as well. What I particularly liked about the bonds was I actually really liked the discipline of there's a bond pricing formula and you can calculate things like duration from bottom up.

    Jo Townsend

    Everything is very logic and it all just fits together. And that numerical aspect and the discipline of it, that just naturally sits well with the way that I think about things and the way I work.

    Camilla Love

    And the thing about managing bonds is actually all about the default risk. It's not necessarily about upside, right? So how is it when you look at a portfolio of bonds now, as an investment committee member or the chair of investment committee, how do you reflect on your time as a bond trader, and how you look at managing bond portfolios today?

    Jo Townsend

    So back in the days when that was my role, we were very much focused on duration. And the fixed interest market, or the requirement for fixed interest portfolio management, changed dramatically in the 1990s because bond yields had already been falling for a very long period of time. And at a really high level, there were people saying, well, you just need to be long duration. You're going to make money because bond yields are all they ever do is fall. And there wasn't a real need for credit management back in those days. And also the super funds, the few that were around then, they'd have a domestic fixed interest manager, and then they'd have an international fixed interest manager. Now, what was happening during that time is that clients, super funds, wanted globally diversified fixed interest, and they wanted credit management because there was a growing number of corporate iss coming into the market which weren't there necessarily 10 years beforehand. The style of fixed interest management that we used to undertake all of a sudden was out of favour. We were domestically focused, we were duration focused. And so we just got a bit caught out by the changing nature of the client appetite for fixed interest portfolios.

    Jo Townsend

    These days, when we're building fixed interest portfolios at Funds SA, we have dedicated duration managers, we have credit managers who have investment, great credit, or have high yield. So that's just one way of building fixed interest portfolios. Other people might do it other ways. So yes, you're right. It's a very big market, but it's also an asset class that was under an awful lot of stress, particularly late last year with the rising bond yields. I actually remember being around in 1994, and we all used to refer to that period as a great bond market crash. But last year was even more challenging if you were investing in bonds.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. And we can see that in performance, and you can see that in issuance and all that stuff. It's certainly interesting. So then after that, you went into rest, correct?

    Jo Townsend

    I ended up at rest. So I basically worked in funds management for about 10 years. So I was trading fixed interest. And what happened, 2002, was that value capital management, which was the boutique fixed interest manager, was closing down for those reasons that I talked about changes in market. And my husband and I were thinking about going back to Tasmanian to live. Now, the challenge that we had was that he worked in advertising and I worked in finance, which are probably two of the most underrepresented industries in Tas mania.

    Camilla Love

    Totally. Unless you're in tourism.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah. We did a deal whereby if one of us could get a good job, we'd go back to Tas mania. And a job came up at the retirement benefits fund, which is effectively the state government public sector fund. And I remember going for that job. And one of the questions that they asked me was, you're going to miss being a fixed interest dealer, because they were working on a manager manager's basis. And I said, oh, look, if it turns out that I've done my last fixed interest deal, then that would I'd be entirely comfortable with that. But that was actually a big thing to say, because I did really like getting on the phone and buying and selling bonds and doing all those sorts of things. So that was a really big move for me because it took me away from funds management into superannuation, which is I've spent most of my career in now. So I was at the RBF for four years. We went back to Sydney four years and years later, and I worked at non government school super for a little while. And then I went to rest, and I was at rest for about seven years.

    Camilla Love

    And then you became a generalist in the investment management side?

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah, that's exactly right. So the thing about working in superannuation funds, particularly 10, 15 years ago, was that you had to do a little bit of everything. And so it was actually quite steep learning curve for me, going from being a fixed interest funds manager to understanding equities and understanding direct property. And they had a mortgage portfolio as well down at the RVF, so they had an asset consultant. Actually learning how to work with an asset consultant. And that was really where I first started going to board meetings and dealing with directors and investment committees and things like that.

    Camilla Love

    And so that set you up for the role that you're currently in?

    Jo Townsend

    Yes.

    Camilla Love

    Or about to step away from? Yes. So then was it hard to make the transition? And I'm always interested in this from a personal point of view. So how to make the transition from being the functional specialist, as you were at rest, to become the CEO. How did you make that transition? Because we've talked a lot in this series about the importance of culture, the importance of authentic leadership, the importance of imposter syndrome, particularly when you're making those jumps. What did you think about when you were making that decision?

    Jo Townsend

    So one of the biggest challenges for anyone who does a technical job is to then take on a management leadership role because most people get promoted because they're technically strong in an area. But it is a completely different skill set to be able to be a successful manager. And what quite often happens is people will get promoted above their former colleagues. And so you go from being everyone's friend to actually having to be the boss. And that can be really, really challenging. And some people can make the transition. But the biggest problem sometimes is that organisations don't provide sufficient support to people to actually help them to make that transition. So I was very lucky, particularly at rest, because they put a lot of effort into teaching people how to be managers and supporting them. And I had an executive coach for a lot of the time that I was at rest, which with the wisdom of hindsight, was just one of the best things. Because I remember sitting down with this particular lady once, and I was talking to her about it. So something that wasn't going quite right and why it wasn't working. And I was saying, That person should just do this or that.

    Jo Townsend

    And she's going, Well, there's your problem because you've got to stop telling people what to do. And I'm going, But I know what needs to be done. And she's going, Yes, but you're a manager and you're not actually helping to support that person by just telling them what to do. You need to guide them to figure out what the options are and what the best recommendation is. And yes, you can say to people, Why don't you think about that rather than that? Because I don't think that will work. But you've actually, even though it's going to take longer, you've actually got to be able to develop people.

    Camilla Love

    And you got to let them do it. You got to let them think or swim.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah, no, that's right. And the other thing that is quite difficult for people at times is just to realise that everyone has a different way of doing things. And so I've been involved in a couple of different organisations with things like MICE Briggs, which is a great way of...

    Camilla Love

    What are you? Can I ask?

    Jo Townsend

    E STJ.

    Camilla Love

    I'm an ENTP.

    Jo Townsend

    Yes. So it's things like that. And when I was at rest, and I didn't realise this until after I'd done it, but I was hiring people at rest and they were all like me. Occasionally, I'd hire an ISTJ, but I was hiring people that were exactly like me. And I look at funds SA now and I've actually managed to hire an exec team, for example. There's great diversity. And so across the organization, we have conversations around, Why did you do it that way? I would have done this. It's like, Well, your way is not necessarily the only way. So one of the things that I did learn that was really valuable was just the ability to reflect. And sometimes you've just got to be brutally honest with yourself around the contribution you've made to an outcome that hasn't quite been ideal.

    Camilla Love

    And those reflection periods, that self reflection is early on in my career, I found that quite difficult to do. Now, because I'm much more comfortable in my own skin, it's much easier for me to do that whilst difficult to own up to half the emotions and things that you've done, much easier to reflect and say, Hey, I should have done it this way, or, Hey, maybe I need to go and apologise to this person because of this, or, shouldn't have said it that way, or whatever it is. And that's a really nice thing to understand, particularly if you've created a diverse executive team, the importance of not only... We talk about gender diversity here all the time, but neurodiversity, and diversity of culture, and diversity of background, and diversity of a multitude of different things, to actually get the best one out of everybody, but two for the organization.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah, that's right. I 100 % agree with that. So particularly when you're a CEO, everyone watches everything you do and say. And sometimes I just think, Oh, I wish I hadn't said that, or I wish I'd asked that question a different way. And there's absolutely nothing you can do about it in the moment. But what you can do is just think, Oh, if I had my time over, I would frame that question differently, or I wouldn't have had that reaction, or something like that.

    Camilla Love

    But keeping to your true self as well, it is difficult to have that balance right. And I don't think anyone gets it right, whether they're the secretary or the CEO. So what keeps you up at night as CEO? Or maybe it's now what keeps you up at night as person going maybe traveling or something like that.

    Camilla Love

    It'd be interesting to see how you feel about the transition to the new CEO from you as sitting in the seat still.

    Jo Townsend

    So it was a really difficult decision for me to make. I have never left a job without having another one to go to. I've never been made redundant. And so for me, and a lot of people say this to me, work is a big part of who I am. And so this is why I want to keep my options open as to whether or not I go back to work because I could fall in a hole. I could fall completely in a hole. I'm hoping that doesn't happen because I've got a very long list of things that I want to do. But it was a really, really difficult decision for me to make. And I had to personally get comfortable with the uncertainty of not having a job to go to, not having an income, and not having that part of my identity So in terms of...

    Camilla Love

    But is it still keeping you up at night?

    Jo Townsend

    No. No, I'm actually sleeping really well now that I've made the decision and it's been announced. I'm actually sleeping really well.

    Camilla Love

    So then, and maybe this is a difficult question to reflect on, but what is your legacy there?

    Jo Townsend

    So Funds. S Ailey is a very well resourced organization, and we've got a lot of people that are very smart and very experienced that are now established in Adelaide managing money for the government. I actually hope that Funds SA's reputation is very strong. It's a very well regarded organisation. We're seen as a client of choice for investment managers because one of the things that we are quite clear on is that we do believe it's possible to add value using active investment managers. There's a lot of superfunds that because of their size or whatever have gone down the passive reach, a big driver for that has been fees. So what we've actually seen with the consolidation in the industry is that we now have access to some active investment managers that we wouldn't have been able to put money with a couple of years ago. I think why I hope that my legacy is that, you know, Fronts SA is seen as a great place to work, smart people doing a good job. So if that was true, then I'd be very happy with that.

    Camilla Love

    Great. I think that's a wonderful legacy to set. When you reflect on your career, was there a sliding doors moment or a point where you could have chosen one or the other and you could have turned out differently? And if so, could you tell a little bit about what it might have been?

    Jo Townsend

    Probably not. I've never been someone who can tell you what I want to do in five years' time.

    Camilla Love

    Neither can I. I like my options open.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah. So we've moved around a bit. We've gone Hobart, Sydney, Hobart, Sydney, Adelaide. So that could be seen as one definition of taking a risk. And that's usually been driven by the roles that I've been offered. If I'd wanted to stay in Sydney, I could have done that. Would I have had the opportunity to be CEO if I'd stayed in Sydney? Maybe, maybe not. So I don't know about sliding doors, but just, I use the words, go with the flow again.

    Camilla Love

    Great. I love going with the flow. So one question I ask all my guests is about a piece of advice that they were given as part of their career from either a mentor or someone else that really resonated, whether it was the time that it was delivered or it was something that happened subsequent to utilising it. What's your reflection on that?

    Jo Townsend

    Probably one of the best pieces of advice is don't worry about the small things you can't control. I think about it often and I try to implement it, but I'm not always successful.

    Camilla Love

    It's practice makes perfect, Joe.

    Jo Townsend

    I do spend some time at an ordinary amount of time worrying about something that I shouldn't. But that's just how I am, because I worry about the impact that various things have on people and the organization's reputation. Of course.

    Camilla Love

    So sweating the small stuff.

    Jo Townsend

    Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    Don't sweat.

    Jo Townsend

    The small stuff. It's good advice, and I think about it often. Am I the best at implementing it? I suspect not. I still need to work on that.

    Camilla Love

    Okay, good. Good. Good. Okay, so towards the end of the episodes that we do, we do this quickfire round. Do you know anything about this?

    Jo Townsend

    Not really. And I'm incredibly bad at things like this. So if I just say pass, let's just move on.

    Camilla Love

    No. Okay. I don't think you're allowed to pass, though, Jo. So you need to say whatever is on your tongue, first thing that comes out. And it's funny because everyone's like one word answers or something like that, but actually it could go on for like five minutes. But we'll start at the top. So you ready? Okay, sound a bit apprehensive. If you could live in any country in the world, what would it be and why?

    Jo Townsend

    Great.

    Camilla Love

    And why?

    Jo Townsend

    Great food.

    Camilla Love

    Great. Fabulous. Let's think of the sun, beaches, food. I'll happily do with that. My favourite superhero is...

    Jo Townsend

    Wonder Woman.

    Camilla Love

    Why? Are you one of those?

    Jo Townsend

    No.

    Camilla Love

    Do you know lots of Wonder Women?

    Jo Townsend

    Well, I've got lots of fabulous girlfriends that I met in the finance industry, and they're all Wonder Women.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. Good shout out for all those, the cheer squad out there. My first investment was...

    Jo Townsend

    I'm not sure it's an investment, but it was an investment in my freedom. And it's a 1980s green hatchback Gemini.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, my gosh. So Gemini s were the car that everyone learned on. And they were like, hand me down, like, five times, six times by the time I got to get my Ls. All my friends had one, but I did not. But it was green, you said?

    Jo Townsend

    Yes.

    Camilla Love

    It was fabulous. Couldn't miss it?

    Jo Townsend

    No.

    Camilla Love

    And where did the freedom take you?

    Jo Townsend

    So I used to live in country Tas mania, and I used to work, one of my really early jobs was working in a hardware store, in the office of a hardware store. And so public transport didn't really exist those days, so it just meant I could drive and do things and got a mobile.

    Camilla Love

    Whenever you want, however you want. Great. At the moment, I have FOMO for what?

    Jo Townsend

    I actually don't think that I'm missing out on anything. Well, I don't have FOMO. If I want to go do something, I just.

    Camilla Love

    Go do it. Fabulous. Love that attitude. Okay, next question. If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

    Jo Townsend

    Can I just say my fabulous girlfriends? Because I love them all so.

    Camilla Love

    Much and we have a great time. Totally, absolutely. Why have anyone famous when you're going to have my famous.

    Jo Townsend

    Friends instead? You didn't use the word famous. I think you just.

    Camilla Love

    Said live or dead. Absolutely. Does not have to be. Particularly if you don't see them often enough. A lot.

    Jo Townsend

    Of them are in Sydney. One of them is here in Adelaide, which is fantastic. But yeah, most of them are in Sydney.

    Camilla Love

    So watch out a Saturday night near you. Next question, my favourite book is?

    Jo Townsend

    I don't know that I've got a favourite book, but I'm reading a great one at the moment, which is called Never Split the Difference. And it's written by an FBI negotiator. So there's lots of really interesting tips there about how to manage your relationships at home and at work.

    Camilla Love

    So I'm enjoying that. Never Split the Difference. And I'm sure there's some cracking stories.

    Jo Townsend

    Oh, there is. Yeah, I highly recommend it to everyone.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. I might have to go and download that as an audiobook. How would your friends describe you?

    Jo Townsend

    Black and white.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, great. You are what you are and that is it. Yes. Fabulous. The one piece of advice I'd tell my 20 year old self is?

    Jo Townsend

    Don't sweat the small stuff. Good.

    Camilla Love

    And the final question is, describe in three words why career in finance is fabulous.

    Jo Townsend

    So many opportunities.

    Camilla Love

    That's.

    Jo Townsend

    Great. Because there are so many opportunities and you just have to go with the flow.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. Well, Jo, that was fabulous. I reckon I could have picked your brain on a whole number of different things. But it was great to hear your beginnings of moving around doing lots of different things, having the variety in your roles, taking risks, your green Gemini, the legacy and the growth that you've had at Funds SA. And whilst we haven't known each other for a long time, I've always watched you for the last... I've been in the industry for 20 years and you've always had a wonderful reputation. So it's been a real pleasure of mine to interview you today and I look forward to seeing your next journey.

    Jo Townsend

    Thank you very much, Kamilla. I've really enjoyed talking to you, so thank you.

    Camilla Love

    The information that is in this podcast, we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance would be a fabulous career for you.

S4 Ep3 Meet Suzie Riddell, CEO of Social Ventures Australia

Introducing Suzie Riddell, CEO of Social Ventures Australia. Get inspired by Suzie's unplanned and exciting career path that led her to achieve ikigai, and how volunteering to teach English in Guatemala wasn’t all it’s cracked up to be.

  • The following is a transcript created using AI technology so please forgive any grammatical imperfections.

    [00:00:00.180] - Suzie Riddell

    Ikigai is the intersection of four things. What do you love doing? What are you good at? What can you get paid for? And what does the world need? And when you find all four of those things, then that's your ikigai.

    [00:00:19.200] - Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of F3 Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people all with one thing in common, they work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories. We'll be open and honest and will inspire you.

    [00:00:54.500] - Suzie Riddell

    So let's go.

    [00:00:58.280] - Camilla Love

    We are just going to dive right into today's episode as this guest is an amazing talent, a firecracker, and an all round beautiful person. She's a CEO of a for purpose investment organization who is touching so many lives for the better. It is our guest's goal to use finance to transform education, employment, and housing for all Australians, particularly for those who are less well off than probably the two of us and our listeners today. In short, she's changing the lives of so many people she doesn't even know and building a better world. Am I overselling it? Absolutely not. And you'll work this out very soon when you get to meet her. So welcome to Shares Not Shoe, Susan Riddell.

    [00:01:46.280] - Suzie Riddell

    Thank you very much, Camilla, for having me. It's a pleasure to.

    [00:01:49.070] - Camilla Love

    Be here. I'm so excited about telling your story and I followed it for a long time. Not that you even know. But we won't tell anyone, but we met when we were much younger than we are now. But I have followed you even when you are on the AFR front cover and all this stuff, which I'm really excited to delve into a little bit more. So tell me a little bit about what you do and why you do it.

    [00:02:21.510] - Suzie Riddell

    Thanks. Social Ventures Australia is the organization that I run and it is a for purpose organization. We're a not for profit and we have a vision of an Australia where all people and communities thrive. I like to think you can collect lots of people underneath that vision. So what does that mean? An Australia that has a really thriving and dynamic ecosystem. It's a reconciled Australia. Everyone has a place to call home. Young children get a really great start in life. They're flourishing. Young people get access to high quality education. Everyone has access to meaningful work. Everyone can participate in society and have their rights upheld. So in short, everyone's joined in in a really inclusive, thriving society. So the way that our not for profit organization works is in partnership with others. So we're not a typical not for profit that does service delivery and works directly with people and communities. Instead, we are an intermediary and we work in partnership with other for purpose organizations, with governments, with businesses and with philanthropists because we think it takes village to drive towards a better Australia. The reason that we work with those organizations and different types of organizations together is because at the moment, Australia is not the picture that I just painted.

    [00:03:47.670] - Suzie Riddell

    One in four people experience disadvantage in Australia in the form of poverty, social exclusion, or deprivation, or sometimes all of those. And it's simply not good enough. We think we can do better. We think we should do better. And that means working towards changing policies that impact all of our lives. Very importantly, and I'm sure we'll dig into this, changing how the funding flows so that money is attached to outcomes that matter and evidence about what actually works and changing practice at the front line. And so the way that we partner up with those organisations is that we have an impact investing team, and I'll talk a little bit more about that. We have a consulting team that does advisory work, and then we use philanthropy to run medium to long term demonstration projects with our partners to see if we can get better outcomes, particularly in early childhood, in education, school age education, and in employment. And we're just over 20 years old. We have about 110 people around the country.

    [00:04:52.400] - Camilla Love

    It is amazing. And really, the purpose is just so meaningful. And getting up and going to work every day, some people dread it. But I could imagine you'd just be jumping out of bed because of all the people that you will impact. I mean, do you think you'll ever finish the job that you have set out to do?

    [00:05:15.340] - Suzie Riddell

    I'd like to think we'll make some progress, but no. No, I don't think it'll ever be finished, that's for sure. But you're honest about purpose and motivation. I really love the Japanese concept of I Kigai. I don't know if you've heard of that. An I Kigai is the intersection of four things. What do you love doing? What are you good at? What can you get paid for? And what does the world need? And when you find all four of those things, then that's your I Kigai. And what's kept me at SVA for 12 years and why I absolutely love my job is I really feel like I found my I Kigai in this role. I love it. I'm pretty good at it. I can get paid for it and earn a good living. And I really think the world needs this. So that's what I hope lots of people can find in their careers and in their lives.

    [00:06:06.350] - Camilla Love

    That is a goal for everybody to reach and not everyone does, right? So it's a big, hairy goal. So tell me a little bit about you yourself. So how did you start your personal life? What does what does Suzy look like outside of being a CEO?

    [00:06:25.850] - Suzie Riddell

    Sure. It wasn't planned. And I think people who have interesting careers are rarely people who have planned their pathway. I grew up in Sydney. I studied accounting at university. So I went to University of Technology, Sydney, and I had one of those great Coop scholarships where you worked full-time for half a year in your first year and your third year. So I was fortunate enough to try my hand at what accounting might be like.

    [00:06:57.280] - Camilla Love

    You do this? And you as an accountant, though.

    [00:06:59.500] - Suzie Riddell

    Well, I didn't go very far in the accounting world, to be honest. Don't tell.

    [00:07:04.080] - Camilla Love

    Anyone, okay?

    [00:07:05.900] - Suzie Riddell

    So I worked in the accounting teams at AB and Ambro Bank, which is now Royal Bank of Scotland, and in my third year at Coca Cola Haltel. And I really liked studying business and accounting. I found that part interesting. It probably wasn't really for me when I was out there in the workplace. And I'm not sure it's fair to judge the entire profession based on being a university student as an intern. And it was a really good set of fundamentals for me to understand the numbers, to have confidence in financial literacy, and to see how businesses generally actually ran behind the scenes. I did an accounting honours degree because I liked uni, not because I particularly liked accounting. And I did a lot of other fun things at university. I did a lot of sport and travel and debating and various different things that were great. I went on exchange to Canada and had a great time. When I finished my honours degree and had handed in my thesis and I was done, I had been to precisely zero job interviews and my parents thought that that was a bit of a problem. Now that you're not a student anymore, you probably need to get a real job.

    [00:08:19.680] - Camilla Love

    And how are you going to practice?

    [00:08:21.410] - Suzie Riddell

    Yeah, exactly. This was around Christmas time, just before Christmas, and I went and applied for jobs in management consulting for the very good reason that other smart people who didn't know what they wanted to do in their lives were doing it. I didn't know what it was at all. I didn't appreciate it. It was hard to get into. I just sent them my CV and a couple of letter randomly and said, Can I come and interview to join your organisations? And we did a few interviews and I got a job offer for Bain & Company.

    [00:08:55.170] - Camilla Love

    Which I didn't absolutely sort after.

    [00:08:57.740] - Suzie Riddell

    Well, I didn't know that. I didn't know that. I found that out later. I was like, Oh, yeah.

    [00:09:03.780] - Camilla Love

    I like it. I can do this, whatever.

    [00:09:08.220] - Suzie Riddell

    I met great people and they sounded like they did interesting stuff in lots of different industries. But they wanted me to join in January. I said, Oh, I'd really actually prefer to take a whole year off and join the following January, which at the time they were happy to accommodate, which was very lucky for me. They gave me a sign on bonus, which was a pre GFC thing. And I went and took a year off. I thought instead of only backpacking and partying, which I had done enough of, I would also do something that I thought would be good for the world. And I worked as a volunteer English teacher in a girl's primary school in Guatemala for a few months. Yeah, it was all based on the belief that education is what it takes to break the cycle of disadvantage. And I thought that I would be helping.

    [00:09:59.790] - Camilla Love

    And I knew before. How did you get those values and philosophies? Because not everyone goes, Yeah, I'm just going to wake up in the morning and go to Guatemala and teach girls English just because we can break the cycle of poverty. Is that an influencer thing from your parents? Is it innate? How did you find that value? Because you're also quite young to have found that value at that point in time, right?

    [00:10:26.740] - Suzie Riddell

    Yeah, that's a great question. Some of it is from my parents, for sure. My parents were both born in South Africa and they left independently because they didn't agree with Apartheid when they were young adults and both met here in Australia. So they arrived in Australia and met here and decided to get married and have me and my brother here in Sydney. And I think that fundamental disagreement with a policy that last ed for an incredibly long time in South Africa that was based on racism and prejudice probably did lead to family discussions and inherent family values that were about family and social justice. Not sure we use that language, but we certainly had an appreciation that we were incredibly fortunate and that not everybody is as fortunate. And that might not be because of choices they make. It might be because of systems that exist where they have no control over outcomes in their own lives. So I think that was a big influence. And I think when I explored, just as a backpacker, some parts of Australia that I could afford to spend long amounts of time in, which means countries where there's quite a lot of poverty, the juxtaposition of wealth and poverty, and particularly for girls and women it's just really obvious to me.

    [00:12:01.970] - Suzie Riddell

    I think you can go to some of those places in Southeast Asia or in South America or in Africa and parts of Eastern Europe and just have a great time and think, gee, my Australian dollar goes really far here. But I found it quite unsettling. And I think that really struck a chord for me.

    [00:12:21.420] - Camilla Love

    I went to Nepal as a young, as a 16 year old, and we did a bit of tracking around there and all that stuff. And it was actually with school. And that was probably the most shocking thing that as a young, near adult, to experience. Because it was hard to see the girls not going to school because the family couldn't afford it, and they would allocate the money to the boys, whatever it was. Or even if the school was 12 kilometres away and they just couldn't get there, it's devastating. It's devastating to see.

    [00:13:02.260] - Suzie Riddell

    Absolutely heartbreaking. So I thought I was doing the right thing by going to the coal face and volunteering my time. And the really sad part, and this was very formative for me is that I did not have a positive impact in Guatemala with those little girls.

    [00:13:20.550] - Camilla Love

    Why do you say that?

    [00:13:22.310] - Suzie Riddell

    I wasn't a very good English teacher. I had an accounting degree.

    [00:13:27.840] - Camilla Love

    Maths, on the other hand, no problem.

    [00:13:29.440] - Suzie Riddell

    Yeah, that s right. So I wasn't very good at it. But actually, there were more systemic factors. So high school is not compulsory in Guatemala. And so most of those kids, especially because they were girls, a lot of them living in poverty, were not going to go to high school. So what they really needed was Spanish literacy, numeracy, life skills, because they're about to become adults at a 12 or 13. I was not part of a coordinated system where if you had been exposed to English language lessons throughout primary school in a skilled way and you had functional English, that would help you with getting a job in the tourism industry. But I was like, colours of the rainbow, days of the week, made a lot of dumb mistakes, like trying to teach them about time when no one had a watch and there wasn't even a fork in the classroom and about weather in a place where the weather's the same every day near the equator. The organization I volunteered with was corrupt. I had to pay to volunteer. I had to make a contribution and I was supposed to go to the community and I didn't.

    [00:14:31.830] - Suzie Riddell

    And there was just really no evidence that me doing what I was doing would actually change the trajectory of their lives. I mean, I hoped it would, but I'm pretty sure it was probably harmful. But really stark contrast was the young children who were sitting in front of me for an hour every day in their various different classes, and my family and friends back home who thought I was such a good person for volunteering my time and wasn't I doing good in the world?

    [00:14:59.070] - Camilla Love

    How did that even sit with you. Then fast forward to today with what you're doing with SVA, right? Surely, in hindsight, obviously, you think it was a negative impact. A re you repaying that impact through SVA in some unusual, I don't know, self effacing way? Is that what it's doing? Or did you just go, Holy moly, and just go, Okay, I've got to find a different way of applying my skill set?

    [00:15:36.720] - Suzie Riddell

    It definitely felt that way. I've got skills that I am not using, and I just have to find a completely different way of making a difference in the world. I do think SVA is somewhat the antidote. I did my diligence when I started at Social Ventures Australia 12 years ago. They started with the evidence. What do we already understand about what works? They were highly collaborative, no solo endeavors. Everything is in partnership. They worked really hard to keep people at the centre of the work. What matters to them? What does good look like? How do they get involved in the design, the delivery, the evaluation of the work, and most importantly, had a track record of doing some pretty tremendous things that I thought had a real story to tell about impact at scale that was really attractive to me. But at the time, I just found it really heartbreaking. It was demotivating, and I couldn't communicate very well either. So I was living with a host family trying to learn Spanish at the same time. And I can tell you what, when you haven't really mastered the past tense, you are not yourself in expressing deep philosophical challenges that you have with how you're living your life and existential dilemma s.

    [00:16:59.480] - Suzie Riddell

    And I feel like I'm sure most people who have been in a foreign culture and specifically a foreign language can relate to that feeling of, I don't really feel like me. I feel like I'm this one dimensional version of myself plugged into a system that's corrupt and ineffective. Actually, this system is designed to give me a good time not to help these kids. It's volunteerism. It's not international development and significant community building. And that really sat with me for a long time. And I try and be a bit kind to my former self. I was young as you just trying to do the good thing. And it was a worse than just going to Greece and partying and getting drunk. I don't know. I hope not.

    [00:17:48.830] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, I understand. It's a really interesting dilemma, right, too, because you do think you are doing good. And a lot of people still do those just that volunteerism type of things. So what would you recommend? Obviously, the due diligence piece is a big one.

    [00:18:09.420] - Suzie Riddell

    Definitely the due diligence. I guess I'm a really big believer that people should use the skills and talents and gifts that they have and get great training where great training is on offer so that you can contribute in a meaningful way. That's what I would recommend. Studying things that you're interested in, going and getting started in your career in places where there's going to be excellent learning and development, whether it's on the job or technical training is a fantastic place to start. And for those who are further on in their career, use your skills. You've already built all this knowledge and networks and you've got scar tissue that is really relevant. How can you use those to contribute to making the world a better place, rather than seeing it as something that you need to go back to the beginning and just be a generalist volunteer, start again.

    [00:19:05.660] - Camilla Love

    I love your comment about scar tissue. We talk about it, but obviously a lot in the podcast on mistakes that we've done in our career or turning points or lessons learned. Do you want to tell to us about one thing that sticks out that either changed your trajectory or changed your thinking? Obviously, we've already talked about one, but anything in ide, either working at Bain or inside social ventures, truly?

    [00:19:37.370] - Suzie Riddell

    Sure. I'll give you an example. When I was leading our education team, actually, I should probably say I started in our consulting team, I then led our education work, then began a new part of our organization focused on policy and advocacy, and I became the CEO about four and a half years ago. So I've had lots of different roles in the organization. When I was leading our education team, we had developed an initiative that we were super excited about working with schools that were in low socioeconomic communities that were also really high performing. So these are the positive deviants, the ones that are getting it right. And despite tough circumstances, getting really great outcomes for young people. And we'd identified a bunch of schools with the help of a lot of experts in our team who are led by this brilliant former school principal and education expert called Sue Crige. And we wanted to work in New South Wales and in Victoria and in Queensland. And we wanted to partner with the Department of Education with the government. And I was really naive about what it takes to partner with government because I had never had significant interaction through a social policy or social program lens with government.

    [00:20:59.710] - Suzie Riddell

    And I found myself on a plane to Brisbane with my then CEO, Michael Trail, to go and meet with someone very important in the Queensland government. And we thought we were going in to shake hands and tell each other how great each other were and to come out with some agreement for us to work with a handful of schools in Queensland. And instead, we got, not quite shouted at, but close and told, No, you can't work with schools in Queensland. You've gone about this in the complete wrong way. This isn't aligned with our agenda and our policy reforms that we are doing and what we want our schools to be focused on. And at the time, I was pretty angry and also really upset, probably went into a bit of a shame spiral about what I'd done wrong to get us to that point. And it certainly wasn't just me, it was a team thing. But I look back now and think, I did not take advantage of what I had many times, which was asking people who had real experience and insight and knowledge for help and support. And I really should have. We should have gone and talked to people who deeply understood how to partner with governments to get their advice about how to frame it, who to approach, how to think about the difference between the politicians and the bureaucracy, how to talk about different horizons based on when there were elections and a whole bunch of different things.

    [00:22:34.250] - Suzie Riddell

    And that was a really big turning point for me.

    [00:22:37.910] - Camilla Love

    What was that all about? Was that ego in that I can do it all? I don't know. You mentioned being naive about it, but there's a whole bunch of other stuff that comes into that thought process.

    [00:22:58.270] - Suzie Riddell

    For sure. It wasn't ego because I didn't then and I still don't think I can do it all. I spend probably more time in the self doubt, how did I get myself into this job where they're going to find me out face. My prehistoric syndrome. Yes. So it definitely wasn't that.

    [00:23:13.820] - Camilla Love

    Was it hard to... I mean, why was it hard to ask other people for help? Lots of people have this problem, which is why I'm asking.

    [00:23:20.760] - Suzie Riddell

    It wasn't that it was hard. It was probably more of a blind spot thing. It didn't really occur to me or to the people I was working really closely with because we just thought that the thing that we were doing was so obviously great, actually. Obviously, when we tell you that we're bringing some philanthropists to the table and some great academics and some brilliant not for profit leaders and some incredible school principals, and we're going to convene them in this brilliant collaborative networking methodology. But what's not to love? So I think it didn't occur to me that it was not going to be met with a warm embrace. So it felt like whittle ash actually. It wasn't that I went, Oh, this is going to be a bit hard, but don't worry, I'll just wing it. If I thought it was going to be like that, I absolutely would have gone and asked for help, but I didn't think it was going to be like that.

    [00:24:16.250] - Camilla Love

    And how did your CEO react to it?

    [00:24:18.850] - Suzie Riddell

    Well, I think he was pretty upset and angry as well at the whole situation and probably had a little bit of the same blind spot that I had about not appreciating that governments have different roles and different perspectives and a different set of information than we do. So I think that why it happened is that we collectively had the same group bank, the same set of blind spots. Exactly.

    [00:24:48.480] - Camilla Love

    So then as you as CEO now having that seat, had you had yourself in your situation, upset set, sad about what's going on, big bruise to the emotional component of you, and also coming back into the imposter syndrome piece, doubling down on that, how would you support your former self in going through all that? Because everyone makes mistakes, right?

    [00:25:20.640] - Suzie Riddell

    Everyone makes mistakes. I make lots of mistakes still. One of the things my coach helped me with when I was the when I was first getting started as the CEO is helping me think about how I speak with my young children. They're now five and seven. They were one and three when I started as the CEO. The thing that worked best for me was just the reminder that being a beginner is hard. I was a beginner and I made a mistake. And that's what beginners often do. It's to be expected a lot of the time.

    [00:25:58.240] - Camilla Love

    So at work, do you create a culture of successful failure? Do you the supportive nature of it? How does it manifest at work?

    [00:26:11.040] - Suzie Riddell

    We certainly try very hard to. Something that I wish we could do more of is sharing stories more publicly that belong to our partners and us. Inside SVIE, we try to be clear eyed about what happened and what we contributed to it, what other people contributed to it, and what just was a set of circumstances that were completely outside of our control and move on. Where do we go from here? It's completely expected that when we are trying to do things that are innovative and that require quite bold, courageous attitudes, that we're going to make mistakes. If it was just a repeatable process of things that were already well understood, no one at SVA would be interested in that. That's not what we do. So yes, we try and do that. I think internally, I try and do that with my team. We do get caught sometimes with how do we tell the stories more openly.

    [00:27:17.110] - Camilla Love

    Without it having career limiting factors, that stuff. Yes, career limiting factors. Perceived career limiting factors.

    [00:27:27.950] - Suzie Riddell

    I'd say also reputational things for a bunch of different kinds of organisations. People have different appetites to share stories about what happened, and that's fine and appropriate, depending on what organisation you are.

    [00:27:44.040] - Camilla Love

    So that's for flip tack a little bit and talk about the financial and investment aspects of your business. Do you want to give us a bit of an overview and then I'll delve into a few more questions?

    [00:27:56.680] - Suzie Riddell

    Absolutely. It all started about 12 years ago when SVA's CEO, Michael Trail, led a consortium of not for profits to buy the failing childcare business ABC Learning. Michael's background was in private equity at MacQuarrie Bank, and he worked closely with three other CEOs of not for profit organisations. Because he had, and a couple of people he knew really well, spotted this opportunity to turn the largest childcare provider into a social purpose organisation and change the landscape.

    [00:28:38.670] - Camilla Love

    For.

    [00:28:39.230] - Suzie Riddell

    Young children and families across the country by doing that. And what it talk was a pretty mammoth effort at a very fast pace to put together a bid to the liquidators, administrators, can't remember which, that required only debt because it was going to be a not for profit entity. So you wasn't able to have equity, you could only have debt. And so there was some senior debt from a bank, from the National Australia Bank. There was a government loan, which was pretty hard to pull off because governments used to guarantee money, but not necessarily up to lending money in this space. A bunch of private investors who were high net worth individuals and philanthropic foundations, mostly who came in with some subordinated debt and then deeply subordinated debt that was very risky for the not the profits themselves. Absolutely. And they were successful in putting forward the most competitive bid and then turning ABC learning into what is now good start, early learning. Good Start has been a tremendous success story. They run about 15 % of early learning centres across the country, which is 700 centres. They support 50,000 families. The quality of that early learning has just risen in this beautiful curve ever since they turned it into a not for profit under the incredible leadership of their CEO, Julia Davidson.

    [00:30:12.060] - Suzie Riddell

    And after that transaction, people came to Michael and to SCA and said, What next? That was pretty incredible. And what next has translated into a few different things. Social impact bonds. So SVA runs a social impact bond practice. And social impact bonds are quite unique financial instruments where we are essentially running an experiment on a program to deliver better social outcomes, where we have a really, really rigorous set of measures understanding what typically happens in this population or cohort, and then what is going to happen in this specific program. Governments stand to save a lot of money by not having to pay for things that cost money and are also not great for people like significant justice costs or hospitalisation costs, et cetera. And there's a not for profit who's going to run the program. And there's quite a bit of risk in that the government is going to pay on an outcomes basis. If you get better outcomes, you'll get a higher payment. And to be able to fund all of that, not for profits typically don't have very large balance sheets and therefore aren't able to take a whole lot of financial risk.

    [00:31:34.260] - Suzie Riddell

    So private investors invest in the bond and they get paid a coupon that is attached to the set of outcomes that are achieved. And an example of that is the very first bond in Australia, the New P in Social Benefit Bond in New South Wales, which focused on families who had their young children removed from their care and put into out of home care. Out of home care on average, is not great for children and for families in terms of their social outcomes, emotional wellbeing, etc. It also costs governments a lot of money because you have to pay for people to be in out of home care. So it's double benefit of better outcomes for families and children and benefit to the state not having to pay. And this program called NEAPN, which was run by Uniting, was about building the capability and capacity parents to have great parenting skills so that their children could be safely reunited with them. And then the payment is based on what proportion of children are reunited compared to what proportion would normally be reunited in the general course of affairs. And it was incredibly successful. Around 200 children were safely restored to their families over the period of, I think it's about seven years.

    [00:32:51.020] - Suzie Riddell

    And the investors got the highest rate of return that had been agreed upfront. And since then, we've run a number of social impact bonds and have a portfolio of them across the country. We're about to launch our next one, which is focused on people who are exiting prison in Victoria and supporting them with wrap around services and housing with a not for profit called VACRO. So that's been a really exciting area to lead in and requires really specialist skills. So that work's been led by an incredible colleague of mine, Elyse Sainte, who was an actuary. She worked in wealth management. So she's extremely competent with the numbers and the scenarios and very multi lingual in that she's great at collaborating with governments, treasury and finance departments, as well as line agencies. She's raising the capital, her and her team, from investors and then managing that. So we have a financial services license and then working really closely with not for profits and building their trust and being able to really refine the design of the program and understand outcomes and measurement, et cetera. So social impact bonds, we're going to continue to do because we think they're exciting experiments.

    [00:34:06.890] - Suzie Riddell

    And they're not really about making money for investors. They're really about trying to figure out does this work well for the people and communities?

    [00:34:13.470] - Camilla Love

    Have you expanded outside the philanthropy space? Are you still getting the funding mainly from individuals? Or is it coming more from these days, the super funds looking at it? Are there other wealth managers who are looking at it? Who are who are looking for a return, but they're looking for a return in multifaceted way?

    [00:34:39.520] - Suzie Riddell

    Most of the investors are high net worth individuals and philanthropic foundations. And we do have some super funds who've invested, and a few re institutional investors. The challenge for those type of investors is the size. The whole bond is usually only $7, 8, 9 million. And that if you can have only up to 20 % of that, it's often not worth their while. So we are in general challenged in the social impact investing market with ticket size for institutional investors.

    [00:35:12.270] - Camilla Love

    Do you think you could get away with a $500 million bond? Or is it really just going to have only small bond issuance over time just because of the specific nature of the project?

    [00:35:24.290] - Suzie Riddell

    Because they're so specific and they work with really targeted cohorts and they're going to stay small. The opportunity for large scale is really to translate the lessons from what we learn from these programs into how government procure services in general. So the bond for out of home care is small. New South Wales spends 480 million dollars a year on out of home care. You don't need a bond at that stage, but you do need to have really good data and measurement and clarity around what outcomes you're aiming for in order to do more outcomes based p ritual amount where it's possible and appropriate. That's why we are interested in is shifting the dial on some of that government expenditure. The areas that are more scalable and definitely institutions are looking at these are in the funds management space. So not bonds, but managing funds on behalf of investors. We've run a couple of different funds since we started doing this work just over a decade ago. One of those funds is on behalf of an institutional investor and is a single mandate. And the way that they make sure that they're still upholding their fiduciary responsibility to members is that they have a veto over every single investment.

    [00:36:38.960] - Suzie Riddell

    They're really involved in that fund. And then the other fund is smaller and is more of a demonstration scale. And they can invest equity and debt. And that's a range of operating organisations that are supporting people who are excluded from the workforce into meaningful employment, quite a number of housing initiatives, affordable housing, dementia housing, etc. And sometimes those funds invest with appropriate separations of authority into the social impact bonds as well. So we have two direct funds and then we have one where we have a joint venture with an asset manager called Federation. And that joint venture has a fund called synergists, and we invest in specialist disability accommodation. And that is a really exciting area for SVA because we deeply believe that Australia is going to be a better place when people with disabilities are able to thrive. And that includes having a safe, appropriate, and affordable place to call home. A small number of people who are participants in the National Disability Insurance Scheme need really specialist housing. And there's a payment under that scheme that can go to them that they can use for rental payments under specialist disability accommodation. And we have been partnering up with specialist developers and providing funding so that we can build brand new houses and apartments for people who have these special needs and are eligible for specialist disability accommodation.

    [00:38:13.410] - Suzie Riddell

    So that is an area specialist disability accommodation, which is going to grow enormously. It's expected that that market in 10 years' time will be about $10 billion. And affordable housing, absolutely on the radar of every government in Australia. Housing crisis. They're looking for more opportunities to have the policy settings in a way where private capital can be part of the solution in creating new stock that's really appropriate for people in the right places. And SVA is really interested in how do you measure the impact for the people who are living in these houses? So that it's not just about the financial return, it's also about the measurable social impact for the tenants or the homeowners, depending on how this is arranged.

    [00:38:59.150] - Camilla Love

    The social social and affordable housing is an interesting one because there are a lot of fund managers also looking in this space, right? But they have to partner. They absolutely have to partner because it is not necessarily their specialty. Their specialty is on the investment side, but actually the procurement and the management of the project and also the government relations. There's money to be made in there. So whilst there is the social outcome, which is what we all want, there is a return to be had in that segment as well, which I think is really exciting to see because it's such a burgeoning... It's just on the precip of of, as you mentioned, booming in that segment. I'm excited.

    [00:39:50.640] - Suzie Riddell

    You're absolutely right. And that's the remit of the government's social impact investing task force. And they have sent in their recommendations, actually, to the previous coalition government. It was reignited by the Albanese government, and they've done a bit of a refinement on their recommendations. And Jim Chauvin, as the Treasurer, has been writing about the role that private capital can play in addressing really challenging issues across the country in partnership with governments. And I think that's really exciting because we're never going to really make a meaningful difference in this country with just philanthropy. We absolutely need investment capital to be pointing towards outcomes that matter based on the evidence of what we actually know works and for governments to play their role in setting the agenda of what matters and in providing stability and certainty, particularly around pricing and return mechanisms so that investors can invest with confidence in what are, especially in housing, very long term assets.

    [00:40:59.200] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, absolutely. So then that puts Social Ventures Australia right in the centre of being able to coordinate all of this next generation of impact. Does that keep you up at night thinking about, I don't know, the footprint that you could have and the responsibility that you might have?

    [00:41:25.060] - Suzie Riddell

    I have spent a lot of time thinking about this.

    [00:41:28.780] - Camilla Love

    I'm sure. I'd be up at two o'clock in the morning on that one.

    [00:41:32.080] - Suzie Riddell

    Yeah, this and a few other things do keep me awake at night. Although, again, my coach has been helpful in teaching me some techniques to reduce the ruminating in the middle of the night and set good boundaries about when you're allowed to ponder.

    [00:41:47.520] - Camilla Love

    It gets the best of us.

    [00:41:49.310] - Suzie Riddell

    What I actually really am focused on is what can our small organization do that others can't? And how do we keep evolving and pushing the next frontier? So I'm I'm thrilled that fund managers and institutions and other players in the finance industry are looking at this really seriously. Come on in. Welcome all of you and all of your billions or trillions. Brilliant. And make.

    [00:42:16.390] - Camilla Love

    The pie big, right?

    [00:42:17.830] - Suzie Riddell

    Make the pie big. And there was an idea when impact investing and social impact investing or social finance, depending on how it was called, first began, that it would become its own asset class. And it was going to be a bit like private equity. That wasn't really a thing in the 80s and then it became a thing and now everyone has an allocation, small allocation to that. I think it's turned out quite differently, which is that it's not really an asset class. It's more a mindset and that we need to be able to deeply understand the impact of all the different investments across all different kinds of asset classes. And that's way better. It's harder, it's way better. But I am really pushing myself and our team and many of our stakeholders to think, well, where's the the next frontier? What does Australia not yet have that it needs to have in order to think about how returnable capital can play a role in addressing some of our most challenging problems? And we are going to be continuing to start with the evidence of what we already know works here and internationally to be really collaborative with different kinds of partners.

    [00:43:22.070] - Suzie Riddell

    You said it before that we're well placed because we are trusted partners of the not for profit sector who are often playing a role here. We know how to, I understand now, and not just me, we know how to work with governments.

    [00:43:37.600] - Camilla Love

    We learned our lesson.

    [00:43:38.920] - Suzie Riddell

    Back then. Yeah, well, we're better. Maybe we're not. We're not top of the class yet. I think we can be taken seriously in a corporate boardroom, and we do have philanthropists who are prepared to come and take risks with us. And that's unusual, and that's not what a typical fund manager would be able to do. So how do we use our special multi lingual skills and special positioning to be able to do things that only we can do and remain responsive and agile as well as a pretty small organization? We don't want to just grow our funds under management and become a big fund manager. We're not interested in that. We want to do the innovative stuff that hopefully will become a bit more commonplace in another decade.

    [00:44:22.450] - Camilla Love

    Great. Pushing the boundaries. I love that. That's something close to my heart. So we're going to ask this question of all my guests, so we're going to change tack again. You know I could probably pick your brain for a 1,000 years in this sector. So about advice, and you've mentioned your coach a few times. So do you want to do a shout out while you're...

    [00:44:48.160] - Suzie Riddell

    Well, yes. Elyse Cernick, she runs an organization called Leadership Space. She specializes with her team in coaching people in the for purpose sector, and she's a super star.

    [00:45:00.650] - Camilla Love

    Great. Good on you, Elyse. There you go. So what's the most valuable advice you've ever been given? And it could have been years ago versus yesterday. And the context and why it resonated with you so much.

    [00:45:16.480] - Suzie Riddell

    One of the things I found hardest in learning how to manage people is navigating legal and HR, people and culture, policy, procedure, what's the right thing to do, what am I allowed to do? I got advice from a mentor when I was first in one of those roles that the best thing to do is act like a human being and show kindness and compassion and just be your authentic self and try and do the right thing based on what you think the right human thing is to do, and the rest will follow. And if sometimes that means you made a bit of a mistake and you didn't do things in quite the right order, or you didn't use quite the right language, that's okay, you can clean that up. But trying to do things from the other direction, I'll just follow the rules and the policies and the procedures and act like a robot will get you into much more hot water and it will feel horrible as well. I think about that often. Just being a human being and try and do it in an authentic way and clean up the minor errors along the way, rather than trying to conform to policies and procedures.

    [00:46:25.590] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, I think that's a great piece of advice because we've all been there. We've all gone, Okay, what's the box to tick? Or what's the boundary that I need to work within? Rather than actually realise that the people that you are impacting and talking with are just people like you. They put a shirt on every morning and pull their pants on and put their socks up and they have families and all that stuff. And they are people with feelings. And it's important to bring your feelings, no matter how awkward or uncomfortable it is, to that meeting and room.

    [00:47:08.200] - Suzie Riddell

    Camilla, that's so right. And I think popular culture, representations and leadership are still.

    [00:47:15.850] - Camilla Love

    Really.

    [00:47:16.740] - Suzie Riddell

    Problematic in that I've had this idea that at some point I'd get my shit together and I'd really know what I was doing and I could be hard and authoritative. And I don't want to be like that. And I don't think that's what's needed. And I think it's harmful stereotypes for all of us. I don't think it's only harmful for women to see how those men represented in TV and movies, et cetera. But that's what I was holding in my subconscious about what leadership needed to look like. And it's been liberating to realise that that's not what leadership is. And to have made connections and form relationships with so many leaders, women and men, who don't behave like that. So then I can be reassured that there is a better way.

    [00:48:03.000] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, absolutely. I personally have been working on vulnerability in leadership, and that comes as a factor of authenticity. I'm quite an emotional person, so being vulnerable is difficult because you're actually putting your heart on your sleeve and saying, Hey, this is who I am and I feel bad that I have to make this decision, or h, I put you in a spot, but let's work this through together and we'll be better off. So it's tough.

    [00:48:38.390] - Suzie Riddell

    Well said. It is tough.

    [00:48:40.940] - Camilla Love

    It's tough.

    [00:48:41.290] - Suzie Riddell

    It's tough. And it's okay to do things in a values led way and feel really sad and upset that that's how things turned out and wish that it had been different.

    [00:48:54.960] - Camilla Love

    Totally. Now, we're going to go to the end bit where we have a bit of a laugh. Are you going to do quickfire questions?

    [00:49:03.140] - Suzie Riddell

    Yeah, I'll do my best.

    [00:49:05.000] - Camilla Love

    So it's the first thing that comes into your head. So you can't think too much, right? First question, how would your friends describe you?

    [00:49:17.540] - Suzie Riddell

    Extraverted, loud, optimistic, hopefully kind.

    [00:49:23.440] - Camilla Love

    Great. What is the most important money lesson you've learned?

    [00:49:29.590] - Suzie Riddell

    You need to earn more than you spend.

    [00:49:32.760] - Camilla Love

    That is an absolutely good one. We're all still working on that one, I'm sure. Okay, what movie do you absolutely love, but it's embarrassing to admit.

    [00:49:48.070] - Suzie Riddell

    Is it embarrassing? The Sound of Music. Top two. Movie for me. Top two? Wow.

    [00:49:56.630] - Camilla Love

    Not embarrassing, by the way.

    [00:49:58.840] - Suzie Riddell

    Okay, good. Great. Well, I love it and will rewatch it anytime.

    [00:50:02.410] - Camilla Love

    I will sing to everything, all those mountains. Exactly. Absolutely sing. I sing half of those songs to my daughter, Sabrina, to bed every night. My hidden talent is...

    [00:50:18.480] - Suzie Riddell

    I don't have many hidden talents. Is it a talent? It's not very hidden. I really like karaoke, happy to do it sober and in day light.

    [00:50:27.910] - Camilla Love

    What is your go to karaoke song? You ong, you can't just let that slide and then that's why that's what it is.

    [00:50:34.280] - Suzie Riddell

    My go to is Dancing Queen by ABBAF.

    [00:50:38.730] - Camilla Love

    I'm a Moderna fan, so I'm direct into the Madonna components.

    [00:50:44.190] - Suzie Riddell

    Vogue, that's the one with all the actions.

    [00:50:50.880] - Camilla Love

    Exactly. On my bucket list is?

    [00:50:54.930] - Suzie Riddell

    I want to take my kids on a multi day bush walk like backpacks tents, the whole thing when they're big enough. That's why it's still in the bucket list. They can't do it yet. They go bush walking for an hour or two, but yeah, camping out there in the bush with the whole family.

    [00:51:12.980] - Camilla Love

    Great. Fabulous. Fabulous. Tell me something no one else knows about you.

    [00:51:17.670] - Suzie Riddell

    I really wanted to be a dancer and wasn't ever flexible enough to continue past the beginning of high school.

    [00:51:29.200] - Camilla Love

    What type of dance? Ballet?

    [00:51:31.240] - Suzie Riddell

    I did a lot of ballet and then switched to jazz, did a bit of tap. I wasn't that talented. I just really enjoyed it. And I wasn't flexible. So I didn't really have any of the ingredients, actually. That's funny.

    [00:51:50.990] - Camilla Love

    If I was a superhero, I'd be...

    [00:51:55.030] - Suzie Riddell

    Jacinda Ardoin.

    [00:51:56.250] - Camilla Love

    Oh, boom. Totally. There's a woman who wears an invisible cape.

    [00:52:01.910] - Suzie Riddell

    For shales. Absolutely. When I was in my own head and hung up about being a young woman as a CEO, and when were they all going to figure out that I wasn't really a real CEO, I would just look at her and think, far out, you are running the country and dealing with volcanoes and terrorist attacks and COVID, and you have a young child, so I should be able to handle my small not for profit with a bit more grace.

    [00:52:29.740] - Camilla Love

    But you smash it anyway. Smash it. If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

    [00:52:39.570] - Suzie Riddell

    I would love to meet my grandfathers. They both passed away before I was born, and I'd love to meet them and better understand my parents through meeting them.

    [00:52:49.510] - Camilla Love

    There's a little back story there I won't ask. My favourite book is?

    [00:52:54.980] - Suzie Riddell

    I love Anything by Brené Brown. I'll try dare to lead.

    [00:52:58.660] - Camilla Love

    Me too. At Lis of the Heart.

    [00:53:01.250] - Suzie Riddell

    I'm all.

    [00:53:01.630] - Camilla Love

    Watching for the hell of That.

    [00:53:04.140] - Suzie Riddell

    She's the best. I'm so sad she's wrapped up her podcast. They just sucked every single one of those episodes into my brain.

    [00:53:12.000] - Camilla Love

    Me too. Me too. And I understand the reason why she did. But yeah, Atlas is the heart. Oh, my gosh.

    [00:53:20.890] - Suzie Riddell

    Anyway.

    [00:53:21.520] - Camilla Love

    That's a whole another story. We can come up to that as well. What is left for Social Ventures Australia to do?

    [00:53:29.010] - Suzie Riddell

    Well.

    [00:53:29.880] - Camilla Love

    This one word remember.

    [00:53:32.450] - Suzie Riddell

    One word. Innovate.

    [00:53:36.910] - Camilla Love

    That's good. Innovate the world. Well, yeah.

    [00:53:40.880] - Suzie Riddell

    I mean, the systems that we have in place are what is producing the level of inequality and disadvantage that we see in this country. So we need different systems, better policies, better funding, better practice.

    [00:53:53.020] - Camilla Love

    Push the boundaries.

    [00:53:54.130] - Suzie Riddell

    So we need, with others, to innovate.

    [00:53:58.700] - Camilla Love

    Great. And I always ask this at the end, so I'll complete this sentence, a career in finance is...

    [00:54:05.840] - Suzie Riddell

    Something that should be combined with purpose and making the world a better place.

    [00:54:11.600] - Camilla Love

    Big, fat heart and love for me because we talk about it all the time. And that is the absolute reason why I invited you to come along today because there is a lot of purpose in getting into finance and you need to find it. But you have epitomized it for a very long time. I'm really glad that you came along and visited me on Shares Not Shoes and actually told us all about how many people that you impact on a day to day basis. I couldn't imagine that weight on the shoulders too. And the many more that you could through your organization. So thank you. I'm very proud of what you've become and then what you're going to do. And yeah, I'm excited.

    [00:55:05.710] - Suzie Riddell

    Well, thank you so much, Camilla. I really appreciate it. Thanks for a great conversation. And I hope some of your listeners are intrigued. Look up Social Ventures Australia. If you want your donation dollar to be taking risk and having really large impact at scale, we're always looking for philanthropic support. And if you've got all these great skills in finance or whatever your career is and you're interested in moving that more deliberately into purpose, we're always looking for talent and people to join our team as well.

    [00:55:38.830] - Camilla Love

    Touchy. Thank you again. And it's been an absolute.

    [00:55:41.870] - Suzie Riddell

    Pleasure to speak with you today. You're a great host. Thanks, Camilla.

    [00:55:51.360] - Camilla Love

    The information that is in this podcast, we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance would be a fabulous career for you.

S4.Ep2 Meet Jen Driscoll, CEO of AllianceBernstein Australia Ltd.

Jen Driscoll took a chance. She wrote a letter that led to her having an illustrious 24 year long (and counting!) career in finance.

  • The following is a transcript created using AI technology so please forgive any grammatical imperfections.

    Jen Driscoll

    Be who you are and own that and find the greatness in that because that's the thing that's actually ultimately led me to the place I'm at now. And it's something that I would never have known at 20 years old.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of F3 Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people all with one thing in common, they work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories. We'll be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go.

    Welcome, everyone. And as you know, this season of Shared Notes, we're focusing on CEOs in financial services. And today we are in for a special treat. In today's episode, we are getting to know a person I've admired for a really long time. She's the CEO of Alliance Bernstein, otherwise known as AB here in Australia. And from her accent, you'll quickly realise that she's an international powerhouse. She's worked across three continents at least and has been with a funds manager for over 20 years. Quite similar to me, been in the same place for a long time. She's also the Deputy Chairman of the Financial Services Council, one of Australia's preeminent industry bodies. Without much ado, Jen Driscoll, welcome to Shares Not Shoes.

    Jen Driscoll

    Thank you so much, Camilla. It's great to be here this morning.

    Camilla Love

    Well, can I tell you that I have been listening to your wisdom for probably, I was thinking about, approximately about eight years, maybe a little bit longer than that, but I think it's about that long. And for all of you out there, you'll find out that Jen has these wonderful little gold nuggets of advice. And they're generally what I perceive as they're learned through perseverance, mistakes, and just good old good luck. And I'm really looking forward to hearing about a number of these today with you, Jen. So let me open up with the first question, right? Sure. So tell me a little bit about you, who you are personally and what you do for a job, because I know that you're very an authentic leader, and I love that the most about you. And that that personal and professional life always interacts. And some people don't like to show that. But you are one of those people who absolutely does. So tell me a little bit about you and your own words.

    Jen Driscoll

    Sure. I'd love to. So maybe starting with the personal side, as you mentioned in the intro, I am not born and bred in Australia, but definitely an Australian at heart now. I was born in Boston, lived there. And there are two of me in the world because I am an identical twin. My other half is still in the US. Watch out, everybody. Yeah, watch out. She would absolutely be the powerhouse you'd want to have on this podcast if we were trading places. But that's a conversation for another day. So one of four children born to a father who's Irish and a mother who's American. So I think that colored the perspective of the world that I came into. I went to university in New York in the Bronx. Again, very formative and informative time of life. From there, started working actually out of university after traveling around Europe with my twin sister after we graduated in New York City and started there for a couple of years, just joining at the entry level role of a client service associate, working with institutional clients in the Northeast. Didn't know the difference between a stock and a bond when I started.

    That's okay. It doesn't matter. We learned these things on the job. Really enjoyed getting to know the clients and the communities that we were serving there. When the opportunity presented for AB to open its first office outside of the US, I went over to London for three years with them and started managing a team of client and consultant relations associates over there. Then as life tends to do, it took me on a different path. I met a young man who was a KiwI. Tell all the odds in my life. I didn't know any better at the time, but we ended up making it and deciding that it was time to leave London. We came down to Australia for what we thought was a year and basically loved it so much that we decided never to leave. I had left AB at the time to come down and travel and take that year and ended up rejoining AB back in Sydney about a year and a half after we moved down here. That was back in mid 2004. Going back in time to being a client relations associate on a contract and then becoming permanent. From there, really just suffered the highs and the lows of what came over a career in the last 17, 18 years here, navigating through Australia to the point of ultimately becoming the CEO back at the end of 2013 of the local business here and continuing to work with our Asia X Japan business on the Institutional side.

    Camilla Love

    You mentioned when you first started back in New York that you didn't even know what a difference between a stock and a bond was. Do you actually even know that you wanted to go into finance as part of your journey, or is it just something you fell into?

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah. I guess I fell into it in a way. And there was a little bit of a story there. But when I was at Fordham University in the Bronx studying, I actually studied economics and political science, so I was in the School of Arts. But I did a work study and worked for the College of Business Administration. I worked with the Deans of the college and just did filing and answering phones and lots of general office admin. They looked at me as like an honorary member of the College of Business. They had these, what they called at the time, CEO breakfast clubs, and they'd bring students that volunteered to go into the city and meet different companies over breakfast or a late morning tea and hear from companies just to get the students socialized with what it was like to be working in the city and different careers that were available to them in the business world. I got invited to come along to one and the one I happened to attend was at Bernstein. It was a presentation by one of their private wealth advisors. I remember going into the office and thinking, Oh, this is cool.

    Jen Driscoll

    They're right on Fifth Avenue and it's a great spot. The office was lovely. The individual who spoke was just amazing. He was so captivating. He was so passionate about what he did in serving his clients who were high net worth clients. He talked about his path to finding a path in finance and in financial services. It was quite a winding path for him. He talked about reading the book, What Color is Your Parachute, and really doing some soul searching. I just absolutely loved everything he said about what he did for a role and also the company that he worked for. We got back on the bus to go back to the Bronx after that session. Everyone was buzzing like, Oh, that was amazing. And Charlie was so fantastic. And the Dean got on the bus and she said to all of us, I'm going to say this and half are you going to do it and half you aren't. But if you really enjoyed that, I encourage you to write a letter of thanks to the company and to Charlie for taking the time to do that. And so, raised by my very strict parents, I was.

    Camilla Love

    Right on to that.

    Jen Driscoll

    As soon as I got back to my dorm, I was like, Dear Sam C Bernstein, dear Charlie, thank you so much, blah, blah, blah, blah. Wrote that letter, never heard back. I was at that time in my third year and fourth year degree. And a year later, I got a voicemail on my different dorm room from some girls who lived in the dorm room I lived in a year before. They said, Oh, we're looking for Jen Driskill. Some company, Samford Bernstein, called and left a message at this number, but we think it's for you. Here's the number. Give him a ring back. I did. They said, Oh, yeah, you came in a year or so ago? I said, Yeah, I did. They said, Oh, you wrote a thank you letter? I said, Yeah, I did. I said, I don't think I ever heard back. They said, Well, we kept it and you're graduating this year, aren't you? And I said, I am. And they said, Well, we'd love you to come in for an interview. And that was the way in which I think both fortune and luck coincided. A little bit of personal touch, I think, in writing that letter, which.

    Camilla Love

    Something resonated. And thanks to mom and dad.

    Jen Driscoll

    For bringing you up. Thank you, mom and dad. I'm going to say that was all mom, really. But that drill that we used to get every time we got a gift really came in handy and got me the job that has seen me work through a 24 year career to date. So yeah, thank you. That is.

    Camilla Love

    Such an amazing story because they could have just gone, Oh yeah, that's nice and chucked it in the bin. Or you could have just gone back and been like the other 50 % that never wrote the thank you letter. And then so sitting back and reflecting on that 20 something years later, that's just a lesson in itself, right?

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah, it is. It's one of those things where I think of so many things where the little things you do go so far, so much further than you can appreciate at the time. And that was one of those things where really I didn't think anything of it. I thought, Oh, yeah, it's a nice thing to do. I should thank them. They put on this great discussion for us, and they really helped us get a sense of what it's all about and what they were passionate about. It came back to that point when I was interviewing and I was talking to both my mom and dad and my aunt, who was a preeminent figure in financial services for me as a growing up and seeing her in a role and getting their advice from them and thinking about, Is this a company I should join? And how do I want to think about that? They were US only at the time and I had in my head always thought, I want to work somewhere outside the US. Don't know why I just thought that was going to be part of my path at some point. It came back to that way that the engagement played out, the thank you letter, the interview process.

    Jen Driscoll

    I think it was my aunt that said to me at the time as I was contemplating it, she said, Well, I get that you want to work outside the US, but do you like the company? I'm like, Yes. Do you like the people? Yeah, I really like it. They made me interview with 17 people. And yes, I like them all. I was like, I'm 22. How many people do I have to meet for this entry level role? We did testing, we did all this stuff. She said, Listen, if you like the people, you like the culture, don't worry about the other piece because you never know what can happen down the line. And sure enough, two and a half years later, they were opening a London office and off I went. I don't know, my aunt might be a little bit psychedelic, but she certainly helped give me the right steer to get myself and get that foot in the door in the beginning, which was pretty amazing.

    Camilla Love

    It's amazing. I mean, it's a sliding doors moment. It's one of those things where anything could have happened. But do you look for that in the next generation coming up with the people that you interview with today? How does someone stand out like that today?

    Jen Driscoll

    I was having this conversation with a couple of young women at a networking event in the last couple of months. I said, So tell me your story. W hat's your background? Who are you? And there was a lot of focus on the academic achievements. And I was thinking, That's fantastic. I have no doubt you're an incredibly intelligent person. You're really focused on what you want to do in your studies. But I'm really trying to get to know who they are and what their story is. And I remember a young woman was talking to me about... We happened to get on the topic of sports, and I'm an avid sports person, so I was really interested. And she said she used to be a semi professional ping pong player in China.

    Camilla Love

    And I said.

    Jen Driscoll

    Oh, my gosh, that's amazing. And she said, Yeah, I had the opportunity to go professional, but I decided not to because I really wanted to focus on my education and my career. And it was really much around this conversation of how do you break in? How do you distinguish yourself? I said, that's it. That's the story. That's your hook. I said, the discipline, the training, the perseverance you've shown to become an elite athlete in a highly competitive sport doesn't have to be sports. It could be any club. It could be any extra curricular activity that you enjoy and feel passionate about that connects you to people. For me, that's what I'm looking for is just I feel, and this is again based on my own experience, so others will feel differently. But I know coming into this industry, as I said, very openly, I didn't know the difference between a stock and a bond. I didn't really have the technical grounding in what I was walking into. But I had a manager at the time who heard a story from me about captaining my soccer team and a coach that was really challenging. S he wouldn't let us eat on the way home from a nine hour bus ride.

    Jen Driscoll

    W e took that up with leadership at the university when we got back. He said to me, That's why I hired you. Because I knew that you're going to deal with some tough stuff. I'm going to place you with a sales advisor who was a very challenging individual. I felt like based on what I got to know of the story I heard about how you interact with challenges and conflict and the perseverance that you've had. And again, in my story, it was sports related as well. There was an element there that he felt would serve me well in the industry I was working in. I'm really grateful that he did that and took the opportunity to get to know me in that way because I really had no idea that my telling that story would have any impact on me getting hired. But it turned out it was actually the key element over and above my GPA and the studies.

    Camilla Love

    I was talking exactly, I was sitting on a panel at a uni last week and we were talking exactly the same thing. So about the authentic you, we need to see it. And so we don't want to see... To get to the point of the interview, the marks and stuff is great. But you need to stick out from the pack. You need to show me who you are. You need to show that you can culturally fit within the organization and be the team player that we all need. I think you're right that people forget about, bring that element and actually feeling somewhat, I would describe, vulnerable in people judging you that whatever it is that you love to do is perfectly fine and fits in every organization.

    Jen Driscoll

    Whether it fits, maybe is a question that on the other side, I remember through that advice my aunt gave me, the interviewee should be critically assessing because I actually think there are so many companies and we won't fit in all of them. And that's okay because ultimately you have to think about the culture that you would feel would be to bring out the best in you and how do you like to work? And there's lots of different companies, lots of different cultures that all have positive attributes to them, but they won't fit for each one of us. So I think that's one of the things that to your point, exactly, if you aren't comfortable being who you are in an interview setting, they're not getting to know the real you, and they're not going to be able to help you understand whether you are the right fit ultimately. So I think that's just another element of navigating the interview process and trying to be comfortable with who we all are because we do bring different things into these organisations.

    Camilla Love

    I've mentioned a few times before that you've stayed at the same organisation for 20 years. So what is it? So there's a couple of questions in here. So given that background, what is it that, one, makes you stay, two, makes you still passionate about what you do in the organisation you do it in it. And also, I'm always interested in times of when you're taking career risk. And lots of people talk about making career risk, moving outside of an organization, but you can definitely take career risk within an organization. So maybe talk a little bit about that risk taking within an organization and how you can feel comfortable in doing that as part of your journey over the last 20 years.

    Jen Driscoll

    Sure. Well, maybe I'll start there because I think that's been a recurring theme in the years that I've had at AB. Not that, again, I particularly was aware of it at the time. I think that's one of the great things about navigating a career from a youthful starting point through to a much more mature point where when I was in my younger parts of the career, the move to London, for example, I was in a place where I was thinking about what I wanted to do next, and I knew that I probably had enough time in New York. I had been offered to go to San Francisco with the company, and I had accepted that role and the London role came up, and through, again, happenstance of circumstances, I was offered that role and was able to try to decide whether to go over there. And I remember thinking and saying to my parents, again, they want me to sign a three year contract. And at 24, 25, that felt like a really long time. It's a long time. It's three years, Jen, it's okay. And she said, What's the worst that's going to happen? This is a company who's investing in sending you overseas.

    Jen Driscoll

    Do you really think that if you really didn't like it or really weren't finding success over there, that they wouldn't want to try to work with you to help find your way back? I thought, Yeah, okay, I've got to take that leap of trust. It was a time in my life where I didn't have commitment, so I was able to go over and do that and jump into that experience. I remember probably coming back to London from Sydney for a celebration of the London offices first five years. I had been there for the first three and a bit and I'd moved back, moved over to Sydney, come back. The CEO at the time, we were chatting because when we started, there were only 10 of us. We were all very close and we were ground level stuff where you're like, We have one client in this country and we're going to try to make this business work. I was so naive, I really just thought, Of course, it'll work. We're going over there, we'll give it a go. Remember him saying to me at the five year, Gosh, there were some times when it was so precarious, this business.

    Jen Driscoll

    And I was like, really? Totally oblivious. Totally oblivious. He's like, we have one client. And I just remember thinking, God, that was a massive risk that we all took, that we really just dove into and really didn't contemplate the what ifs. And I think that that is something which has held true to the way I think about risk, which is you assess the information you have at the time, you decide if it's right for you, and then you go forward with confidence and you don't look back and second guess what information you had at the time. Things may or may not work out that, of course, is the way life is. And if it didn't work out, we would have figured it out and we would have found our way back to a different path and some other door would have opened. That's just generally been my perspective. I think when I came to Sydney, I tried to follow the same logic. I had a year and a half off. I had lost a bit of confidence in feeling like I could step back into the industry. I interviewed in Sydney and was told I was too experienced for some roles, didn't have local knowledge for others.

    Jen Driscoll

    So it was proving really challenging. I was very fortunate that a role at AB did open up because they did know me. They were willing to take that chance of bringing me back in. But I stepped back into a role that was what I had been doing five years before, and I was okay with that. I said, Okay, well, I'm going to have to step backwards to step forwards. Sure enough, within a year, I was able to hire my own team in the client service space again and take on different responsibilities that then allowed me to continue to grow. I think that's one of the things, going back to your earlier question about staying at a company for so long, that opportunity to grow and do different things has meant that absolutely there are times when you think, should I be going somewhere else to do something different? Then all of a sudden an opportunity would jump up at me and I would take it and it would bring me into an entirely different place of connection into the company, responsibility and growth. And so when I think about that opportunity to grow and also just the people I've been able to work with over the decades I've been here now.

    Jen Driscoll

    That's really what's kept me here for so long.

    Camilla Love

    Yes, it's really refreshing because a lot of people.

    Jen Driscoll

    Feel.

    Camilla Love

    Either bored or a bit, I don't know, they got ants in their pants. It's like that two, three, four, five year mark and then want to move. But actually satisfying that itch internally can be equally as rewarding over time?

    Jen Driscoll

    It definitely can. I used to say I moved countries, not companies. But when I passed the three, four mark in Australia, I was like, oh, I'm here. I'm not going to move countries. You're going anywhere now. Yeah. I found home. I think I found the place I wanted to be for my life at a personal level and the place that I was just loving being at a professional level, and it coincided. So that worked, plus the fact that I then started to take responsibilities outside of Australia to Asia Pack and to EMEA over a period of years. And then when I took the CEO role, that was another huge challenge that just frightened me to death. But I thought, you know, yeah, give it a shot. Why not? We'll see how it goes.

    Camilla Love

    And if you're in an environment in a culture that supports you to be able to take that risk, going back to the original question, you feel supportive that it's all supported, that risk is way actually less than what is in your mind because, as you say, they're not going to let you fail, as your mom said, really. They're not going to let you fail here. They want to see you succeed. Otherwise, they wouldn't have offered you this opportunity.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah, it's so true. I genuinely don't think I could have done what I've done and made the decisions I've made without so many supportive people managing me and giving me guidance within the company, as well as those resources that I tap into outside the company. So without that support, it would have felt very different. And I'm not sure I would have made the same decisions.

    Camilla Love

    So on that and talking about moving on from risk, but is there a point in your career or something that sticks into your brain about a mistake or some what you would classify as a failure that you have obviously recognised what's happened, turned it around and actually come out the other side being a better person from? And can you tell us what that is?

    Jen Driscoll

    One thing that I find that I know was really tough for me was when we went through the financial crisis here in Australia and the company was... It was a really tough time. We significantly disappointed the market. Financially, the company was going through a difficult time. There were layoffs happening. It was not the first time in my career, but perhaps the first time I was managing through that type of situation. I remember having to make the decision around my team of someone who would have to be let go because the financial conditions were so difficult. And that was a really emotional time for me because our team was very close. There was a lot of camaraderie amongst the team. Our process was such that at the time, I wasn't able to be in the room when that individual was going to be told. And I really struggled with that. And I very vocally made my feelings known to our managers and human capital at the time. Not in a bad way, but just really trying to make the case for I need to be accountable for this decision. It's my decision. I need to be able to look them in the eye and let them know the context for this.

    Jen Driscoll

    And I was really conflicted because that wasn't the way that it was going to happen. It was really challenging. We had some really tough conversations, and I could tell that I was not a favorite employee at the time because of the way that I was handling it. This is your agenda. Yeah, very much pushing my agenda and probably, in retrospect, not respecting the process as much as just being very firmly rooted in what I felt I should be doing. And so play that forward. The situation did play out. I thought to myself, Gosh, I've really created some tension here that we have to be able to work through because this is a really tough time for the company and we need to be able to work through it. Because I'd gotten quite upset and I talk to people about this all the time. Maybe it's a female trait. I have cried in this office. I have done so many things that I would say, Oh, if I put my professional hat on, would I do that again? But it was real. It was raw. And it was me trying to process this in a way that I hadn't experienced before.

    Jen Driscoll

    One of the things that I did do after that very difficult experience was go back to one of my colleagues and who was part of the process and say, I really want to circle back on what happened and the way our discussion progressed and the tension that it created because I just want to let you know, what I hadn't done was really share with them at the time my perspective and why this was hurting me so much, why I felt so strongly about needing to be in that room and also heard their perspective about what they were struggling with and how difficult this was for them. And so we had that post mortem cathartic conversation in which we were both a little bit emotional, but it was like... So therapeutic. Yeah, we just need to share with each other. And at the time, they had said to me, Wow, I really had no idea that for you it was about the accountability piece and it was about feeling like you could be authentic to this person who you respected and be in that room and really saying, I wish you'd let me know that. That would have been really helpful because maybe it would have changed.

    Jen Driscoll

    I don't know that it would have changed in the outcome, but I think having that conversation certainly brought our relationship right back on track to be one of mutual understanding, mutual respect and appreciation that we're all coming at things from different points of view. That was one major learning, which is quite frankly, we surfaced a few times in the context of being able to say, Listen, I didn't show up to that conversation the way that I wanted to, and I want to revisit it. Because that's something that I think all of us should be open to doing. But when I talk to people about challenges or conflicts, they're seeing it's human nature. We don't want to address it head on. But actually, the productive way to do it is to try and say, listen, I didn't handle that in the way that I had hoped because I got emotional, or I got defensive, or I couldn't quite articulate my thoughts in the moment, but I've thought about it and I want to revisit it and I want to see if we can work forward from there. That's been absolutely one of the biggest learnings for me.

    Camilla Love

    And it's absolutely and that's amazing learning to have. It's really character building. How I would describe it is being comfortable in, again, that vulnerability in being uncomfortable with others. And as a leader, people are ostensibly different to you. I've got a piece of artwork on my wall that says, Was it something I said? And it says it's half crossed out and it says, You heard? So to me, that just keeps reminding me of the way that we communicate and the way that what we all say as leaders might not be taken by others in the way that we either mean it or that they've taken it, or that maybe the tone is not right or whatever it is. And let's go back and have another conversation to really nut out the problem, make us all feel, make me feel uncomfortable, but make us, our relationship, better in the end. And I think that that is an amazing learning to share. So thanks, Jen.

    Jen Driscoll

    That was a pleasure. I would love it to have been a little less painful along the way to learn.

    Camilla Love

    But it's sometimes. But they're the best learnings to have. They are. The ones that are truly painful from an emotional point of view and also from a personal point of view, that uncomfortableness makes you a way better leader over time.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah. And it just shows, I think, we're nowhere without feedback, without people coming back and telling us, hey, that didn't sit well. I love when people are so good. I'm so fortunate to have a lot of people who come up and go, hey, I don't know if you realize this, but that person was going through this and they may not have appreciated that comment or they might not have realised where you were coming from. So you might want to circle back. And honestly, with all of us running so hard, having people around you that are willing to share that feedback, it's completely invaluable.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely agree. Absolutely agree. But it's something that you have to practice. People expect that that's something you'll do. It's innate, but it's a learned piece of skill, right? Oh, it is. To provide and receive feedback in a positive win, win nature.

    Jen Driscoll

    Definitely. But you have to make the mistakes, too, right through that. You can't expect of yourself or of anyone else that we're all going to get it right 100 % of the time. So we've got to make a few mistakes and then be willing to revisit them and then say, Okay, let's move forward. Let's not hang on to the baggage, but let's also not shuffle it under the rug because as we all know, it stays there. And then something small comes down the line.

    Camilla Love

    And then something small down the line. And then it's.

    Jen Driscoll

    Never good. It's a constant challenge. But yeah, one, we continue to navigate with each other, hopefully.

    Camilla Love

    Now, talking about challenges, I want to ask, so in my googling, as I am good for, you're a long term supporter of Vinnies and their CEO sleep out. And oh, my God, I can't think of anything worse to do in that, sleeping on the street in a cold winter's night, but raising money for a really good cause and all that stuff. So what resonates? Why did you do it? And you keep doing it. What do you learn about yourself also? Sleeping rough.

    Jen Driscoll

    It's an absolutely amazing event to be a part of. It's a very small thing. I just want to frame doing that for one night a year has really put into context what a small thing it is. But going back to where it came from, it was raised to me by one of my colleagues in the Sydney office. He sent me an email 10 years ago and said, Hey, this sounds cool. Would you be open to doing it? I looked at it and I was like, Yeah. What? Yeah, that sounds amazing.

    Camilla Love

    Totally not knowing what.

    Jen Driscoll

    You're getting into. No idea. No idea. You read a website and you think, oh, okay, that sounds cool. And I think it was my first year as a CEO and I thought, Well, that's something that I can put this title to work for. I'm not a great fundraiser. I don't love the process of it in a way, but what I have been absolutely blown away with over nine years of doing it is just how incredibly generous people are. Whether in Australia or outside of Australia, of course, family, friends, but AB colleagues and the AB matching that we have as a program for the company has been absolutely tremendous. I'm really humbled every year that I do it because I hesitate to put it out there, but I was recently in Asia seeing some colleagues that I hadn't seen in three years post COVID. One of the colleagues there said to me explicitly, and I had not again seen her in many years, she said, I love that you continue to do the sleep out. It means a lot. It really makes me proud of working for a company where someone would do that. And it meant so much to me because they're not in Australia, they don't have to be associated with this.

    Jen Driscoll

    And it's not necessarily important whether or not they donate financially. For me, the fact that that is something which we can rally around and that people see it as a joint cause has been amazing. So I've learned so much over nine years, and next year will be my 10th year and I'm super excited to hit that milestone and hopefully blow through it. But it's just something which when you think about what we do and trying to support communities more broadly, and then you marry that with an organization like Vinnies who are in these communities, helping the most vulnerable, helping them try to find their way back. And you hear stories from people that have literally been in the same positions we're in. I've heard all kinds of stories from really brave individuals who've shared their trauma and their trauma and their challenges. And the fact that we're all probably one or two bad decisions away from this being an unfortunate reality that we're dealing with. And most of us, we hope, would have a support system to help us. But without Vinnies, these individuals don't have that support system. And so learning how to see someone and think about what the story is behind how they find themselves in that situation has been probably one of the biggest eye opening experiences.

    Jen Driscoll

    And one of the colleagues who shared a story in one of the Vinnies events a couple of years ago was asked, What can we do? Aside from donating money, what else would be a meaningful difference? And he just said, Just look us in the eye. Let us know we're still human. We still connect. We still matter. That's it. If you prefer, go buy us a sandwich. Be conscious because he said, Listen, of course, not every situation is safe. He's not trying to stereotype. But at the same time, I think those stories and the ability to come back into the company, which I do every morning after I do the sleep out, I like to come back straight in and talk to everyone who's in the office about what the event was like the night before, what I learned, what services Vinnies are providing, how we can help. So I just think it's something which has been really personally and professionally motivating over many years, and I'm looking forward to continuing it.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, it makes me warm and fuzzy as well. But also the personal accountant, I think it's really important in a business, as you say, that supports you to do this. Now, I asked all my guests this same question, and everyone has a different take. So I'd love to know your take, another little nugget from you today, about the most valuable piece of advice you were given and why did it resonate with you? Why was it so valuable for you? Whether it was the time and place, whether the person it was from, whether it was something else.

    Jen Driscoll

    What is it? There were a couple that stood up, but one that really, I think, has framed where I'm at now and probably the journey to this point came again from my aunt who had smashed a few glass ceilings herself in her career and been someone who continues to fight the good fight, I think, and trying to tackle diversity.

    Camilla Love

    Shout out to the aunt out there.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah, shout out to Gayle. I think it resonated because it goes back to experiencing challenges at work. We all come in a little bit idealistic and we would like things to be pretty simple. I want to come to work, I want to do a good job, I want to go home, I want to have a life outside. And ultimately, as we know in a long career, it's not always quite so linear or quite so perfect. And I was at a point where I was really struggling with a few things that I was seeing that I was not particularly comfortable with or feeling we're really challenging at some level, my values, and how was I? Did I really want to do this? How was I going to continue feeling good about what I was doing? And my aunt had said to me at the time, if you want an ability to influence or change things, you need to get a seat at the table. I was like, Okay, I'm starting to have a bit more ability to share my views and my voice. And always felt that was important. I always wanted to be honest and authentic about where I was at.

    Jen Driscoll

    But that comment, I think, did catalyze me to realize that we do need leaders who are going to be thinking about these types of things all the time and focused on this. One of the big, I think growth areas in my career has been recognizing where my strengths are and where they are not and being honest with myself about where my contribution can and should be. I'm still extending myself but trying to do that. And I think that getting the seat at the table there really helped me realize that that's what I'm passionate about. I want to continue to advocate to make sure we're doing as a company, the things that serve both our people and our clients best, that we can have those conversations that are challenging and difficult if we feel stretched by something and ultimately trying to work to make it better because that's a day to day thing. That's not a once a year, once every five years. It's every day you look around, you assess, you take temperature checks and you feel like, what can I do to influence? And I don't think my aunt necessarily meant it in the context of you need to be a CEO.

    Jen Driscoll

    She just meant get around the table when people are discussing things, make your voice heard in whatever context you are. It doesn't matter if I've been there for two years or five or 25. It was really about trying to make sure that you felt like you had a channel to be heard. And that has definitely stayed with me. It's the reason that I feel really comfortable putting a few things out there that may not always feel entirely comfortable for others to engage in, but I feel we can navigate with a really constructive bent. So that for me has been one piece of advice which has always stood out above many others. Just quickly, the other piece, I think, is giving people the benefit of the doubt when we're trying to interpret to your point of, Is it something I said or you heard? There's always multiple different inflections and things that change the way people hear messages. Email has been both an amazing advent of technology and a terrible way of trying to put in written word with no nuance and so subject to so much interpretation. I think giving people that benefit of the doubt, thinking about asking the questions of, Hey, was this what you meant?

    Jen Driscoll

    Because it's how I interpreted it. And they go, Oh God, no, no, no, no. That wasn't what I meant at all. I was just typing a quick email and I thought I would just shoot it off. But God, I'm so sorry. Those type of things, if you don't give people the benefit of the doubt, we're humans. We rush to judgment and emotion and.

    Camilla Love

    And we're all guilty of it.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    Exactly. Yeah, absolutely. Well, thanks. Gayle?

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    The seat at the table. Well, and I think that's great because to affect change, you need to be there.

    Jen Driscoll

    To.

    Camilla Love

    Navigate it.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah, I think so. And to be both on I'm sure you've had a million examples of where you've seen that in your career as.

    Camilla Love

    Well, right? Too many to go into now.

    Jen Driscoll

    Go on forever.

    Camilla Love

    Exactly. Okay, we're coming to the end. And, Jen, if you listen to any of my podcasts, we do this super quickfire round really just to get to know you a little bit more, to put you out of your comfort zone a little bit. So watch out. Oh, gosh. American. So you have to say what's first in your mind, right? Okay. And it's quickfire. It's not like we're not going to hear for another half an hour.

    Jen Driscoll

    Got.

    Camilla Love

    It. Okay, so you're ready?

    Jen Driscoll

    I'll.

    Camilla Love

    Start with an easy one. My friends would describe me as?

    Jen Driscoll

    Fun, hopefully kind and caring and active. Okay.

    Camilla Love

    What really bad movie do you absolutely love?

    Jen Driscoll

    I am a tragic for any romcom that is out there. Recently, I've gone into any type of foreign language romcom because I think I've exhausted all English language ones. So literally, my Netflix feed is probably one bad movie after another. If you ask my husband, he's horrified by what I watch.

    Camilla Love

    Just going to leave it there. What's your favorite romcom?

    Jen Driscoll

    Oh, my God. Ten Things I Hate About You.

    Camilla Love

    That is in my Netflix. It keeps reminding me. It's in the moment, Netflix algorithm.

    Jen Driscoll

    I'm like, What are they trying to say here? I think with Heath Bridger, it was like the Australian connection was in me from the time I was in high school and I never knew. Just those little things. Amazing. But yeah, my favourite.

    Camilla Love

    Good movie. My biggest investment mistake was...

    Jen Driscoll

    I don't know if I've had a big... I was trying to think about whether I've had an investment mistake. I'm so conservative. I think my... Actually, that's it. My investment mistake was being overly conservative in my younger years and not... That's a big one. Yeah, it definitely was. I would say that my best investment was in myself because I was immediately on that train of put the maximum I could into my, at the time, 401, my equivalent of superannuation in the US. But I think my worst mistake was not investing earlier.

    Camilla Love

    When I go out to talk to students and stuff like that, always talk about get started early, take more risk because you've got time on your hands, etc. It pays dividends to not be so concerned.

    Jen Driscoll

    It really does. I picked up the mantle, but not quickly enough, I think, if I was honest with myself. So yeah, definitely a mistake.

    Camilla Love

    What is the one piece of advice that you give to your 20 year old self that you haven't given already?

    Jen Driscoll

    Be who you are. I think for a long time, I believed in that I'm one person at home and I'm one person at work. And I've realized over years, it's just not what is the best for you or for where you work or for where you are at home. You just be who you are and own that and find the greatness in that because that's the thing that's actually ultimately led me to the place I'm at now. And it's something that I would never have known at 20 years old.

    Camilla Love

    So if I wasn't doing this job, you'd be a...

    Jen Driscoll

    I think I'd be working with young kids.

    Camilla Love

    Or.

    Jen Driscoll

    Volunteering somewhere in the community. It's a broad statement, but I love... My twin sister is a teacher, and I remember getting up in front of her classroom of kindergartners in many years ago and being absolutely terrified. I couldn't do it. She was like, tell the kids where you live. And I pointed to, like, we were in LA, I pointed to San Francisco. She's like, Jen, you live in Australia. It's lower. And I was so nervous. But what I love doing is playing with young kids and being around them. And so I think that there's something about that young age group that I would gravitate towards if I wasn't doing what I do now.

    Camilla Love

    Great. I think anyone at that age group would love to have you to be with lots of fun. Lots of fun. I would love it. So is it shares or is it shoes?

    Jen Driscoll

    I'm so glad you raised that because I really wanted to talk to you about that. It's both. Actually, that is one thing my friends would say is shoes are amazing. I'm a sneaker person. I used to be a heel person, but my knees don't allow it anymore because I'm old and whatever. But my shoes are my thing. But then shares is you can't not have that investment side there. So for me, this is one of those situations where you can have the best of both. It's shares and shoes all the way. Shares help you buy lots of cool shoes.

    Camilla Love

    Totally. But you got to start with the shares before the shoes is my view.

    Jen Driscoll

    You do have to. Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    Agree. So if you were a superhero, who would you be?

    Jen Driscoll

    I always really wanted to fly. So I feel like the going the old traditional superwoman is really where I'm going. I think.

    Camilla Love

    You're already there. You're already there. I am.

    Jen Driscoll

    Definitely not going to say I've made it, but I do admit to practicing the superwoman pose in front of the mirror every now and again when I need to boost that confidence.

    Camilla Love

    So there's a little bit of... I can see that in you. For sure. Hands on the hips, chin up.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah, I.

    Camilla Love

    Got this. That way.

    Jen Driscoll

    I've got this. Definitely. That's it. So I'm going with traditional there for sure.

    Camilla Love

    It's the truth, people. It's the truth. Tell us something that no one knows about you.

    Jen Driscoll

    Well, I like to be mostly an open book, so I don't know if there's anything that people don't necessarily know. I think one thing that always freaks people out is the twin factor in my family. So my mom's a twin, I'm a twin, and I have twins.

    Camilla Love

    Which.

    Jen Driscoll

    Is fun. And there's a fraternal identical fraternal thing happening as well. But it's an amazing relationship to have to be a twin, to raise twins, and to have seen that modeled from my mom and her twin brother when I was growing up. So that's.

    Camilla Love

    A bit of a.

    Jen Driscoll

    Unique one.

    Camilla Love

    Are you in any twin studies? Any of your family are in twin studies?

    Jen Driscoll

    No, I don't think that my parents ever did anything with that. We were thinking about it with our boys because there's this small possibility that they may be identical because they do look really similar, even though they are fraternal technically. But we just felt, That's not important to know. So we're like, We'll live with the mystery. We like the mystery.

    Camilla Love

    And it's been three generations. So who cares now? Exactly.

    Jen Driscoll

    Someone else will pick up the mantle some way down the line and hopefully carry on the trend.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Okay, last question. A career in finance is? I think it's.

    Jen Driscoll

    What you make of it. But in my experience, it's definitely been challenging and really rewarding.

    Camilla Love

    Great. Well, Jen, oh, my God. It's been amazing to spend all this time and suck up. I told everybody that there's all these crazy nuggets, and Jen has them in spades.

    Jen Driscoll

    Well, I don't know about that, but it's been an absolute pleasure to chat to you and to reflect on a lot of what we've been able to talk about. So it makes me excited thinking about the next generation of young people coming into the industry and the career. And I can't wait to hear their stories.

    Camilla Love

    Totally. And you know what? I want to meet your aunt. She sounds like the bomb.

    Jen Driscoll

    She's a special lady. She really is. And I think she's going to be fighting for all of us for a very long time just to try to keep pushing that dial. So I'm going to do my best to follow in those footsteps and take the rest of the advice that comes from having some pretty switched on parents that are been able to push and support me at the same time, which I'm very.

    Camilla Love

    Grateful for. All in your superwoman cape? Totally.

    Jen Driscoll

    Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    But thanks for being so warm and vulnerable and telling all the stories because that's how we all learn and we really appreciate it. So hopefully you can come back.

    Jen Driscoll

    One time. I would love to. And thank you for this podcast, Camilla. Without it, we're not able to tell our stories. So thank you so much for the format and the forum and just a great conversation.

    Camilla Love

    Really appreciate it. Great. Well, everybody, the next episode of Shed's Not Shoe s will be out in a week or so. So check it out, man. And we'll see you soon.

    Jen Driscoll

    Bye, everybody.

    Camilla Love

    The information that is in this podcast, we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance would be a fabulous career for you.

S4 EP 1 - Meet Deanne Stewart, CEO of Aware Super

Meet Deanne Stewart, CEO of Aware Super. Deanne shares her wisdom on the importance of having a divserified skill set and what she looks for when hiring.

  • The following is a transcript created using AI technology so please forgive any grammatical imperfections.

    [00:00:00.000] - Deanne Stewart

    I want to do things a bit differently. I want to bring real humanity and real personal leadership to that role.

    [00:00:13.320] - Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of F3, Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people all with one thing in common, they work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories. We'll be open and honest and we'll inspire you. So, let's go.

    We Are in for a cracking episode today, everyone. So hang on to your seats. Our CEO series is definitely on a high with today's special guest. Today we have the pleasure of chatting with a CEO that I think I have known and admired for probably, I was thinking about it today, about 10 years. She is the CEO of one of Australia's largest superannuation funds, representing millions of everyday Aussies in the financial markets and navigating them to successful retirement outcomes. Think about that as something to have on your shoulders every day. That is an amazing thing to think about. She's also the former CEO of MetLife here in Australia and in 2001 was awarded the Feel Fund Executive of the Year. Welcome today to Shares Not Chews, Diane Stewart.

    [00:01:43.640] - Deanne Stewart

    Thank you, Camilla. It's so wonderful to join you. I'm a bit scared after that rap.

    [00:01:50.140] - Camilla Love

    Don't worry, you definitely live up to it. That's probably an understatement. Everybody, I've known Dee for a bit, and I remember the first time meeting you when you were CEO of MetLife sitting next to you at a function and just wowed by the presence that you have in a room. So you made that impact first up on me. And I'm sure you're going to do that today with everybody for the listeners today. So I'm so excited to ask you some really, really pointed and nitty gritty questions. So you ready for this?

    [00:02:21.600] - Deanne Stewart

    Awesome. Can't wait.

    [00:02:23.000] - Camilla Love

    Okay. So Dee, tell me a little bit about who you are and what you do and be personal and professional at the same time.

    [00:02:31.360] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, how long have you got? No, I'm joking.

    [00:02:34.530] - Deanne Stewart

    Short. Well, I grew up. I'm a country girl. I know. I was going to ask that question. I grew up in Bathist. That was awesome. It was such an idyllic childhood when I think about it. My parents were both, they're now retired, but they were both teachers. Bathist was just this beautiful town to grow up in, very idyllic. I have two siblings. I am now an and have been for quite some time, happily married with two teenage kids, a girl and a boy that certainly keep me on my toes, but they're truly beautiful, most of the time. From a personal side, just love of life, love of exercise, love being with friends, love travel, that life. Then on a professional side, I'm just so privileged to be the CEO of Aware Super. As you said, it's one of the biggest super funds. I try not to fixate every morning about the 150 billion and what we're doing. But it's pretty amazing. It's a beautiful industry fund. It's history. I mean, it's open to all Australians, but it's history. Having come out of the public sector is at the heart of it, we've got so many essential workers.

    [00:03:50.070] - Deanne Stewart

    Your teachers, your doctors, your nurses, your cleaners, your fireies, your paramedics, just essential workers that really make the community hum. They're the backbone of the community. Getting to serve them and make sure they get the best possible future is a real privilege.

    [00:04:11.200] - Camilla Love

    Absolutely. I'm sure that having two parents as teachers and having teachers as a big cohort, how meaningful is that.

    [00:04:22.070] - Deanne Stewart

    For you? Exactly. When I got the phone call about whether I'd consider the CEO role, I didn't have to. I jumped at it because it was like my dream job. It was like the rest of my career, which went in many different directions, was waiting for this moment. A big part of it was knowing it quite well because of seeing how well the fund did for my parents and other teachers, and the fact that I'd watch my mom and dad scroll away every extra cent they could into their super annual nuation, and now seeing them in retirement and just really getting to live, quite frankly, a much better life than what they... With all the financial hardship growing up, they're now getting a wonderful retirement because of what they put into superannuation. So, yeah, it's pretty cool.

    [00:05:19.250] - Camilla Love

    That is amazing. Amazing. Now, how did you end up doing uni in the city coming from country town?

    [00:05:28.470] - Deanne Stewart

    I applied to this amazing Coop scholarship at the uni in New South and was very lucky to get it. So that was my ticket to Sydney. I got to do Bachelor of Commerce at Uni of New South and I did marketing on the one hand and finance on the other hand. So it was quite good. It definitely got both sides. It's fantastic, isn't it? Because it gets both sides of your brain working, the creative and the numbers.

    [00:05:59.620] - Camilla Love

    Was it something at uni or was it before uni that sparked you into going into a career in finance?

    [00:06:07.720] - Deanne Stewart

    I think it actually was. Well, it's interesting. I think it was a love of math. I always loved math through high school. Then you go, Okay, well, what do you do with math? You could be an accountant, you could be an actuary. There's this whole thing called investment markets. Wow, that sounds really interesting. I think I just wanted to do something that was quite maths orientated, but I also had a deep love and wanting to understand more about human behaviour. That was the essence of the marketing side, right? What drives consumer behaviour? It was that double combination, not sure where that would then lead me. Then as a graduate coming out of that, getting an opportunity to be a graduate trainee at BT Funds Management or Bankers Trust at that time, and getting the go in rotation in a few different roles. Some were on the investment side, some were more on the marketing side, and getting to explore what worked, what didn't work. I don't know that there was a moment in time that I was like, It's definitely finance. It was something I lucked upon. But I think it was the love of math that lent me in that direction in the first place.

    [00:07:25.070] - Camilla Love

    It's funny that you say that because you strike me as much more a people person. And I love and similar to me in that, that mix of finance and marketing together enables you, both brains and both loves get together in this symbiotic relationship Because we talk about the passion for math because a lot of people I'd speak to on this podcast have a passion for math. But you don't have to be the biggest math geek to be in.

    [00:07:56.030] - Deanne Stewart

    Finance, right? No. And certainly what I've discovered since is that's almost a bit of a misnomer. But actually, it is your much more your deeper understanding of humans, humanity, the big trends in society that makes you a far more astute investor, one way or the other. Sure, you need to have some good underlying math skills, but actually that is one very small component, unless you're going to be pure quant, where it does tend to be far more mathematical. A lot of it is much more your read on humanity and on society and what's going on than maths.

    [00:08:39.430] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, indeed. Now, you mentioned your formative years at BT. Now, for those of you out there, BT, who don't know, BT in the 90s was the place to be. And you can sit here today and see amongst the top echelons of the finance industry, BT alumni running money, running businesses. How was that for you? Probably not even knowing where all these people would go in the future and where indeed you would go in the future. But how was that formative years? What was the impact of that in your career?

    [00:09:24.120] - Deanne Stewart

    It was pretty awesome. It's had so much impact on my career, actually. It was a group of such smart individuals, a lot of them not having come from privileged backgrounds and just really wanting to make a difference. You were definitely in the presence of very bright people. But the other thing that I loved and was so formative to me is I was chucked in completely different experiences really young. Started out as an investment analyst. Then they were starting up the institutional marketing team. This amazing woman who has since passed Sheena Stoke said, Hey, how about you have a cracker helping start up the institutional marketing team? Now, I was 21 years of age. Who does that?

    [00:10:13.610] - Camilla Love

    No.

    [00:10:13.900] - Deanne Stewart

    One. Then had amazing opportunity to join a great team on the property side, then moved over into advertising and market research. Now, all of that happened in my first four and a bit years. I look at that and I think, You know what? That was them just backing me, backing potential over you have to have done everything before you're given an opportunity. I've remembered that. Well, I had the fact that I got so many different experiences has actually really helped in terms of a CEO type of role. But then, secondly, I have to remember that. How do we make sure that we give really amazing young talent through lots of opportunity based on their potential, not on all the boxes that they've already ticked.

    [00:11:01.610] - Camilla Love

    So I was going to ask that question, too. How do you embed that? Because that could be really difficult because that can be career risk for managers, particularly, who go, This person is really good over here, and I think it has way more potential than just what they're doing. And let's throw them into doing something entirely outside of the square and outside of the box for them. How do you encourage and enthuse your management team to be able to do that?

    [00:11:33.690] - Deanne Stewart

    It's a couple of things. One is, I think when you look at all the roles that you've got, some roles you are going to need someone to come in with really deep experience that's seen all the highs and lows, and you need a really experienced pair of hands. But a lot of roles, actually, what you need is much more around mindset behaviours and and that potential. Certainly making sure for me, when I'm looking to hire anyone, and I certainly talk to my team about this all the time, I'm like, mindset, values, and potential is so much more important. T hat's what I look for when I interview. I think that combined with having a really good mix. You can't necessarily just hire on potential for all roles, but certainly, I would say most roles you can.

    [00:12:30.630] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, it's an interesting one because you end up sometimes in your career, you end up in that silo just being a really good technical analyst or you're technically good at one thing. But then to try and get that breadth is really difficult. And to find a manager who can see that in you is amazing and then cut you off into different things. So you've been in finance for a long time, I won't say how many years. Thank you for sparing me that. Exactly. And the industry has changed a lot. When you reflect on that, what are the major changes that you think were instrumental to where the industry is at now, and indeed where you are at now personally?

    [00:13:20.410] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, I think one of the hugest changes in Australia is really, and of course, I'm probably seeing my own shop here in superannuation. If you think about it, this year, superannuation, as we know it, with compulsory superannuation, is 30 years old. That's pretty young in the scheme of things. But if you look at where most of the capital in Australia now sits, it sits within the superannuation system. It's just ticked over three and a half trillion dollars.

    [00:13:53.890] - Deanne Stewart

    That makes it the third largest asset pool in the world. That's extraordinary when you think about it. The changes that I think are certainly occurring is you're certainly seeing more that is superannuation orientated than non superannuation orientated. I think the real positive that I don't think we've completely grasped yet is that what that means is that companies and investors can be and should be much more long term orientated much more about the sustainability of organisations 10, 20, 30 years out because that's what we're investing for. We're investing for people's retirement. We're not investing for tomorrow's quick buck. I think you will see some really big changes over this next decade as more and more of the super funds internalize, bring some of their investment expertise inhouse and have much more that long term horizon, together with their external investment managers that also are directed by the super funds to be far more long term. I think that change is slowly occurring, but I think it will really speed up in the next decade.

    [00:15:20.430] - Camilla Love

    I think that's a really good insight because you're right that everyone's looking at markets every day and high turnover and all that stuff in portfolios. But actually that sustainability and sustainability in its whole sense of the word in the longevity piece and the stakeholder piece. And it's not necessarily all about shareholders and shareholder return anymore. It's about stakeholder outcomes. I think that that's a really good point to take away. So just changing tack a little bit. One question that I'm... This is a personal question for me to ask because I've got the mic, I can do this. How did you make the transition to CEO? Was it difficult? Did you have a sponsor or was it just hard work and good luck? What advice would you give to those out there who are keen to get there in the top echelons of business?

    [00:16:21.780] - Deanne Stewart

    It probably was all of the above. But look, there's a couple of things. I think first of all, I think for me, it certainly started about wanting to be a CEO, but hopefully for the right reasons. What I mean by that is I've had this restlessness from when I think I first began back at BT as a 20 year old, of wanting to make a real difference and working out that finance and capital markets had so much power to have a positive impact on the community, on the economy. The more and more senior I got, the more I could have that impact. But also seeing just incredible people in our industry, but seeing possibly too many leaders that had come up through a very technical background but weren't necessarily great people leaders. It was this dual feeling of, Wow, this is amazing. How do I get more senior because I want to have more impact? But also, secondly, I want to do things a bit differently. I want to bring real humanity and real personal leadership to that role. That was where my desire, quite frankly, to be CEO came from. Then I think the couple of things that have really helped me, first of all, and I do say this to lots of young people that coming through, is do not get so focused on a career ladder and just all you want to do.

    [00:18:01.940] - Deanne Stewart

    Because before you know it, you get so technical and you might get the next senior level and the next senior level in a real technical field. But actually having a bit of a lattice, so you go a bit here, a bit there. If I look at my career, I've been on the investment side, I've run contact centres and operations, I've run marketing, I've run digital, I've run major transformation, so I've been in life insurance, I've been in wealth, I've been in asset management. I think it's that really collective, different experiences that in a way helped me be much more ready for a CEO. Together with I do think you've got to be much more of a systems thinker. You've got to be able to join the dots. It isn't just about operational expertise or investment expertise or people expertise. It's how do you join those dots and provide real clarity in the future direction, but be always on the alert for what's going on in the broader environment. That was really helpful. Then finally, you mentioned it, it is great mentors and sponsors and people willing to back you along the way. I remember one time when I got a huge promotion when I was at Merrill Lynch over in New York, it was this amazing chief operating officer who just backed me into this role.

    [00:19:23.530] - Deanne Stewart

    I'd only been in the organization for six months. I was way more junior and way younger than the two managing directors that quite frankly should have got the job or I thought should have got the job. I remember him offering me the role and I burst out crying because I was like, Well, it was genuinely a feeling of not feeling worthy. How ridiculous.

    [00:19:47.650] - Camilla Love

    Totally not ridiculous.

    [00:19:50.850] - Deanne Stewart

    He was just like, You got this. You've absolutely got the potential and the runway and I'm backing you. I am forever grateful for that. I definitely think it's a bit of all of the above and a fair dose of luck as well.

    [00:20:07.580] - Camilla Love

    I think luck is an interesting one because no matter how good you are and how much potential you have, being in the right place at the right time with the right people around you is difficult to orchestrate, right? But I love your take away of that intersection between different aspects and different career collection points is probably what I'd describe it as, to make you a better leader, a better CEO, that intersectionality of it.

    [00:20:45.930] - Deanne Stewart

    So.

    [00:20:47.680] - Camilla Love

    As a CEO, what keeps you up at night? There's a big pause.

    [00:20:55.710] - Deanne Stewart

    Yeah, I'm like, What's keeping me up at night? But look, I have got a lot better, I have to say, of not getting so caught up in my job that I have too many restless nights. But certainly at the moment, it's probably three things. One is certainly what's going on in the markets at the moment. I mean, it's so volatile. And so it's like, Oh, are we on the right path? Are we doing the right things? Because ultimately, we've got 1.1 million members retirement savings, and we've got to make sure we're doing our very best. But we're also going through a huge digital transformation and I really believe it's going to be market leading. The team are doing an awesome job. But when you do something of that order of magnitude, it's certainly the biggest digital transformation I'd say in industry fund land. You want to know that things are really well managed and the team are doing an amazing job. But things like the ASX announcement.

    [00:21:58.340] - Camilla Love

    Yesterday, I'm like, Oh, okay, these things.

    [00:22:00.790] - Deanne Stewart

    Can go horrible.

    [00:22:02.430] - Camilla Love

    That's a big number.

    [00:22:05.200] - Deanne Stewart

    Exactly. Then the final one is really around our people, because coming off the back of several years of COVID, we've undertaken several mergers. We're doing this amazing digital transformation. We've just got this incredible team. But you've constantly got to be worried in many ways about, have you got the right balance of pushing people forward and being really ambitious, but really taking care of people's wellbeing, and that people are on that journey with you. Particularly in this very hot talent market, that people feel really motivated and engaged. They are probably the big threes of my mind at the moment.

    [00:22:46.310] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, talent's an interesting one. I was talking about with somebody else this week. It is coming down to the values and the purpose and the culture of the organization. So how do you get the right people in, build the right culture as the leader, essentially, because leadership comes from the top.

    [00:23:10.990] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, you're speaking to my passion, but I also know you're speaking to your passion here. You are amazing, I have to say, on this, Camilla, and both what you do with F3, but way beyond that. You are such a person that's purpose and making a difference. It oozes out of you. I know you know this. But I think this is where we are quite kindred spirits, because for me, purpose and values is everything. I would always say to someone, before you take a job, really do your homework of what is the culture, what are the leaders, but are they really true to their purpose and values? Because I do think it's your true north. Most people want to come to work work and feel like they're learning and growing and contributing to something that makes a positive impact on society. If you are not clear what is the role that you play and what is your purpose, then it's very hard to feel motivated beyond just doing your day job. T hat's where the discretionary effort comes from. I certainly, from an aware super perspective, we created our purpose, really bottom up. We had a pretty awesome team that went and did 40 workshops across the organization to understand what people's why were.

    [00:24:37.330] - Deanne Stewart

    What was your personal why? But also, why did you either join this organization or why have you stayed? T here were these beautiful words around, Well, we get to create the best possible future for our members, and they're incredible human beings. But also, we get to make a real difference, particularly running so much money. A ctually, it was one workshop where one of the people said, You know what? The thing I love about Aware Super is that we get to be a real force for good. We use those words to really shape up the purpose, which is to be a force for good, to shape the best possible future for our members, their families, and the community at large. It just so rings true in our organization and what we get to do. We've really taken leadership roles in sustainability, in things like the climate change transition, in housing affordability, as well as earning really high returns. The two are not mutually exclusive. In fact, they are symbiotic. That really is at the heart. That drives people. It's absolutely when I talk to people, Why are you still here? They're like, I so believe in the purpose and values of this organization.

    [00:25:55.000] - Deanne Stewart

    I could wax lyrical about this all day long, and.

    [00:25:58.160] - Camilla Love

    I know you could too. Totally. I could probably ask 20 questions further, but we might bore people.

    [00:26:04.940] - Deanne Stewart

    We'll do a separate podcast on this. Yeah, maybe we could do it. Exactly. But it's got to be real, right? I get so frustrated when I see organisations that have on their wall purpose and values, and then you just go one layer down, and it's all BS.

    [00:26:24.150] - Camilla Love

    It's crickets down there. It's empty. And yeah, I totally agree. The organisations that talk the talk and walk the walk, the organisations that you see talent flock to because they are full of purpose and that purpose for good. But they also have a values alignment along their entire stakeholder chain. And that is such a strong bond.

    [00:26:59.680] - Deanne Stewart

    All right. I'll give you one really good data point here. It's a funny dilemma that we've just faced. I just talked to you about this amazing digital transformation that we're going through where we're really creating the simplest and most helpful member experience for super members. We just really want to own that in the marketplace. The team had budgeted for a certain degree of turnover in the team, right?

    [00:27:26.320] - Camilla Love

    But.

    [00:27:27.370] - Deanne Stewart

    We've got so low turnover in the team that they came to me the other day saying, Well, it's costing a little bit more because we've got so little turnover. I'm like, Wow, okay, well, that's pretty amazing. That's great. Considering the degree of change in the industry. But it's because the people on the team are so dedicated to it, and they so see the purpose, and they so see the difference they're making. It really does hit the bottom line.

    [00:27:58.520] - Camilla Love

    That's so fabulous. It's just a testament to the team that you lead also, and pushing those values down, and then being astute to those values down into the next layer, and then the next layer, and the next layer. So I love that. So just want to turn slightly, and you mentioned it early on, and I'm a big proponent of this, about being the best person you can has this mind, body, soul, as well as career purpose. So how do you make sure you're on as a physical and mental person, like wellbeing, to match who you need to be as a CEO? Because I see you around this shop and all I see is smiles, which is awesome. But surely there's points in time where those smiles are upside down. So talk to me about how you manage the stress and the complexity and the positivity that comes from your role?

    [00:29:06.050] - Deanne Stewart

    Yeah. Look, I've definitely got battle scars, so I wouldn't ever want to project that life is just in one direction. I think most people have battle scars, and those that say they don't are probably just lying. I think part of it does come from those battle scars and really learning. But a big part of it is just that self reflection. If I think about, I've definitely had a couple of points in my career where I lost focus or I lost what my own individual purpose was. I found myself just working so hard to just keep up, probably on the outside looking like things were fine. I was getting promoted. I was being given extra work, et cetera, but on the inside, I was I was just burning out, basically. When I looked back, I was working huge hours, but it was probably not really about that. It was the fact that I felt really in an environment that wasn't aligned to my values, and I had lost sight of my purpose. A ctually, it was reconnecting with that and being really clear about what really matters to me, how I want to make a difference, what values in an organization have to be there for me to thrive, combined with really setting boundaries from a wellbeing perspective so that t's not to say you don't have crazy weeks, but you can't have crazy weeks become crazy months become crazy years and expect to sustain that.

    [00:30:55.630] - Deanne Stewart

    It was really about coming back to my purpose my values, and also my boundaries that really, what are the things I've got to have in my life that give me joy, that sustain me?

    [00:31:09.570] - Camilla Love

    How do you do that? Because sometimes when you're in that dark hole of months of long hours and all that stuff, is it I'm going to go for a run, or I need to have a circuit breaker somehow. What is it for you that might have a mindset shift?

    [00:31:27.190] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, for me, it's funny. And I talk about boundaries a lot, and this was taught to me by the wonderful Penelope, who was a career coach of mine, of you've got to be clear. What are the couple of things in your life? And those couple of things can change as life evolves. But absolutely, you have to have in any given period. And so for me, I think about it over a fortnight because over a week is probably a little too hard to manage. That absolutely needs to be there because they give you joy. So for me, it is exercise. If I do not get three or four lots of exercise in a week. Me too. It's not worth knowing me. No, me neither. Then my second element is sleep and I've got to have a good night's sleep. Now, occasionally, I'll have to be late or I have to be working late, or whatever. But most nights, I've got to have, sounds a bit boring, seven or eight hours sleep a night. That just hasn't changed for me. So there's some fundamentals. And then for me, it is definitely about having time with the family.

    [00:32:31.450] - Deanne Stewart

    If I go for too long where I'm not having... What I mean by time with the family, I mean quality time. It's when you are not thinking about work, you're truly dedicated. So that for me are the key things. Now, when the kids were younger, one of those ones was I needed to be at the school gate at least one day a week. And this is before we all got way more flexibility in our jobs, which is one of the absolute silver linings, I think, of COVID for many office work jobs. That has clearly changed because the kids clearly as teenagers, don't want me at the school gates any longer.

    [00:33:07.700] - Camilla Love

    Daddy, mum.

    [00:33:08.330] - Deanne Stewart

    No. Exactly. That for me is really where it's at, is getting really clear what those couple of things are, and just making sure that you don't cross the line of not giving them the credit that you need to give them.

    [00:33:25.620] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, indeed. I have a last question, and I ask this everybody, and everyone has a different take, which is why I ask it. I'm always learning something every time someone asks it is, what is the most valuable advice you've been given, and why has it resonated with you so much?

    [00:33:47.990] - Deanne Stewart

    Oh, do you know? I found a much better way of articulating this recently. It is to learn from today to make tomorrow better. The reason I love it, and that is a much better articulation than what I used to say, what I used to say was more like, Don't take yourself too seriously, just work out what you've learned today and apply it tomorrow. Because I think particularly for those of us who grow up as perfectionist pleases, which is definitely the category that I fit it into, you'd always be bashing yourself up, and you'd be your own worst self critic. It would stop you from doing certain things, or it would stop you from feeling great about yourself or what you were doing. For me, that is definitely a mantra. But it's also a mantra if you think about it in a learning growth mindset. Okay, well, what can I learn from today to make better tomorrow? I think if you've got that mindset, you're afraid of a hell of a lot less, and you're not afraid of failure. I think fear is so rife through our industry and something that people talk so little about, but it actually inhibits most people.

    [00:35:05.800] - Deanne Stewart

    So for me, I feel like I have a hell of a lot less fear with that advice resting on my shoulders.

    [00:35:14.150] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, definitely. And that could be a whole another podcast talking about fear in the industry. Oh, my gosh. We could have five podcast about this one. We got a series going on here. Because I agree with you because the ability to... Our industry takes risks every day, but that ability to take risk without that reflection and that mindset, whether it be a personal risk or investment risk or any other risk, does hold you back, really.

    [00:35:45.980] - Deanne Stewart

    Spot on. And if you don't do enough self reflection, then there's so many people that don't realise that in themselves. Totally.

    [00:35:55.440] - Camilla Love

    Oh, my gosh.

    [00:35:56.800] - Deanne Stewart

    So deep. Stay tuned.

    [00:35:59.160] - Camilla Love

    Stay tuned. Next time. So we're at the end. I've taken up way too much of your time already, but super excited about my quickfire questions. Have you listened to any of my podcast? Do you know what you're about.

    [00:36:11.490] - Deanne Stewart

    To get into? I have. I'm like, Oh, dear.

    [00:36:14.980] - Camilla Love

    So I've got some cracking ones for you today. So remember, first thing that comes into your head.

    [00:36:22.650] - Deanne Stewart

    It comes.

    [00:36:23.070] - Camilla Love

    To my mind. Okay, all right. Okay.

    [00:36:25.710] - Deanne Stewart

    What happens if nothing comes into my head?

    [00:36:27.680] - Camilla Love

    Well, you could say blank, but there wasn't there was a huge big pause. No, they're pretty simple. They're pretty simple. Okay. How would your friends describe you?

    [00:36:42.800] - Deanne Stewart

    Extraverted, caring, a bit funny, and very driven.

    [00:36:49.970] - Deanne Stewart

    I wouldn't say too funny, a bit funny.

    [00:36:53.310] - Camilla Love

    A bit funny as in funny odd or funny? Could be both. Okay. What is the most important money lesson you've learned?

    [00:37:09.870] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, I'm going to have to say this clearly is save a bit from the moment you start earning. Just put a little bit away, even if it's just a dollar, just that magic putting of compound interest is the biggest thing.

    [00:37:26.180] - Camilla Love

    What did they say it's the eighth wonder of the world. Yeah, exactly. My hidden talent is?

    [00:37:37.110] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, actually, I have told a few people this, my hidden talent is Zumba. I am pretty Well, I wasn't awesome when I started out.

    [00:37:47.820] - Camilla Love

    I actually looked ridiculous.

    [00:37:50.280] - Deanne Stewart

    But now, I've got some moves. You're down. Yeah, I'm down.

    [00:37:54.330] - Camilla Love

    Great. I might have to join the class. I am not so down.

    [00:37:57.960] - Deanne Stewart

    On the work. Definitely. You have to. All right, we'll talk after.

    [00:38:01.830] - Camilla Love

    The podcast. Okay. Could be slightly embarrassing. On my bucket list is...

    [00:38:09.180] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, we as a family really want to go to Africa. We've spent time in South Africa and going to another part there. But I really want to see the migration, and I just haven't. So that is definitely on my bucket list.

    [00:38:25.630] - Camilla Love

    That would be fabulous.

    [00:38:28.900] - Deanne Stewart

    If.

    [00:38:30.510] - Camilla Love

    I was a superhero, I would be...

    [00:38:34.960] - Deanne Stewart

    Oh, the first thing that came in mind is Wonder Twins. Do you remember the.

    [00:38:40.230] - Camilla Love

    Wonder twins?

    [00:38:40.840] - Deanne Stewart

    No. Tell me. When I grew up, wonder twins, power, activate, fomal, and ice cube. These were twins. I always wanted to be a twin. I grew up with twins. They were awesome friends, and I always wanted to be a twin. There was Wonder Twins, and they could basically fist pump and then turn themselves into anything they wanted.

    [00:39:01.550] - Camilla Love

    So.

    [00:39:02.440] - Deanne Stewart

    I wanted that superpower. Now I just want to teleport. I just thought teleporting would be a very cool superpower.

    [00:39:10.670] - Camilla Love

    I call it the beat me up Scotty. If we could have a beat me up Scotty and I can be in Paris for the weekend, so much fun.

    [00:39:20.350] - Deanne Stewart

    Or you can just take me with you. Yeah, exactly.

    [00:39:26.250] - Camilla Love

    Who do you admire the most?

    [00:39:29.900] - Deanne Stewart

    That's a tough one. I admire so many people. I admire people that are really putting themselves out there and making a difference. I know that's a cheap answer, but it's the first thing that comes to mind. I admire Gandhi and Dalai Lama and people like that that are incredible. But in an everyday sense, I just love seeing people step up and make a difference.

    [00:39:54.890] - Camilla Love

    That's actually really lovely to say.

    [00:39:58.790] - Camilla Love

    If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

    [00:40:05.250] - Deanne Stewart

    That would be very cool. Well, actually, talking of the Dalai Lama, I would love to have dinner with the Dalai Lama and just learn.

    [00:40:15.550] - Camilla Love

    And soak.

    [00:40:16.310] - Deanne Stewart

    It all in. Soak it all in. Because certainly in our Western world, we are so time poor, we're just running from one thing to another. I just feel like we've got so much to learn from people like the Dalai Lama. I'd definitely invite him. Who else? I'd love to invite people like Lincoln and Churchill and amazing people that have been amazing at these absolute moments in history. So that would be pretty cool. Then just for humour's sake, it would be fascinating to have someone like Trump at dinner, wouldn't it?

    [00:40:59.920] - Camilla Love

    Well, at least you'd have great conversation.

    [00:41:03.660] - Deanne Stewart

    Yeah. Well, I don't know if you'd have conversation, but you might have one way communication. But yeah, I'm curious.

    [00:41:13.300] - Camilla Love

    I agree. My view on that stuff is that you should have people to dinner that actually are at differing ends of the spectrum or challenge the dinner party conversation. T hat's definitely one.

    [00:41:27.680] - Deanne Stewart

    Absolutely. It's like whenever I'm in the States, I always watch Fox and CNN just to see what's really going on. What's going on?

    [00:41:36.720] - Camilla Love

    Okay. My favourite book is...

    [00:41:40.850] - Deanne Stewart

    Do you know what? I've just finished reading, so I have to say this because there's lots of great books when the Krood Act sing. Have you read that?

    [00:41:49.550] - Camilla Love

    No.

    [00:41:50.800] - Deanne Stewart

    Well, there's a movie out now. I haven't seen the movie. I've just finished the book. It is beautiful. It is so beautifully written. Yeah.

    [00:42:00.310] - Camilla Love

    I have to put that on my list for my very long holiday that's coming up. What really bad movie do you absolutely love?

    [00:42:11.240] - Deanne Stewart

    My sister and I, although my sister watched it way more often than I did, but growing up, we were quite addicted to dirty dancing.

    [00:42:21.800] - Camilla Love

    That's not a bad movie.

    [00:42:23.660] - Deanne Stewart

    No. Nobody puts baby in the corner. No one does.

    [00:42:28.450] - Camilla Love

    Oh, Patrick Swayze. Oh, my God. He was so good in that.

    [00:42:33.540] - Deanne Stewart

    He was. I know. It was a beautiful love story.

    [00:42:38.040] - Camilla Love

    So black.

    [00:42:39.130] - Deanne Stewart

    I don't know that I'd say it's a great movie, though. That's why I was like, Oh, yeah, that's a really good one. My sister got up to watching it, I think, 16 times.

    [00:42:48.190] - Camilla Love

    I remember being banned from watching it as a kid because it was M, from my parents. It was M and I think it came out. And I think I was probably 12 or 13, everyone would be talking about it. And I'm like, I'm just going to... When they're out, I'm just going to watch it. I'm glad I did. I don't think I.

    [00:43:05.910] - Deanne Stewart

    Probably watched it 10 times. It's definitely the worst movie you could have watched as a.

    [00:43:07.970] - Camilla Love

    12 year old. Yeah, definitely. Okay, last question. Describe in three words why a career in finance is awesome.

    [00:43:15.830] - Deanne Stewart

    Catalyst for change.

    [00:43:18.350] - Camilla Love

    That is fabulous. Oh, my gosh. We could do this for hours, I think. But I'm going to stop there. And thank you for all your advice today. I loved the nexus of your parents as teachers and in the job and the people that you represent today and achieving them, their superannuation outcomes. I love the fact that you're a country girl at heart that ended up in New York and has now brought your skill set into the Australian environment. I love that that you'd love to invite the Delai Lama and Trump to dinner at the same time.

    [00:44:07.670] - Deanne Stewart

    It's pretty.

    [00:44:09.480] - Camilla Love

    Crazy, hey. That's crazy. But thank you so much for your time and thoughts today. Really, really appreciated it. I hope you'll do it again. I really do.

    [00:44:21.630] - Deanne Stewart

    Thank you. I've so enjoyed the conversation. And thank you for your generosity, both to me, but also to so many people in the industry. You are an absolute role model. So thank you.

    [00:44:32.240] - Camilla Love

    Thanks. Thank you. Well, until next time, everybody, we'll see you soon. The information that is in this podcast, we.

    [00:44:52.630] - Speaker 3

    Always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually.

    [00:44:57.200] - Camilla Love

    Really.

    [00:44:57.670] - Speaker 3

    Careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances.

    [00:45:07.450] - Camilla Love

    With that.

    [00:45:08.130] - Speaker 3

    But this is all about careers advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S3. Ep5 Get to know Camilla Love, the Woman Behind F3 and Shares Not Shoes.

Jodi Pettersen from Season 1 of Shares Not Shoes comes back to put your regular host, Camilla Love in the hot seat. Get to know the woman behind the podcast, Fthree and eInvest.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.

    Jodi Pettersen

    You need to be your number one cheerleader, right? So no one else is going to be your biggest cheerleader except for you.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Welcome back to Shares Not Shoes Podcast. The Insider's Guide to Careers in Finance. My name is not not Camilla Love. It's actually Jody Pettison. And the reason why I'm hosting today's podcast will become very clear shortly. Cherscot Shoes podcast introduced those that work in finance and uncovers the personal stories of the who, what, when and how of careers in finance. So let's dive into it. On today's episode, I am interviewing Camilla Love, the actual founder of Shares Not Shoes podcast, the founder of F Three and all around awesome person. This has come after many requests from Shares Not Shoes listeners to really find out what's Camilla's story. She's the one asking all these questions. But let's pull out their uno reverse card around and discover what Camilla is all about. So thank you for stepping on the other side of the podcast today, Camilla.

    Camilla Love

    Thanks, Jodi, for saying yes to be the new moderator. You might have a permanent job, so watch out.

    Jodi Pettersen

    You better watch out. Hey, this is my first go. Excuse the listeners. Hopefully I can meet up to your expectations. So should we dive right in?

    Camilla Love

    Sure. Absolutely.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Obviously, Camilla, you founded F Three, but what is it that you do besides F Three? Because that's not your day job, is it?

    Camilla Love

    No. And a lot of people don't actually know what F Three is, so let me start there. So, the founder of F Three, and you mentioned that. So F three stands for future females in finance. And what we aim to do there is encourage and nudge the next generation of female talent into the financial services industry. And we target girls from year ten all the way through to the end of their journey at university. And the backbone of it is an online work experience programme, which is seriously fabulous. And you got to see a little snippet of it this morning, which is fabulous, and it warms my heart. There isn't a week that goes by that someone's not telling me a really fabulous story about the people they've met or the new job that they've got, and that just makes my cup really full. But we can go into F Three at another time. But what I do outside of F three. And this shares not shoes. Podcast. So I am a mom, and I'm a mom of two children and two dogs and a wife, which is really exciting. I'm also the founder of Einvest, an actively managed ETF business we found within the perennial group here in Australia.

    Camilla Love

    So the business runs just over $100 million in assets, which is pretty exciting. So I started that a little while ago. We've got now four actively managed ETFs out on the market today that anyone can trade. And I have a number of different hats. So I'm a board director I sit on, do a lot of work within the universities, I do a lot of work within my old school I went to in the start up and angel investing segment. But I've been in the financial services industry for over 20 years now and I've really spent most of my time on the marketing, client service and sales side of a buyside firm, which is perennial. What we do there is essentially all about marketing and promotion of our investment capabilities in house. So Einvest is just another feather in my bow on that segment.

    Jodi Pettersen

    And full disclosure to listeners, I am also a team member at Einvest and we'll find out later if I am the favourite team member.

    Camilla Love

    Could be.

    Jodi Pettersen

    But honestly, I don't know anyone who does juggles more than you do, and with such energy and confidence, it astounds me on a daily basis. But let's wind it back to how you actually got into finance. I'm sure you could have done anything. Why? To finance?

    Camilla Love

    Yes. You know, I really wanted to be in the arts sector. When I did my MBA, I actually did a career deep dive in whether I should actually look at buying and selling art, corporate art, on behalf of big companies out there, and I love all that sort of stuff, but really, that is my passion outside of work. So I didn't necessarily think that that would be a really good career choice for me. But why did I choose a career in finance? And that really comes down to a love of business studies and commerce, a love of people and understanding, decision making and strategy and I love all that sort of stuff, but really, it actually pricked my interest when it's all about what I describe as my international man of mystery. That guy knows who he is. And it was my godfather, so he spent most of my younger childhood offshore, outside of Australia in New York and Tokyo when I was growing up. So every summer he would come down here and come and see my parents and we'd hang out and everyone had been all super excited about where he had been, which Global City had been to in the last month, say, for example, and what deals he had done and the people he had met.

    Camilla Love

    And these stories really invigorated my interest in financial services. The funny thing is that no one actually knew what he did, but what I did was say, I don't know what you do, but I'm just going to do that and fast forward. And he's working at Citigroup and having a really interesting time. So that's how I sort of loved finance and that's why I knew early on why I wanted to go in there. But I tell you what, everyone thinks that you have to be a whiz, bang, smash it out of the park maths geek. And I definitely was not that. As I mentioned before, I'm a real people person and solving problems. And sure, I can do the math, but it doesn't get me out of bed every day. But finance definitely attracts people like me as well because it really is a people related industry and a problem solving related industry and that's why I love it.

    Jodi Pettersen

    What I love about finance is you really don't need to be that like master to succeed in this space from that moment of deciding at a young age to go into this space until more recently when you set up F Three, lots has happened. What was it on that journey that inspired you to create a three?

    Camilla Love

    Yes, a lot of different things actually. So I guess it was a reflection on my journey into the industry and the fact that there weren't a lot of females around at the time that I wanted to look at moving in. I remember in year eleven doing a business studies assignment and interviewing someone at County NatWest, which doesn't actually exist anymore here in Australia about what she did for a role. But I can't even remember any other females around me in my parents circle, for example, who were accountants or anything like that or in finance other than my godfather. So there's that. So that's sort of that reflection on 15 years in the industry. I represented at perennial a really talented group of investment professionals, but in reality there were no females at the time that I started F Three and thankfully now that has changed and changed quite substantially and I found it very hard to affect change on others if I couldn't make change myself. So I set out building F Three because I really wanted to turn work experience and the experience of the female journey within financial services and getting into financial services upside down, shake it all about, put it all back together and see if we can change the way that we do.

    Camilla Love

    It really meaningfully and I really wanted a grassroots, scalable approach to it and that's what we've come up with, with F Three. So for all those F Three girls out there, congratulations on getting through all that work experience and coming into the industry. And I know there are a lot of them. So it is a meaningful part of my life giving back into the industry that has given a lot to me, but also changing the industry for the better. Absolutely.

    Jodi Pettersen

    And I think I don't know about you, but I've sat into some of these presentations that F Three interns have made and I'm just astounded at the quality of their presentations and the research that they do. So the fact that you're getting these talented women and shoving them boardrooms yeah, I see it. Once they're in the boardrooms, they knock.

    Camilla Love

    Everyone away, they shine. It's a supportive environment and it's really important to create that. So that it really is a big fat nudge to show these talented university and school students that they can actually do this, no problem, give them the confidence that they need. It's really important to be part of that journey, to actually say, yeah, I can do this and let's take a big step into the industry.

    Jodi Pettersen

    I love it. So I guess jumping off from that as well. You've clearly helped a lot of young women enter into this space and I imagine we'll continue to do so in the future. I know how much demand there is for young women to be entering this programme and the demand of corporates to really accept them into their offices. What is it that you've learnt from s three students?

    Camilla Love

    A lot of different stuff and it's really about the next generation's views and eyes and attitudes on problem solving and whether that be a social media bent or whether that be more focused sustainability bent, whether that be really purpose driven. There's a lot of different stuff. But in reality, if I reflect on it the same feelings that I had 20 years ago on entering the industry, these people and these talented females having the same trepidation, is this right for me? Am I going to find cultural alignment of my values? Can I do it? All of that is the same, but it is just a slightly different lens with a slightly different purpose and okay.

    Jodi Pettersen

    You have been working under the perennial business of which Einstein are part of in a number of different roles over 20 years now, which to work for the same organisation for 20 years is quite unusual in Australia at least. How did you do that? What was it like?

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, funny. I guess there's a couple of things that are really important. So the ability to take big steps and risks within your career in a comfortable environment and perennial has given me that a number of times throughout my career. Whether that be taking the first job, whether that be getting my first promotion, whether that be doing offshore business development for a period of time, whether that be starting invest, it was all risky and it was a comfortable working environment and comfortable culture for me to be able to take that risk. Also thing is also about the leadership within the organisation is really important. So people who are aligned with my values, who care about me, who want to see me do my best, I think that is a really critical part of why I've stayed for so long. And working with people you really enjoy, so not only your boss, but also the peers that are around you, the intelligence, the ability to have difficult conversations, provide good quality feedback to each other without repercussion, I think is really important. I think that growing the new talent in the organisation and showing being able to allow them to shine is also really important.

    Camilla Love

    So that's why I've stayed for so long. I've taken a lot of risk, I've done a lot of different things and I found renewal each time. So it's not that I haven't looked outside for sure, because you have to keep yourself aware with what other people are doing outside. But is the grass greener or is it just a different colour? That's essentially what I'm always assessing, whether is the grass greener and sometimes it's not.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Yes, I imagine you get lots of calls from recruiters because you're such a star and yet don't tell. You're going to get flooded now, girl. Once they hear this, I'll be like, oh, Camilla. Because I know how much of a star you are in this industry. And, yeah, the fact that you continue, obviously you make that choice all the time and this is still the best place that I want to be.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, but remember, that's pretty cool. Yeah, I would say there's a couple of things. So I think the best piece of advice that I was ever given, and it was given to me by my boss, was essentially, you need to be your number one cheerleader, right? So no one else is going to be your cheerleader except your biggest cheerleader, except for you. So unless you're putting yourself out there and saying, hey, I want to go and do that, or, hey, can you give me a chance to go on to that committee? Or, hey, put me forward for this role over here. They're not mind readers that your boss isn't a mind reader. You need to be able to verbalise and articulate what it is you want, and if you can't do that, you're not being your number one cheerleader, and it's important. But then also, the other thing is, the onus is on you to build your own profile and get stuff done, right? So whilst I've been in the organisation for a long time and I've done different roles outside of the organisation. Within charity groups and things like that. The onus is on me to build my profile within the industry for not only doing a really good job and being great at what I do.

    Camilla Love

    But also bettering the industry for the next generation. Which is what F Three is all about. Too.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Absolutely. I've really found through my career in the finance space that the more that you give, the more you get back, and you're a giver. So it's this cool virtual cycle, which is something that I think it's true sometimes you give, give, give. You might not get back straight away.

    Camilla Love

    Come on in, karma.

    Jodi Pettersen

    It's true, though. It's absolutely true. And look, I think you kind of touched it in your answer here, but I want to highlight it to the audience because I'm sure they already know already. But you are like a very excellent networker. What would you give to advice would you give to others about putting yourself out there and networking and especially when it doesn't feel natural?

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, this is a really good question and I'm one of probably 1% of people who walk into a room of people I don't know and go, yes, who can I meet? And the other person I think I know is my mum. So it is something that you have to teach yourself, it is not something that is necessarily innate. I love networking, I love finding out about new people. I think that my network is an organic organism which essentially needs new people to enter and leave as it goes to grow and be beneficial to the people within my network. So I think that that isn't really important thing to think about when deciding whether to network or not. It's important. I've written actually a blog ages and ages ago on my LinkedIn, on my best tips for networking, but things that I do. So just a basic thing is just smile because everybody is feeling equally as awkward as you are and a smile goes a long way and I think that that is if you're giving off that exciting and positive energy, you will get that in return when you're networking. So that's point one.

    Camilla Love

    Point two, I think is you need to be interesting to others and ask a lot of questions and on the flip side of that is being an active listener as part of that. So asking what do you do on the weekends and when's your next travel and what makes you tick outside of work, all that sort of stuff, really listening and understanding that of people. Because a lot of people first question is where do you work and what do you do? I tell you what, if that was the only thing that was ever about me, no one's writing where did you work and what did you do on your gravestone? It's actually about what do you like as a person and what do you do outside of work? That's actually super interesting. So ask those type of questions and be really engaged and active in your listening of that. And then the follow up piece the next morning, is it an email, is it a LinkedIn pin that says lovely to meet you last night, it was great to chat about X, Y and Z. Let's stay in touch. I think that is really important.

    Camilla Love

    But I'm quite strategic in my networking. I network inside the industry, across multiple industries and then for fun and what you find is all those people interact and you're getting outside of your bubble and you're learning different things about different people in different industries and the challenges that they are doing, which actually just makes you an interesting person to be around, which means that people want to network with you. So, yeah, there's lots of different tips and tricks out there, but the biggest one is to smile.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Yes, I agree and I think you touched on at the end, like having something when you're an interesting person, you attract interesting people to you and again, that becomes that virtuous cycle that I mentioned earlier. I've always really found it that like, offering to someone like, oh, I'm really interested in XYZ. Offering that of yourself to them can actually make them feel comfortable because then they know what to ask, they know what to talk to you about, particularly in kind of new situations. We're all a little bit of out of Practise at the moment. After Covert, I know I haven't been to many functions and I'm still kind of getting back into that groove. I think it's also okay to acknowledge the person like, oh man, I haven't been to one of these in a while. Feeling a bit rusty. My name is Jodi. How are you going? Acknowledging that you're feeling a bit nervous to someone I found personally works really well and kind of breaking the ice and being a bit more vulnerable.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And vulnerability is important with networking because if you put yourself out there, people will reflect that as well. So they will put themselves out there as well. Yeah. It's super important. And networking is absolutely critical to the success of your career. I can walk into many rooms doing industry events these days and I can see people I haven't seen in forever, but yet I know I've networked with them five years ago and it's like, I've started again and it's hit back all the banter and what about this? And I'm seeing you here and blah, blah, blah, blah. And it is critical, it's critical for your career progression, definitely. So for those people who are scared of it, just get out and give it a go. And whether that's you put yourself a goal of, okay, I'm going to do one networking event a month or one working networking event a quarter, whatever that is, reflect on the learnings that you have during that time that you are at that event, and understand when you feel uncomfortable and acknowledge it, because there's absolutely nothing wrong with it.

    Jodi Pettersen

    It's completely natural. Another tip that someone told me, which I always really like, is when you're following up on LinkedIn, say hi, so and so, it's really nice to meet you at and put the event in like three years time when you're like, oh, where do I need that person? You've actually got the record of it in your LinkedIn messages. That's really cool. So the last kind of big question I have is, you've got incredible energy, but what is it that inspires you to keep that energy going every day?

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, it's a really good question because sometimes I'm an extrovert, so I live off the energy that is inside me and I get from other people, which is why I'm a people person. Right? So everybody sort of understands that, but it can be tiring. So I totally acknowledge that as well, particularly for people who aren't so people orientated, like me. So I absolutely appreciate that. What keeps me going is a number of different things. So I always like to leave the world in a better place than I found it, and whether that be just by touching or having a conversation or being involved with an organisation or whatever it is, I always like to leave a positive mark on it so that people reflect on me in a positive light. So there's that piece. I also it's the next generation. So leaving a legacy for not only the organisations that I'm involved with, but on the industry as a whole, I think, is really something that drives me. And then my kids drive me a lot and they drive me up the wall sometimes too, but they drive me a lot to become a better person and part of me starting out three.

    Camilla Love

    And whilst it started before my daughter was born, the reason and purpose is only solidified by her and the ability for her to come to me in 20 years time and say, hey, Mom, I want to be part of the industry. And I can go?

    Jodi Pettersen

    Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    Great. It will welcome you with big arms and give you a big crazy hug, because it will welcome anyone from a broad church, from a broad background with broad sets of skills and you can make a mark and find your purpose in this industry. So there's lots of different drivers, but, yeah, that's a couple for you.

    Jodi Pettersen

    And you've had S Three students going through the programme for a couple of years now and we were talking about this at lunchtime, how I think you're really starting to see the kind of the knock on effects of what happens to these students once they've gone through the programme and or finish the university or wherever that in that journey. The reality is that you're going to for you to see real change that you're trying to make with S Three. It's going to take a number of years for it to kind of really come out, but I'm interested to know if you've got any really special stories from some of the students that you've interacted with so far on their journeys that kind of you think about when you go to bed at night.

    Camilla Love

    Oh, lots. So I think the first one is Daisy, who I went to her school and did a career stay presentation there. She then went and took a commerce degree at university and then turned up in one of my Fthree groups. So there's a great one. I had lunch the other day with four exfree girls who are all out in the industry and we were talking about, is there a way that we can all keep together? Because I would love to continue to support F Three, or I would happily take a coffee from an ex F Three girl, all that sort of stuff. Sitting on a final presentation from an S Three group today, alongside the CFA and a company called Neos, and one of the girls there said, I've done this three group before and it was three years ago and she essentially got an internship out of that. So it's really positive. And as I said right at the beginning, it really fills my cup every day. There isn't a week that goes by, like, even this week, I got an email from a girl I placed in your ten work experience at Hester, one of the large superannuation and pension funds here in Australia, and she's then gone on to take a commerce degree, majoring in finance, and she's just come back and said, hey, I'm looking for work experience.

    Camilla Love

    I'm like, well, just join one of the F Three groups that we're going to come up later on the year. So the virtuous cycle is occurring and it really is grassroots and it just makes me happy.

    Jodi Pettersen

    I know how much it makes you happy because as I sit next to you every day at work, I see when these emails ping into your inbox and how it lights up your day of these good stories. So I'm going to take my opportunity as the master of today's podcast to encourage the former F Three students to please send emails to Camilla about how much you love F Three and the things that you've done and what you've done since. And even if you haven't gone into the finance industry, I think that's also a really relevant data point. I'm sure you've still learned something from your F Three journey and I know how much these emails make Camilla's day, so I'm just going to put it out there that you should probably send her a message.

    Camilla Love

    I'm going to get bombarded.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Oh, come on, you love it, I know you do. I love a war story, camilla, this industry is full of them. What is your favourite war story from your career so far?

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, good question, Jody, because I have an absolute cracking one and, like, there's many, so don't get me wrong, but this one always sticks out. So, at the time, I was responsible for offshore business development and client engagement for perennial and we had a really cracking listed global real estate capability and I had found out that we had been shortlisted for $250,000,000 mandate in Taiwan. And so I had gone and I got everything translated into traditional Chinese language. I got an agent over in Taipei over there and the agents like, okay, well, you need to turn up with everybody and go, well, I'm turning up with the portfolio manager myself. And my boss, he goes, no, you need to have 15 people there. And I'm like, what are you talking about? Anyway, fast forward, because lots of people just don't have the you know, you don't have the resources to do that. Plus you think about all the time that takes of all these people. But anyway, so fast forward, we're in Taipei and we go into this pension fund office in Taipei and we got into this room which was this huge U shaped room with twelve trustees behind it and a big auditorium in the dark behind us, right?

    Camilla Love

    And we're on a table and we're there pitching and we're saying it in English and they're translating to Chinese and all that sort of stuff. And the clock literally had started at 40 minutes and then it went 395-9395 eight and it's like clicking down, clocking down, clocking down. And then at the end of it we had to stop and that was it. And then the trustees asked one question after one question after one question after one question and then it was in Chinese and the translators writing it in English and then giving us a question and we're trying to do it in English, give that question back and then she has to translate it into Chinese. It was a really interesting and lost in translation experience for me and it really highlighted a number of things about taking culture and thinking about it more deeply and the way that you interact with potential clients and things like that is really important. And then we all sort of left that and we sort of had to sit in our hotel room and we'd already given our fees in and so once we'd done the pitch, the pension fund would open up and work out what the fees were.

    Camilla Love

    And we had to sit there, hauled up in this apartment or this hotel room waiting for them to bring us back to see whether they wanted to be in negotiation or not. And needless to say, we didn't win the mandate. But really, as I said, really huge learning lesson for me because in reality the decision maker probably was in the dark behind me in the auditorium rather than the people around the Ushaped table in front of us. And it was enormous. It was cold because it was winter. The time we went, it was just entirely lost in translation. So it was one of those if I had to do it over again moments, it would be done slightly differently. But I'll tell you what, would I have not ever done that? Would I have? No answer. I learnt a lot about myself. I learnt a lot about the industry, I learned a lot about improvements that I should have made and things we should have done differently. But it was an amazing experience. And I tell you what, going to Taipei and the food was amazing and just everything, it was just fabulous in a country that I don't think necessarily I would have chosen to go to unless it had been works.

    Camilla Love

    So yeah, big wall story, but one of those ones. Would I have changed it for this world? Absolutely not.

    Jodi Pettersen

    How long were you waiting in the hotel room for that phone call?

    Camilla Love

    Like hours. Like 6 hours. It was hilarious. It was seriously hilarious.

    Jodi Pettersen

    And with your boss, everyone. Around you, everyone just sitting there looking at the phone, waiting, just waiting.

    Camilla Love

    It was really odd. It was really odd. But different cultures do things differently and you need to respect that. Yeah, it's different doing business here in Australia.

    Jodi Pettersen

    But what I love about that story as well is in that moment, you can prepare all you want and you're not only managing yeah. But you're managing the expectations of this whole room, of the people you're selling to, but also managing your boss, like, who's there? Like, sitting in the hotel room, probably going, I'm sure going to you going, when are they calling? Do you think we got it?

    Camilla Love

    What do you know?

    Jodi Pettersen

    I can only imagine the pressure cooker of the situation.

    Camilla Love

    And it wasn't a small mandate either. Like, $250,000,000 is a pretty big mandate. We should have sent 15 people along. We should have, I don't know, had a traditional Chinese speaker within the investment team that may have, you know, there could have been a lot of things that we would have done differently. But would I have changed it? Absolutely not. I reflect on that period and even talking to my boss about that, because obviously he was there, just how funny it was and how different it was and how good it was to do well.

    Jodi Pettersen

    If anything, it makes for a good story.

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. It might go down in folklore.

    Jodi Pettersen

    I'm sure the management is still talking about it about time in Taipei, like, ten years ago.

    Camilla Love

    Dear yes, dear me. But anyway, loved every second of it.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Let's wind into our quick fire questions and let's get right into it. So, Camilla, if you were any animal, what would it be and why?

    Camilla Love

    I think I'd be a dolphin. Highly intelligent, pretty I mean, it looks funny, but pretty good looking for a fish, I think. And it's always in the water. I love being close to the water, so I'm going to say a dolphin.

    Jodi Pettersen

    They're also highly social creatures, which is highly social creatures. Just complex social networks. It's you.

    Camilla Love

    Indeed.

    Jodi Pettersen

    What about your favourite superhero? Who is it?

    Camilla Love

    Well, I don't actually have one, but I tell you what, alongside F Three, I did a startup sort of boot camp thing a little while ago and we had to come up with our own superhero name. So don't judge me on this. And I actually won, so I'll take away with this, but I called myself the Networking Noodle and I had a special N and it was quite funny. But I'm the networking noodle. So I'll go with that.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Sure. And no one will ever come up with that one before, so I love that no.

    Camilla Love

    But can I say, before you move on, planet Money has done a cracking bunch of podcasts on creating a comic hero character and they're so worth a listen. So go and go and find there's, like, multiple of them and what they've done to buy it, and create it and now they've just done a musical which is think is hilarious. So go and have a look.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Maybe we might be able to link that in the body of the notes. Yeah. Best fashion brand for women to wear at work?

    Camilla Love

    Oh, there's a few. And I am definitely can't go past Scanner Theatre at all. Like you and I both know that they are a bit XY but they are staples within my wardrobe. I do love Ginger and smart to throw in a whole bunch of colour and interest and stuff into my work wardrobe. And even Saba I think is pretty good for the work wardrobe.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Great. I've also heard lately that Veronica Maine has really stepped it up. I haven't gone to cheque it out because again, post Covert, I haven't really been going out that much. But watch this space. Maybe we need to revisit foreign domain. That's what my friends have been telling me. What's your best book recommendation?

    Camilla Love

    Best book recommendation? So my favourite book is The Great Gatsby? For sure. I read it at school. I think I've read it 15 times. Just the Unrequited love story and the figurative language and the flappers and the devastation of loss and that small book just cracking. Love it.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Did you love Bass Lemon's version?

    Camilla Love

    You know what my favourite basal omen film is actually Romeo and Juliet and nothing is ever going to top it. So sorry. I like Leo but I tell you what, in the Gatsby in the Basilvan version, but he was way better in Romeo and Juliet and Claire Danes.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Amazing.

    Camilla Love

    Just like the ultimate couple. And the soundtrack all my life.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Oh, the music.

    Camilla Love

    The music so good.

    Jodi Pettersen

    I know that you love a short course, always learning. What's the best one you've taken so far?

    Camilla Love

    I have done a number, I think the two that really has sort of stuck out for me. I did a recent one at MIT on AI and its application in business strategy. I think that was really interesting. I've done one also with section four which is an online specialist and they do a lot of digital stuff and so that was really interesting too there on branding and strategy and product innovation and then also UNSW then learn to lead which actually Jody. You know. But for those guys out there. I'm actually a guest lecturer for it. Which I'm sorry for those people who are taking it. But the learnt to lead actually with UNSW which they offer for free for their postgrads. Is really interesting. So you're getting to understand the new and up to date thinking on different areas about leadership and stuff.

    Jodi Pettersen

    The ESG edition is coming soon, it.

    Camilla Love

    Will be released soon with similar in September. So yeah, all kind of responsibility.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Well, as I help edit it, I can vouch for it. It's quality, lack of that's great. Don't know about my Edison job. We'll see how we go. I know also that you've been involved with a number of charities. It's probably like picking your favourite child, but what's your favourite charity?

    Camilla Love

    Good question. So I give a lot to my old school foundation, Abbottley. I also am really passionate about some of the children's charity and also Beyond Blue or the sort of suicide prevention charities, because most listeners don't know, but Jody does know that my father unfortunately passed away due to suicide, so it's really important to me those areas. Should we take a little moment? I'm okay, I'm shaking it out.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Camilla, I also know that obviously you work at investing and you invest personally yourself, both in angel companies, but also into manage funds and ETFs, just like what Einvest creates over your time in the investment industry. What has been the best investment that you've made?

    Camilla Love

    In myself, definitely. So don't forget that one is probably what I'd say from a monetary position. My best investment may be in the small caps area, and the reason for that is because we've got time on our hands. So whilst it's highly volatile and can give you really good returns, it is over a really long time frame. So there you go. So I'll probably give you that one. But definitely, definitely investing in myself and the betterment and the knowledge base I have, and that is critically important.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Who is the most influential person in your life?

    Camilla Love

    Well, I definitely think my husband. He's definitely influential. He's the type of person who will tell me when things are bad as well as good, which I think is really important to have. I think my mum has been heavily influential. She is a businesswoman herself and she sort of paved away on, you can definitely do this, Camilla. So I love that. And then, obviously I mentioned my kids because they are the reason why we do what we do.

    Jodi Pettersen

    And what about your hidden talent?

    Camilla Love

    I don't know if I have a hidden talent. Like some people on the podcast have said, oh, yeah, I like to cook. And all my hidden talent is I can dislocate. Not dislocate, but got multiple joint things. I don't know. I don't know if I have a hidden talent. I would like to say my hidden talent is finding the murderer on Murder Mysteries, but I don't think I'm actually that good. Maybe that's what I'll go for. I know what I think and I'll call it out early, but I don't know if I'm that good.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Fair enough. Best wine recommendation, your go to wine if you're going to a dinner party or a function. What is it?

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, good question. So if I'm taking a white, I'm taking a Phillips shaw white. That's from Orange here in New South Wales. And if I'm taking a red, it's definitely a Clonicyla, which is down in Murray Bateman here in New South Wales as well. Cracking. And I will also say, so shout out to the Mount Madura crew. So I drink a lot of Mount Madura, both white and red here in this household. We do have a family connection, but yeah, they're the go to the go to one for me.

    Jodi Pettersen

    I love that because my go to is also from Orange as well. So Orange represent totally and last go fire question. I alluded to the beginning. Who's your favourite Invest team member?

    Camilla Love

    Good question. And now I would probably have to say the star here is our head of Legal, Juju the Cat. So Juju is Jodi's Cat and Julien Covet was a starring appearance on a number of different podcasts and videos and webinars. And even on our daily team to do, the Cat would always be there. She's there. She's number one support crew. But also she's a great legal representative because she doesn't say.

    Jodi Pettersen

    The people who don't follow the Einvest Instagram page, you guys really should, because Judy, the Head of Legal, does make an appearance on there occasionally. And some of our other followers have also got added in. There kind of honorary investments. We've got some dogs and other cats there. So definitely recommend following Instagram for the following Judy's journey as a legal cash. I also will make it very clear that we do have real legal people too.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, we definitely.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Bill and Beck. They're great, we love them. But Juju is the star. We'll give her that. Well, look, Camilla, thank you so much for having me as your host today. I'm so glad I got to pull the reverse Uno card and fire the questions your way, because I know that many of the F three students and also F Three partners, corporate partners, want to hear more about the lady that has created so much positive momentum for this industry. So thank you.

    Camilla Love

    Thanks for being the host with the most today, Joe. It's really important. And thanks for asking the really important questions, because from all of us, and as you well know, if every single one of us tells our journey, every journey is different. Someone will see something about themselves within those stories. So it is important to bring everyone's stories to life. And that's what Shares Not Shoes is all about.

    Jodi Pettersen

    Fantastic. Make sure you tune in to the next episodes.

    Camilla Love

    Bye, guys. You know the information that is in this podcast. We always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S3.Ep4 Jo Leaper Talks Jigsaws, Imposter Syndrome & Falling Into a Career in Finance

Meet Jo Leaper. Jo is the Head of Operations Consulting at JANA Investment Advisors.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.


    [00:00:00.190] - Jo Leaper

    End of the day, you have to have the right safeguards in place around the assets, insurances like you, you lock on the gate, but if you can't get that gate robust and secure, what's it really going to do for you?

    [00:00:16.410] - Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another the episode of Shares Not Shoes an Insider's Guide to Careers in Finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of Future Females in finance. Shares or Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people, all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go.

    [00:00:55.870] - Camilla Love

    Hi, everybody, it's Camilla Love and we are together again for another episode of Shares Not Shoes. And I'm super looking forward to chatting with today's guest. So I believe that this guest has one of the most interesting roles in the industry because she gets to uncover and go into other organisations and pick things apart and put things back together again, which, as a jigsaw enthusiast, I love to do. So welcome to shares not shoes, Jo.

    [00:01:27.930] - Jo Leaper

    Thank you very much. jigsaw enthusiast myself.

    [00:01:32.710] - Camilla Love

    Oh, I love them. I love them. I gave my mum the Jackson Blue Poles one and I think she's still going.

    [00:01:40.990] - Jo Leaper

    We had horrible one for my father in law and it literally had no edges and no edges. Bonkers. No edges.

    [00:01:48.330] - Speaker 3

    Was it circular? What was it?

    [00:01:49.680] - Jo Leaper

    It's sort of an elongated globe shape and, yeah, he passed a few years ago and it was still incomplete. So we took it on and we moved into his place for a while while we're renovating. And we said, Too hard, can't do it.

    [00:02:03.330] - Speaker 3

    But don't you like just the one piece or the two pieces a day and then you go away and come back again?

    [00:02:09.970] - Jo Leaper

    I still got my coverage from Lockdown. It's on one of those felt roll up things and so I'm convinced I'm going to get it done, but I just haven't got there. Life got back on track and jigsaws have sort of fallen to the side a little bit. So I need a good quiet weekend of lockdown and brain working properly to actually sit down and get stuck into it.

    [00:02:26.910] - Speaker 3

    Yeah, clear brain hard to find. So, Jo is the head of Operations Consulting at Jana Investment Advisors, and Jana is an asset consultant and advisor to large ship reannuation and pension funds here in Australia. And I even read that you managed a domestic cycling team here.

    [00:02:48.870] - Jo Leaper

    Oh, my God, I did. It's definitely going back a long way now.

    [00:02:53.520] - Camilla Love

    I'm a cycling widow. Okay, that is no mean feat, really.

    [00:02:59.550] - Jo Leaper

    No, it was pretty full on. So I met my husband Tom at uni. After Uni, he started cycling full time and every weekend we were here and there around the country for various bike races. And he won the Australian National Road Series Championship, which was a year long series, which got him a spot with the national team in Italy. So at this point. I finished Uni. I'd start at NAB and I was doing about six weeks in Europe each year with Tom. And then he was home from October to February and this back and forth romance for a long time and then we got engaged and I took a five year career break and was a cycling widow in Italy and the US. And then came home. At that point, he lost a bike and at one stage, his domestic club wanted to start a team and they wanted to to lead the team, and he's like, well, you know how all this works. So that's how I fell into domestic cycling management. Wow. Reasonably short period, but a couple of the riders that we worked, we ended up riding overseas and we had a pretty good programme going there.

    [00:04:05.300] - Jo Leaper

    I think we had seven riders at one point. All the bikes were provided, all that sort of stuff. That was definitely a very different grounding to what most people have in the industry. But it was a fun life.

    [00:04:16.620] - Camilla Love

    Totally. Living in Italy, eating too much pasta and pizza. How great would that be?

    [00:04:21.160] - Jo Leaper

    Really good tomatoes. Really good tomatoes. That's like the clearest memory. It's just that flavour of a really fresh tomato in Italy.

    [00:04:32.630] - Camilla Love

    Funny. We could be in the Italian sun right now.

    [00:04:35.510] - Jo Leaper

    That would be nice, because it's really cold in Melbourne today.

    [00:04:38.610] - Camilla Love

    We're going to go through and chat with Jo about her career journey and really delve into what operations is, why it was for her and why it could be a career for you. So let's take a step forward and tell me a little bit about you and about what you do on a day to day basis.

    [00:04:57.890] - Jo Leaper

    My day to day is incredibly varied and my background is very varied as you've worked out the cycling. But when I was overseas with Tom for that, I actually did my MBA very young and looking like I did it way too young, but because I couldn't get work visas while I was living in Italy and the US, and I didn't speak Italian, doing my MBA back then helped me sort of fill in my time, to be really blunt. Looking back historically. Well, I think the theory stuff that I learned was probably a little bit early in my career. The grounding and the time spent overseas really moulded who I am now. My background initially was actually HR.

    [00:05:32.540] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, right.

    [00:05:33.240] - Jo Leaper

    And so I did a HR management degree and I loved the strategy and the big thinking, and I hated hiring. Firing and training really wasn't me and I sort of dabbled in it for a very little bit and just went, oh, that's just not going to work. And so a friend's dad was working at a large bank and he was like, oh, they need someone in the mail room over summer. And I ended up at a custodian falling summer came around, really didn't like what I was doing in HR. Called and said, oh, I thought I didn't go on and leave again. Can I come back? And I was at Nas, including the career break, it was nearly ten years in the end.

    [00:06:06.880] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, right.

    [00:06:07.500] - Jo Leaper

    So that was I took a really long career break, but every time I came home with Tom, there was always casual work going, always contract work going. And so I fell into custody by accident and I loved it, but I realised how much kind of like a jigsaw. I like the EndToEnd process. I like seeing how things fit together and how one thing can impact another. And if I think back to what I used to love about HR and management, it was, how do you make the cogs fit better to get a better outcome? And that's what asset servicing was to me. And then I got into the client side of it, which I really love, because you make some lifelong friends, you meet some amazing people from there. I remember there being a tender consultant, come in and run a custody tender. And I went, oh, I really like what you do. And that was kind of the seed. It went from there.

    [00:06:55.200] - Camilla Love

    Great.

    [00:06:55.660] - Jo Leaper

    I worked at Access Capital with Jackie. You had Jackie Krausey on there.

    [00:07:00.040] - Camilla Love

    She is fab.

    [00:07:01.090] - Jo Leaper

    She's brilliant. I love that woman. We met there and then I ended up at Jana and started off with doing some custody tender advice. And now it's growing into this large team that doesn't just work with custodians, we work with asset managers, we work with our clients. And not just super funds, we work with charities and endowments and just help them make things work better.

    [00:07:22.590] - Camilla Love

    So talk to me about for those people who are out there who don't know, what is custody and what does operations entail in that segment?

    [00:07:32.840] - Jo Leaper

    Custody, by tradition, is holding someone's assets safe. And in the world that we live in, for a super fund or for a charity or an endowment, it's making sure that everything that's needed with those assets is done. Are they settled? Are they safe? Are they in the right location? Our cash flows manage properly and then there's tax and performance and other things on the back of it. So that's the real premise of operations in that sense. But what operations used to be, which was more of that bread and butter, is it all safe? Kind of space. Operations now? Within custody is, where are my assets held? Where is my data held? What risks am I exposed to? What are the challenges in China and Russia do to my assets and my books? What are my business continuity plans around those assets? How am I going to keep running my super fund or keeping my endowment and charity assets safe? Because there are real people beneficiaries behind all of those clients that need to get what they need out of those environments.

    [00:08:24.790] - Camilla Love

    And it's interesting because we talk a lot about cyber security, security within my organisation, and how that affects the safekeeping of assets. How do you view that segment? Because that's an area where I think financial services could do better per se, and it's a really important burgeoning segment of the sector.

    [00:08:48.660] - Jo Leaper

    It's growing so fast. It's one of those ones that we always look at is changing on a daily basis, not weekly or monthly. And you look at things like insurance around ourselves, is it even worth it for insurance? Because at the end of the day, you have to have the right safeguards in place around the assets. Insurance is like you lock on the gate at the end of it, but if you can't get that gate robust and secure, what's it really going to do for you? I think from a cyber perspective, our industry is an incredibly rich target, unfortunately, and we're very lucky that we do it as well as we do. But we have to get better and we have to get better faster at cyber. And so it's something that when we're looking at a custodian bank, they've got trillions of dollars to spend on this sort of stuff and that really is the benchmark for what we're looking for. Asset managers are doing the absolute best they can in that space, and so are our clients. But it's growing so quickly and evolving so quickly. You look at even things like spam calls that sort of went quiet during Covert.

    [00:09:47.850] - Jo Leaper

    And I don't know about you, but spam volumes or spam volumes are exploding post covet.

    [00:09:53.470] - Camilla Love

    Absolutely.

    [00:09:54.470] - Jo Leaper

    People are looking at different ways of easier money and so we have to be really conscious with cyber and really on top of our game.

    [00:10:01.200] - Camilla Love

    And you mentioned business continuity planning as well, and what does that mean in operations, particularly for your clients? Because we've seen business continuity planning as a really critical component of how we've worked throughout Covad. Have you advised your clients in that sector?

    [00:10:22.190] - Jo Leaper

    So, around COVID, we've been really lucky and fortunate that the groups that we work with, so the asset managers, the custodians, even our clients have been able to transition into covered really well. And BCP, or business continuity planning is meant to transfer in on a really quick and short term basis. And we often talk about transfer of work. So, for example, we have custodians who are in India and China, or they're in Poland or they're in Malaysia, and we want to see them turn that over really quickly. And fortunately, in those nations, or unfortunately, a positive hybrid of them being in those nations, is they're subject to a lot of natural disaster, things that we don't have to deal with. So you've got floods in Mumbai, type typhoons in Kuala Lumpur, that sort of thing. And so Covet was really hard on them from an economic perspective, but they were able to transfer work really, really well. I think for BCP now, we actually have to look at the bigger picture and look at the geopolitics of it. Costa RDS around the world that we all deal with are all located around the South China Sea.

    [00:11:21.030] - Jo Leaper

    There's challenges between Russia, Ukraine, India, up into the Ukraine Poland borders, and that's going to create a bigger challenge for BCP going forward. We have to start looking longer term at things like that, but also BCP. And the concept of remote work used to be really scary for a lot of businesses. And thankfully we're seeing a lot of businesses go, oh, we can do that. That's okay. And hopefully that is creating a concept of change around the globe that we haven't seen before because I think that will open our eyes to what else could be possible.

    [00:11:51.790] - Camilla Love

    Absolutely. And I thought the jigsaw analogy going back to that, and I know that in your role, you advise and assess your clients operations and where they can be better and where they can be helped or changed or whatever. So is there a one jigsaw piece that fits all or is there no? I think so.

    [00:12:19.010] - Jo Leaper

    That would be the drain, wouldn't it? This is your model. Off you go. Please play nicely. That would be lovely. We have a pillar foundation that we work with. So we look from an operational consulting, which is what we call the world that I work in. It's consulting on operations back to investors, as opposed to consulting to the investors themselves, being the asset managers, et cetera. So the bottom layer of that pillar is looking at the operations within Custodian banks because as I said before, these multi trillion dollar entities, they have a lot of cash, they should be able to do this well. And we take the learnings from them. And then we look at the asset management and go, well, you guys aren't that big, but you should be able to get to pretty good Practise and we try and roll that up. So we do take very similar components as that model, and then we try and right size it for the size and scale of the asset manager. So a boutique asset manager is going to be very different to some of the mega asset managers that are around the world. And you have different expectations on them, but you still want the best possible Practise they can do.

    [00:13:15.670] - Jo Leaper

    And then we roll it back into our clients who are smaller again. In a lot of cases. They might manage hundreds of billions of dollars. But they're small teams and they're usually run for member profit if they're in the industry superfund sector or we've got a diversified clients where we've got hospital foundations and charities and school endowments that are literally running on the smell of an oily rag because their beneficiaries really need the funds that are coming out of those groups. And so we try and give them the best possible Practise available. And so the foundations of what we do there is it has to be practical, you have to be able to implement it and you have to be able to assess it.

    [00:13:51.980] - Camilla Love

    And I think those three core premises are actually a really good sort of analogy and pretty much anything that you do in operations because it needs to be scalable, it needs to be applicable for the business and the culture that you're putting it into and also the funding, as you mentioned. Because really operations can be very expensive.

    [00:14:17.660] - Jo Leaper

    It can be really expensive, it can be really complex. When you've got those three foundational principles you can design it any way you like, provided you can keep to those principles. And all of a sudden Ops becomes an opportunity and it becomes a way of doing things a little bit different to try to think ahead of the curve. So we often talk about the investments guys at John. They're the why of investing. We want to invest with that manager because my team is the how of investing and how for manager A to Z is completely different the whole way through. But the same logic applies. And so when you say to someone well, how could you do it better? What would you do? Get that innovative thinking happening. All of a sudden Ops isn't just I'm ticking a box and going through my exercise, it's actually I'm designing the jigsaw, I'm trying to work out where the corners need to fit, I need some guardrails. But how I make that work within my culture to get better motivation, to get better outputs, these things actually kind of open up the world a little bit. And I think for people that are listening, who are looking at careers is that the operation side of finance isn't boring, it can be really dynamic.

    [00:15:23.000] - Camilla Love

    My way of putting it is essentially operations is extremely important to organisations within finance because they are your ticket to be in business. So you could have an absolute kickass investment team that's shooting the lights out. But if you don't have a strong, consistent and reliable operations team and framework to centre your business on, you don't get to play in the game at all, you're just not there.

    [00:15:59.450] - Jo Leaper

    It is also such a driver of culture for exactly that reason. Because if you do have a kick assessment team, which we all really want, and they can't get what they want to achieve to happen, if it's not translating to the numbers, you get demotivation, you get culture issues. There's often pay parity questions between investment and non investment staff anyway. So I can reinforce that divide really dramatically and you start to get a really tired organisation, because when the numbers aren't working the right way, it's harder to get out of bed in the morning, it's harder to get up and really enjoy your job. And so the culture and the motivation of the staff that you've got, whether they're ops or investments or risk or HR, otherwise, these have to come together really well. And opposite is kind of the glue that should be able to help make that happen.

    [00:16:43.520] - Camilla Love

    And I've been on the opposite side of the fence where our clients come in with advisors like you who run through our operations and our capability, and they ask us 350,000 questions with policies that I actually enjoy the thoroughness that comes from that assessment process, because I know that our clients think that operations is a critical part of our business. That's really important to me. Full stop.

    [00:17:19.790] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah. And look, it's one of those things that I look at and go, we do take a lot of your time. I know that our question is huge. My hands up will absolutely say that.

    [00:17:28.820] - Camilla Love

    500 pages?

    [00:17:30.750] - Jo Leaper

    God, I hope not. I'm really trying to get the numbers down, but what I take from it is I have a paying client at the end of it. I need to give them the best possible outcome and I need to work with the manager to get the best possible outcome. But what makes me tick is that if I can help a manager make a better outcome, I haven't just helped my client who's paying for the review. They get the benefit of relying on what we're saying and relying on what we're doing. A manager that makes a change or a custodian who makes a change based on something that we've had a conversation about becomes better for every single client in the market, for every single investor and every single beneficiary. And that's what makes us tick. That's how we get the depths that we're looking for. I mean, John is not always depth with difference. To me, that's where the depth of difference really comes from.

    [00:18:14.810] - Camilla Love

    So tell me, did you always know you wanted to come into finance? You said you fell into it.

    [00:18:19.750] - Jo Leaper

    No, that's not necessarily a line. No, finance is definitely a happy accident. So, no, finance wasn't what I wanted to do. And I actually deliberately chose an MBA majoring in finance and international business because I didn't want to do a CFA. I love the strategy in the bigger picture, I'm one of those people who actually likes to get up and go to work in the morning. It doesn't bother me at all. And it's one of those things where my job is so different every single day. Now, if I'm working on the one job for a long time, I get bogged down, really frustrated. I need variety. That's what makes me tick. And so if I'm close enough to be able to implement change. I'm a happy camper.

    [00:19:02.780] - Camilla Love

    Yeah. So I was going to ask, you have been at Jana for a long time now. Obviously, you love it and you love the environment and you love the people that you work with. So is that what's kept you there? Is the strategy piece what's kept you there? Or is it the people that you actually work with?

    [00:19:20.210] - Jo Leaper

    It's the people, it's the autonomy and it's the trust. They're the really big things for me. I've had some amazing mentors through January, inside and outside, and the analogy that I've used that isn't the most eloquent. So I apologise in advance is that you get enough rope, but no one will ever let you hang. You've always got a safety net. You've got an amazing support system that you can talk to and work with. The fact that John is willing to really look at the world a little bit differently, both internally and externally, makes me happy and they let me do what I want to do. How cool is that?

    [00:19:53.530] - Camilla Love

    Totally cool. And so knowing that that coolness is sort of disposed on you, do you dispose that coolness onto your team as well?

    [00:20:02.270] - Jo Leaper

    I have to. I can't do this on my own. I was on my own for this sort of stuff for quite a while. And I love the team that we've built, got some really smart people and they're so, so different, and that's the beautiful part of it. And we actually had a day and I called this morning, like, well, yeah, we're ticking some boxes. Race diversity, all that sort of stuff, neural diversity. But the fact that my team comes from completely different backgrounds is just amazing and that's what makes us work. We did a YouTube for someone who hopefully will take the job a little while ago and he's like, but what are you looking for? I'm looking for curiosity. I'm looking for someone who wants to go back to the jigsaw, who wants to work out the jigsaw. I don't want someone who's going to be ticking the box. And that's one of the things I love about Jana, is if you want to get involved in something, you can have that conversation and you can get involved in something.

    [00:20:51.850] - Camilla Love

    For all those people who are at uni or in mid career and looking for something new, how do you engage that curiosity? How do you even look for that curiosity when you're interviewing people?

    [00:21:05.180] - Jo Leaper

    It's really hard. And even talking to recruiters, how do you interview for curiosity? There's not a clear answer on that one. And I think particularly the interview process in general, it's very formal. It's really hard to get people to online and show their personality. So I think I'm getting a bit of reputation for going left to centre. I will often ask people what the weirdest ingredient is in their fridge that they used recently, what they're watching on netflix. People have got kids. What did you used to do pre kids? What do you miss doing? What are you doing next weekend? These sort of things just to try and find people's naturally curious trait. If it's in there, some people are naturally curious. That's okay. But I've really found more and more with interviewing. I have to go off topic to try and get a sense of the person. Because I can teach skills, I can't create personality. But if someone wants to just like to think a little bit freely, I think our industry can do with a lot more free thinkers. We're so governed by regulation to have some scope to genuinely change and innovate.

    [00:22:11.250] - Jo Leaper

    If we can find a way to capture that, that would be an amazing thing.

    [00:22:14.890] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, you're right. The industry has such a compliance mindset that you need to always be between two guardrails, which is fine, but to ask the questions on when you can step out of those guardrails and to actually explore that within an environment that's comfortable, it can be hard to do because it can be career limiting.

    [00:22:41.130] - Jo Leaper

    Right.

    [00:22:42.190] - Camilla Love

    Being able to ask hard questions and step outside that box, a lot of people don't want to take that risk.

    [00:22:51.430] - Jo Leaper

    I suffer from impostor syndrome badly. There are times I'm in the room going, oh my God, what am I doing here? I feel uncomfortable and I know I just have to do it. And one of the things with the team is trying to create an environment where they can ask questions and they can ask the dumb questions. Colleague and I had the same conversation yesterday. Those questions that we think are silly questions are actually usually the smartest questions in the room.

    [00:23:16.830] - Camilla Love

    Totally.

    [00:23:17.550] - Jo Leaper

    And to have the mountains to ask those questions or to be enabled to ask those questions, that's a really powerful tool. A really powerful tool. Because often in finance and investments and in Ops, we assume there's a level of knowledge around the table and sometimes there's not. And we have to make sure that those who don't understand can ask their questions because they'll go, that was actually a really good question and we didn't think of that. So sometimes going back to basics and that's how people learn as well. And we have to reeducate ourselves to make sure that we are listening to those people.

    [00:23:56.040] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, it's such a deep segment.

    [00:23:59.890] - Jo Leaper

    We're supposed to be lighthearted and fun.

    [00:24:04.090] - Camilla Love

    Let's go back to two stores. So maybe sort of slightly in the same area. But how do you find the right culture to work in for a workplace? And why is that important to someone who's looking for a new role out there?

    [00:24:22.720] - Jo Leaper

    For someone who's looking for a new role? I would try and turn the interview concept around a little bit. They are interviewing you, but likewise you need to be interviewing them. And that means asking insightful questions. And sometimes that's really hard some of us don't process information at the same pace. Those questions come to us later. There's no harm in reaching out. I have some follow up questions. Is that okay? Or if you get to the next round of the interview, make sure that you've noted down those questions that came to you at 03:00 in the morning. We use the concept of interview, interview and then coffee catch up. And the way I premise the coffee catch up with anyone who's interviewing, is that's really a chance to get to know the rest of Jana? Because I'll deliberately pair them up with someone who doesn't work in my team. He has an idea of what we do in some interaction with us, but they're really their sounding board of what's the rest of Jana life? And that's really important because if you don't feel safe and comfortable and accepted in an environment, you're not going to thrive.

    [00:25:17.410] - Jo Leaper

    And sometimes I think when you're first starting out in your career, you don't know what you don't know. You don't know what you're looking for, and you have to try it and see a few times. And if you're really fortunate, you find someone like I found at Jana, where you just fit and you feel like it's working and your voice is heard and you're given opportunities, and better yet, you get the chance to give others opportunities. So I'm a classic for saying I don't like doing people leadership, but I will happily sit down and coach and mentor till cows come home.

    [00:25:48.610] - Speaker 3

    I think that's how we started. I didn't like the HR piece in my degree, but now I love leading teams because I allow people to be authentic and to rise up to their own skill level and exceed it.

    [00:26:02.600] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah, and look, it's one of those things you look at corporate psychology and you go, oh, my God, that's such a dry topic because there's so much theory. But if I look at my HR degree, that's the element that I use all the time. What makes people tick? How do you motivate them? How do you get the best out of them? How do you make it fit in with their life, with their brain? Some people's brains are on at night, some people's brains are on in the morning. If you force them all into working in the same time frame, it's not going to work. How do you make sure they get their voice heard in a meeting? These things are so incredibly crucial, and sometimes we have to step back and work out how to make that work. We have to give it a little bit more airtime.

    [00:26:38.590] - Camilla Love

    Now, you mentioned Imposter syndrome, and we mentioned it a few times in our podcast before, but you come across as really confident, has Impostor syndrome. Tell me.

    [00:26:54.370] - Jo Leaper

    So if someone said to me once, everybody puts their pants on one leg at a time, and that's true, literally, unless you're sitting. On a chair, you can't sit there and put your pants on both legs at once. But I think I want to say it's a more female trait than male, but I know males that suffer from it just as much. It's that element of humbleness that I think comes with a really good culture that makes you go, oh, am I doing the right thing? Am I in the right place? Am I not going to mess this up? And Am I going to make it okay for everybody else? And I think imposter syndrome and humbleness is probably a bit more linked than what we think. And as a core value. To be able to respect the fact that the other person in the room that you're talking to has worked incredibly hard. In this case for all of her career and built this amazing thing. And now she's going back and talking to all these amazing students at Uni and how to get them to grow and get into an industry. You go.

    [00:27:48.950] - Jo Leaper

    Wow. I really respect that person. And I think there's a linkage there with imposter syndrome as well, because you have a natural recognition of what it takes to get where you've gotten to. And sometimes you'll just sit back and go, oh, my God, I've done all of that. If someone said to me, at 18, you're going to live around the world and be a cycling widow, and I wouldn't have believed it. And so much of life is just putting 1ft in front of the other. But I think with imposter syndrome, it's every now and then you catch yourself and look back and go, wow, I've done that. And that's pretty cool. And there's nothing more than, in my case, my kids and my dog, to humble me and make me realise what I've done in that place.

    [00:28:28.270] - Speaker 3

    It is cool to reflect, it really is. And to then bring up the next generation upon that reflection.

    [00:28:36.640] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah, that's the thing. It's something I still want to do more of in my career, is from the next generation forward, and I do a lot in terms of taking calls from people who are looking for staff and that sort of thing, and just, oh, that person could be good for that job, or that person. And I enjoy that side of it. It's definitely not HR, it's definitely not Hurry, but it's just that people connection. But I look at the new generations coming through and I think back to when we were sort of growing up in the industry and you had to be a jack of all trades, you had to get to know so much of everything, and yet people are being brought through University of you. This is step one, this is step two, this is step three. And I'd love for people, if they're interested, to reach out or just opening up their mind to a much broader subset of finance, because there is so much beyond. This is why I invest. There is so much that makes this industry tick that is not pure numbers.

    [00:29:29.410] - Speaker 3

    And that's what we're here to do at Fstre. And she is not. She is because whilst the numbers are great, there are so many other segments in finance that you can go into, whether you want to be a lawyer or whether you want to do MMA or whether you want to put up do debt funding and property or operations or whatever. It is a broad church. We accept all comers.

    [00:29:53.310] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah, absolutely.

    [00:29:54.260] - Camilla Love

    You just need to believe in yourself and just get amongst it, really, is my view.

    [00:29:58.280] - Jo Leaper

    Yes. At some point, you've just got to try and you're going to succeed and you're going to not succeed. And some days I'll feel like I'm succeeding and some days I will feel like I am floundering big time. Yes, exactly. And that's so much of what we do and how we learn, but I think we're raising our younger generations to have really high expectations and so we need to be that safety net. I talked about the hanging but not dropping. If we collectively can be that safety net and help them learn, help them grow, help them explore something different, they'll do amazing things.

    [00:30:33.190] - Camilla Love

    So true. And you mentioned a little while ago about how the workplace has changed over your time of your career. And I look back on my career and how the workplace has changed. What advice would you give the newest generation coming in to understand that over your career, you might have five or six different careers and the workplace will change dramatically over that period of time?

    [00:31:01.870] - Jo Leaper

    It definitely will. Personal connections is everything. I was really guilty for a really long time of keeping my work and personal life quite separate. I felt more comfortable that way and I think I'm enjoying this part of my career more because I feel like I'm in a workplace that is so much more encompassing, so much more holistic and connected will probably be the way to go. And I think for people coming in, that's really daunting, because I've got my workplace, I've got my home face. I might want to mix that social life, I might not. But along the way, you'll find some really trusted parties that will become friends for life, essentially. And they're the group that you go with. They're the ones that I still have any stuck. I'll email going, I need a hand. It's kind of like my trusted network, I guess, would be the way to put it. And I know that if I'm getting a staff member recommendation through one of those people, I'm almost certainly going to hire out of that group. Trust you got when you're talking to people, try to get built into the organisation so that you can learn from them and they can learn from you.

    [00:32:16.820] - Jo Leaper

    Because at the end of the day, trust and value breeds trust and value. That loyalty soft compound, and that includes having trust in yourself. And we've talked about imposter syndrome and sometimes I have to just force myself to drop it and try and do hard, try and do a little bit of it is, but we gotta try baby steps.

    [00:32:33.670] - Speaker 3

    I think sometimes.

    [00:32:36.550] - Jo Leaper

    It is true, but yeah, really good friends and a glass of wine after work sometimes, oh my.

    [00:32:42.320] - Camilla Love

    God, they're the bomb.

    [00:32:43.890] - Jo Leaper

    These things work.

    [00:32:45.180] - Camilla Love

    So I ask a question every time to my guests about the most valuable piece of advice that you've been given along your career and why. Maybe it was the time that it was delivered or maybe it's upon reflection, it actually is so meaningful. What was it and why?

    [00:33:04.900] - Jo Leaper

    So when I was at Nas, I was in a client service environment, client relationship person, and it was always outwardly servicing and coming to a consultant. It was a change of tone in what we were doing. And our now CEO Jim Lamborn gave me the advice of you are always better off to say when you're at the end of your knowledge base. It's part of that being humble. But whether it's a board or a trustee, whether it's my kids to be able to say to them, I'm not sure, let's find out, I'll prove that none of us are perfect and in reality none of us are perfect. We can't be perfect. And I think for me, I've met with some incredibly important people in the industry. I've been really privileged to have that time. And I've met with people who are just out of uni. And in either case, being able to just be honest in that sense builds that trusted relationship so much faster. And clients respect it as well. So not just staff, clients, friends, it really matters. So I think it's that humbleness and self recognition of I'm at the end of my length now, I need to go back and find out.

    [00:34:16.410] - Camilla Love

    Because also, and I think on the flip side also it's the ego that pushes you on to say I can do this or I actually can fake this and pretend that I know it, that actually gets you in trouble.

    [00:34:30.730] - Jo Leaper

    Sometimes it needs a little bit of ego, but it's where you balance that. And I think that's a little bit of a struggle from time to time. But yeah, I think holding back is not bad.

    [00:34:42.950] - Camilla Love

    Yes, I'm the first to say, I.

    [00:34:44.730] - Jo Leaper

    Don'T know, I think that's actually a really good quality because I don't know if I need to go and learn something new. You asked before why I'm still here after twelve years. Because every day I'm learning something new. That's really the guts of the answer to that question. If I'm not learning, why am I at Jonah? Because I'm not going to be able to teach anyone else. I'm not going to be able to help make my clients better either.

    [00:35:10.060] - Camilla Love

    Totally such a good oh, my God. It feels my calm. I'm so warm and finally inside. Okay, so, Joe, at the end of our podcast, do you know what we do? Have you listened to are you ready? Are you ready to do a quick question? Are you ready? So, what was the question that you asked? What was your interview question again? It was things do you have in your fridge?

    [00:35:36.610] - Jo Leaper

    So, mine is pomegranate molasses, which make an amazing beef short ribs, slow cook.

    [00:35:43.150] - Camilla Love

    Serious?

    [00:35:44.010] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah, it's brilliant. I've just seen the recipe. Daniel dark chocolate in this one. I'm last night for dinner. I love it.

    [00:35:52.260] - Camilla Love

    I didn't make my own sauce from pomegranate molasses.

    [00:35:57.670] - Jo Leaper

    Yes, pomegranate molasses. It's a little bit tart, but quite a syrupy sweet. And when you combine it with the short ribs over a long period of time, really yummy.

    [00:36:07.450] - Camilla Love

    Delicious. So then, can I ask, just as a sidebar, what is the weirdest answer that you've had to that question in an interview?

    [00:36:16.450] - Jo Leaper

    It was someone who really enjoyed Swedish and Western European foods. It was some kind of sauerkraut spice thing. I actually can't remember the name of it, but I get some really interesting ones. During lockdown. I was saying what are you doing? Part of the time? And we had people who were painting little iron action men figures and lots of really bizarre things. So, yeah, let's just answer questions really work. I'm quite a fan of them.

    [00:36:46.900] - Camilla Love

    So my friends would describe me as.

    [00:36:49.230] - Jo Leaper

    Trusting and loyal, but to a fault. I guess I get a little bit invested. It's that ride or die kind of concept.

    [00:36:57.910] - Camilla Love

    If you're a superhero, what would your name be?

    [00:37:00.980] - Jo Leaper

    Goodness, I'm stumped on that one.

    [00:37:06.770] - Camilla Love

    Wouldn't it be like, Joe's go getter or I don't know.

    [00:37:16.250] - Jo Leaper

    I'm really not sure.

    [00:37:18.290] - Camilla Love

    What's your superpower, then?

    [00:37:20.300] - Jo Leaper

    I'd love to be able to read mine. That would be really, really good. Yeah. Harry Potter fan. The whole legitimacy concept is pretty cool. I'd go for that. Or operating before on the Harry Potter topic appraisal would be awesome because I'm one of those people who loves to be early, but he's honestly not quite as early as I think I should be. Anything that saves you a bit of time, I'd be all for great.

    [00:37:43.890] - Camilla Love

    Yeah. I'll have the jewel. If I could doppelgang myself and have another person living my life so I can get it all done at the same time, that would be my and.

    [00:37:52.220] - Jo Leaper

    So I could really enjoy the good parts because they're so busy.

    [00:37:55.170] - Camilla Love

    I know. So shares or shoes?

    [00:37:59.140] - Jo Leaper

    I'm a shoes person. Sorry.

    [00:38:01.960] - Camilla Love

    Shoes.

    [00:38:05.410] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah. Shares have a really rightful place. But shoes are my love.

    [00:38:10.750] - Camilla Love

    I might have to come down and have a look at your shoe covered. My biggest investment mistake was investing without patience. Oh, that's a good one. Tell.

    [00:38:20.140] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah. So early days started at Nas. Tom and I had some money to invest, and I just sort of went this splatter gun approach across a range of unlisted trusts. And, of course, when you don't have enough within each one, the fees erode, particularly from a retail perspective. And so we pulled the pin and pulled it out and lost money at the time. On the flip side, working at NAB in the past, I've been able to have staff shares, allocated, that sort of thing, through the old bonus structures that they used to do, and I've never sold them. And so it's just this nest egg that keeps growing on the side and that was a really good reminder that just patience and that long term horizon when it comes to investing is really critical.

    [00:39:06.950] - Camilla Love

    Yeah, lots of good advice there. One piece of advice I tell my 20 year old self is trust yourself.

    [00:39:14.770] - Jo Leaper

    Definitely trust yourself.

    [00:39:16.690] - Camilla Love

    So my biggest hairiest personal goal is.

    [00:39:21.090] - Jo Leaper

    It was to be running the business unit I'm running now, so not done and dusted. John didn't have that sort of operational capability and I could see a real need. So from a work perspective, that was definitely to get this going. And I'm proud of what I've been able to achieve and what John has been able to achieve, but I still sit back and go, what next? And I'm still working on that.

    [00:39:48.590] - Camilla Love

    Good. So what about non work?

    [00:39:54.570] - Jo Leaper

    People often ask, what do you want to do in five years? And my usual answer is, I don't know, I'm not sure, because, like I said before, I'm still learning every day at Jana and so that works for me. We have some family members who have health challenges and I've learned a huge amount working with them over the years and helping there. And so I actually wonder whether or not a side career in patient advocacy or something like that might be something that I do going forward.

    [00:40:23.490] - Camilla Love

    So if I wasn't doing this job, I'd be a patient advocate.

    [00:40:29.910] - Jo Leaper

    Okay, good.

    [00:40:33.390] - Camilla Love

    So my take on what weird thing do you have in your fridge is what weird thing do you have in your handbag right now?

    [00:40:39.720] - Jo Leaper

    About six or so bandaids at the moment.

    [00:40:43.050] - Camilla Love

    From the kids?

    [00:40:44.260] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah, from the kids. One of my sons is alleged to sugarcoatase and so we've got a whole range of different ones for different things. And it's like this walking medical kit, so probably their age, I'd have to say a fair variety of them.

    [00:40:57.870] - Camilla Love

    Normally. I've just got the scrunch shop bandaid papers left, so on my bucket list.

    [00:41:05.930] - Jo Leaper

    Is, yeah, Fiji Travel is definitely on the bucket list. The kids are back at sports and basketball, so that's always really good. So, yeah, probably the next thing is to find some more time to get back in the kitchen. I enjoy baking and sort of 3D cakes and all that sort of stuff, so I think that's probably the next thing to be looking forward to.

    [00:41:25.130] - Camilla Love

    I like to bake, except I bake to eat, so that's my problem. Yeah. My go to brownie recipe.

    [00:41:34.930] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah. And you just need neighbours that you.

    [00:41:36.500] - Camilla Love

    Pass it off to do that. So the last question is always a career in finance is so much more.

    [00:41:44.960] - Jo Leaper

    Than you ever thought it could be.

    [00:41:46.060] - Camilla Love

    I love that. I love that because that just leaves.

    [00:41:49.270] - Jo Leaper

    A little reach out and find out what it could be. Try something different. Don't be afraid to give something new a try because what is finance now is not what it will be in 10, 15, 20 years and not what it was 10, 15, 20 years ago. It's just so dynamic and changing and be part of the change.

    [00:42:14.230] - Camilla Love

    So Jo, I think that is a fabulous place to live and thank you so much for your time. I loved finding out about you managing the cycling team and your time in Italy and I love your deep dive in understanding culture and this complexity between investments and operations and the jigsaw puzzle because I think it's a fabulous analogy that we got to and I really loved your openness and transparency about how to juggle that the confident nature. But also the imposter syndrome because it is a big challenge because not everyone you think is confident is really confident.

    [00:42:55.420] - Jo Leaper

    Yeah, very true. Thank you so much. It's been really good to chat to you. Tamila.

    [00:42:59.300] - Camilla Love

    Thanks Jo. I'll see you next time.

    [00:43:01.350] - Jo Leaper

    Sounds good.

    [00:43:02.440] - Camilla Love

    Bye.

    [00:43:08.030] - Camilla Love

    You know the information that is in this podcast, we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice, it's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances of that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S3.Ep3 Katharine Goulstone on "Why Risk Is Cool"

Meet Katharine. Katharine Goulstone is a partner at Deloitte in their Risk Advisory practice.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.

    Katharine Goulstone

    So risk advisory is where it's at. Risk is cool and I've been telling you for a long time. So I'm delighted that you finally have a risk series in your podcast, because risk is really where it's at. More women need to be in risk. Welcome, everyone.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes an Insider's Guide to Careers in Finance. I'm your host, camilla Love, founder of F. Three future females in finance. Shares on Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people, all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We lift the lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go.

    Camilla Love

    I have been really looking forward to today's episode since the beginning of the season because I know you will absolutely love this person. She is one of my all time favourites in my life and I think you should meet her, which is the reason why she's on. Not only do I think that she is just smart and cool, but she's just a person who kicks ass in life. And actually we've just started and her pronoun is boss, which I think says everything. This person has worked in hedge funds, regulators, banks and in the big four she's just straight up she calls a spade a shovel and she's just all round fab. So, Catherine golfden. Welcome to Shares not shoes.

    Hello.

    Camilla Love

    Oh my God. So excited to have this chat today. So, Catherine is a partner at Deloitte in their Risk Advisory Practise and focuses on helping financial services firms as her clients in responding to an undergoing regulatory inquiries and concerns. And the reason why I've chosen Catherine today, because she has so much wisdom and she's going to pass all that along to all of you today. And by the way, she also loves working in finance. She's the bomb. So, thank you again for joining and I hope that now you live up.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And I know that you will intro Camila. I was feeling very comfortable until you gave me that big talk up and so now I'm just hopeful that I can share any of those wisdom stories with your listeners. But I will try my very best.

    Camilla Love

    I know you will. So let's start a little bit at the beginning. So tell me a little bit about you and what you do. What is the day today look like for you?

    Katharine Goulstone

    So, as you mentioned, I work in Deloitte's risk advisory Practise. So we're obviously one of the big four consulting firms and one of the biggest consulting firms and we do number of things. So risk Advisory is where it's at. Risk is cool. I know I've been telling you for a long time. So I'm delighted that you finally have a risk series in your podcast, because risk is really where it's at. More women need to be in risk. As you mentioned, I guess I have that regulatory focus. So I spent a chunk of my career both in the financial markets and then as a regulator. And I think from those perspectives, I suppose I have a healthy understanding of what must go right, which I think is probably the essence of the things I think about. How do you build those things that must go right and then how do you step in and fix things when that isn't the case? So my day to day at Deloitte, as you suggested, I focus on financial services. There are parts of that industry that are very heavily regulated, work a lot in banking. We also do a lot across superannuation and insurance and in wealth.

    Katharine Goulstone

    So it's a big gamut that we do. In risk advisory, I tend to focus on the banks and in financial markets. That's where my area of focus is. And the types of work that we think about is so diverse and I think this is why I love it so much. But that thread is always the regulatory driver. What's changing in regulations? What's the change in a client's business model? That means that systems and processes and tooling need to need to change. How do organisations, particularly big and large and complex organisations, what are the processes in those organisations that are monitoring critical risks? And I don't think this is about death by controls, but I think in any process or in any organisation, there are specific things that must go right. And so how do you understand and what are the processes and the surveillance tools that you have in place to detect and understand the potential harms in your business and future proof them? So I think that it falls into a lot of things, but I love it and I love the diversity of it, I love the high stakes nature of it. We get to work with big organisations, think about big problems, and I think from time to time, when those organisations do have those dark days, being able to jump in there and help and get them through those crisis as effectively as possible, it's meaningful work and it's very exciting.

    Camilla Love

    So some of those client of yours comes to you and says, I've got this really big, hairy problem. And some of those, as you mentioned, some of those problems are really complex. How do you actually sit there and think about that complexity and how it actually forms out of the risk componentry of it, but also to ensure that they're still getting the return they need to still be profitable as a business? And then you're adding back into the culture of the business from a risk framework point of view, how do you take those big? Where do you start?

    Katharine Goulstone

    My approach is generally to start with the rates, what must be true in your business. And I think one of the things that I do find our clients really appreciate and I think perhaps from my perspective, because I am an ex regulator, I think one of the things I do spend a lot of time talking about is that regulatory intent, what is the expectation of your organisation and what are the harms that regulators could be potentially concerned about?

    Camilla Love

    I mean, what does risk mean to you? Maybe that's just maybe a starting point to educate some of our listeners about that component of the industry and why is it critical to the business?

    Katharine Goulstone

    Yes, it's a good question because I think even in the Australian market, even now, I think people use a lot of phrases like risk and compliance interchangeably and they all mean very different things and different things to different businesses. Right. My perspective of a great risk function is a function that helps an organisation take risks safely and that's not so much about a compliance person throwing up every control, but how do you navigate the organisational strategy and execute that safely within that organization's risk appetite? And when I think about regulatory risk, one of the things that I do talk about with our clients is what is your specific appetite to regulatory failure? What are the things that non negotiable must go right, and then let's start there in developing that regulatory risk strategy and building processes and systems underpinning that that deliver on your level of risk tolerance to those various things. So I think there's always becomes an element of compliance underneath that as we build those processes and controls. But I think that risk perspective is something that often requires careful decisioning and healthy discussion and debate at that executive and board level.

    Camilla Love

    And I'm going to say this so you're not the fun police?

    Katharine Goulstone

    No, you know me, Camilla, I am not the fun police.

    Camilla Love

    Let's park that one, because that has too much baggage, I think. Yeah, quite. But from a risk perspective, it's not about not allowing you to do things, it's how you can do what you want to do within a framework that is beneficial to success.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Absolutely. And I think if you look at financial services now, it's innovating faster than ever before. I see much and it's not just even new types of businesses that are coming in and disrupting, it's just even all of the financial services that currently exist have to be completely reimagined in the next couple of years. There is just so much change that's on foot, but there is just this tsunami of change that needs to happen and should happen and financial services will be a much more dynamic and exciting and future proof place because of that. And so I think that that risk element is absolutely not the risk police. But it's really about when an organisation sets their strategy of those goals and what is the place that they need to get to. What's then the systems and process have been placed around. OK. In order to get their work must go right and let's place our efforts in making sure that those things do go right. So we get to our journey safely. Because I think one of the things that I kind of look back over the last number of years, and even including the Royal Commission, which is obviously a huge event in our industry and in our lifetime, the fallout of that, the collateral damage, was enormous.

    Katharine Goulstone

    The disruption to businesses in dealing with having to go back and remediate historic issues, the damage to executives and boards that needed to step down. It takes organisations a long time to recover from those major failures. And so I think that risk lenses, really, if you know that there are certain things that must go right and you must not fail at then control those processes. It's not about constraining the business from innovating or taking risks across a variety of businesses and portfolios, it's just about making sure that the things must go right, the organisation gets there safely, because.

    Camilla Love

    Really, you've only got your reputation to another business. That's it. And personally, yeah, absolutely. So then, before we move on, I'm really interested because risk is an area that is in desperate need of graduate and new talent. It is a burgeoning area, growing substantially, and Australia is generally quite good at managing risk and producing really high quality risk professionals. Why would you tell a new entrant or someone who is looking to change their role into risk, why would you tell them it's the best place to be?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I think, like many parts of financial services right, I think in risk, it's many careers in one. I don't think I've ever had two consecutive years in my work history that have been anything like the previous. So I think there's that diversity and I also kind of think that it lends itself to being in the pony end of that decision in organisations. Where are we going, how are we going to get there? What needs to be true in order for us to get there safely? So I think it's a really exciting and dynamic and challenging place to be in a variety of decisions and there's so many different roles there, right across that risk spectrum. I think even across Risk Advisory at Deloitte, the areas of specific focus that each of my colleagues have is just so different across so very many risk domains. So I think it's a diverse and exciting area.

    Camilla Love

    Cool. So let's step back a little bit and let's talk about the early stage of your career. Did you always know you wanted to be in finance and why did you know that?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I think many people say they start a career, start a journey and don't know where they want to go, but for me, I was always attracted to financial services, like always. And I think there were two major contributors to that, and they were actually my mom and my dad. That sounds a little cheesy, but let me tell you why, because it's probably not what you think. So I think my dad, he was a bond trader. And if you think about what money market desk were in the it's so cool. I know, right? So as a young person, I remember kind of walking into this trading floor, and it was back. These are the high vis jackets in the ashtray and the telephone and that cloud bubble across the desk and everybody yelling, and I had absolutely no idea what was going on. But it seemed to me to be the funnest job in the world. And I think as a very young child, I'd see my dad kind of flying around and off to Asia. It was always in Singapore and Tokyo and Hong Kong, and I had no idea what he was doing there.

    Katharine Goulstone

    But, gee, it just seemed like this very exciting space. And I think as I grew up, I think I had this attraction to financial markets because I think it was the complexity. I couldn't understand what the hell was happening.

    Camilla Love

    But you wanted to know why I.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Was drawn to try to understand what financial markets and the capital markets was about. I think the second thing that was a huge influencer was my mom. And my mom did not work in financial services, but she was a single mom and she was a nurse. And one thing I learned from her as a very young person, but also as I grew older, was that she was exceptional at managing the household finances. And that was a tough gig when you work shift work as a single mom who is a nurse. And I think I learned so many great lessons in and I think this is really where I became very inspired around financial literacy, financial independence of women. I saw this great role model there, but also the vulnerability about being a woman and managing your financial security in a world that's designed that that wasn't the case. I think the combination of both of those things I was drawn to financial services. I wanted to be financially literate. I wanted to be financially secure. And I was drawn to finance and the economy to try and understand how does this all fit together and how do I find a career that has that global focus where there's the opportunity to start to understand what all of this complex world of yelling and screaming and investment means.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And so I think that was probably for me. I knew there was a direction I was going to go, but I had really, other than my dad, I didn't know anyone that worked in this industry. So I think that's probably where that inspiration came from. So I think there was a definite draw to the industry. But really no plan how to get there.

    Camilla Love

    The no plan is always a plan, right. When we look back on it and people generally fall into it or they've made a concerted effort. Right? Which bucket do you sit in?

    Katharine Goulstone

    Definitely concerted effort. Interestingly. My personal circumstances were that I didn't finish high school and not many people know that about my journey because I've probably had a long career of being an advocate for education and continued to educate myself along the way. In fact, that's where we met, Camilla, first day of our MBA class. There's you in the front row, there's me in the back row. So I entered the workforce while all of my school friends were entering year eleven and I just knew it had to be in the market and my very first job. I still don't even know how I managed to find my way there. But I was a runner or a courier now. Ups. It was Warburg Dylan Reed at the time and I had a little satchel of contract notes that I used to run around the city and delivering during the trading day. And so I found my way in and out of every stock broker and bank within the market and it was all of the exciting things that I thought it would be. So I think it affirmed I was in the right place. I just had to find my way, my way in.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And actually, I think while my friends were doing their HSC, I went and started studying. It was called the securities Institute of.

    Camilla Love

    Australia, but it's now Finnsier.

    Katharine Goulstone

    It is. And so this is where I started learning all about finance and started doing their courses module by module. I loved it and so it was just the beginning of an exciting journey in finance for me.

    Camilla Love

    Great. So then I know a little bit about your career and how you've been offshore as well as onshore. Talk to me about where your finance career took you offshore.

    Katharine Goulstone

    I spent the early years doing whatever entry level job I could find in the industry to keep learning and growing. And I went across to London, like many of my friends did when they finished university, to go and get some work experience and travel a little bit. And while I was over there, a couple of really impactful choices or sliding door moments happened for me. One was and this is all prayer, Jesse, right. This is an exciting time in finance. I started working at a fabulous fund of fund in London. It was an American company that had just opened a business in London where it had traders executing on behalf of their American business and they had six very senior people in the business and no one really holding it together. And so I quite abruptly and that is a little bit of my mo, if you would suggest that I would be a fabulous person to come and help them establish that business and support them. And so I found myself very quickly sitting on this trading floor of the six very, very senior people, one leading a private equity business and another one leading a high yield book and some traders executing on behalf.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And so I found myself kind of doing the back offs and the operations and supporting legal and supporting compliance booking trades. It was just it was it was fabulous. I was working in London Day, I was working the US day and it was an exciting time. Like the markets were so dynamic and I remember at the time, my now husband saying to me, you're never going to find another job like this. This is the job that is going to ruin all jobs for you. And I think it was I think I learned more in that role about the markets, I think on the technical, but also about business, about the type of work I wanted to do, about the type of leader I wanted to be, about the type of opportunities I wanted to seek. It was fabulous time and it's interesting.

    Camilla Love

    That you I talk a lot about it and shares, not shoes about large organisations versus small organisations and how you can actually use small organisations to actually grow that breadth of knowledge that you have and just making sure that don't dismiss small organisations when you are on your job search out there. Particularly for new grads that are coming out into the industry because they generally sort of gravitate to the big four or large organisations but there's a raft of really great small organisations that are highly globally competitive that can give you a lot more of a leg up in opportunities that you never would have thought before and it's a great sign that you've done that as well.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Yeah, 100%, I agree. I think there's different we have these different steps in our career and from each job we learn something different. I think the hedge fund space, there's no 5000 person hedge fund out there if you want to learn that part of the market, they are smaller firms. But I think the other opportunity in that is there's no junior people. These are the smartest, most senior people in the industry and so I think it's almost by sitting there, by osmosis every single conversation that you over here, you're learning something but then there's also this opportunity that doesn't exist in other firms which is no one's doing that. Can I do that? We're doing this analysis, let me help. We're preparing for this investment, what can I do? And I think that's kind of the start of how all of my roles have morphed into the next job or the bigger job because I tend to be one of those people that sees look at these opportunities or these pieces of work no one's doing. I'll just kind of wrap that into my job. Thank you very much and continue on the expert.

    Camilla Love

    Ding ding.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Exactly.

    Camilla Love

    So then talk to me about your time with the regulator here in Australia because it's a really interesting I know from our previous conversations you've had a really interesting time there, looking at cyber securityecurity and looking at all the outcomes from the Royal Commission and stuff like that. How was that role such a learning experience for you?

    Katharine Goulstone

    It's a great question and let me tell you when we eventually came back to Australia, and we've probably skipped about ten years, but yes, when we did come back to Australia, I was given the opportunity to join Asik on a twelve month contract. And at the time I was not particularly tempted by having spent the last kind of 15 years or so, kind of like right in the forefront of capital markets. But they had quite an interesting opportunity that I decided to take for a year as a foray back into Australia, which was really around the time that Asik was assuming the responsibility of supervising listed markets from the ASX. So prior to that time that was the responsibility of the Australian Stock Exchange and Trix, as you'd be aware of your line of entering the market. Yeah. So that shift from a monopoly to a duopoly meant it wasn't appropriate for the ASEX to be conducting real time surveillance. And so asik in taking on that responsibility, needed to make sure that they have the right capability and were ready to undertake and discharge those regulatory obligations. And so my role was really around supporting that very large project team that was enabling that to happen.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And my area of focus was really around the capability of people. Did ASIC folks on the ground have the right knowledge and capability and capacity to deliver on that. And so I thought it'd be a short and sharp project. And I have to tell you, I look back and I would say working in government and working in particularly in regulation, is such an extraordinary privilege and I'm so glad I got the opportunity to do that in my career. It's high stakes and it's important work and that's a big deal and it's a great responsibility and I really didn't appreciate that until I joined Asik. But one of the things that I did find was it's a platform to see an entire industry to think about an issue from an entire market perspective. And this is probably why I'm consulting now, because my view is that's the only other vantage point where you get to kind of sit indeed in the ivory tower and think about an issue from the entire market perspective. And I love it, but that certainly ran true for me at Asik and the role that I had at the time was in the markets business at Asik.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And so that's a big chunk of that particular agency. But in doing that, I started to have observations across other parts of how the agency was discharging its markets business, and they became quite valuable insights to share with the executive at the time. And so, typical Mo for me, I started putting up my hand saying I've identified a few opportunities where we could be doing some really cool stuff, but as that's no one's job, do you mind if I just wrapped that into my job? That played out again where I found myself suddenly owning all of the really juicy projects and it was fabulous. It's fascinating stuff, right?

    Camilla Love

    Oh, it's just filthy cup. Right? Because making sure that consumers are getting the best outcomes and making sure that the regulation is applied evenly across all facets of the industry and even interpreting the legal framework that the regulator has to work in and then embed on all the other participants, I totally understand purpose there. Yeah.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And so it became to me really addictive because every time you finished a piece of work, there would be something else that would pop up that was very exciting. And I find myself back there with my hand up, can I please do this one as well? So I ended up spending after that, I think, the twelve month contract I joined ASIC on. I think after seven years I said, I think I must go now. I'll be forever grateful for that opportunity. I think that the projects I got to work on, the leaders I got to learn from, and the outcomes I got to be a part of, just career changing. And from a growth perspective, I took out of that experience so very much and I'll always look back on that, of what a great privilege it was to be part of that regulator.

    Camilla Love

    I'm going to switch text a little bit here and ask a question that I know I think about all the time, and it's something that a lot of people think about when applying for their job, whether it be their first one or their 10th one. Was there ever a role that you applied for and landed where you weren't 100% qualified to do? And how are you able to sort of deal with the fact that you didn't necessarily tick all ten boxes, you only picked eight of them and you needed to ensure that you are confident enough to take on that role with gusto?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I think for me, if I follow my career history, I think I've always been the underdog and I think I always deliberately I think when I've got to a point in a role where I think, great, I've learnt so much, I've learned what I've come to do here, I must go do something different. It's never been a linear progression for me. I've always been knocking on the door of saying, I've done all this interesting stuff over here to the left, but now I'm inspired to come over here and learn what it is that you can teach me. So I think I'm probably one of the few people that certainly I feel that vulnerability in knocking on that door. But I think I've been quite deliberate in looking deliberately for something I have not done before. And I think that's important for me. I think that's where magic happens, that's when we grow.

    Camilla Love

    And I love the curiosity that you bring into your answer here, because it is about knowing what you know, being confident in what you know, but also being confident in yourself to be able to learn what you don't know, definitely. And it's a hard thing to do to be able to step over that line, to go. I feel comfortable in being uncomfortable, but it's one of those things that you have to do, whether it be for me, it's ice skating. I never want to ice skate, ever. But if my kids ask me to ice skate, it's one of those things that you might want to try to do again that is so comfortable in doing stuff.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Well, we should definitely go ice skating.

    Camilla Love

    That's the best thing. Or maybe it's a stand up paddleboard like we've known before.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Yeah, maybe. I don't know. I think every time there's a confidence you get in solving problems that are new. And I think because I've made a career out of that, I don't want to solve the problem that we've solved ten times before and have the template for. I want to work on our biggest problem, the one that's so complex that our clients are bringing it to us because they need someone and a team of people with a diversity of skills to pick it apart and build a solution that's fit for purpose. And I think that's the thinking that I value. And I'm very confident looking at things I've not looked at before and saying, okay, great. These are the skills and experience and the knowledge that I bring to this problem. Therefore, the other skills and experiences that we need to bring to this team are the following. I want to work with people that have the skill gaps that I have. I want to learn from them, no matter what level they are, but I want them working on the team to get the right outcome. But it is interesting that we don't always think about our careers in that way.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Sometimes I think we do put this pressure on ourselves and it's kind of the old private school boy mentality of we must be an excellent individual and celebrate that. I just kind of think if you want to do complex work, that's never going to be the answer.

    Camilla Love

    And it's always the answer is always sort of dirty anyway. Like there's never one silver bullet, one round peg in a round hole in those ideas. And so being able to have confidence in yourself, to be able to go into that unknown is important. And really going in there and. Getting that crazy big, hairy problem, shaking it upside down and pulling it apart and then putting it back together with a better solution. In reality, I think that when you're going through that job and you're not ticking 100%, there's always it's never going to be 100%, regardless. You're never going to tick the ten boxes because you're working with different people in a different organisation, dealing with different products or services or whatever it is, so therefore you're not necessarily going to tick every one of those boxes anyway.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Exactly. And, you know, I think leaders of organisations, and I think in financial services as well, I think we've come a long way in embracing diversity and truly, I mean, we've got a long way to go, right, but truly embracing diversity. And I think in our organisation, we've been working quite hard to think about that from a number of different facets. But one of the things I've observed we're doing, and I love it, is thinking about what are the skill sets we want to bring into our organisation? And I think if you had gone back five years ago, ten years ago, professional services firms would have only hired at the graduate level. And there's kind of one way up, right, and I think if you went back five years ago, there's these lateral hires and graduate hires, but people would have brought in the financial services space, would have come from the small handful of Pedigree universities with the same types of degrees. And what we've found is that obviously those people are invaluable, but they really have a diversity of thought. You need to tap into talent pools way beyond those traditional hiring methods.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And I think last week I had a coffee with a fabulous graduate in our team who's a chemical engineer.

    Right.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And I just thought it was fascinating. We're taking a diversity of people from different parts of their career, from different parts of the industry, and certainly we can train people to be consultants, but you can't train people to think differently. Right. Like, where we have the mindset, we have the perspectives we have based on the experiences that we've had today. And I think that's a very rich, rich source of talent for us. So I think we think about that collectively, but I think, as individuals, you're right. I think when we're still that one individual tapping on the door of that next job, there is sometimes those times where you say, oh, but they want these eight things and I only have six of them, I'm going to go.

    Camilla Love

    For that job anyway, is what Catherine would say.

    Katharine Goulstone

    If you got six out of the eight, you're overqualified and make sure you're telling about all the other things that you have, because they don't even know yet that they need it.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. And by the way, they are the bomb, those things. Totally the bomb.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Exactly.

    Camilla Love

    So I always ask this question and everyone has a slightly different answer, which I think is great. What is the most valuable piece of advice you've been given in your career and why? And maybe it's just the time that that advice was given, or maybe it's just that just embedded in your brain sticks with you. Why was so important?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I love this question and in fact, I've got two, so I hope that's okay.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, sure.

    Katharine Goulstone

    The first one was actually a piece of advice that was given to me years ago by someone you introduced me to.

    Camilla Love

    Who was it?

    Katharine Goulstone

    Lewis Bierman. Oh, Lord. Yeah. And he probably doesn't even remember this conversation, but you introduced him to me at a time, I think, after we finished our MBA together. And I was reflecting on what I wanted to do and he very kindly met with me and gave me a number of great pieces of advice, but one of them is burnt in my brain and it's so simple, but it's just run true for me. And that advice was, be excellent always. People on this tiny island have a very long memory, and I just thought it was great advice because you know what? Australia is a very tiny island, and financial services, no matter how big and how diversity is, you will come across the same people 20 times for 20 different reasons. And people do have those long memories. And I think the people that make a point of being excellent always do a great job, be proud of the work that you do because it will support you and hold you in good stead. Totally.

    Camilla Love

    And it's something also that one of the last seasons, Alex Mcquick and she mentioned about, don't underestimate the mediocracy of others. And I think that perfectly goes together because you actually do want to be excellent always. You want to have that last impression, be the first impression every single time.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Exactly. The second one I thought of, and it makes me laugh still thinking about it. And I go back to that first hedge fund role I had in London and there was a fabulous very senior trader that came to join our business, and he came from one of the major investment banks and he was a very senior hire. And the week he started, he was just getting to know people on the team. And we sat down and he had his big American personality for California personality and accent, and he just asked me this one question off the bat and it threw me and he's like So, Catherine, there are two types of people in this world. There's people who get shit done and people who don't. Which one are you?

    Camilla Love

    I know, I know.

    Katharine Goulstone

    What do you think my answer was, Camilla?

    Camilla Love

    Oh, let me think about that. Probably the same answer that I have. We're both getting shit done type of people.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Exactly. And for me, I think that was a really powerful question because it did for me plant a seed in my mind as very early on in my career. You know what, I really want to be recognised as that person that just gets shit done.

    Camilla Love

    Doesn't matter how big or small.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Here's the job, I'm going to go get it done. And so I think it's probably why today I have such an execution bias. What's the problem? Okay, let's start to imagine the solution. When am I exactly going to get there? And let's make sure we get there on that date. I definitely am wired that way and I think probably because of that statement.

    Camilla Love

    Okay, well, at least you know that's your bias. Yes, because I have the same. So a lot of feedback is camellia. You know where you're going, you're 100 miles ahead of everybody else, but you need to take everybody else on the journey.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Quite true.

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. Indeed. Well, I think they're absolutely fabulous pieces of advice. And big shout out to Louis Bamboo out there because he's just fab too. So we're at the end and we could probably chatting forever and ever, as I know you and I could do. Definitely.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Absolutely.

    Camilla Love

    So we do this quick buy around. At the end it is. Tell me who you are. First thing that pops into your head, you prepare, ready to go. Okay. Shares or shoes?

    Katharine Goulstone

    Both. Why would you have just one perfect.

    Camilla Love

    Answer, one piece of advice? I tell my 20 year old self.

    Katharine Goulstone

    You know what, I would not sorry, this is quick fire round, but I would not give my 20 year old self any advice because I needed to figure it out myself and I did.

    Camilla Love

    That's just so good. Making mistakes and grow from it, that is so good. If I wasn't doing this job, I'd be a surfing instructor, I'd be a ski instructor. So we could swap seasonal, we could.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Be each other students.

    Camilla Love

    So then this one follows on from that maybe autumn, winter, summer or spring, summer. What weird or out of place thing do you have in your handbag right now?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I have several Matchbox cars in my.

    Camilla Love

    Handbag right now, just in case you want to zoom down the street.

    Katharine Goulstone

    I think it probably just donations from my youngest child. Biggest investment mistake, mixing family and investment together.

    Camilla Love

    That comes with a whole load of other story. Right?

    Katharine Goulstone

    Well, probably. I just think one of my reflections is it's really important to kind of help families financially and support each other, but you shouldn't mistake that with investment choices.

    Camilla Love

    Full stop on that one. What is the most important money lesson you've learnt?

    Katharine Goulstone

    Start small, think big.

    Camilla Love

    That's what we say here. It shows no shoes. My friends would describe me as noisy. That's it.

    Katharine Goulstone

    I'm really nervous with the words that you would use to describe Meg Miller as one of my dear friends.

    Camilla Love

    Noisy is the only one.

    Katharine Goulstone

    This is the quick fire around, I think you'll find.

    Camilla Love

    True. You're telling me my own rules. What two things would you take if you were deserted on an island?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I would take an axe. That feels quite important. I might need to cut trees or fetch coconuts.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah.

    Katharine Goulstone

    And I would need a hobby. I'd take a home brew kit.

    Camilla Love

    What are we making in our home brew kit? Is it gin, vodka or beer?

    Katharine Goulstone

    I probably say beer. I think if I could cut down my trees and make a fire and enjoy a glass of beer, I think my life on the deserted island is probably set.

    Camilla Love

    Let's think about hate. We're going to get you weak barley.

    Katharine Goulstone

    See, this is what I hate about you. You're so practical. Never let the details get in the way of a great plan.

    Camilla Love

    Camilla no, true. But as person in risk, you should know that the details will trip you up. So the final one is describe in three words why career in finance is super awesome.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Dynamic, changing, lifelong.

    Camilla Love

    Great. Well, thank you for this fun and hopefully uplifting and inspiring podcast. And I just love the stories of dad being a pontrader and Mum being a nurse and how that's come to really impact why you've chosen finance as a career for you. I love the curiosity that you bring to all your roles because I think that is something that more people could do more with and it's a really big lesson for me that I've taken away from today. Catherine, that's super, super awesome for you to join us all on. Cheers. I hope you'll come back.

    Katharine Goulstone

    Thanks for having me. Camilla.

    Camilla Love

    You know the information that is in this podcast, we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about out career advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S3.Ep2 Bianca Richardson on How Taking Risks & Having a Positive Mindset Can Excel Your Career

Meet Bianca. Bianca Richardson is a Senior Search Consultant at Westpac.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.

    Bianca Richardson

    Because I always took the view of if I can understand the process, I can apply that to any other topic if I can understand the framework.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes an Insider's Guide to Careers in Finance. I'm your host, camilla Love, founder of F. Three future females in finance. Chersal Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people, all with one thing in common they work in finance. We lift a lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go.

    Camilla Love

    In today's episode of Shares Not Shoes, we are joined by someone who has a role that truly changes the course of the investment management industry here in Australia every day. And there's not that many people who can say that they can do that in their role. Not only does she have a law degree and is formerly our financial advisor, but she's also won awards for her advocacy for better regulation of the industry. Welcome Bianca Richardson.

    Bianca Richardson

    Thank you, Camilla. That was very nice and very generous of you.

    Camilla Love

    I am super keen to find out.

    Camilla Love

    How you started in finance, all the twists and turns that you've had in your career, because I think that you've changed and pivoted quite a lot and I really want to delve into those and I'm really keen to find out.

    Camilla Love

    How you can find purpose in your role today.

    Camilla Love

    And I know through the intro that you really do have your thumb on.

    Camilla Love

    The really important issues that hits the investment management industry and finance in general on behalf of the FSC members. But we'll come back to that. So thanks for joining us. To start off, Bianca, tell me a little bit about you, who you are and what you do in your role.

    Bianca Richardson

    So I've had a very interesting Korean financial services and I think my story is not like many other people who I've talked to over the years, which is I fell into financial services. It wasn't the first career choice in that I initially went to university, I had visions of being a psychologist, studied Bachelor of Arts in psychology, decided I wasn't quite ready to finish uni and go into my career for the next 2030 years, and then did a law subject, really enjoyed commercial law, did well at it, and then decided that I was going to be a lawyer. Now, having successfully completed commercial law and unincorporated associations and trusts, when I saw a job ad come up for a corporations lawyer at a financial services firm, I did a very bold thing. And now I look back at it and I think, I can't believe I did that. But I'm so glad I did. And I applied for the role of the corporate lawyer and said, I'd like to apply for this position. Unfortunately, I don't meet your requirements. But I did just get a HD in commercial law and in unincorporated associations and trust.

    Bianca Richardson

    Will you give me a role? And surprisingly, four weeks later, the CEO of that advice business and the head of legal call me in for an interview. And I started working there as a corporate legal assistant, so similar to a paralegal within the legal team. And then that kind of side of my career in financial services.

    Camilla Love

    That is so good because you hear.

    Camilla Love

    Stories all the time about girls who go, I don't tick every ten points of the job ad, so therefore I'm not going to do only pick nine of them. And in this circumstance, you tick and then I'm going to go for it anyway. Love that. What made you think about doing that?

    Camilla Love

    Do you just take a risk?

    Camilla Love

    What is it?

    Bianca Richardson

    I have to give a lot of credit to my dad. My dad was very much a believer in inspiring his kids. I have a brother and a sister and he used to encourage us to read the Finn Review and he gave us books about thinking positively and having a growth mindset. So Napoleon Hill think and grow rich. Bridge dad, Poor dad.

    Camilla Love

    You had a book list like this.

    Bianca Richardson

    Longset and being Positive and Shoot for the Stars. And so I've been working in hospitality while still at university, didn't like the late nights and the weekends, and I thought, I'd really like to be able to get some work experience before I finish my degree. And I just went for it and I thought, what's the worst that could happen?

    Camilla Love

    What's the worst that could happen?

    Camilla Love

    I still got a job.

    Bianca Richardson

    Yes, well, much better. It led to basically my career in financial services. That one job ad.

    Camilla Love

    So do you give that advice to.

    Camilla Love

    All those girls out there who think they only tick eight out of the ten? You like, Just throw your hat in the ring.

    Bianca Richardson

    Anyway, that's key. Absolutely key. That's the first step. You have to at least be in the game, and so you should have a go. And it's been interesting. I've also had a very short sense as a recruiter. I had a year living in the UK. And on the recruitment side, you can see that you're really looking at, do people fit the box and pick all the criteria in order to even get someone through the first hurdle? But over the years, what I've also learned in business is what actually is more important is attitude, because you can teach someone the skills and the technical aspects. And so even if you don't fit the box, I would encourage people to put your receiving in, pick up the phone, have the conversation, go and meet people and get yourself out there, because you actually don't know what opportunities will arise. And I'm casting point for that.

    Camilla Love

    That is a superb answer because it just gives so much joy and opportunity and somebody else did it. Somebody else did it. So I have a funny story that actually somebody egged me on or suggested that I needed a mentor and that I should really start from the top.

    Camilla Love

    And so I wrote to Gail Kelly.

    Camilla Love

    She was the CEO of Westpac at the time, and said, hey Gail, will you be my mentor?

    Camilla Love

    She came back and said, no, but.

    Camilla Love

    I tell you what I know from.

    Camilla Love

    Subsequent conversations with people I've met along.

    Camilla Love

    The way, that question was actually discussed in executive meeting with Gail in it and whether she should be my mentor or not. And again, the answer was no. But I tell you what, you've got to be in it to win it. You've got to ask, you've got to put yourself forward. So tell me about what you do today.

    Bianca Richardson

    My role is a policy role, which means that I work with our fund manager members to really shape the future of what our industry looks like. We might identify an issue or a problem that we would like to solve in the broader funds management industry and we might come up with a policy position. One of the pieces of work that I've been really enjoying working on and that I met you, Camilla through is the work of trying to improve gender diversity in investment management and trying to get more women into roles of running money. Women are underrepresented and we all know the benefits of diversity and we've been looking at this issue. And so as a collective in policy development, for example, we came together with our members, saw that we have a problem here that we'd like to address, and then really explored how can we support business and how can we support industry to help shift the dial in a meaningful way. And then we've developed some resources that businesses can use, guidance notes and suggestions around what things to look for when they're recruiting people, what policies help with retention of staff, and then gone the next step from developing guidance to developing a charter where firms who want to shift the dial can sign up to the charter.

    Bianca Richardson

    They track how they're going around gender diversity in those investment management roles and then hopefully over time, they will be able to see that they're increasing the female representation in their relevant teams. And so you get to do some really practical things like that, as well as participate in regulatory reform if the government or the regulators such as ASIC is looking at changing the way they regulate the industry. In the work that I do, we can basically use all of the knowledge and the insights from all of our members to develop provisions and make recommendations for how we can basically shape the future landscape of the industry.

    Camilla Love

    That landscape of the industry has changed substantially.

    Camilla Love

    I've been in the industry for nearly 20 years, and I know that the Financial Services Council has been really at the forefront of guiding the industry through.

    Camilla Love

    A lot of regulatory change.

    Camilla Love

    And we've seen a lot of stuff, whether it be through the Banking Royal Commissions or changing advice rules, even through.

S3.Ep1 Risk Management Is at The Heart of All Business with Sam Mosse

Meet Sam. Sam Mosse is the Chief Risk Officer at Perpetual.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.

    Sam Mosse

    Everyone's a risk manager, so everyone actually needs to be able to understand risk.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes an Insider's Guide to Careers in Finance. I'm your host, camilla Love, founder of F. Three future females in finance. Chersal Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview some of my favourite people, all with one thing in common they work in finance. We lift a lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go. I'm really looking forward to chatting with our guests today, as she has one of what I believe is the most interesting roles in the funds management industry at an organisation and brand that is synonymous with the Australian funds management industry, this fabulous person holds the role of Chief Risk Officer. And as you all know, risk is critical for any type of return in business, but it's the management of risk and taking calculated risk that creates true business success. So, without much ado, welcome today to Sam Mosse.

    Sam Mosse

    Thanks, Camilla, it's really great to be here. And thanks for that very generous welcome.

    Camilla Love

    No problem, it's all very true. Sam is the Chief Risk Officer at Perpetual and Perpetual is a fund manager that's been established since 1886. Oh, my gosh, that is so long. And I don't know, a lot of companies have been around for that long and the business today manages nearly $100 billion. So I'm super keen to find out about your career, what makes you tick and why you bound out of bed each morning to do your role in risk. So, thanks so much for joining us in today's episode, Sam. So, first question, Sam, tell me a little bit about what you do and a little bit about you as a person.

    Sam Mosse

    So I'll start with this second one. So, a little bit about me as a person. So, I'm a mom, firstly, and I have two what are adult children by age still progressing into adulthood? More generally, I would say I have had a background. I started my career as a chartered accountant and then really have since sort of over gosh, I think it's about 2028 years now, which means I'm very old. I have had various risk compliance, governance, management and operational roles within the financial services industry. And as you say right now, my current role is as Chief Risk Officer for Perpetual, which is, as you say, asexlifted top 200 company, a diversified financial services company. And in my role, I look after the legal, governance, risk and compliance frameworks, but really is about bringing new perspectives, often quite technical from a legal or a regulatory or risk perspective, ultimately to be helping make good decisions, which is essentially what successful businesses do most of the time and where they don't they are reassessing them within an appropriate time frame. So I'd say I spend a lot of my time, I sit on a lot of boards across our different businesses and a lot of committees where essentially I am asking a lot of questions.

    Sam Mosse

    My favourite thing actually ask me that would be is asking questions to really get to the heart of the matter and sometimes there can be not enough of that getting right into what's really important and what is really going to have the most impact. So yeah, I spend a lot of my day asking questions, being asked questions as well. That's obviously really important but really driving decision making.

    Camilla Love

    Risk is a really important part of managing a funds management business or a business generally, but really particularly in finance. So where are the burgeoning risks that you are finding in today's funds management business?

    Sam Mosse

    So obviously it's a great time to be talking about risk and managing risk. Clearly there are a lot of geopolitical type risks going on at the moment that really need to be factored in to every sort of decision making and obviously that the degree of impact geopolitical risks have on your business depends very much on the nature of your business but one of the areas we're quite focused on or very focused on at the moment is ESG related risks or sustainability risks is another way of saying it and in many ways ESG is what I call in my usual non technical style a super risk. It really is triggering a lot of the different underlying risks. So for example the one that everyone talks about is obviously climate related type risks, whether they be the physical risks or the risks relating to the transition to sustainable economy. But equally ASG risks are really triggering people related risks. So employees want to work for companies whose values very much align with their values and it's important that from a retention and an attraction of talent perspective that your companies are thinking about sustainability of the corporate and of course in our case as a wealth manager and asset manager we embed ESG into our investment decision making as well and obviously that's not just on the risk side but obviously on the upside.

    Sam Mosse

    So the riskadjusted returns that we're always thinking about from an investment perspective. But yeah, ESG and sustainability risks definitely. Probably if I had to pick one area of focus right now it would be the one that everyone's talking about.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely everyone's talking about it and we've spoken about a number of times within the Shares not Shoes podcast but mainly from an investment point of view. So it's interesting to see how you as a non investment person is really looking at that same risk but with a different lens and how it impacts your business and talent is really an interesting one because there is such a war for talent out there. So it's great that you're addressing that through a different lens and embedding that within the business because I think you're right that it is absolutely a critical risk that everyone is really addressing. So you mentioned early on that you started where really many graduates actually do start in one of the big four and in particularly an audit. Why was this a really good starting ground for you and why would you recommend this as a way of graduates starting into their journey in finance?

    Sam Mosse

    It's a great question and I think for me, finance and accounting and they're very interlink, it's sort of the language of business, isn't it? It doesn't matter what industry you're in, you have to understand the finances of your business and accounting is obviously how they flow through the records and the books of the business. And so great, it gives you the ability, the skill to really be able to understand any business in that common language of the financials. I actually think everyone broad statement, but everyone should do some bit of finance and account. Both of them actually finance and accounting learning in their careers. I don't think that's limited to people who are having a career in finance. I actually think it's any industry to really understand the workings and coming back to that decision making, how to make decisions as well. For me, actually fell into it in many ways was sort of preordained. My father was a chartered accountant and I loved math and economics and commerce at school, they were my favourite subjects and I fell into accounting and I took up a scholarship. That was what was then KPMG, sorry, Pete Marlin became KPMG and that sort of got me started, but I thought it was such a great background just to be able to speak the language of business.

    Camilla Love

    And then quickly after that you sort of moved directly into risk. Was that a decision or did you fall into a long stint at Macquarie looking at different bits and pieces in risk and compliance?

    Sam Mosse

    My first job at Macquarie was actually in internal audit and so as an external auditor, I was pretty keen to say goodbye to my auditing days and quite funny story. So I applied for this ad at Macquarie and I don't in any way want to infer that Macquarie were misleading. But the ad did not mention internal audit. Which I think is actually quite a good joke because on the face of it. I would have thought. No. I don't want to go keep doing audit. But actually I went to have a lunch with the head of internal audit at that time and the way that he spoke about the learning ground. That was what was then risk management division at Macquarie and the ability to see all of the different businesses. He actually talked me into taking the role again. I've had a career of learning and in those days. Risk management was just starting. So at a bank they had your typical credit risk people and we obviously had all the dealing desks, so we had very much a big market risk team, but from a regulatory risk, from us it's a compliance and from an operational risk, governance risk, reputational risk, conduct risk, all the risks that have come out since then, they weren't even functions back then.

    Sam Mosse

    So that's really where I was sort of another learning journey for me of actually not only seeing all the different parts of Macquarie but also becoming interested in all the different types of risks that are out there and the very large impact that that can have. It was always something that was very much central to Macquarie's model of understanding, not just the big returns that were available, but were those returns adequate for the risk. And so to me, risk management is everyone's job because it's actually just the other side of any decision risk reward, cost benefit. So I always have understood the importance of risk and how it's everyone's job. Now, granted, it is quite technical and that's why we have specialists, but certainly from the time I started in my career in risk really have always known that it's fundamental to success.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. It's an area where there's huge demand for jobs out there in the industry but it's not the first area that everyone thinks of when they think of finance. Why do you think there's that dichotomy there? Because I think risk and managing risk is really interesting, as you say, it is the flip side of getting a good return in business. But why isn't it everyone's first point of call for their jobs?

    Sam Mosse

    What a great question. If I could just make a definite plan certainly I think probably it's a history thing, I think back in the day, certainly not where I've been, the firms that I've worked for, and I wouldn't have worked for these firms if it was the case. But risk can have been seen as the handbrake, the handbrake to happiness. It's a term that I think people have heard of, may have heard of, so that was where risk was very much about the no police and no, we can't do that, it's too risky. And so it's always sort of people didn't come to risk offices until the proverbial had hit the fan and it was time to clean it up. Whereas actually, what a modern risk function, what a modern risk officer is about is actually the upside, it is about protecting the downside but it's actually more importantly about maximising that upside. So yeah, I think it's probably had a bad brand. I can say that as a career choice and perhaps it's been seen as something that's shoved in the corner and not really central, but actually it's quite the opposite to that.

    Sam Mosse

    The beauty of it is that it's part of every single decision, so it bans the entire organisation. There's no part that we don't get to be involved in and to learn about. And I think of my team and a career in risk as actually sort of a great breeding ground as well, to see, as I did at Macquarie, to see the whole of the business and then to make a decision as to if you might not want to stay in risk forever. But as I say, everyone's a risk manager, so everyone actually needs to be able to understand risk in terms of being able to make good decisions. So, yeah, I think it's probably just that whole bad image and we just need to be getting out there a bit more to actually sell it as a brilliant career, either short term or long term. But, yeah, it's involved in everything and there's not a day goes by that I'm not learning still and that's what I'm passionate about and it's what you really want to have in terms of when you choose a career and indeed a company that you can keep growing, keep learning, keep growing.

    Camilla Love

    From what I've heard, Australians actually manage risk at a really high level globally. Like, they're actually quite well renowned as risk managers globally. And from what I understand, the actual ISO standards actually based on original Australian standards. And I know there's some great university courses in Australia that are well renowned globally on looking at risks specifically, which, given that Australia is all the way down here in the world, it's quite interesting to see that we actually produce some really high quality risk managers out there, particularly in finance, which I think is just a good plug for us Aussies down here. So just changing tack a little bit. Looking back on your career, is there a moment that actually sticks in your head that you're either most proud of or you've made a decision that really had a different trajectory that you were really successful at? Was there something that you want to talk to us about that makes you happy?

    Sam Mosse

    A lot of my proud moments relate to the people in my team and the things that they've gone on subsequently to do, but some of the moments where I've made sort of deviated from what might have been expected. And frankly, I'm a bit of a planner, or a lot of a planner, if I'm honest. And I think about it, I think, wow, that's pretty cool. I wouldn't have predicted that I'd done that and gee, I learned a lot. So the first one was actually after I left Macquarie. I went and I had a career break from finance for a couple of years and I worked in the creative space. Actually an interior stylist and interior designer. And that was really pretty cool. Firstly. Because I got to rock up in jeans and Converse sneakers every day and just go to some really cool spaces that they work in. Rosebury in this really cool warehouse, but anyway, so totally different physical sort of world, but just so different as well. It seriously was like going to a different universe. And I'd come out of finance where we've got so much jargon, but actually they've got just as much jargon in their world as well.

    Sam Mosse

    But the thing even stuff like we'd be working on IBM computers because they are powerful and best for Excel and most compatible with Microsoft and stuff. But over in the creative space back then anyway, it was Apple Macintosh all around that I actually bought my first Mac and they're really good with Photos and I got onto Instagram, so that was really good. But I suppose that the point of the story. Really. Is that it was a small business where you're living every day to day. Every dollar matters and you really have to and I really appreciated my knowledge of understanding accounting and finance and realising really at the cold base almost what it's like when you have to be managing your cash flow. You have to be thinking about decisions in terms of when is this actually going to pay off and are we going to make it? I think it's something like one in three small businesses fail in the first year of their life. I suppose what I'm saying, it was great to go into this different world and sort of see how important the language of finance and accounting is and in this small business space where actually often they don't necessarily have that good understanding of numbers in finance.

    Sam Mosse

    And so that was pretty cool. And I came back into finance after that, actually, with an appreciation of the role that our industry plays across all the broader economy in terms of delivering services and expertise. The second sort of thing I would say experience, I would say, was when I came back out of Semi, call Semiretireirement in the creative space, I actually was employee number three at Henderson in Australia. So Henderson at the time was a very large, prominently European asset manager and they had decided it was time to start the business in Australia. And what was unique about that was coming from where I'd had a team of 60 people at Macquarie coming to be employee number three and having to really roll up the sleeves and do stuff again. It was a really humbling, really cool experience as well. But having that blank sheet of paper and I was actually working with a colleague, ex colleague from Macquarie, had tapped me on the shoulder for that role. We sat there and we said, let's bring all the really from a cultural perspective, as we start to hire people and build relationships with suppliers and launch products and do all these things, let's really think about the culture, the elements about culture that we've loved during our career.

    Sam Mosse

    And that was very much around being able to be yourself at work and ask the questions without fear of looking stupid and really just being your authentic self at work and leave some of the stuff that perhaps we might have seen that wasn't so great. And really that blank sheet of paper experience is something that not everyone gets, but it just really makes you focus in on what's important to you in terms of where you work and what really drives and motivates you when you are at work. And for me, it's working for a company where the values align, right, so that you talk to the very beginning about what gets you out of bed in the morning. And for me, it's knowing that I don't have to come to work and be this person that I'm not at home and I can just be myself and be as smart or as stupid as I am on any day and just encourage transparency. I suppose so, yeah. There were a couple of moments where I think, wow, I wouldn't have plotted that out in my little plan at the start, but actually I learn a lot out of both of those.

    Camilla Love

    It's never the straight line, is it? Right. It's always that graph of the circular line of the trajectory of your career versus the straight line that you plan it to actually be. It never ends up being like that. And the luxury of starting with a blank sheet of paper and getting the diversity of team right, and as you mentioned, culture right, it's not a lot of times that anyone really gets that opportunity because you're either going in as part of an old team that's already been there for a long time, so you inherit what somebody else has already planned. So, yeah, it's quite luxurious, I think, to be able to start from scratch and build it as the way that you want it to be. Now, on the flip side of that is we always learn from things, particularly when the chips are down and things have gone skew. If in your career is there a moment where you can think of that you go, yes, I learned a lot from either a mistake or something that might not have gone the way you wanted it to?

    Sam Mosse

    Yes, definitely, I will limit it to one or more. You've got to learn from mistakes. You're not trying hard enough if you don't make mistakes. But certainly I would summarise it by I took a role that was working for someone whose values didn't align to mine, and I took it because it was something different and certainly a challenging area. It was a bit of a cleanup job, certainly was a clean up job, and that was all good, and I learned a lot from that. But ultimately, something that I've stayed true to my whole career, except for in this moment, is to really pick who you work for. So you've got a choice in who you work for. And in this case, as I say the values were different. I'm not saying who's were better or not or worse, but certainly there wasn't that alignment of values and I did end up doing the job and then leaving. So I thought afterwards, yeah, there's no use having regrets, right? No, that's just wasted energy. So I reflected back on what I'd learned. As I said, it was something different and I learned a lot. I worked with some really great people in my team, but at the end of the day, you need to work for leaders who you have a value alignment with, and I've not done that in this case.

    Camilla Love

    And how do you find that out? Because generally you're only sitting through two, three, maybe four interviews with various people within the organisation, and values is really something you can only see once you're in it. Are there any flags that you think of when you reflect on that that you could have picked up on beforehand?

    Sam Mosse

    Yeah, well, I mean, in this case it was an internal move and so I really didn't have any excuses. But you're right, it's a great question in terms of people, listeners, I suppose, certainly do your research sometimes. I'm doing a lot of interviews at the moment. As you would imagine. And sometimes it surprises and frankly disappoints me when the candidate hasn't actually looked at the company and there's actually a lot of information. Especially if you're talking about listed companies. It's a bit more tricky in the private space. But there's still a lot on the internet that you can find about the principles of the company and by that I mean the leaders of the company and the principles and values of the company both ways. And so I think you just really need to ensure that you do your research for any role. Don't think just in terms of a role, thinking of short term, that's a great role. I think you need to be a bigger picture than that and think about the actual, the firm that you're working with, the team that you're working with. Do research in terms of looking at what they've achieved and the types of decisions that you can see that they've made.

    Sam Mosse

    And frankly, there's actually quite a lot of information you can gain from a website these days. And if I take sustainability, for example, is that something that is you're quite passionate about and you want to work for a firm? They should have a sustainability report or information about their approach to that on their website and that's something that you can look for and make sure that you feel like they are going in the direction that you want to go. So, yeah, I agree, it is challenging a couple of interviews, but I think you need to do more than that. I think you need to do your research ahead of making what is a really important decision in terms of a career choice or a job choice.

    Camilla Love

    So one of my last question I always ask is, what is the best career advice you've ever been given? And why particularly? And sometimes it's always in the moment, why it was important to you at that time.

    Sam Mosse

    So we touched on it already in terms of work for a firm whose value because ultimately you need to be happy, right? You can't have a job that makes you miserable. And I think for me, happiness means that you need to work for a company whose values align to yours, but also you need to make sure that your manager is someone that the job of the leader is to enable success of the team. And so if you feel like that isn't something that's happening, then you need to put up your hand and have a conversation. Don't assume that managers are mind readers, because they're not and they don't have super powers, so you need to have a conversation. There's nothing to lose from having a conversation. If you're not happy anyway, then maybe you leave or whatever, but you don't want to not actually have had the conversation and put forward your ideas and suggestions about how things could work differently and how they could be enabling you more. So I think don't be afraid to put forward your ideas and talk about how you think that you could be doing something differently or be doing more, et cetera.

    Sam Mosse

    So I would say that I also have been told at various points in my career and encouraged, and I've had some pretty good sponsors and mentors, but there's been times when I have left off ledgers, but I've also had someone doing this bit more and sort of giving me a bit of a shove and saying, trust yourself and so back yourself a bit more. And I suppose that's what I said. I sort of say, talk to people. So if you're feeling unsure about a potential opportunity and as women, sometimes females can underestimate themselves in terms of not ticking all the boxes, we hear about that a lot. So to sort of overcome that, because as I say, we're going to be ourselves. So in my case, I've spoken to people and I've tested things and I said, look, this is how I'm feeling and I'm not sure if I can do this, frankly. And I've had people that have said, yeah, it's a bit of a challenge, but you can totally do it, you're a planner, so make a plan for how to address some of those learning gaps or knowledge gaps or experience gaps.

    Sam Mosse

    And I suppose the summary of all of that Miller, is really talk to people and people are afraid of archive, mentor, various people, some more formal and some less formal. Don't be afraid to ask for help, don't be a martyr, I suppose, and don't make decisions in your head. More in the fishboard, right, exactly. And more introverted, analytical style. People might be a lot in their head, but actually they need to talk to people to get a different perspective and make a better decision.

    Camilla Love

    Well, that's fabulous. And I think that that's some really important advice out there and I might take a few of those. So, at the end of each episode, Sam, we do this sort of quick fire round. Have you listened to any of the podcasts? So you know I love a podcast. Okay, good. So you know what you're getting into, right? So you have to say whatever's coming out of your brain at the time, right? There's no planning on this. Okay, sure. So you ready to go?

    Sam Mosse

    Hit me.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. If I wasn't doing this job, I'd be a chef. A chef.

    Sam Mosse

    I'm not saying I'm good at it, no guarantee that would be a good one, but I would enjoy it. Yes.

    Camilla Love

    Okay, good. Are you a baker or like what's?

    Sam Mosse

    Not so much baking, actually. More savoury, so sort of love spices and flavours and mixing together.

    Camilla Love

    What's your go to dish?

    Sam Mosse

    I would say baked salmon with lots of fresh coriander and ginger. Probably Asian influences. Quite a bit of Asian.

    Camilla Love

    I'll come to your place for dinner, I'll just invite myself along. What useless thing are you really talented at?

    Sam Mosse

    I can remember. It's so weird. I can forget whether I put the washing in the dryer, but I can remember, like verbatim lyrics to some seventy s and eighty s ballads like Piano Man and things like that. It's just weird. It's totally useless.

    Camilla Love

    Don't worry. I can wrap Ice Ice Baby via vanilla ice without amusing. So I'm totally with you. I'm very talented of that as well. So yeah, quite useless, but quite talented. If you could live in any country, what would it be and why?

    Sam Mosse

    Gosh, I would probably say Japan. That's a bit weird. So I studied Japanese at school and Yoodi and I love everything about their food and their culture and just their way of being and their respect for each other, et cetera. So I'd love to live there.

    Camilla Love

    Great things. Fabulous. And the skiing is great too.

    Sam Mosse

    The skiing is great, yes.

    Camilla Love

    My biggest investment mistake was selling my.

    Sam Mosse

    Macquarie shares too early and I can't even talk about that.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. A bit of a sore spot, everybody, so probably not a good wrong question to ask. Note to self. How is your friends describe you?

    Sam Mosse

    I think they would say organised. I plan a lot of events and things so social and very loyal.

    Camilla Love

    I think that's great. That's quite true, I'm sure. Tell me something that no one else knows about you.

    Sam Mosse

    I'm an identical twin.

    Camilla Love

    Are you?

    Sam Mosse

    Yeah. It is a big part of my personality. We're still very close, but yeah, to all the identical twins out there, you know what I'm saying? It's a pretty amazing shout out to your sister. She would not like me to do that.

    Camilla Love

    Okay, well, hi out there, whoever you. Are, if you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

    Sam Mosse

    Goodness, that's a hard one. Good one. I want to say one of my favourite people is I'd love to meet Sami Stoza. So I love tennis, personally, and she's amazing, clearly, but more importantly as a leader. And the way she thinks about her team and not herself, I don't know if you've ever noticed in her thankyou speeches, she always talks about us, she never talks about me or I. And I just think that is awesome and inspiring and fabulous.

    Camilla Love

    I absolutely agree. And the way that she played and bowed out from her career in the Aussie Open was just all class, which I think is fabulous. So I look forward to seeing where she goes in the next tranche of what is going to be a fabulous career for her. So on my bucket list is lots more travel.

    Sam Mosse

    There's just so many amazing places in the world that I want to go to. Antarctica, Egypt. I could just list off millions and I just haven't had the time so far. Obviously we've had covered, but I'm really looking forward to spending a lot more time doing that in the future.

    Camilla Love

    I think we all are, so I think we're all in line for that. Okay, my last question describing three words, why a career in finance is awesome?

    Sam Mosse

    Three words. It's dynamic in that it's obviously there's just change happening all the time. It's boundless in terms of limitless, in terms of there's so many different roles and skills that you can acquire in the finance industry and then rewarding. So not just from a money perspective, but just from a learning and challenging, fulfilling perspective. I think it's pretty awesome.

    Camilla Love

    It is super awesome and I'm glad we're all on the same boat there, but thanks, Sam. We've come to the end of the episode and I really appreciate your time and it's been great to hear your journey from Audit to your really important role in Risk Now and how you've moved and navigated that. I love the fact that you went out and you had a bit of out of finance career break and went into the creative realm for a bit. And I love your advice on asking the people for advice and not internally making decisions, and particularly about the value set and the importance of aligning your values with your leaders values as well as the organization's values. I think that is an absolute takeaway that everybody needs to really think about and assess when they're looking at a job, not necessarily in finance at all, but out there. So, super excited to have you on and thank you very much for your great advice here today.

    Sam Mosse

    Absolutely perfect. Miller and thanks so much for asking me to come.

    Camilla Love

    No problem. You know the information that is in this podcast we always talk about finance in this podcast, but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about career's advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S2.Ep5: Never Underestimate me with Alex McGuigan

Meet Alex. Alex is an institutional sales person by trade and is also the Global Development Director for 100 Women in Finance.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an Insider's guide to careers in Finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview someone of my favourite people, all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We lift a lid on who they are. How they came into a career in finance. And arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest. And will inspire you. So let's go. So today, I'm so super excited to introduce you to Alexandra McGuigan. Now, Alex has a fabulous career in finance and is now heading as one of the front people for 100 women in finance. And I have known Alex for at least, I'm thinking eight years. Right. I remember the first time we met, we've got introduced over the email. And I think the two of us have very good mindset about let's put things in the diary and let's get things done. And we're very efficient type people. And I think both of you and I just knew straight away we would be good mates. And I'm Super excited to tell all our listeners about your journey. So, Alex, welcome to Shares Not Shoes.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Thank you. I'm very excited to be here. And I love the name of Shares Not Shoes. But I do actually think that a career in finance, you can have both Shares and Shoes.

     

    Camilla Love

    Shares and Shoes. It's true. It's true. Because as I always say, I do like a good pair of shoes, but I'm only buying those shoes of the profit I have in my shares. So I invest first and then take my shoes later. Although it's really hard to get back into those high heels after covet and being in, my dear.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    It is. Yeah. I carry my handbag, actually, mostly.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And I think all women in finance do that because they're all tower walking between meetings and then all of a sudden you whip out your shoes. Totally. Yeah. So your finance career will give you good shoes when they Alex.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Absolutely.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. So, Alex, thanks for saying yes, for coming along. And maybe you can give our listeners a bit of an introduction on who you are and a little bit of your background on what you do right now.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Sure. So I am an institutional salesperson by trade, if you will. I have had about 15 years experience in the industry doing that. Raised around two and a half billion dollars in the Australian market, across asset classes and strategies, and have definitely. What do they say pounded the pavement?

     

    Camilla Love

    You warn those shoe leathers out. I broken that many heels.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Broken that many heels. Absolutely. So dumb. Surround me with anybody and everybody who would take a meeting with me ended up raising lots of money. And then I moved to Singapore with my husband in 2018 and we had a small baby at the time and I set up my own company in Singapore and I've been consulting since then. So my company in Singapore is called Am Access Capital, and I currently am the global development director for 100 Women In Finance. And what I'm doing for them is institutionalising their capital raising process. So we can essentially fund the demographic change in the industry from the companies that work in the industry. So I work, I talk to investment banks, asset managers, fund managers, insurance companies, brokerage firms, you name it, I speak to them and I ask them for money. They do.

     

    Camilla Love

    And can I say, there is nothing wrong with asking people for money and a lot of people out there really find it quite uncomfortable, but I dare say, with a bit of practise, it actually becomes easier, right?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Very easy. In fact, don't ask. You don't get as well ask.

     

    Camilla Love

    I live by that mantra totally on anything. Right.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    And then you still don't have what you wanted anyway, so it doesn't really matter.

     

    Camilla Love

    And what's wrong with no? And I always take a no as a maybe and never as a no by you.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Absolutely. They can always change their mind.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, indeed. 100 Women and F Three actually have very sort of similar outcomes and goals, but we're doing it for different ways. So talk to me a little bit about what 100 Women are doing globally.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Okay, so 100 Women In Finance is the largest organisation for the empowerment of women in financial services in the world. We have 28 locations around the world, something like 20,000 registered members, 500 volunteers who really execute. And it's kind of different what we offer our members. So we offer our membership base. What we offer them is probably something similar to maybe like Women in super, where we do bigger events and have keynote speakers, etc. E. And then we have sort of smaller events broken down by the experience level. And then our third pillar is impact. And so with the impact pillar, what we are trying to do is change the demographics of the industry. So for that, we have in our locations that are more senior, if you will, have probably 500 plus members. We host galas and there's a committee that puts on the gala and they put together. It's a fundraising event, really, for the industry. And so all of that money that we raise and we've raised $55 million in the last 20 years. All of that money goes towards investing in the next generation. And what does that mean? We have a grant giving programme.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Because of our global reach, we don't think that we can do everything ourselves and we want to support smaller organisations or organisations that might be geographically specific, like S Three, for example, in the Australian market. And we give funding to those organisations. So they can go out and continue on achieving our vision, which is to have 30% representation of women in senior investment roles and executive leadership positions by 2040. So recipients of that grant, those grants would be currently matched for girls in the UK. And there's one in New York called Girls Who Invest. And then we can also do our own initiatives. And our initiative is because we almost have a bird's eye view of the industry globally. Our initiatives would always be industry facing and bridge the gap between organisations that are looking for students and helping those female students to understand what a career in finance might look like. The different job types, the different companies they might be able to work for, the different countries they might be able to work in, and then helping those students to actually meet those companies and people who work in those companies. So it becomes a real option for them to consider a career in finance.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed, there's a couple of pretty lofty goals in there. Are there areas globally where finances are doing really well on the gender gap and then areas where they aren't?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yes. So the most underrepresented area are women in investment roles and the very senior executive leadership, we call it executive committee, because sometimes the numbers at that very top level can be swayed by women who are working in traditionally female roles and companies can say, oh, well, we've got two women at the top, but they might be the person, the head of HR, global head of HR, or global head of marketing. Right. Because what we want is representation of women across the board. And so we have specifically focused on trying to solve for the most challenging piece of the puzzle, which is getting that investment role, which is currently Bloomberg says it's about 10% of women, our portfolio managers globally, and that number hasn't changed in 20 years. So the reason that we're focusing on this is that historically, actually our fundraising has gone to different philanthropic partners. But in 2019, the board recognised that the demographics hadn't changed. And if they were going to change at all, then there needed to be a concerted effort and we would have to actually invest in making that change. So that's the goal. And it is a lofty goal, but we gave ourselves the time horizon of 20 years because we can work on different initiatives, like grassroots initiatives, getting girls who are still at school, considering careers in finance, helping those who might be, say, studying science or something at University, considering a career in finance.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    So actually transferable skills. We're going to work on initiatives to retain women in that mid career section. So make sure that we're working with companies and make sure that they have a plan to help their women during that child rearing period where it is more difficult. Some countries have high representation in that period, obviously, because there is childcare available. So we see high in Asia where I live now, I'm looking for participation rate of women in financial services firms during that period. It doesn't really drop off that much. It does drop off at the more senior level, though. And so we find that there is a multiplier effect, and this sort of comes into unconscious bias as well, or even conscious bias, really. But if you have women or diversity at the top, you end up having a multiplier effect throughout the organisation. And so that woman will then hire women. Will then hire women. Right. So if we can get more women at the top, more women in the middle, and more women coming through the ranks, then maybe we have a chance.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And both you and I have been in the industry for a long time, and F Three is doing a lot in the grassroots, really on the student side, as you know. And I'm just trying to drive the pipeline. And when I looked at it, I just went, okay, how can I facilitate change inside an organisation? I don't think personally I could. So hence why I decided to start F Three for the pipeline. But I'm glad that 100 women are looking at retaining the senior women and promoting senior women as part of that as well. But you did media at Uni, right? So how did you jump from doing media at Uni into finance? What was the trigger point for you?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Actually, I wanted to be an actress and I did a lot of acting training. I used to do a lot of performances with another girl who was a year ahead of me at school, and she got into Nida and we used to win all of these performances, et cetera. So when she got into Nida, I just assumed that I would get into Nida. Unfortunately, I didn't get into Nida. Well, maybe it was, fortunately, I don't know.

     

    Camilla Love

    Very fortunately. Otherwise we wouldn't know each other, right?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah. Unless I was an amazing famous celebrity.

     

    Camilla Love

    Which is a chance it could be on the rich list and beyond every Marvel episode that's out there unlikely.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Because the chances of that are very slim. I quickly realised that I didn't want to be poor, actually, I had other skills and so I actually did media communications because I was just buying my time until I got into Nida. And then I realised that I had other skills and I should just probably focus on my studies for a little while. And I ended up working. I did an exchange overseas, I came back and I ended up working in the wine industry because my family makes wine, which was super fun. I used to go to all these parties and sponsor fancy parties.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, I should have been wine.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    It was really fun, but it was also a little meaningless. And so after my travel and studying at Cornell, I was like, I really kind of had the travel bug, and I wanted to go overseas again, but I didn't really know what I wanted to do in my career. And I also kind of didn't want to waste that time just sort of sapping about. So I made a plan, and I decided five things that I wanted to achieve in the next five years. And I wanted to complete a postgraduate degree. I wanted to live in another country. I wanted to learn another language. I wanted to buy a property, and I wanted to have a share portfolio. And I went down. I told my dad, and he laughed at me. And I was like, Whatever. I could figure out a way to do this.

     

    Camilla Love

    The whole purpose is you proving up your point to your dad.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Is it always the goal? That's always the goal of everything. So I decided to do an MBA. And I figured out that if I did an MBA at a University that didn't exchange to another country, then I could tick off two of those boxes. And if that other country didn't speak English, then I could take off three of those boxes. So I did that. And then I wanted to buy a property before I left. And so I figured I was going to need money. And where do people make money in finance? So I changed up my CV to suit whatever job. The only job that I was qualified to do in financial services, and that was to be an executive assistant. So I got lucky. And I interviewed with an amazing man who became my mentor and took me under his wing. And he was the managing director of Being by Mellon Asset Management. And he said to me he was an American guy. And he saw that I studied at Cornell, which is an American, I believe, University. And he said, look, you're overqualified for this job. But if you do it and you do it really well, for two years, I'll teach you how to run a business.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    And I was like, that's a pretty good deal.

     

    Camilla Love

    I'll take you on that.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah. And so I ended up getting to shadows this managing director. And literally I learned everything. I learned how to write emails, I learned how to present myself, I learned how to put a roadshow together, I learned how to manage my time. And all of those skills that I learned in that role I still do use every day for sure.

     

    Camilla Love

    And do you still keep in touch with him?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I do.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    And he's based in the States now, not as much as we did in the past, but there's only been a few people that have been as impactful on my life as him. And so after that, he was just flying around the world, winning mandates for $150,000,000. I was just like, this is cool.

     

    Camilla Love

    I want to be like you.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Exactly. And then after that, that's just what I set my mind on. And I was like, I want to do that. And so I ended up studying. I did go to France and I did the exchange, but I actually had to major in international business, but I studied all finance subjects and really was coming from very far behind, but I worked my butt off and here I am.

     

    Camilla Love

    Do you find purpose in the financial services industry? Like, it sounded like you've definitely found that here.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Absolutely. Well, I think that is finance is really interesting, but the subject matter is challenging. Right. So the people are generally quite intelligent and intelligent people have interests other than just finance. So I find the conversations that I have with people in financial services to be interesting. The subject matter is always changing, and I'm a lifelong learner, an advocate of that. So I like the fact that it's always changing, but really, in order to make change in the world, change goes where money flows. Right? And so if you actually want to make a difference in climate change or anything like that.

     

    Camilla Love

    That'S a great example.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    In financial services, you actually have the ability to make change. And I mean, it's all good, don't get me wrong. Marching and joining in protests and all of that kind of stuff. That's all good stuff. But if you really want to make change, you got to get money to go to the problem.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yes. And divert capital away to actually really make the change that it needs to see. I absolutely agree.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Absolutely.

     

    Camilla Love

    So then talk to me a little bit how you were like, did you love sales? Did you love your roles? What was your favourite asset class that you sold? Can you give me a bit of an insight then?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah, sure. So what I really like to do is start with a problem so I can talk about Gan when I first started at Shed Enterprises. So Gan is a huge global asset manager and we were representing them. They had performance in a fixed income strategy of 10% per annum. They had a tracking record of like ten years. They were coming out to Australia for six years and they just couldn't raise money. So I was like, all right, I need to do a bit of an analysis on what is going on here. So I went out to the market. I spoke to different people. I found that the fee was just too high for the Australian market and they were raising capital all around the world. So they were like, pulling up and negotiate on fees. But that's a mistake, because if you're trying to enter a different market, you need to understand what the constraints and the requirements are of that market to be able to sell the farm. So that was the first thing then. The second thing was you're going to laugh. This is how old I am. But at the time, interest rates were like.

     

    Camilla Love

    More than zero.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah, exactly. They were getting 10%, people go, all right, well, you're getting annualised 10%, so you say. But things can change, right? So that's an okay 10%. Then you're going to charge me 1% fee. So I get to 9%, I can get a guaranteed 7.5%. So I think that I'm going to go with that option.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Because the risk is a no brainer on the risk decision too.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Absolutely. It was an absolute return bond strategy. Basically. I put that analysis together and I expressed that to the manager and they were like, oh, thank you. No one had ever told us this before. So figuring out what the problem is first and then working out a plan on how to execute and how to sell. So that strategy then. Okay, so then where does it fit? What bucket does it fit into? Is it an alternative because it's a hedge strategy or is it a fixed income strategy? Probably not fixed income because it's too expensive. So then you work out your target market and from the target market, then you go, all right, who are the asset consultants for each of these people? So it's like a puzzle, really. And so it's kind of cool to be able to figure out the bits and pieces and then you just have to go and drink tonnes of coffee.

     

    Camilla Love

    And from a person who doesn't drink coffee at all, me, right. I find that very difficult.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah, it's a lot of coffee. So you have to build relationships, people have to trust you. I always like to think about it. First it's they buy me, then they buy the business and then they buy the product. If they don't want to deal with me, then there's no chance that they're going to buy the product.

     

    Camilla Love

    That's really critical because we talk about a bit in shares, not shoes, that it really is a relationship industry. So talk about how you go about building relationships that are based on trust and authenticity.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I think you just have to go and have coffee with people and just talk about things that aren't related to the product, like don't try and sell all the time. It will come to the end of the conversation. And they'll say, all right, well, show me what you got. I'll see if I'm interested. And I love the institutional space because, look, there's a professional approach to it and I can have a personal relationship with someone and go and try and talk to them about a specific product. But if they're not interested, they can be like, Look, I really like you, Alex, but this is just not going to fly with us.

     

    Camilla Love

    Not for now.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Not for now. Coming soon when you've got something different. So you can have those. It's less opaque, I think, and you can have those open and honest conversations, you can get feedback and you really just have to pound the pavement. Now, it's a little bit different with Zoom, but it's also more efficient. Sometimes you can never forgo or underestimate the impact of being in person. However, having an hour coffee and then tracing to the other end of the city to have an hour coffee takes a long time. Wears out a lot of shoes as we go.

     

    Camilla Love

    The high possibility of breaking a heel. I've done that a few times.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Me too. But on Zoo at the moment now I deal a lot with the US. So I'm based in Singapore, so I deal with the US. The twelve hour time difference. So every day I pretty much only have work from 08:00 P.m. To 10:00 P.m. At night with the US. And I probably have four pitches a night for half an hour.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, right.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Which is a lot of energy, but I can get through a lot. I must have had 220 meetings with global institutions in the last seven months or something. That's a lot of meetings.

     

    Camilla Love

    That is a lot of meetings.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Gosh.

     

    Camilla Love

    The efficiency is definitely there. You can see that already.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah. And so depending on what the product is and how complex it is, I'm selling sponsorships to a nonprofit, which is pretty easy to get your head around. Whereas if you're selling a derivative strategy or a quantitative strategy, it's going to take a lot of meetings. Right. And institutional sales process, I always tell people, is minimum twelve months from the first meeting, two years, and then two years, probably by the time the money comes in, it's probably six months from the time they tell you that you're going to get the money.

     

    Camilla Love

    Actually, by the time you do all the legals definitely in the negotiation part on fees. Oh, my gosh, it can take a while.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    It can take a while. But when you get $150,000,000 mandate or my biggest one ever was $350,000,000, that's pretty exciting.

     

    Camilla Love

    On that day, totally go out and buy a pair of new shoes just on a pattern.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah, absolutely.

     

    Camilla Love

    So you mentioned your quest and your sort of mantra of lifelong learning. And I know you've done extra stuff and your postgrad stuff. Tell me a little bit about that and why you did it.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    So, Kai, I did because most Shared enterprises was it's a third party marketing firm. And what that means is that we represented international fund managers in the Australian market and Shared Enterprises is a specialist in alternative investments. And alternative investments are typically basically they have more bells and whistles and levers and bits and pieces more complex, much more complex. I did that and then I moved on to Tribeca and I was head of investor relations at Tribeca. And again, they had a macro strategy. They had a long short equity strategy and a regular small cap strategy, but they were complex strategies. And I really felt that to have the credibility to go and speak to a CIO about the macro strategy or the long short equity strategy, which was what we call quantum, which is part quantitative. Sorry. And part fundamental. I really needed to have the vocabulary and the skills and the understanding to be credible. And so I did the hire and it was the most useful study immediately, useful study I've ever done to exactly what I was doing. And no study is wasted, don't get me wrong. But for what I was doing, the comprehension rate just increased substantially.

     

    Camilla Love

    And that is a focus on alternatives. Correct?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Correct. So it's like the CFA, but it's for alternatives.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Okay. Obviously that applied directly to the people you're talking to and the products that you're with. And I bring this up because there are alternatives out there that might not necessarily be apparent when people are just looking for extra learning in this space.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Absolutely. And so the other thing that I'm doing now is I've just signed up to Wharton online. So Wharton is the top finance University in the world. The top finance University in the world. Obviously, I don't have the capacity to go and do a course there in person at the moment, but I've signed up for a certificate in asset allocation and portfolio construction, which I'm continuing to do. So there are lots of different ways that you can upskill yourself. And if you want to transition or you need to move from media communications into finance, lots of different ways you could do it.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Good.

     

    Camilla Love

    So tell me, I always like to have real life stories as part of this and tell me, like, I'm really interesting or highlight of your career so far.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Really interesting highlight of my career. Well, I guess that was the first mandate I won. Right. So I did this analysis and I don't actually think anyone ever thought that I was going to raise money, so that was pretty cool.

     

    Camilla Love

    Why not? Well, I don't know.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Because with the third party marketer, you're kind of a gun for hire, almost. Sure. So it's not the same as what you do being invented organisation and understanding what's happening. You're always one step removed. Right. So you're just the sales and marketing, really. And she's had been successful, definitely. But I think that people were expecting that other people would have to come in at the top level and support the sales process through the end. So I worked out this strategy and I was like, all right, so this is how they outperformed. And so I reached out to one of the CIOs and I said, Will you have a meeting with me? And he said, yes, I have a coffee with you. And so he had like a 30 minutes coffee with me. And he said something about the product why he wasn't interested in looking at it. And I said, well, actually, I have to cheque because I'm only new, but I think that that's wrong. I think that actually these are the returns of the product. And so he was like, all right, well, send me stuff, and I'll have a look at it. And so I sent it to him, and he was like, you're right.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Actually, my understanding of this strategy was not correct, and it has outperformed all of its peers. So then I started building a relationship with this CIO and brought the portfolio manager out a number of times. And then he said to me, okay. So I've decided I want to do this, and I'm going to go and tell Jana that I want to do this. And they have to come back to me with a reason why I can't do what I want to do. And I was like, that is the golden ticket. If you can get an institutional investor to instruct an asset consultant to work on your product, then you basically can open the floodgates. And that's kind of what happened. He had the access consultant work on it. They approved the strategy. And I remember I was walking on George Street when he called me, and he said, I just want to let you know I'm going to give you $150,000,000. And I did a happy dance on the street.

     

    Camilla Love

    And people are like, who's this crazy lady? What is she doing?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Why is she doing? And then literally. So it took 18 months to get that first call to say they were going to give us that money and another 18 months to raise $1.5 billion.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Wow. And it's funny how it's just the first and then once the first how long it takes to get to the first. And once the first comes in, the flood comes not always.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    But if it's a good product and it really helps. And so one of the key points I would like, I think that's a good story to highlight the need for persistence. And a lot of people won't have that persistence, and that tenacity to keep following up. And they can't be annoying. You really have to try not to be annoying, because that shuts off the basis. The way that I did it with him was he said, okay, this is the next thing I'm going to do. Call me in two months. And so I put it in my diary, and I called him in two months. And I said, hey, you told me to reach out in two months. Is now a good time? And he would say, no, I still haven't got to it. Give me another month. And so I cancel it in my diary. And whatever he told me to do, I really try not to test for him. So having that systematic approach to the follow up is significant in the sales process, for sure.

     

    Camilla Love

    To me, there's two sort of learnings from that story. And I relate to something that I had a conversation ages ago, maybe 15 years ago, I had with my boss, who said, really? There's only 10% of people like you and I, Alex, where we just get stuff done. The rest of the people will go along on the ride or things happen in its luck or whatever. But it's 10% of people who have that persistency. And the second moral of the story never underestimate to me, Alex McGuigan.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    They're underestimate Alex McGuigan. That's exactly right. So I used to be the chair of the emerging leaders and the CEO was leaving. And I remember I had a conversation with them and I said, Please give me some pearls of wisdom before you leave. And this person said to me, Never underestimate the mediocrity of others.

     

    Camilla Love

    And that's true.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I've never ever forgotten it. And you know what? You don't have to be the best. You just have to be a little bit better than everybody else and you will still win.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed, pearls of wisdom, everyone pearls of wisdom. Hey, where are you going to be in five years time?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Where am I going to be? Well, I'm actually working on something pretty exciting. I can't say this yet, but I'm working on a project. What I can say is that female portfolio managers tend to outperform. And there's a lot of empirical evidence that has been done by investment banks and management consulting firms that prove this. And it's for a number of reasons. One is self selection bias. So they are just those type of people, those 10% of people who get it done. They are also comfortable being the only person in the room. So these portfolio managers tend to sit with contrarian positions longer, which is very valuable in a portfolio. So even though we have this information that tells us that women outperform, they still manage less than 1% of the global assets, and that is also for various reasons. One is unconscious bias, but I think that we're coming to a place where they are being actively addressed in organisations. But the second and probably most challenging piece is the structural element. Right? So institutional investors, they have risk management requirements and investment committees who say you can't be more than 10% of a fund, which makes it impossible for them to invest in women.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    So there's this whole group of exceptional investors who get immediately eliminated from the selection process just because of their size. So I'm working on a project with two single preemptive institutions on analysing whether or not this is actually true for the Asia Pacific managers outperform. And if the research proves the case, then I'm going to be working on a solution to get more money to women.

     

    Camilla Love

    What's this thing?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I know it's very exciting.

     

    Camilla Love

    That's so exciting.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    It is.

     

    Camilla Love

    So we're going to come to the end of our podcast soon, but before we do, have you listened to any of my other podcasts? What we do at the end, we do this quick fire round where I ask you like five or six different questions and you got to say the first thing, like the first thing that comes into your line you're up for something like that?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Sure. Okay.

     

    Camilla Love

    Well, who knows what your answer is going to be?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    That's why I say I hope not. Rude.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay. You ready to go? Yep.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Let's go.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay. If you could be any animal, what would it be? And why?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Tiger. Strong and beautiful.

     

    Camilla Love

    Fierce.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Fierce.

     

    Camilla Love

    Endangered.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Endangered. I think strong, powerful. But I don't want to say calculated. Yeah, but planned and considered. I think if they make an attack, they don't just do it. They think about it and they stalk. They stalk.

     

    Camilla Love

    My favourite superhero is Sheira Princess of Power.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    So good.

     

    Camilla Love

    Oh, my God, that reminds me of the 80s. That's so good. I love that. If you could invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Oh, Elizabeth Taylor.

     

    Camilla Love

    So amazing.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Taylor? Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    And just because of the Grace. The diamonds, the dress?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Diamonds, the diamonds, the dress. I just want to know the stories as well.

     

    Camilla Love

    How many husbands?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Nine or something. She married one of them and divorced one of them twice.

     

    Camilla Love

    Twice exactly. A lady who can't make up her mind. Nothing wrong with that. My favourite book is.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    By David Benioff and it's called City of Fees. It's about the siege of Leninbrad and two boys. They get thrown in a prison cell together and they've basically both been accused of doing something wrong. And in order to save their lives, the general or the commander sends them off on this incredibly dangerous adventure to find a dozen eggs in the Siege of Leonograde when there was, like, everyone was starting to death. So it's a fabulous look. You won't be able to put it down.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay, great. I'll have to put that on my reading list.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    It's very good.

     

    Camilla Love

    My first investment was a property.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    An apartment on William Street. Darling house.

     

    Camilla Love

    Do you still have it?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I do.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Someone is living in it right now. Hopefully. Happy.

     

    Camilla Love

    Good.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    My biggest investment mistake was not linking my offset account for my money. For the property.

     

    Camilla Love

    No.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Anyway, I figured it out.

     

    Camilla Love

    Extra interest, paid less and learned.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Lesson learned. That was a Biggie.

     

    Camilla Love

    What weird or unusual thing do you have in your handbag right now that you want to tell us about shoes? I'm thinking of something else, but. Yeah, cool. No, every handbag has a good pair of shoes.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Well, and you know what? I'm just really organised and I constantly change my handbag, so there's nothing weird in there. I usually put it away.

     

    Camilla Love

    Gosh. I don't have enough handbags to do that.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Maybe that's a better question. What do you draw?

     

    Camilla Love

    What is in your drawer? Then tell us.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Yeah, it's not really very exciting either. No, passwords is not very exciting.

     

    Camilla Love

    The efficiency of passwords in your drawings. My hidden talent is.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Oh, reciting poetry.

     

    Camilla Love

    What?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Reciting poetry.

     

    Camilla Love

    Can you tell some now? Come on, you can do it. Come on.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I used to have this one poem that I used to win all of the estate around Sydney. And for anyone who's not into acting or whatever, it's very lucrative business. So when you get to the open stage when you're 16 years old, there's like, $100 cheque, which was a lot of money back in the 90s. So I used to make my mom drive me around all around Sydney, and I used to recite the same poem and just, like, clean up.

     

    Camilla Love

    Do you remember it?

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I can tell you the night. Yes, of course I remember it. My family still walks around the house going, Knight herons. Judith. Right. They mock me to know it.

     

    Camilla Love

    And you're like, But I still got cash for that.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    I got cash for that and I got an apartment. So who had the last laugh?

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. Indeed. And the final question is a career in finance is freedom.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    That's it.

     

    Camilla Love

    I think that's fabulous way to end. So, Alex, fabulous. So good to hear from you. I really miss you for being in Singapore. Come home and visit us soon. Thanks for being so wonderful and such a great, organic conversation. And thanks for sharing your ups and downs and your Nuggets of information. And if anyone wants to take anything away, never underestimate Alex Miguel.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Never underestimate the mediocrity of others. That's the best one. But if anyone wants to contact me, any students want to know anything, contact me through LinkedIn. I'm happy to help in any way I can. Hunter Women in Finance has free memberships for students. So if you want to get involved and learn more about just start to learn the dialogue and the language, the different events they're on, all that kind of stuff. Just let me know and I'm very happy to help.

     

    Camilla Love

    Thanks, Alex. Okay, hopefully see you soon.

     

    Alex McGuigan

    Thanks, Kim.

     

    Camilla Love

    Bye. For more information on what we do at F Three, Head to F Three.com Au. I look forward to you joining us next episode Where we continue to interview some fabulous people. Thank you. The Inside Scoop On Careers in Finance. Bye. For now, you know the information that is in this podcast.

     

    Camilla Love

    We always talk about finance in this podcast.

     

    Camilla Love

    But it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how I'm Finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S2.Ep4: Don't be Afraid to ask the Next Question with Annabelle Gillings

Introducing Annabelle. Annabelle shares about her time at University, her work experience and taking the plunge for her first official role in the finance industry at eInvest.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology. Please forgive any grammatical imperfections it may have.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an Insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview someone of my favourite people, all with one thing in common they work in finance. We lift a lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest and will inspire you. So let's go. This week's episode, we are joined by someone who really and truly impresses me every day, Annabelle Gillings. She works with me as an associate investment specialist at Einvest. I've chosen Anna to share with us her journey into finance. She is a really recent graduate, even showing me her graduate certificates this morning that she printed out specially on the printer. She hasn't even got the hard copy yet. I'm keen to find out why she was interested in finance, what she did at University and school, some of her work experiences before taking her first big career step, coming to join us at Einvest. So thanks for joining us today, Anna. Thanks for your time and I look forward to hearing your story.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Thank you so much for having me. It's my first ever podcast, which I think is a bit scary, but exciting, and I'm happy to be here. Hopefully have a bit of a unique perspective to some of the other great guests you've had on so far.

     

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. And I don't bite, as you well know, so this will be a pretty easy experience to go through. So tell me a little bit about yourself. Start from the beginning. What did you do at school? What subjects did you do in your final year and why did you choose those subjects? What was so interesting about them?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, so I grew up in Sydney, went to Plc, and I kind of grew up always keeping busy with sport, dance, music. I was athletics captain at school as well, and I just had always loved maths and business from the very beginning. So funny story. I grew up really obsessed with those Excel books that you buy from the news agent. And I would make my parents buy them for me to do math questions on the couch over the weekend in all my spare time. Really quite odd of me, but I think I just always love problem solving in maths and formulas and all that kind of stuff. And it was just every time I tell anyone that they think, that's the weirdest thing I've ever heard.

     

    Camilla Love

    You should tell my son Henry, who is in year three, we have this conversation all the time.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I just used to love them because it's just when you have a problem and then you can answer it and it's right and you're right or wrong, it's like very logical. And that's just my approach, I think, to a lot of things. So I guess when I was in my final year, I did the usual extended advanced English, I did extension maths, I did bio, I did business, economics and religion. So I had quite a full schedule and I was definitely always interested in those business subjects. We got lucky to have financial literacy in year seven and we did some business commerce subjects all throughout and I always picked them. I think it's because I always knew I wanted to go into that kind of field after school, so I knew it would come in handy at some point. And I was pretty terrible at the art and creative subjects compared to some of my peers. So, yeah, that's definitely why I went in that direction.

     

    Camilla Love

    So tell me about why choosing business and economics as two separate subjects, because I love them separately, but it's quite challenging to do economics and business together.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah. So I think I liked business because I think it's more of what I do now is like the front side, the front facing clients, how you work with people, how you work with operations. And that was quite unique, especially in school. Economics was so different to business or business. We did the typical finance, marketing, operations, HR, and then economics. It was monetary, fiscal policy and it was actually quite challenging and not many people did it. And also I think my parents were encouraging me because they both did economics and they knew I'd probably end up being quite good at it and they worked well together and then they worked well when I did go into uni and I started off in my economics degree and it was just, oh, I did this in year twelve.

     

    Camilla Love

    Like it was a very good transition and it makes sense economics and business together because you talk about supply and demand in economics and you see that come out in business all the time.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, they did work together and I think I don't even know how well I did in economics because it was really hard for the level that we were at only in year twelve. But yeah, they definitely work together nicely. And then even with the maths, I did three unit maths as well, so they kind of all paced together a bit better. So that was nice.

     

    Camilla Love

    How did you juggle your extracurricular stuff at school, being the captain of athletics and the captain of netball? How did you juggle that with your studies? Because they're pretty big roles to have.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, for sure. So I think since I was in primary school, I had a dance class every day. I had netball training three times a week and I had music and Mum had the piano lady come over and I was just so busy that I think I was forced to get stuff done when I have the capacity to do it, even, like when I was so young. It's just you have to be so efficient with your time. And it kind of just taught me the concept of time and that you can still do the things that you love without sacrificing your schoolwork and other, like, job opportunities, whether it's just activities that you like to do. And mom would always be like, okay, you have to pick one thing to do, and I just know I want to do them all. So it's just I kind of put myself in the position where I had to. If I didn't do the good work and I didn't get my work done, I didn't get the good marks, then I wouldn't have been able to do it. So I think I just didn't want to give up anything.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    So I just forced myself to be efficient, which has been good now, because I'm pretty good at managing my time and doing everything that I want to do as much as I can.

     

    Camilla Love

    And it's a really critical skill to have when you are at work and you have a lot of other things to do, and you've got maybe extra study, doing a post grad or you got your juggling, your friends and all that sort of stuff. It's definitely a skill to have.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah. I think you should start with all your studying that you're doing now, taking on everything. So it would be inspiring to me. As soon as I finish my degree, Camilla's going, okay, so what's next? What are you going to sign up for to do next in your learning? So that's always good to have people around you that do the same thing.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And I have a philosophy of lifelong learning, so I'm always seeking information out, whether that be informal study or even informal study through other people, listening to them talk, understanding what their backgrounds are, different cultures, travel, I think, is a great learning experience as well.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, you can definitely learn from literally anyone if you just ask the right questions and be curious. Really cool. Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    Curiosity is really interesting, and it's a skill I think that we all have to bring into our working lives these days.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, for sure.

     

    Camilla Love

    So tell me, did you get the Mark that you wanted to for your end of leaving school, and how did you transition into uni?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    So when I finished school, I got a good Mark for what I had done. And yes, I worked really hard, but I was so busy and I just knuckled down and got the marks that I wanted. I didn't get a Mark for commerce, but at the time, I was pretty set on economics, because I'd always heard of commerce. Yes. The finance side had always had that, like, stigma behind being really, really hard. And perhaps at the time, I didn't know any girls from my kind of age, like, year above me going into finance. It was always the marketing side. And I think Jody actually touched on that in her podcast that all the girls went into marketing and all the boys went into finance. And I think that steered me away a bit from commerce. And because I did like the math side, I started off doing an economics degree, majoring in econometrics, so statistics, numbers. Yeah, it was pretty full on. So I did that for two years. And then I think I really wanted to move. I was doing a finance major in my economics degree, but then I got to the point where I thought, I don't think I'm set out to be in a statistician.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I just didn't think that was going to be my end game. So I was like, I may as well pick up another major that I would enjoy, and that was banking, which I love doing at Uni. But I could only do it if I moved to Commerce. I didn't get in first try to commerce, but it's so great that if you start off and get some good marks, you can just transfer into something that you do want. If you figure out that it's not quite right for you because it's so hard to know when you finish school what is right, but at least you can have the opportunity to change if you need to.

     

    Camilla Love

    And I think that's a really good point because a lot of the students I talk to, they're like, I don't know what I want to do. And commerce is a really sort of broad degree that can apply to a lot of different things. So that's why I was interested in commerce, because, like you, I was interested in business and running a business and all the marketing and sales side of it, but also supply chains and logistics and all that sort of stuff. I really enjoyed that. But were you disappointed? I've got a great story about my University entrance Mark, but were you disappointed that you didn't get into Commerce straight away from your Mark?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    When I was doing subjects, I didn't even have commerce down as one of my subjects. I think I just have economics because I was quite happy to do that at the time. But who knows if that's me subconsciously kind of knowing that at the time I probably wasn't going to get 97 and just going, well, I'm happy to do economics, and I'm interested in it. So I think I know that if I put in a lot more hours, I could have perhaps gotten there, but it seemed such a big thing at the time. But you can really do anything if you're smart enough or if you understand what you're learning, you can get in anywhere. Like, you can end up doing what you really love if you have the capacity. And it's definitely a big deal when you're first year out, but no one asks you when you're going for a job, no one says what did you get at school? Because you can get 99 and not be the best doctor in the world just because of getting a good Mark in school. So I think that made me less disappointed, I think, because I knew there were still so many opportunities regardless of my marks.

     

    Camilla Love

    And that's a great message to tell those students out there listening today about sure, there is a lot of impetus put on to doing the best you can in your final year exams, but really when you hit your career and hit the workforce, do they matter?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, I think that it's so important to be able to talk to people. And I think that I do have so many skills because growing up and in high school I balanced my time, like doing athletics, doing sport, always, just keeping busy. It helped me grow so many more skills that I wouldn't have if I just sat inside all day, every day and quit my sports. And I lost that leadership component of doing sport, doing other activities. And I think I wouldn't get where I am or go anywhere much further in what I want to do if I didn't have those basic skills that you just learned by being around people. But yeah, definitely it is a great opportunity to try your hardest and get into what you want to do if that's what you want to do. But it's not the be all and end all if you can't or if you have other things to manage, like you never know what's going to happen, particularly with Cove. But I'm sure everyone is not going to be as happy with their marks this year or last year than if it wasn't if we weren't locked down.

     

    Camilla Love

    But yeah, it is definitely challenging for those students who are doing at University and at school doing their exam in this lockdown period. It's not good. And on the flip side, as a person who interviews a lot of people, I am always looking for that good mix of street smarts and book smarts, because I think it's that person who has a well rounded life, someone who volunteers and someone who plays an instrument and someone who is in the local netball team or plays tennis regularly. I'm looking for that in people who I like to be around and be with and work with, because it just shows the type of personality you are that you have the ability to work with others in a team. You have, as you said, leadership skills. You have the ability to learn, because all that training and practise, the ability to take direction, take direction.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Exactly like good criticism, like not being offended because especially when you do any area creative, that's creative, whether it's sport, whether it's music, you have to let someone tell you that you're doing something wrong or not very good at something without going off in a Huff and getting offended because you just have to keep going, which I think is very useful because a lot of people aren't super resilient and as soon as someone tells them off, they go into their shell. But it's so important to just be able to be careful. Okay. Thank you for pointing that out. Or thanks for letting me know. I missed that.

     

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. So then when did you know you wanted to have a career in finance? Like I said before.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think I've got like a logical brain, not too heavy on the creative side, but I like just things that you can work out, use a strategy or a formula and just get the result. And I think finance just allows for that. I see it as the foundation to everything in life, whether it's your business, whether you're starting a business yourself, whether it's the markets and the economy, everything just goes together and makes so much sense. And I think it just uses your brain in a really unique way because it can just help you in your whole life, like being financially stable and understanding how to make money, how the world works. I think it's just so cool.

     

    Camilla Love

    Did you try other things? Like did you try looking at FMCG or did you try looking at doing work experience in the fintech space or even the technology space, or did you look at property or anything else before landing on finance?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Well, I think I because I started working in finance by random, like, random job opportunity. I was working at a pub, I had some really good chats with a bunch of people that came in and I was offered a job basically by this great person that was in financial planning and offered me a job and said, you're doing commerce, that's great. And so I think by getting this job just randomly out of the blue, it taught me so much. And I was kind of like, this is really interesting, and this is why I guess that kind of led me to where I am now. But I did look at doing I know there's a few programmes that are in the fintech space and I do love that area of work. Like, I think it's so interesting and it's evolving so quickly and so many opportunities in there. But I think I just obviously did the typical intern grab applications, that's all the big places, but I mean, that didn't really go anywhere.

     

    Camilla Love

    And I think how was that?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Well, I think it was tough because especially during the current climate, in the last two years, we haven't really had many opportunities to get those roles. And I think it came down to.

     

    Camilla Love

    The typical people.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    It's always about that, but it always came down to all the big places, usually take ten people. When I was applying, I only took four because of coverage constraints, and then it was always, oh, you actually number five out of four. We really liked you, but this person knew the numbers better or something like that. And I think that's what I love about working at Einvest is like you don't need to be the smartest, the best at maths, the best at anything to still do your job well and make an impact. And I think that's really important. Like we're saying before, you want the whole person and them and their skills to complement each other. But yeah, they were definitely hard and it's definitely a bit demoralising, demoralising, perhaps getting so many turn downs. But I don't think about now. I think it's more good to have those experiences and try again as many times as you want.

     

    Camilla Love

    So then what would you recommend if you're standing in your shoes or providing advice to someone who's standing in your shoes a year ago or two years ago, what would you tell them about that internship process or otherwise?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think particularly with those internship and grad role processes is obviously more structured with the big four banks, the big four accounting firms, all that. And I would just say just give it a go because I think I learned so many skills because now it's all online. I did so many video interviews responding to questions on the spot. I did so many online questions, online puzzles, whether you get the job or not, it's just great experience. Writing cover letters, learning about a company quickly and explaining how your skills match is such a good way to learn about yourself. It's essentially just interview questions like we're doing now. Just what makes you want to work in this industry? Why would you fit in with this company? What's the biggest challenge you've had in your life so far or whatever it is. It's such a good way to learn about just talking and responding and whether you get the job or not. It doesn't matter because you'll just be better the next time you apply.

     

    Camilla Love

    But there's so much pressure on people getting these one of six spots or whatever.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, it is hard. And I think obviously with S Three, that was definitely a work internship programme that I don't see any other companies really doing. And when I did the F Three programme, we were with a big company. It wasn't just a random little place, it was still one of those really well known, amazing companies and it was just such a good experience. And I think it was a lot more rewarding than a lot of those programmes can be because you get seen a lot more. But it is a lot of pressure to get those jobs. But there's always something else out there and you just need to.

     

    Camilla Love

    You just need to be patient.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, no rush.

     

    Camilla Love

    So you touched on it before. You and I met nearly a year ago when you were put in one of my F three work experience programmes. And for those of you out there who don't know. F Three does a six week online remote work experience programme where five girls worked together to research, analyse and solve a business problem with a corporate partner. And so Anna was one of these five girls put into an organisation with a business project and they had to research, analyse and solve and present to pretty much the whole of the Sydney and Melbourne offices, correct?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    On their recommendations and the outcomes and the solution to their project. So tell me a little bit about what you did, how you found it, because the whole goal of what we do here at Shares, Not Shoes. And what I do at F Three is to nudge as many girls into finance as possible by showcasing really great role models and showing them the knowledge that finance isn't the scary industry that it's made out to be. But that F Three, the work experience programme, is a really supportive framework to do that in. So can you explain your experience?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, of course. So we met, obviously, all on Zoom and we're working in groups and we got given a big problem, a topic. And so coincidentally, ours was on ETS and we got to do this big project that was so just felt like real world experience. It wasn't just a Uni project, it was like, okay, we're actually presenting to the board and the whole company. It's like, we need to know what we're talking about. And I think it was so unique because obviously, being a girl, a woman doing finance at Uni, I did maybe seven or eight group assignments in the last year. I was the only girl of five in every group that I was in. And I think when you get put up against just boys, they sometimes probably don't think, you know as much as you probably do know. And I think the good thing about F Three was that you really just learned so much and just grew so much more confidence. Like, we'd have these group discussions and instead of being a bit tentative or not knowing if your idea was good or if it was relevant, we just got so comfortable with throwing out our ideas.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    And then if someone's idea was bad, we'd be able to say it and then we talk about how it was bad or how it was good. And I think it's just like a really supportive experience. We got to meet each week with someone different of a different Department in the business. And obviously they all link to finance in some way. It's a financial services company. And I think that was one of the key things that I got out of it was that I was like, wow, you can literally be in any Department and still work in finance if you like it. You don't have to be the analyst, you don't have to be at the back end of everything. And that's what I think in Uni, sometimes you can be scared about financing. If you do finance, you have to be an analyst and not everyone wants to do that. And so I think it was a really great opportunity for me to see the cool sides of stuff. Like, we did a whole piece on the marketing side of this product and it's kind of what we do now at Einvest, which is awesome.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    And you can still be creative. And I think in some ways it can be even more challenging, especially in finance and marketing. It's like there's so many regulations, there's so many things you can say, there's so many things you can't say. And it's interesting. Like invest. Now, we're one of the only fundies on social media, which is so unique, but it's so necessary with today and the world that's changing so quickly. Everyone invests on their phone, everyone is on their phone all the time. They want to learn. So I think that was what was so good about Fbri is I met all these cool people that did things that I was like, I would be good at that, rather than just thinking, what if someone's a bit better at stock picking than I am? It just broadened my interest and my horizon, I guess, of jobs that are out there for finance.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And that's essentially what the work experience placement does aim to do. It shows not only does it give you the experience and skills you need, but it gives you the network that you need into financial services, which a lot of people say I can't get into finance because I don't know anyone who works in there. This programme not only shows you, gives you an introduction to these people, but gives you an understanding about what their background was, what they do for the business, how the business sits within the value chain of financial services, and how their suppliers or their customers support the ultimate end game of the business itself. So you had a pretty cool team, I would say. You guys were obviously very smart people and you had a team that got along really well. And I could definitely tell that we were quite lucky.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think it was hard, not obviously meeting in person, but great Practise for uni subjects, uni courses. And now we work from home every day for the past few months, so it's been good Practise to learn to make connections with people, even if it's not in person. And I think we had a fifth member, but she wasn't quite enjoying it or following along and she ended up leaving our group and we kind of all had to pick up the extra work, but it ended up working out well because we got to just work together even more and kind of build a really good connection. So, yeah, it was actually a lot of fun as well, which is always nice to have a fun group because then we actually enjoyed having our 09:00 P.m. Meetings on a Tuesday night because everyone had a different work schedule. Everyone had uni. Some people worked at night. It was just all over the place. So you kind of have to get along if you were going to be talking that much for six weeks.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. Now would you recommend it to people out there to get involved?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Sure, yeah. I think being a woman in finance is a bit scary. In Uni, it is majority boys. Well, at least that was my experience and not because they can't do it, just because I think people probably get scared and it just gave me so much confidence. I think I came back to Uni last semester and I was giving all the ideas and then I think I was giving a bunch of ideas that I maybe wouldn't have been as happy to say before, but I was kind of just like, well, I've learned I've had experience. I kind of know a bit more now and I think that's the best way to learn is definitely through experience and it was so supportive and really fosters the growth of women in finance, which can't get much better than that.

     

    Camilla Love

    During that work experience programme that we did, you and I met and I asked you to start an invest, which thankfully you accepted, which I'm still very excited about.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yes, me too.

     

    Camilla Love

    Tell me about what your role is. Is there a typical day in your role? What challenges does your role bring? Stuff from the top so everyone can understand what you do?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah. So obviously I work with a great team. There's only five of us at the moment who all have a different role and different parts of play. And I guess my role kind of is just a bit of a support in each kind of area, whether it's helping content create with Jodi or now talking to clients and kind of educating investors in that way. But it's also the daily reporting on performance and making sure all of our ETFs are complying with the ASX and on Chi X on our trading platforms and making sure all of our monthly requirements are met. And there are a lot in the financial services industry which everyone will come to realise. But it is fun because I get to work on the website, work on sending out the commentaries and just help. I guess my job is to pretty much learn about the funds in the markets and just try and be up to date with everything. And yeah, I think it's cool because it's really important to always be up to date with news and we're constantly sharing news articles to read and just see what's going on at the moment because it is so important in our industry, which I've loved doing.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    So I think that's the daily activities is just checking. We've got all of our announcements sent out for all of our funds, and then it's just a bit of a mixed bunch. It's a lot of fun, though, because you do get to see all the different sides. I do work with the operations quite a bit, work with the sales team. Then I'm emailing the portfolio managers and learning from them, as well as looking at the marketing and how we can kind of get our products out there and get more traction and get people to invest because it's such we've got the best fun. So why not?

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. Yes, it's great. Thanks for the little Einvest plan.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    You just started in the industry. It must be a really big learning curve for you right now. What's it like in that learning curve? Is it as daunting as you expect? And did you have any sort of false starts along the way? What are your major learnings?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, I think when you definitely start out, the biggest thing is just I've said this to Camille a bunch of times. I don't know if I can ask the question or whether I should know it or not already, but I think definitely now, being here for a few months and working in financial services previously, it's just like you need to just ask questions, and that's what is scary. And it's a bit scary. Now emailing portfolio managers just asking them random questions, but that's what they're there for. They love to talk to you and they love to give you some insight and help you in your role, which has definitely been daunting in the beginning and just knowing that a lot of people around you could know more than you. But that's the beauty of working in finance is that everyone around you probably does know something that you don't know. And that's why it's such a good place to learn, particularly now in our business, because we are so client facing and we do work with our investors so closely is that we get to work with investors, but then we also get to work with portfolio managers and we get to work with financial planners from across the country.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    And that's just really cool, I think. And it's not as scary as it's made out to be. I think as long as you just ask the questions and you don't try and do things that you can't do, because if you do make a mistake, it can cause issues. So it's like you just need to ask. And I think that's something I learned a while ago. I was talking to someone and they're saying if you make a mistake, you need to tell someone and they'll help you. But if you try and hide it or do something that you don't know how to do it, it's not your fault. It's not your fault if you don't know how to do it, you just need to ask.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. And it's better up. It's better to be open. And even now, 20 years on for me, I'm forced to say I don't know anything and would really love to be taught by others, particularly if it's their deep expertise.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah. I think it's a hard thing to obviously lots of people don't like asking for help just by nature or whatever. But if you don't ask for help or you just don't say no, I don't know that it's quite. What's the word? It's quite confident of you to just say, I don't know, I don't know the answer. And that's something that I've learned very quickly, which I probably wouldn't have known before this, because you always want people to think you do know everything, but reality is that you really don't. So it's just great to learn from people with those expertise.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. Now, I always ask this question of all my guests and obviously you're no different, even though you're only at the beginning of your career. But what is the best career advice you've ever been given and why did it resonate with you?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think the best advice I've ever been given and I couldn't even tell you where it's from. Probably my dad at some point or my mum and dad. I know they all have great insight, but I think it was just always say yes. Just always say yes. Whether it's for a coffee, whether it's for like a job or whether it's to learn about someone, just always say yes. I think so far it's given me so many opportunities just to meet people and connect and have opportunities. Just hearing someone else's side and seeing what they do for their work is so cool and such a good way to learn. Like we said, it's just so good to learn through other people. And I think people love. I know it's happened quite a lot recently, me organising to meet up with just people that I know, like, my God, parents just talking to my family about their jobs. People love being asked about what they do because they want you to know. I think that's what it obviously say yes until you have no capacity left. But I think it's given me a lot of good opportunities to meet people and make connections, which is always important.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Just say yes to opportunities because it's so important. I think.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great. I think that's fabulous.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Nice.

     

    Camilla Love

    So we're coming to the end of the episode because you've listened to some of my previous episodes. We do this quick fire round. Right. And so you got to say the first thing that comes into your head about the questions that I'm going to ask you. Right. So you're up for this?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah, got it.

     

    Camilla Love

    So let's start. If you could live in any country in the world, what would it be and why?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think if I didn't have to work, it'd probably be Croatia, because I love the food, the beach, the water, the partying. It was like my favourite place when I went travelling to Europe with my friends, I think Croatia would be.

     

    Camilla Love

    I've never been so it's amazing. I wish typically we were just coming out of lockdown.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I know.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Your favourite superhero is probably Batman and that's because I don't really know any superheroes. But I did watch Gotham, which was that TV show about the backstory of him and I loved that. So that's the only one I know well enough to have an opinion.

     

    Camilla Love

    I think that man is a good choice.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    My first investment was the ASX 200. Just plain and simple basket. You can never get it wrong.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great place to start. Was it an ETF too?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yes.

     

    Camilla Love

    At the moment I have FOMO for overseas trouble, obviously. Me too. So many people.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    My brothers live overseas. They've gone across Europe, across America, and we're all sitting here. But it'll be soon enough.

     

    Camilla Love

    I'm sure it will be soon enough. Don't you worry. If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think this will be a bit of a maybe a shock, but I think not because of my personal beliefs, but I would love to sit down with Trump and just understand him. Just because I think he's such an interesting person and just like businessman, politician, and just like pick apart his brain. I think he just would be a very unique perspective on life or Alternatively, Obama, because I think he's awesome and inspirational and I think I've just always had a little love for American politics. So I just love to see how it works.

     

    Camilla Love

    I think that's a great no, I think it's great. And learning from other people, even if they're different from you, really is really important. So critical. Okay, next one. My favourite book is.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think my favourite book at the moment would be The Husband Secret, which is Leanne Moriarty. And I only got into reading this lockdown and they're just pretty much all Romcoms kind of romantic novels, just the typical boy meets girl. But The Husband's Secret is awesome and I would recommend it to anyone. It's one of her best books.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great. How would your friends describe you?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    I think my friends would describe me as very driven and motivated, loyal and probably reliable. Yeah, I think those kind of vibes is usually how they describe me. Sometimes a bit too motivated or too busy, but I'm always there for my friends.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, I think that's important. So if you're stranded on a desert island, what two things would you take with you?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    That's a hard one. Logically. I'd probably just take a lot of water Philtre and something that would help me start a fire. Logically. Otherwise it would be like my phone and swimmers.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Well, if you're on a desert island and no one else is there.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    You might not need them.

     

    Camilla Love

    You don't even need them. True. But then if you found you want to have something, don't you?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Exactly. That could be embarrassed.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay. Yeah, indeed. Describe in three words why a career in finance is awesome opportunities.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Just learning and just being around also like minded people. Because I think when you're in finance, more than three words, I'm sorry, but I think when you're in finance, your brains just work similarly and that just helps you make great connections. And I think that's what I've found so far is everyone in our team just gets along so well and it's just the same. You love the same stuff. Yeah, it's awesome.

     

    Camilla Love

    And I will say that I've specifically built the invest team to be reasonably diverse. So that's why I think the team actually gets along really well is because we all come from different backgrounds and thought processes.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    And that's the thing. There's definitely something to be learnt from everyone, as well as agreeing on a lot of things too, and having a lot of similar ideas. But you can always learn and someone will always have a different perspective. There's always someone who's on a different page. But it's good because it's great for conversation and great for learning about learning.

     

    Camilla Love

    That comes to the end of our podcast. And it was so wonderful to chat with you today because just seeing the industry in the next generation's eyes, seeing how and hearing your story about how you've travelled through school and University and taking your first job in finance can really anchor, particularly the people who are in finance already, what that next generation is looking for and where they've come from. But also your great insight for those people who are standing in years 1011 and twelve are at University today to explain to them about your journey, what subjects you chose, what you did at University, why finance is interesting to you. I think that's really fulfilling and give people a really good insight from your perspective. And I really thank you for sharing a journey with us at Cher's Not Shoes.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Well, thank you so much. It kind of flew by. It was a lot easier than I thought.

     

    Camilla Love

    I didn't buy, did I?

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    No way.

     

    Camilla Love

    No.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Yeah. It's really important. And I think it's cool to have a good platform to share a bunch of different stories because you never know who it can help. And yes, it's been fun indeed.

     

    Camilla Love

    So thank you for being open and honest with your journey. It really means a lot to me and it means a lot to our listeners and we really appreciate it.

     

    Annabelle Gillings

    Of course. Thank you so much.

     

    Camilla Love

    For more information about our guests on Shares Not Shoes and further episodes, head to Shares Not Shoes.com. Or for more information on F Three, head to F Three.com au you can obviously find us at your favourite podcast spot. I look forward to having you join us for our next episode where we continue to interview some really fabulous, wonderful, inspiring people and showcase you some great careers in finance and give you the inside scoop into how to get into the industry. So bye for now, everybody the information that is in this podcast we always talk about finance in this podcast. But it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about career's advice and how finance would be a fabulous career for you.

S2.Ep3: The Value in Multiple Perspectives with Sandi Orleow

Welcome Sandi Orleow. Sandi is an incredibly experienced professional with a portfolio career as a non executive director. Sandi shares how her career in finance started in South Africa and led her to Australia.

  • The following is a transcript that has been created using AI technology so please forgive any grammatical imperfections.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an Insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview someone of my favourite people, all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We lift a lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you.

     

    Camilla Love

    I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest, and will inspire you. So let's go. Today's episode, I am super excited to introduce you to one of my favourite people in the superannuation and investment industry in Australia. She is a person who questions me, pushes me to think differently and gives me the support to challenge the status quo. She's energetic, passionate and with such a warm heart. It is Sandi Orleow. Thanks, Sandi, for joining me today on Shares Not Shoes.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Hi, Camilla, so nice to be here with you.

     

    Camilla Love

    Sandi has a portfolio career now as a non executive director, but she started her career in South Africa prior to moving to Australia. And I look forward to hearing her journey today. So, Sandi, tell me a little bit about what you do, why you do it and what is the purpose and meaning for you, why you do what you do.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Well, there's a lot of questions, Cam.

     

    Camilla Love

    It's a bit deep, isn't it? First question.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So I have a portfolio career now, which means that I sit across a whole lot of different businesses and don't work with a single entity. So I have a board role on a superannuation fund. I have a government board role. I have a listed investment company board role. I sit down some association boards. And I love what I do. I love the fact that I have the opportunity to work with a number of organisations and I love the fact that I can work with them strategically in terms of sitting around the table and trying to contemplate what the future holds and how things should be supported going forward. That's where I am at the moment. My Genesis into a portfolio career started about seven years ago. I was working within a funds management business. I'd been working within investment consulting, funds management, and I saw sometimes great people and organisations weren't really given the opportunity to be great. So it was okay. How do I try and influence the environment and the culture to try and support environments for people to be great and to come to work and put the best self forward? And I thought that would be sitting on boards and committees and that was my Genesis to start to move from executive work into non-executive work where I am today.

     

    Camilla Love

    So you talk about culture and that's a really big word with lots of different concepts and I always describe it as the iceberg, right? So you only see a little bit at the top. But actually the culture is everything underneath the water and it means a lot of different things to a lot of different people and it's a sort of organic organism. So what do you look for when you're in the cultures of the organisations that you're working with to highlight whether they're a great organisation to work with or not.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So in my executive work, I was involved a lot in manager research and product research, and part of that was actually researching the components that went into making an organisation great or being a good investor or partner for us going forward. And one of those things, we're trying to get your finger on what that environment is, what the secret source or the environment is, because at the end of the day, a lot of things are commoditized. We work in a great industry with lots of highly intelligent, competent people. Everyone, theoretically on paper, can do the job, but you almost need it to almost synthesise and come together so that you can be great in terms of what it's about. So even when I work with organisations and you look at culture, culture is not second, forget, it's kind of always needs to be looked after and monitored. I look at it in terms of speaking to the people, finding out their comfort of talking what the appetite is for growth and doing things exciting. I read a lot on social media, I read mainstream media. I use a lot of almost that mosaic theory of speaking to people that work with those organisations, in those organisations, for those organisations and kind of hear about what's the experience of dealing with someone, what's the issue, what should you be aware about?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    And I think when you're looking at culture, culture can exist differently at different parts of an organisation, but in essence you want to know what is the business or the organisation seeking to do and does the culture support it? And look, I'm a big believer. You can call the word culture. Culture feels like it's becoming a bit of a cliche word at the moment. It's almost like agile culture. What does it actually mean? Same thing I think it's got to do with the kind of place that you want to be involved in or something that supports it. And it doesn't always have to be good and happy and everyone kind of being nice to each other because you could choose to work in a culture that's highly aggressive and supportive of an aggressive growth agenda and everyone goes in and it's kind of made the best man succeed. And it's kind of a little bit of less supportive but more aggressive. And at a certain stage of a business that may be wrapped, but it's almost understanding what you're looking for, what's important to you, and then kind of factoring does that organisation have it, and am I seeing attributes of it or signs of it and anecdotal things that are happening?

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, that's right. And we talk a lot to University students and school students on this podcast and we talk about culture is something that is really led from the top. How do people actually analyse or size up leadership at the moment? Because there's a lot of change that's going in on the leadership mindset particularly. And it's all about authentic leadership and allowing you to bring your whole self to work. And it's really interesting over this cover period how we've been able to sort of move or shift the culture a little bit, to be a little bit more flexible and be a bit more meaningful to people in their everyday lives. So what sort of tips would you give for people to size up, particularly the leadership in reflection of culture? And what signals can leadership give to sizing that up?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Again, as I said, I come with my own personal biases. Everyone has their own biases and styles of engagement that they have a preference to. And I think it's with an acknowledgment of understanding what your biases are and what things resonate with you versus others. And it might be different, but I think it still goes back to the same point that I said. It depends where the organisation is in its life cycle and what its agenda is in terms of what it's seeking to do. I could tell you on paper that I think the leadership of the future is one that is collaborative, that doesn't claim to have the answers, that kind of has a way to pull in the best of everyone and synthesise it. But in reality there will be companies at a certain stage that need leadership to kind of make the hard decisions to get going are less perceived to be collaborative. So I think it depends on life cycle, where business is and what they seeking to do, and what's fortunate is we're all different, and certain things work better with certain types of working styles than others. And I think as everyone contemplates where they want to go with their career, life, place of work, partner, things will be different for different people.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    And it's probably knowing almost what your values are and your priorities are and then recognising where you think things are going and what you want to be part of. And it's factoring that in. And then in terms of the actual leadership, you want people to kind of be living the values that they kind of ascribe to. And I think it's interesting you see a lot of people talking about now the priority of the great is it the great resignation or is it the great balance? Indeed, I think it goes on the notion of it's the whole of person. And definitely we're moving into a time where the whole of person is expected. And as the uni students come in. And as we have the new workforce coming to the fore, the whole priority of your workforce and life not being two separate things being there, you want the purpose to be evident, you want the organisations to share and respect the purpose that you subscribed to and it may be a drive for you actually joining the organisation because you value what they support. And if they don't have necessarily a project that they're supporting, do they expect and accept that their staff do recognise that they want to do volunteering and is the flexibility allowed in the structure?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So I think that's the whole notion of, if you believe it's important that family comes first, you expect someone, your leader, to be taking off a bit of work and going to see their kids play sport or doing gym in the morning and walking in at nine or taking a gym class at one. I mean, when I got into the workforce, that wasn't done indeed. And now it's almost you're finding these Gen X's and these older leaders kind of saying you can't have one standard for yourself and another standard for someone else. You've got to almost kind of live the ethics and the ideals of the organisation and role model indeed.

     

    Camilla Love

    And it's funny because as I lead my team at Einvest, I am very cognizant of how I role model what I expect in the team. So I think it's true. You have your whole of self at work. I think your mind and body needs to be fit and healthy to be able to do that. We do believe that family does come first and I encourage everybody in my team to be at those important events with their kids and be able to pick them up from school and things like that. But you're right in that different cultures and different businesses fit different people. And I always talk about it, particularly when I'm doing panels at schools and on the podcast. You really need to go and try all these different cultures and organisations out to find what's right for you, because you're absolutely right that the individual needs to sit down and work out what's important to them before they get into the workforce or before they change companies, because if they don't know what's right for them and they go into an organisation and go, oh, this is not right for me, then that's sort of like lost time.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    And I think that it's super important just on that camp in terms of knowing what you want, sometimes it's hard to know exactly what you want. It's almost easier to know what you don't want. So I never look at things as actually a waste of time, to be quite honest, because I believe you learn from everything. So I think that mentality of kind of learning from failure, learning from trying, I cannot underestimate or underplay the importance of recognising that if mistakes are made or things aren't perfect. There's a lesson in that and it will play out and it will come to the fall.

     

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely. And you well know that I'm a testament to learning by doing and the ability to, if it's not working, stop. And here I'm going to put the word in pivot to something that may work differently. And so I'm very open to experimenting different things, and I think it's important for everybody else to take on that mindset.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Absolutely.

     

    Camilla Love

    In your answer, you also talked about purpose. And we talk a lot about purpose in our podcast, because you've got to be able to get up every morning and say, yes, I'm going to work every day because I work for an organisation in the industry that has purpose. Talk to me about your perspective on why finance is a great career to have on that factor of purpose.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    It's interesting that the notion of finance because I always just wanted to go into business. It just was the notion I wasn't going in for purpose, I was going in because I loved business and I love to be involved in being on the decision making side, making things happen, being involved in that echelon of the environment and the industry. But what became more concerning, and I think what it's played out, is that with the Royal Commission and some of the things that have played out, finance almost kind of started losing the perception of it having a purpose or having a heart. And it was rarely the notion. It's disconnected to the rest of the society and it is profit motivated. It's capitalism at its worst and it's kind of greed. Do I want that? And it almost became binary, I don't want that. So I'm not doing finance. And interesting, I did a session for F Three and one of my daughters schools to cohort or via twelve students, and it was a startling revelation for me to hear these year twelve cohorts talking about thinking finance only clips the ticket. They didn't value the fact that you had more money to travel or do stuff, they just discounted that.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    And it wasn't a priority. And there was an absolute disillusionment with finance. It amazed me because I don't think I ever got into finance because I was greedy or kind of wanted to do it. I was always kind of recognising the value of understanding how businesses work, being part of business. And for me, the thing that crystallises was Paul Smith, the Exeo of CFA, gave a presentation on the purpose of finance and he spoke about it. And I think what he did was crystallise the words that a lot of us were thinking. But he pulled it together and the CFA contains a lot of that where it basically says finance is a Noble profession in essence, ensures that economies grow, that organisations make money, that they invest, that they produce, that people earn money, that they are able to function, that's the good and the oil that almost greases society to kind of allow it to happen. Because reality is everything costs money and things cost money. If it's not money, it is time, it's a resource. There's a trade off that happens. And finance took a bit of a turn in the last while where this perception of it has no purpose, it has no heart.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I absolutely and totally disagree. Finance very much. Yes, it has the perception that it was disconnected from society. But what it does mean and what finance has done for me is ensure that any organisation that you go into, you can understand how it works, regardless of whether it's a charity, it's a stockbroker, it's a closed producer. You need to understand because you have to keep the lights on some way and you need to actually source the goods. And if you don't actually understand how that works and how that functions, it doesn't work.

     

    Camilla Love

    And that's a great synopsis, because I like you are very passionate about this industry, and I don't understand that perception because I've never seen that perception in action. We do all have a purpose, and it is 99% of us in finance put the client at the heart of every decision that we make. So as with all people and organisations, there's always that 1% that do the wrong thing. But that's not the perception of the rest of the industry. And I think that that's right. I mean, businesses can't take loans to grow and the financial profession can't facilitate those loans. The economy and people just in general would be way worse off.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Absolutely. You've kind of got me on to kind of going on this area, because I go on the notion of people can be greedy and they can be hungry to accumulate assets and be money driven by assets. And that's fine, because that's their drive and that's their purpose. But that can be accommodated in any industry and that's not a blanket kind of thing. Finance does that. And maybe you want those people that actually don't tick your boxes because they might be the people that are incredible stock pickers. They give you outsize returns, and you basically are taking a bit of an incentive based where you invest alongside them and they do what they do because they are arrogant and aggressive and greedy. And you know what, that's fine for that part, but that is not indicative of what finance is.

     

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. Indeed, you mentioned Paul Smith and CFA. You do a lot with the CFA, particularly here in Australia. Why are you so involved here?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I did a CFA qualification, so I'm a Chartered accountant qualification. That was my first foray when I entered into the business environment, but never practises a Chartered accountant. I use it as a groundwork to get into business. But when I immigrated, I didn't want to re qualify as a Chartered accountant because I wasn't practising as an accountant. I've moved into funds management at that stage. And what I needed was a global qualification which would allow me to enter into another market. We had a recognised qualification without going back to re qualify. And I did the CFA programme, which was back in 2003. And to be quite honest, in the early days, it actually didn't really make much of a difference. It kind of was on my resume. No one actually said to me, do you have a set? But I think what's interesting and I can't actually hit home more loudly, is those qualifications are the key to get you through the door. And just by the fact of having a Chartered Accountant degree and then having the CFA, which has a global relevance and recognition, kind of lets you legitimise you and gives you a seat at the table, and then it's up to you what you choose to do with it.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So I've continued ongoing learning and I can't stress the importance of almost. When I said to you about almost, you make a call to go down one way and it's not the right way. I've got two daughters that are in uni now and they're not sure it's the right course that I'm doing. And I've kind of said to them, Whatever course you're doing, you're learning. You may not use it tomorrow. I never practise as a Chartered accountant. Now that I sit as a direct on businesses, the fact that I'm a Chartered accountant and I actually understand numbers are comfortable with risk in those areas. I cannot thank whoever the stars that enabled me to actually do that charge of the accounting degree, because it actually has set me up for the next stage of my career. So when we look at this whole notion of this 100 year life or this notion of multiple careers that people will have you kind of put the pieces in place so you could choose to do an arts degree or you could choose to do a finance degree or something, it may be not used in that very next job, but it will be a component.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    And as the world becomes more competitive and the requirement for application of knowledge, not necessarily because we all have computers and everything will be on hand. The fact of your multiple perspectives and learnings on different areas and different insights from different areas just make you stronger going forward.

     

    Camilla Love

    And that's a really great point to make because you get asked a lot. Will my marks make a difference at the end of University? And really, it's the fact that you've got a degree. I don't think anyone has asked me ever what my Econometrics 101 course marks were. So, yeah, it is, definitely. And that learning mindset. I think everybody needs to have that going forward, to be flexible and to be adaptable in their careers. So I think that that's a critical point to make.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Absolutely.

     

    Camilla Love

    So talk to me about a trend that you're seeing in the finance industry right now and how that's influencing you and your role, sitting across multiple different organisations, whether that be superannuation and government and listed organisations.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    We've spoken by purpose. I think Anna Dougsky was Cop 26 just happening and the whole climate, responsible investing, stewardship, the whole notion of leaving the world a better place, or at least not allowing it to deteriorate further from where it actually is. And the responsibilities that we have to future generations kind of is front of mind of everyone. I mean, we're talking just off to Cop 26. That's particularly pertinent at this point in time indeed. But I think what's interesting is this whole notion of understanding the responsibilities that we have. And so if you look at what finance is dealing with at the moment, it's the whole notion of do banks lend to certain players? How do you keep reskilling people as you move out of certain industries, as we move to more sustainable industries going forward? So the reskilling aspect that's there people living longer.

     

    Camilla Love

    Health care and the impacts of ageing, I think is also an area that's extensive within the finance industry as well.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    It's major because the notion of you living longer, you need to fund it somehow. So it's kind of the notion of funding where you're going. So if I looked at a trend and when I look at my next learning will be is I will do either a formal course or an informal learning within the sustainable space or the impact space, because that area has grown, is changing so rapidly at the moment in terms of how you measure it, the different indices that I play, different structures, and I think to actually understand some of the foundations that are being there, as much as I read it, I come across in most of my boards from some perspective, it's dealt with. I think that if I kind of go back and invest a little bit in some learning and we're living in a time now, I can do sign up to cosera, see if they have a new SG course or market learning, I can go into that. I can do a bit of an immersion. So I get a bit of the foundations. I don't need to do a whole three year course and I can kind of set myself.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So when the discussion happens, I can take it to the next level. So when I look at trends that are happening, I think a lot of that will be that, yeah, okay.

     

    Camilla Love

    And we talk about ESG and sustainability and impact a lot on the podcast and what we've seen at Cop 26 as well. And we know people who are there from an investment point of view as well, which I think is really exciting to have a seat at the table while all these global leaders are talking about it. And then the flow on effects of what does it mean in finance, because I think the next ten years we will definitely see some boundaries set here on lending on even like social impact housing and even just their micro things to think about. But how can the finance industry really help the transition of all our global economies into a more sustainable footprint? And I think that that's a really Noble thing for the industry to put their sites on and help everyone move to that.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Absolutely.

     

    Camilla Love

    So I always ask my guests this last question and obviously you're going to be no different. But it's interesting. You've had a long and extensive career. You've got a lot of advice over your period of time working in the industry. What is the best career advice that you've been given and why did it resonate the most with you?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I think in terms of the best career advice, you pick up advice wherever you go. And I've always kind of valued and always respect the diversity of opinions. So what advice that I've done is kind of recognised to listen to, listen to what people say, to hear the different perspectives, to kind of expose yourself to as diverse as you can actually be exposed to, so that you never become two tunnel vision in one perspective. And it may not be something you understand or share in the theme.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    But the fact that you have insights to that, there is a different way to do it just makes your thinking and perspectives that much greater. So have translated that over time was always the notion of saying every person in every role, senior, junior, or wherever it is, has a perspective that brings to the table. And it's about giving that bandwidth and the potential to actually listen. So if I translate it too early in my career, it's probably that notion of putting yourself out there, subscribing to a whole lot of stuff that you might or may not use going forward to valuing that people are calm to some extent. So it might be a lot of desk research you do yourself so that when you go forward, you're actually doing that stuff. And I think that notion of not being so hard on yourself go forward and actually take learnings from everything and recognise that it's not life or death, everything is going to actually play towards making you more rounded, giving you a better perspective, and kind of just keep going forward, just keep going forward and sticking by what's important to you and what your values are.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, and that's important. I think that's a great piece of advice and I hear that in you all the time. And the active listening piece is something that I always try to work on. I'm not very good at it and I'm sure you will know that I'm not very good at it, but I definitely try to actively listen and to actually find out the reason why the actual underlying so people tell you certain things but actually what is the actual underlying reason why they're telling you that? And getting great perspectives and different perspectives. It's hard because the group around you, you fall into group think and it's easy to stay in that spot. And it's actually hard for you to actually jump out of that piece and extend yourself into an area that you feel uncomfortable. It's really hard.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I think that's excellent. While you're talking and have replayed it back to me, it comes a little bit with age, that notion of kind of understanding. But if you're not going to do that, it's almost just kind of recognising where you actually are.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yes. And people are not necessarily comfortable in their own cells either. So being an understanding where you are at that point in time is really important. You're right. Such great Nuggets here, Sandi. So at the end of each episode, we do this quick fire round so people can get to know you a little bit more. And are you happy to be part of that because it can make you feel uncomfortable. Here's the uncomfortable spot. Okay, so let's go.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So the first question is my bucket list includes my bucket list includes probably going to a cop or 27 or 28 and being around the table and being involved with the calibre of people that have been attending those forums of being something that makes a difference to the future. I mean, the calibre of global interaction with global mind. So that's probably on my bucket list. I would love to be you and I.

     

    Camilla Love

    We can get tickets together. I don't know how we're going to wrangle our way in, but maybe we can pay money to it.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    The younger generations are more of a chance to kind of come with their perspective, be brave, know what you stand for and kind of own it.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Okay. So that's a great bucket list. So next question. My hidden talent is organising trips.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I love to travel. And it's funny because a lot of my friends, when they're looking for something a little bit left field or something, that's a bit of an adventure. I get these calls to kind of say, we're thinking about this. What do you think we should do? What do you think about this? Which restaurant? We're kind of looking at that and I think it's becoming a bit of a passion project. I think you need to live life and kind of experience. And so I'm always on. Unfortunately, my husband and my family are very able allies or just kind of get ready to be taken along to new places or trying new things or doing that then good on them. So that's my hidden talent. It's covered field.

     

    Camilla Love

    No, I totally love it.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    My first investment was my first investment was in a share in a business and my father worked in that listed and that was going to list. And it was, do you want to put a little bit of money in it and kind of watch it. And it gave me the opportunity to kind of watch a business go off market, go on to market, see how the share price went, see what was going. So it was a good entree into investing and to be kind of maybe it was that they planted the seed. But thanks. I've always loved investing in markets. As I've got further on in my career, what I've done a lot more is probably invested and recognised great investors and invested into them and recognising that. Maybe when I can have a belief in a certain business, it's probably I don't have the time because I'm now working too hard to actually manage my portfolio as it's going. And I quite like the innovation space. So if I can put some money into like, new ideas, maybe a little bit of crypto learn when I'm going, I kind of quite like, that.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great. My favourite book is my favourite book.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    It's such a hard thing to actually say which is my favourite book because I love to read, but in reality I've gone from reading. Love the Harry Potter series. Consult more about that girl, The Dragon Tattoo. Loved that series. Read that. I've loved learning books. So Malcolm Gladwell outliers. Love that book.

     

    Camilla Love

    So good. Love, Malcolm.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Success isn't necessarily everything that you do. Sometimes you need the environment to support what you're doing. I love Seth goddamn. I read The Purple Cow. Someone gave it to me on how you have to differentiate yourself. And Interestingly, Malcolm Goodwill, Seth, goddamn all these people. As I read their books, I kind of follow them and then they send their daily pearls of wisdom. So Ray Daniel wrote Principles.

     

    Camilla Love

    I haven't read that book yet.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Ray Dalio. Yeah. Once you read it, you subscribe to it. I subscribe to a whole lot of stuff. I've got my pile of reading ready for Christmas reading. I've got Hollywood reading Edge. I've got The Fish Rocks from the Head.

     

    Camilla Love

    Oh, yes.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I've got the secure board from Analybel. So I've got my hands some fictional stuff mixed in there. So I like science fiction. I read a bit of science fiction.

     

    Camilla Love

    I didn't know that about you.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    There you go.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay. So there's lots. That's a big reading list for those people out there.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I don't necessarily read all the books cover to cover. I can be reading multiple books and some of them unless it's a fictional book that you read from cover to cover. A lot of these other books are pearls of wisdom that you kind of keep going back to.

     

    Camilla Love

    Tell me something that no one knows about you.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Oh my gosh. I have twin sisters. Identical twin sisters that are mirror twins. So one is left handed and one is right handed. One has a beauty spot on one side. One has a beauty spot on the other side.

     

    Camilla Love

    Get out.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    So that's very interesting. So that kind of opened up the whole kind of area of twins versus siblings and the connections that they have. And I am a big follower in spiritualism. I like spiritualism and meditation and meaningfulness, and that esoteric life beyond.

     

    Camilla Love

    Do you practise every day?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    No, it depends on the stages of laugh. I'd like to say that the years that I've got and the times I do it are great. Unfortunately, I'm not always that grounded to do it, but I always aspire to get there.

     

    Camilla Love

    It's on the hashtag goals list, right. If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner, who would it be and why?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    I think I'm tossing up between David Attenborough Jane Goodall is the theme. Eddie Jaku, who just passed away on The Happiest Man.

     

    Camilla Love

    Have you read his book?

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Yes, I do. It's beautiful. I have his book, and I've listened to him talk. And just the perspective that he brings, it kind of always kind of brings you back to the roots of what you need to be looking at. So I think each of those kind of have those commonalities that they've just got such great perspectives and led such meaningful life and would love to be able to speak with them and just kind of hear what their perspectives are looking back on it all.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. Just the pearls of wisdom that would come for even half an hour with them would be amazing. Absolutely. Wow. My last question is complete this sentence, a career in finance is it gives you the foundation.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    It sets you up to go into whatever you're going to do. So you'll never look back on studying finance and being able to understand numbers, whatever industry you choose to do, even if it's running your home. So cannot underplay the importance of being able to understand numbers.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And we talk about that all the time. You don't have to be a genius. You just need to understand it a little bit. I mean, even going to the shops, you need to understand the numbers. I think that's a really great Pearl of wisdom there's your own Pearl of wisdom that you're giving to everybody else today. So thank you very much. And that's the end of our podcast. And I've just really enjoyed our chat today, Sandi. So thank you very much for joining us on Shares Not Shoes and being so entertaining and just generous with your ideas and thoughts.

     

    Sandi Orleow

    Thanks, Kim. I love talking to you, as I always do. And I love the name Shares Not Shoes. So good on you, and I love the work that you're doing. So thank you very much.

     

    Camilla Love

    Well, hopefully we'll invite you back and give us some more pearls of wisdom. For more information on our guests on Shares Not Shoes and further episodes, head to Shares Notchoose.com. And for more information on what we do at F Three, head to F Three.com. Au, I look forward to you joining us. Next episode where we continue to interview some fabulous people just like Sandi here today and give you the inside scoop on careers in finance. Bye for now, you know the information that is in this podcast. We always talk about finance in this podcast but it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal circumstances with that. But this is all about out careers advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S2.Ep2: Getting out of your Comfort Zone with Angela Zha

Meet the talented Angela, a university student who enjoys art, creative writing and is enthusiastically pursuing a career in finance.

  • The following is a transcript created using AI technology so please forgive any grammatical imperfections.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an Insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview someone of my favourite people, all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We lift a lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest, and will inspire you. So let's go.

     

    Camilla Love

    This week's episode, we are joined by someone who truly impresses me every day and we get to work together on F Three. Her name is Angela Zha and she is a current student doing commerce at the University of Sydney. Welcome, Angela, and thanks for joining me today.

     

    Angela Zha

    Thanks for having me today, Camilla.

     

    Camilla Love

    It's great that you have been able to say yes to my invitation to come onto the podcast. I really want you to share your journey through at University and sort of give people an understanding, particularly through your eyes and some of your peers and your friends eyes, about why doing a commerce degree and why going through University and aiming to have a finance career is a goal of yours. And I've chosen Angela because you're going through lots of things that everyone is going through at Uni every day, lots of different learning experiences, you're trying to get great marks, you're doing different things, you're doing a lot of student societies, you've had a scholarship, you're lucky. And so we'll talk about that in a little bit. And then why you're interested in a career in finance as your next step, in your first big step, I guess, into your career. So I look forward to you telling and sharing everybody with your story today. So maybe we should start from the top and tell me a little bit about you, your background, what you did at school, even some subjects that you did at school and why you chose them, maybe even some extra curricular stuff that you did leading up to going to and hitting University.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah, sounds great. So I would say I was a student who always enjoyed quantitative subjects at school, but it so happened that I always did better in English than math. So always the way, unfortunately. So my choice of subjects in the senior years, it was always guided by what I was interested in rather than what I thought would scale better or what I thought might lead to jobs. For example, I took extension to English because I love the breadth of topics that we got to study, which linked to all sorts of areas like philosophy and history. And I thought that was really interesting. And I loved working on my major work as well. I also took excess.

     

    Camilla Love

    I said art. Hang on, hang on to the art piece. I am a big fan of art. What did you do for your major work? Talk to me about that.

     

    Angela Zha

    So it was mostly a piece of writing but I did do some art in it because I thought I would get a bit creative for it and then mix things up. So as part of extension English you do a major work that's either creative writing or essay writing, whatever is your choice. And then I did one which was critical writing but I thought I'd mix some elements of creative writing in there and I wrote some poems, I put in some drawings of mine and then in the end it was very mixed media and it was really fun to do Fab and it's not often like it's funny because you think about it.

     

    Camilla Love

    You think school is sort of reasonably rigid and you've got lots of boundaries and it's just nice to hear that you're able to sort of flex your creativity and your creative muscle to do some great stuff in your English. Yes.

     

    Angela Zha

    School is what you make of it.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, absolutely. So what else did you do at school?

     

    Angela Zha

    So I took accelerated maths in year eleven and then that left enough space for me to do extension to maths in year twelve because like I said, I really enjoy the quantitative subjects. That was really challenging but I thought it was a really good process because I always have this sense of fulfilment when I solve a really complex math question and I feel so proud of myself.

     

    Camilla Love

    Do we all? So then did you do any like science and you mentioned history? Did you do any in history as well?

     

    Angela Zha

    No, I didn't do history and I would say I'm not a very sciencey person. I didn't enjoy it too much in the junior years but I did do a lot of languages so I really enjoyed German so much that I did German extension in high school and also my German teacher was fantastic so it was really cool and I love learning about different cultures.

     

    Camilla Love

    There's nothing better than having a really good teacher to guide you, particularly when you're in any subject really. But I did German in year eleven and I just wish I had a teacher. As you can tell, when you talk about it you can hear the bright spark in your voice about talking about your teacher. And it's funny how I had one of those teachers in geography and the teacher's name is Mr. Keller and he's like most awesome teacher and he's still teaching geography these days and he's still equally as awesome. So I love those stories because it makes you feel more comfortable. It makes you get better marks.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yes, definitely.

     

    Camilla Love

    And so German is very different to extension English. So how did you marry those two up together?

     

    Angela Zha

    I would say learning German actually helps with my own English writing because as a native English Speaker you don't notice it so much. But there are a lot of different grammatical conventions that you don't exactly know when you grow up. You just use it in everyday life. But then when you learn a different language, you start to learn about former grammatical structures and how syntax and grammar they all come together. And that makes you more aware of your own writing when you do writing in English.

     

    Camilla Love

    So let's talk a little bit about your math. You liked maths? Did you think it was easy for you to do math?

     

    Angela Zha

    I didn't think it was like easy, but I think I did well in it. So it was definitely challenging, especially extension too, because I didn't do science and there were definitely physics elements in there, such as the mechanics topics. But I also had a really good teacher and I had really good classmates as well and we were all really supportive, so that definitely helped me get through it.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great. And now do you have people who are in finance around you? Like, is your mom and dad or uncle? Are they anyone in finance around you?

     

    Angela Zha

    Not particularly, I guess my uncle is in accounting, but my parents are not in finance.

     

    Camilla Love

    When I go and talk to schools and school students in years 10, 11 and twelve and you can tell people who are interested in finance around them, they have the language of talking about finance and understanding and interest in finance. But those people who have parents or people who have influence around them that don't have finance, they're interested in other things, obviously. So I always found that when I was talking to kids at school about careers in finance that it was not necessarily a difficult topic to have a discussion about, but rather a topic that is unknown for a lot of people. Did you find that?

     

    Angela Zha

    I think initially at first, but it did help because I took business studies in high school as an accelerated subject. So it didn't end up counting towards my HSC. But I took it in years nine and ten and there was a finance topic in that and that was my favourite topic out of the whole course. So I thought, yes, I like finance, I want to study it more at University. But I did find out when I first got to interact with the topic, I didn't know too much of what was going on and then it was earning through learning more about it and then reading the news, talking to my teacher that I got the finance terminology and then learn more about the industry, even though when I first came to University, I still, to be honest, didn't know what a person in finance did. And I just chose the subject because I had enjoyed it in high school and I thought it was more maths heavy than some of the other subjects under the business school. I did find that I really enjoyed the subjects. And also one cool thing about the business school is that it offers lots of networking sessions and events for you to meet industry professionals.

     

    Angela Zha

    So talking to them really opens your eyes, lets you get your foot into the industry, know more about it and find out where you could fit.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, that's a great way of thinking about it. And maybe we should jump we'll come back to that. I think that's a really important piece. Let's talk about. So you finished school and were you happy with your mark for high school?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah, I was happy with my mark.

     

    Camilla Love

    Did you get into the first choice of what you wanted to do with uni?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah, I did. And it also landed me a scholarship for University as well, for the duration of my degree. So I was happy with it.

     

    Camilla Love

    So did you put your hand up for the scholarship or were you given the scholarship? Because I was also a scholarship recipient for my MBA at HSM. But lots of people go, I don't know if I'd ever get a scholarship, but my message is always, you've got to be in it to win it. What's your view on here and how did you go about finding scholarships to apply for and things like that?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah. So during year twelve, our careers adviser told us to go out there and apply for scholarships. And I also went on to the University's website and looked at what scholarships they offer. I did apply for a few, including, for example, the Sydney Scholars Award. I didn't end up getting it unfortunately, but I was awarded the Chancellor's Award at the end of year twelve, so I was fortunate to get that.

     

    Camilla Love

    And so what does the scholarship mean at University for you?

     

    Angela Zha

    I guess it means that I'm able to fund my studies more easily and it gives me more chances to meet other people at University. For example, before University started, a lot of award recipients were invited to this event and networking session where they got to meet with each other and discover more that University get access to more resources. So that's definitely been a major help.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, right. So if you're a student out there and you're listening to what you have to say, is there any advice that you would give people who are looking at scholarships?

     

    Angela Zha

    I would say, look inside yourself and don't be afraid to talk yourself up, because for the scholarships, you must let them know who you are and let your passion shine through. Some people might think, oh, I don't want to sound boastful or arrogant, but, you know, the University is not going to know about your strengths and who you are unless you tell them. So really let your passion and your interests shine through.

     

    Camilla Love

    That is a great advice, Angela's advice. And I think that goes for not even people who are at school applying for scholarships. That goes for everybody. So why did you apply for a University? And tell me a little bit about your uni journey. Are you involved in other student societies? What majors are you doing? Why did you choose them? Tell us about your uni journey.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah, sure. So as you mentioned before, I'm doing a commerce degree at Sydney University and I major in finance and economics on the finance side. As I said previously, I've had a bit of exposure to it from high school. And as for economics, Funnily enough, I had studied it in year eleven and then dropped it because I thought it was boring. And then when I got to University I changed my mind and I was like, oh, it's actually not too bad. And then now I'm majoring in economics as well. So there's a bit of a mixed journey there, but I enjoy my majors really much. I think they both have that combination of quantitative and qualitative elements which I enjoy, and they both require you to apply both technical knowledge and interact with other people in a team, which I think is really important these days in the industry. And then within University. I was really excited to join lots of student societies in my first year. I remember at orientation week I went around and then I signed up to all these different societies.

     

    Camilla Love

    I think I joined the Chocolate Society.

     

    Angela Zha

    Oh yeah, me too. That was so fun.

     

    Camilla Love

    So did you get involved in any of them at a higher level? Because a lot of people join as a member, but never really sort of get involved in any of the networking or any of the events that they do or even in the leadership capabilities that are offered by the societies.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah. So in my first year I was an editor and writer for the business school publication called Inside Enterprise. And as part of that I've got to host or co host an event that launched our flagship magazine and also interact with industry professionals as well. And in my second year I was an artist for the University newspaper Honi Soit. And as I mentioned previously, I enjoy drawing and art, so that was definitely something that spoke to my passion. Then in my third year I was a marketing director for the University Network of investing and trading within the business school.

     

    Camilla Love

    So at University I always talk about using University as a loose framework to learn other stuff that you might not necessarily have the opportunity to learn at any other time. When you sat down and chose your subjects. And obviously we've talked about your majors, what other areas did you say? Okay, I'm really interested in learning in that slightly a bit left of centre or just interesting to me that I'm going to do for sort of passion or interest sake rather than necessarily hitting it on the head for your major.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah. So I took a lot of electives which are not actually relevant for my majors. For example, in my second year, I took this elective called Cultures of Food. That was really fun because the final assignment was that you go to a restaurant, you eat, and then you write about your experience. So that was such a fun assignment.

     

    Camilla Love

    So where did you choose? Were you a critic or were you just talking about the culture of the food and the culture and the history?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yes. So I went to this Italian restaurant because you could choose a country to focus on. And I chose Italian food. I love Italian food. And I went there. I had an interview with one of the chefs. I ate, I took photos, selfies, and then I uploaded them, and I wrote about the history of Italian food, how it evolved, and what my experience was like.

     

    Camilla Love

    That is such a great example of the learning capabilities that you have at University that it doesn't just have to be so serious. You can actually take a slight bent on doing stuff that's really unusual. Like, I think I did French film. Right.

     

    Angela Zha

    Interesting.

     

    Camilla Love

    So you never get those opportunities to learn necessarily, in a formal setting about stuff that you wouldn't normally choose. Italian history is rich off, and food is at the centre of it. Just even thinking about conquests and the whole Roman Empire across different cultures. And Italian food is a mixed mash of how it's all been put together. Yeah, I love it.

     

     

    Definitely.

     

    Camilla Love

    So what did you eat? Pizza or set in a very nice accent, too. Thank you. So let's talk about the mix of the scholarship and then your degree at the same time. How do you juggle? Because there's obviously things you have to do for your scholarship. How do you juggle that? As well as doing the normal rigours of what you would normally for your degree?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah. So for my scholarship, one requirement is that I maintain a distinction Wam for the duration of my degree. So that is definitely a requirement on my academic studies. But then also outside of University, I also have other commitments, such as my social life, my part time work, as well as my hobbies, including sport and drawing. So I would say to juggle the rigours of University, it really helps to have a good schedule. I like to keep my calendar organised and plan out well in advance when I would start my assignments or when I would study for exams. And this really helps me to avoid procrastination or last minute cramming when things come up.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, everyone goes through it, but at least you can plan.

     

    Angela Zha

    Indeed. And then before an exam period comes up, I do draw up a physical calendar in front of me because I like to see things even when I'm not on my device. And then I would paste that onto my wall and then I would plan out the cake. Today I'm doing this tomorrow. I'm doing that, and I would plan that out alongside with things like running or reading into my daily schedule. So I would know exactly when I would do what. And I would say that really helps me with my time management.

     

    Camilla Love

    And it's important, particularly if you hold that scholarship, that you are living up to all the criteria of that scholarship. So I totally understand a distinction Wam is very difficult to get. Congratulations on keeping that up over your time at University. It's important. So we talked a little bit about you doing finance in business studies at school. So when you got to University and you've done a finance major, when was it that you knew you wanted to have a career in finance? And why was that?

     

    Angela Zha

    So I think I wanted to have a career in finance when I got to do internships in it and I got to interact with people in the industry and find out exactly what work they do. So, for example, one internship that I did is one offered by the business school. It's called an internship placement program. And you apply towards the business school just like you do for a job. You submit an application, do a video interview, assessment centre and a final interview. And after all that, I got matched with a bank in the equity research Department. And at first that was really quite challenging because my manager just tossed this company at me and said, Go do an initiation coverage. And I was like, what? All by myself?

     

    Camilla Love

    What's an initiation coverage? No.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah, it was a really steep learning curve, but fortunately, I had a really great and supportive team around me and they provided lots of resources and past examples of models that they have done. And it also enabled me to communicate with senior executives of the company that I was covering and find out their perspectives. So that all really helped with me completing my task over the course of my internship. And I thought that that was a really great opportunity to learn about what work is like in the industry and to see the dynamics of a team from inside rather than from outside, from the perspective of a student. And then another internship that I did is one with FThree, actually. And that was a really exciting experience. My team focused on a portfolio management case and our task was to research different portfolio managers in Australia and evaluate their investment strategies. This was really exciting because it enabled me to apply what I had learned at University to a practical scenario while working with a very motivated and driven team. That was a really rewarding experience as well, which consolidated my interest in finance.

     

    Camilla Love

    Great. So let's talk about that internship. Did you have to apply? So let's not talk about FThree for a second, but let's talk about the one that's the business school. Do you have to go and apply for those internships. And how did you go about how did you feel applying for those internships, or is it just part of the course and I just get to do it?

     

    Angela Zha

    It's not part of the course, unfortunately. I wish it was. Not every student has to do one, but most students do because they offer these on a very frequent basis throughout the year. So it's a partnership that the business school has with companies outside, and you apply to the business school rather than directly to companies outside. And then if you're successful in getting through the different rounds that I mentioned earlier, then the business school will match you with a firm such as I've heard brands like LVMH, Nestle, really big brands out there, and then match you with a company. And then you'll go and do an internship, either part time during the semester or full time within your summer break, and you get to earn credit points for that.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay, great. Let's talk about being thrown in the deep end there, because let's do an initiation coverage of this company because you can't just go and sort of lean back onto your University studies there. You've actually got to have a lot of soft skills that you've developed over time to be able to go. Okay, cool. I have no idea about what I'm doing here because I've been just dumped in the deep end. You talked about your team and the team environment that you had. What's the importance of soft skills in a situation like that?

     

    Angela Zha

    I think communication is really important. You need to communicate well with your team and then ask questions when you need it because the team won't know if you have questions unless you ask them. And I would also say time management is important as well because I had a set deadline for when I would finish my internship, and I wanted to get as much done as I hope to. So I would set goals for myself over every once few weeks to know what I had achieved.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, great. And I think it's important to have a very supporting team around you to actually go, okay, this person is struggling. I can see that she's struggling here. Let's do as much help as we can because lots of people think that that investment banking environment isn't overly supportive where it actually is. And that's what you're telling me, right?

     

    Angela Zha

    It is, yeah. One of my colleagues in a different team, I would often see her at noon, just go to the gym, come back changed, and then sit back at her desk and start work again. Or I would see people from my own team go out and have lunch at different hours of the day if they are meeting up with a friend and then come back and do work afterwards. And everyone understands that and is really supportive of that.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And I think that that's really important because who you are at work and what you do around keeping yourself sane and healthy and what you enjoy doing is available within work hours. Just you need to sort of give a little on one side to get a little on the other. So I'm a big advocate of using my lunch break. I don't matter how many hours I happen to want to work that day, but just as long as I have my lunch break to go to the gym, I'm perfectly fine and I'm sane. So you mentioned that we met during one of Fthree's work experience placements. Tell me. So you mentioned also about the project that you did. How did you find the process and the environment that you were in? And would you recommend this experience to other Uni students who are listening today?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yup. So the process was really supportive. Once again, our team was matched with a wonderful mentor. And every week when we have meetings, she would teach us a bit of theory about a particular topic, which might be helpful for our case. But also what she would do is that she would arrange weekly meetings with senior executives from the company who are based all over the globe. So maybe this week we'd be speeding to a top executive based in Sydney, next week in Singapore, the week after in the United States. And that was so exciting because I got to learn about their stories and has opened my eyes to the world out there in finance in different roles. So I would say if you're listening right now and considering FThree, definitely apply for it.

     

    Camilla Love

    Thanks, Angela. It is really important. So our view at FThree, yours and mine is to ensure that not only are we giving you the practical work experience that you need to put on your CV and give you some of the skills and arm you with some knowledge, but it's also there to give you an understanding of what the value chain looks like and where the problem is within financial services and how it sits within the industry and why it's important. But also too to actually give you the network that you need to start in the industry, which I think is really important because students like yourself and your shoes go, okay, great. I've done my degree and I'd like to go into finance, but I actually don't know anyone in finance. So how am I going to get myself a job? Well, FThree is there to at least give you, if not ten people, 15 people that you would have met along the way. And it's great that they introduce you to their colleagues offshore because different markets are doing different things and people have different stories to tell about their experiences. And where they've come from.

     

    Camilla Love

    So it's been great that you took that away from a journey.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    So I always ask all my guests the same question towards the end, which is what's the best career advice that you have been given and why did it resonate with you? The best and the reason why I'm asking for that, because it's a great culmination of different people's perspectives on careers advice and little Nuggets that you can sort of take away and apply today. So what career advice did you get?

     

    Angela Zha

    So my manager once said to me, don't be afraid to go outside of your comfort zone and network. Those are something that we touched on previously. But I think this is a really important piece of advice, especially in financial services. It's only through talking to other people that you can find out more about the industry and whether you enjoy the work. And talking to people also helps you build your network. So that when it comes to applying for jobs, the fact that you know someone who works there and can show that you understand the role and explain why that role appeals to you, that really makes a difference, and you will stand out so much more in the application process. Networking also shows that you have the motivation and drive to put yourself out there. And I would say that I sometimes could be quite shy, but as my manager said, people are friendly and willing to help, and the worst that can happen is that they don't reply to you. But there are endless possibilities of good things that can come out of you just reaching out.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And that is perfect advice, because I love networking, but I appreciate that there are lots of people out there who are scared of it or don't love it or uncomfortable, whatever. Which way? But Practise makes perfect in that space. And my top tip is just the first thing to do when you're in a room of people that you don't know is to just smile, because that will definitely take down barriers and make your welcoming and just puts a bright spark in everyone's day when you smile. So I think that's a fabulous piece of advice.

     

    Angela Zha

    Great.

     

    Camilla Love

    So, Angela, we're nearly at the end here, and we do this quick fire round of you got to say what's exactly in your head to the questions that I ask you for something a little challenging.

     

    Angela Zha

    Sure.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay, good. This is all about allowing people to get to know you a little bit. Okay. So the first question is, if you could live in any country in the world.

     

    Angela Zha

    What would it be and why… that's tough. I think Singapore because it's such an exciting city with a wonderful mix of cultures. And I also think the food that is amazing.

     

    Camilla Love

    You should have done Singaporean food for your subject.

    Angela Zha

    I should have.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, indeed. What is it? The salt and pepper crabs down at the.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah, the crabs.

     

    Camilla Love

    I haven't been to Singapore in a really long time, but I still remember those food markets down there.

     

    Angela Zha

    I remember Queuing for ages there. Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    Oh, gosh, yeah. Because everyone heads there. Right?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    So the next question is, who’s your favourite superhero?

    Angela Zha

    My favourite superhero is Captain Marvel.

    Camilla Love

    Captain Marvel. Why?

     

    Angela Zha

    I thought she really shines girl power in the film. She has a lot of resilience and I know that only so far she has only starred as the main character in one movie, but she just really stood out to me when I watched it.

     

    Camilla Love

    So maybe she should have her own. Should it be the main character in the next series?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yep.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay, next question. How would your friends describe you?

     

    Angela Zha

    Organised, loyal, diligent, and always willing to help out when they need me.

     

    Camilla Love

    That's nicely at the moment.

     

    Angela Zha

    I have FOMO of travelling overseas on the holidays.

     

    Camilla Love

    Doesn't everybody? Where would you go other than Singapore?

     

    Angela Zha

    I actually really want to go to New Zealand because I've never been before. I've heard such good stories about it and it's so close, but I've just never been and I really want to go.

     

    Camilla Love

    It is a great country. It is well worth travelling and spending some time there.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah. I'm also a big Lord of the Rings fan, so I want to go and see where they shop in the movies, see the Hobbit.

     

    Camilla Love

    It's an amazing country, so well worth saving the money and going to it.

     

    Angela Zha

    My first investment was an ETF.

     

    Camilla Love

    That's a great first start. And I'll give you that. That's a great first start.

     

    Angela Zha

    My favourite book is Gone With the Wind.

     

    Camilla Love

    Is it?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah. I love the book.

     

    Camilla Love

    That's very old school of you.

     

    Angela Zha

    And it would be my favourite movie too.

     

    Camilla Love

    Really?

     

    Angela Zha

    Yes.

     

    Camilla Love

    It's so long.

     

    Angela Zha

    I know, but it's my favourite movie.

     

    Camilla Love

    Why? Is it because of the love story or is the fact of the setting of the historical context that it's in? What was the best bit?

     

    Angela Zha

    I think when I read books, I tend to like the historical genre and so that first of all appealed to me and I think a lot of the themes really stood out and some of the topics that it evokes are just so interesting to discuss as well. And I think it was really interesting to learn about the history of the American Civil War period from a different perspective.

     

    Camilla Love

    Yeah. And there are lots of great, sort of deep themes that are resonating through that that are still quite current, obviously, today, which is important. If you had to invite anyone alive or dead to dinner.

     

    Angela Zha

    I would invite Vera Wang. She is a great inspiration to me and she is so entrepreneurial and resilient. And also another fun fact is that when I was a child, I always wanted to be a fashion designer.

     

    Camilla Love

    Hey, maybe if ever you get married, you could wear one of her fabulous dresses.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yes. That would be the dream.

     

    Camilla Love

    Wow. She's an interesting character, interesting cultural background, her impact on American fashion and global fashion. Really fabulous. Fabulous and really great globally known Asian leader, particularly who's female. So they're not necessarily a lot of them in that fashion area at all.

     

    Angela Zha

    Yeah.

     

    Camilla Love

    Last question. Describe why a career in finance would be awesome.

     

    Angela Zha

    So in a few words, it's exciting, it's inspiring, and I would say it's diverse.

     

    Camilla Love

    Okay. I love the fact that you've used diversity as one of your important points Because that's what we're all about here. It has not shoes in an Fthree and it's very important not only from an agenda point of view but also from a cultural and cognitive point of view as well. I think that the finance industry will be so excited to welcome you in. If somebody hasn't already snapped you up, there's definitely a fabulous and really bright career ahead of you in the finance industry, so I can't wait. When do you finish?

     

    Angela Zha

    So I finished my bachelor's degree this year, but I'm intending to do honours next year.

     

    Camilla Love

    So we've got a whole another year to wait, people, before she comes. So exciting. So thank you, Angela, for spending some time with us at shares not shoes today and telling us your journey because it's really important so not only for people who are in the industry to hear your story and understand the complexities of students going through school and University today, but also for those students who are thinking about having a career in finance or even thinking about doing a commerce degree or even just graduating their final years at school. It's a great story that you've had to tell and hopefully you can inspire a new influx of females into the financial services industry through the journey that you've been through and the stories that you've told today. So thanks. It's been really wonderful.

     

    Angela Zha

    I hope I provided some helpful tips for students out there and thank you so much again for having me today.

     

    Camilla Love

    No problem, Angela. So for more information on our guests at shares not shoes and further episodes, Head to sharesnotshoes.com and for more information on Fthree, head to Fthree.com au. As always, I look forward to you joining us next episode Where we continue to interview some fabulous people just like you've heard Angela and her stories today and give you the inside scoop into careers in finance. Bye, everybody. The information that is in this podcast.

     

    Camilla Love

    We always talk about finance in this podcast.

     

    Camilla Love

    But it's not financial advice. It's actually really careers advice. If you really want financial advice, I recommend that you speak to a financial planner or a broker and work out your own personal and circumstances with that. But this is all about careers advice and how finance will be a fabulous career for you.

S2 Ep1: Defying Imposter Syndrome with Jacki Ellis

Introducing Jacki Ellis, a remarkable woman working in finance at her dream job as a portfolio manager for Aware Super.

  • The following is a transcript taken from the episode. It has been created with AI so please excuse any grammatical imperfections.

    Camilla Love

    Welcome, everyone, back to another episode of Shares Not Shoes, an Insider's guide to careers in finance. I'm your host, Camilla Love, founder of Future Females in Finance. Shares Not Shoes is a podcast whereby I interview someone of my favourite people, all with one thing in common. They work in finance. We list a lid on who they are, how they came into a career in finance, and arm you with some knowledge about why a career in finance could be a good fit for you. I will promise that all my guests will share some amazing personal stories, will be open and honest, and will inspire you. So let's go.

    Camilla Love

    Today, I am so super excited to introduce you to Jacki Ellis. Jacki is the portfolio manager of retirement strategy at Aware Super, one of Australia's largest superannuation fund. And Jacki and I have known each other for maybe ten years.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah, maybe more than ten years.

    Camilla Love

    We're so young. Jacki.

    Jacki Ellis

    Oh, my God. Stop it. You're making me feel reminding me that I have to come over this year.

    Camilla Love

    Yes, we won't. So today, Jacki, thank you for joining us on Shares Not Shoes.

    Jacki Ellis

    Thank you so much for having me, Camilla. I'm delighted to be here.

    Camilla Love

    Fabulous. So, Jacki, let's start and say, can you introduce who you are and what you do and why you love it?

    Jacki Ellis

    So as you've just heard, I am the portfolio manager for retirement strategy at Aware Super, which is my dream job. I feel very fortunate to have this role. I love what I do. I'm sort of responsible for working out how we, as a super fund of a million members, can do a much better job of personalising the way we manage our members money to meet the specific needs of each of our members, and in particular, how we can help them understand what they need to meet their goals in retirement and give them really clever and smart and personalised strategies for actually drawing down on those savings so that they can live life large in retirement like they no doubt deserve it.

    Camilla Love

    Absolutely.

    Jacki Ellis

    It's very exciting because as an industry, we've spent a really long time working out how to make money and accumulate wealth for members. But as yet, we're not great at supporting members in actually drawing it down once they get to that magical retirement moment.

    Camilla Love

    So retirement is such an interesting space and something a topic that no one really ever wants to talk about because particularly when you're young, talking to a lot of our audience who haven't even thought about retirement. To me, retirement is the party stuff that you've worked so hard in your career to get to and have such a good time at that point. But then everyone's talking about at the moment, will we ever retire? What's your views here?

    Jacki Ellis

    Look, I think that our views of retirement are really starting to evolve and become a bit richer. Previously, it was like you hit a point. You retired, you hoped you had enough money and you kind of made do with what you had when you got there. And maybe for some lucky people, that was inspiring. But often it was sort of a bit of a negative connotation. Getting the age pension for the government was seen as a bit of a handout, and there's a bit of stigma around that. I think that that's really changing in society at the moment. Certainly if you retire the way my mom has, she skis most of the year whenever she can, like sort of eternally jealous about her retirement. Of course, she is one of those lucky people in the Commonwealth Public Service. They got a defined benefit scheme where they have that promised income for life, and that creates a lot more certainty. And I feel like that's inspiration, though. We can make retirement this exciting moment where you get freedom and choice and the time that you choose to retirement, to retire will depend on you and your circumstances and what you want.

    Jacki Ellis

    And maybe you'll choose to keep working for a bit, or maybe you'll start doing other types of work that you've always wanted to do. There's a huge amount of fulfilment we get from working. And so I don't think that the goal is necessarily to stop working for everyone. I don't know that that's necessarily what retirement means anymore. It's more about that moment where you get your sort of financial independence to make choices on a daily basis about what you really want to do. And I think that's really exciting and empowering, and we should be celebrating it as a society.

    Camilla Love

    Indeed. And now I loved when you explained about what you did was all about personalising retirement. How do you do that? Because that's hardly. That's a hard thing to do for 1 million members who are your clients.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah, it's really hard for a shockingly large portion of our members. We don't even have the email address.

    Camilla Love

    Details, people, please.

    Jacki Ellis

    It really makes a difference because even if we have any kind of significant event or any kind of change, we have to mail out to so many members because we don't have the email address as it kills trees and it costs money unnecessarily. Please update your email address. But yeah, we have to get a lot better as an industry at knowing our members at the moment. We do that a lot through my team, from a research perspective, and we partner with some really clever academics who are really good at this sort of stuff. To really help understand that we do a lot of member testing now. Human Centred Design is here to stay in the industry, particularly when it comes to retirement, which is really very demand played. It's all about what the member wants. Ultimately, it's their money, their choice, and so we have to really work harder to understand that. And pretty much every other industry out there has gone through that evolution, we expect a lot of personalisation in our daily lives today. Superannuation is no different, it's just a really highly regulated industry, so there are a few extra hurdles to jump through, which I think is one of the reasons it hasn't quite happened yet.

    Jacki Ellis

    But we're well on the way and I think we'll see a sea change in that aspect of super over the next decade for sure. Once you know things about members and once you get better at engaging with them on their terms without all of the jargon and lingo and ridiculous number of acronyms that do my head in, I use Jargon and I don't even realise it's Jargon. It's really funny because I'm the technical person, I'm the investment strategy team. So I do all of the really specifically technical bits and this is wonderful counterpart I have in product who gets me now after working with me for two years and she translates me and I don't even realise it was terrible. So I'm trying really hard to deognize myself as an important step on that process. But it's really hard if we don't know what personal goals are like. We don't know a member well enough to understand what they're actually trying to achieve in retirement. How can we possibly help them deliver on that?

    Camilla Love

    So how are you doing that? Like, how are you getting all the personal information to be able to do that unless you know their spending patterns and personal circumstances other than the dollar amount of their super balance?

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah, I think it's going to be a combination of engaging with them effectively so that they tell us and really clever, smart nudges that we give them to say, well, given what you've told us about you, if you want to kind of maintain your lifestyle for retirement, which is where most members will start when you sort of talk to them about what they like in retirement, I just really like to keep living as I am as a sort of basic starting point. In many cases you don't need the same income in retirement to maintain your current lifestyle because a lot of expenses disappear for many people, although maybe this will change over time. They'll stop having to pay off a mortgage and things like that. They won't be paying nearly as much tax in retirement in many cases, no tax. Perhaps they won't have dependents to the same degree, although again, maybe that's sort of shifting a little bit and so often a replacement rate is 70% allows you to maintain your lifestyle and then you need to. Oh, I'm sorry, no, I do it again. You can hold me to account. Tam so that's just saying how much of your working life income you need in retirement to maintain your lifestyle.

    Jacki Ellis

    So five point 70% of the income before tax basis, then that will be enough for most people for the masses for them to maintain their lifestyle if you're in the wealthier end, it will be a bit lower than that. You might only need a half the income because you're not sort of theoretically, you're not supposed to be saving as much or a lot of wealthy people's income goes towards savings and sort of not really the point. And then actually the lowest income earners in society. The sad reality or how much of a divergence we have between the richer and the poor. Many of them actually get a pay rise in retirement because the age pension is quite generous relative to other supports in the system. And so often their replacement rate will be well over 100%. They'll be getting more money in retirement. So you have to sort of nuance these things. And that's why we have people like me who really dig into the research and think about it and help bring the richness of those details into the member experience that our marketing and product teams are building.

    Camilla Love

    So you described your job as your dream job. Why is it your dream job?

    Jacki Ellis

    Well, it's never dull or boring. It's just pure problem solving. I get to have this wonderful mix of really geeky number crunching, and I'm a total geek at heart, and I love that. But I also the success for me is making a difference to members. I've got this huge opportunity to really add value. This year, we implemented a new default in super. The default is called my super. So a new default investment strategy for our members that's thoughtful about how their money is invested throughout their working life. And we expect to add about $100,000 to the balance of our younger members by the time they get to retirement. That adds up to, like, I don't know, $20 billion across family members because something stupid. And so being able to make a difference is really amazing. But I also get to network right across the firm. I work very heavily with the product team, with the digital team, with the advice team, with the marketing team, with the policy and advocacy teams all around this really kind of complex and interconnected idea of retirement. We can only deliver on that personalization dream if we're all connected and coherent for that single goal. So I really enjoy the mix that brings all of that together.

    Camilla Love

    Going back in time a little bit. You actually did a degree in finance and psychology.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yes.

    Camilla Love

    So why is that a good mix? And I think I know why that is a good mix. But tell me why you think that is a good mix.

    Jacki Ellis

    Look super fortunate in hindsight, but a little secret. It was completely accidentally. In fact, I was going to become a psychologist. I was, which I would have been terrible at that because I'm a much better talker than I am. Alisa, Lisa, as you would know, I really am. I couch for you. I really care about people. That sort of aspect made sense and people are really interesting but I would have made a really bad psychologist, I think so fortunately for me, my bestie was really into the idea of doing a commerce degree she's a very pragmatic person, very likes numbers and all this sort of stuff, she works at the Absorber of statistics now she really loves numbers and stats and we just thought that you would be way more fun if we could do it together So we made this packed to both do a double degree so we could go through the degrees that we wanted but we could do them together and that was serious, that is how the very deliberate and well thought through and highly strategic way I came to do a commerce psychology degree I should really thank your best friend yeah Coach, which I do all the time because I love where I've ended up in life and a lot of that is the wonderful influence that she has had in my life to shout out to Lauren Ford thank you Dusty the best destiny ever but I love the story that it's always I'm not going to say a mistake but.

    Camilla Love

    You've fallen into it.

    Jacki Ellis

    I've 100% fallen into my career from pretty much every step so somewhere along the line in my degree I just really enjoyed finance and one day I sort of woke up and I thought I just really enjoyed this the most and I went and I spoke to some of the lectures, my favourite lecturers in finance and they were doing some research in Behavioural finance which is just by far one of the more interesting aspects of finance, like why a market is crazy because it's like the culmination of millions of humans making silly decisions that they think logically but may or may not be exactly how interesting I thought oh wow, this is actually a wonderful way I can combine my two interests and so I ended up doing honours in finance and I did my own thesis in Behavioural finance and I totally loved it and then the next heavy accident was that I took so long because I also took some time out at Uni to go travelling and things I took so long at Uni in Canberra, some Canberra born and bred, I love that place, don't knock it and all my friends have left me come back and I thought Well, I want to fly their coup now, I want to hang out with my friends who've just come back So I got one of the few true finance jobs available in Canberra that was working at the Australian Office of Financial Management that sort of is the debt management arm of Treasury I had this amazing opportunity to do some really wonderful grad training through the treasury programme I met some amazing friends through that time too and my first ever boss ended up moving into an asset consulting firm and coached me six months later to follow him. And that was how I ended up in super because I just loved working with him and he was just fantastic. And the way he talked about his new job and the work that he was doing and the ability to sort of make a difference to Mums and Dads, I thought, oh, that's fantastic. And so I ended up there and then my next job was at Mercer again in investment consulting, where I got the absolute privilege of working with people like David Knox, who is a total short leader in the world of retirement and just completely fell in love with that as a problem and such an amazing opportunity. It's a problem that nobody in the world has solved. The Australia's at the forefront and we can't solve it. I am determined and, you know, I always do everything.

    Camilla Love

    I set myself one big hairy goal for the rest of the globe. Here's, Jacki, trying to solve it.

    Jacki Ellis

    That's what I'm going to do. That's probably the rest of my career sorted right there. It might take me that long at I'm it not sure.

    Camilla Love

    And then you'll retire and use your life.

    Jacki Ellis

    I know. And then I'll be like, I'm so glad I did this for myself. So that's a win.

    Camilla Love

    That's fabulous. And then along the way you did some postgrad stuff. You did your CFA.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yes.

    Camilla Love

    Has this been important for you?

    Jacki Ellis

    I think so in a way. Like it was finished studying. It was about ten years, I suppose, or close to it. And some of the detail was a bit rusty. And I have always suffered a little bit from imposter syndrome. I've never really thought of myself as remotely smart. I always just attribute any success to hard work and I know all my friends shake their heads. I know exactly that face. You guys just imagine the face that came into anything right now. That is usually. But look, I mean, that's why humans are interesting, right? We're all slightly crazy in our own way and that's my personal particular bent of that. And so it was really helpful for me. It covers kind of every 101 aspect to finance in a really detailed way and it's very black and white way of learning. I don't necessarily describe that. I think that context and conceptual problem solving is really important too. But in terms of just having that confidence, you across all of the basics. It was really useful. And I think having that sort of breadth and overview of all aspects of finance in the industry is always a really great grounding for anyone to have while they're an analyst. And so you can draw on that knowledge when you're sort of more senior and just your fingers in all sorts of pies all across the firm in the industry. Very helpful.

    Camilla Love

    Now, you mentioned you moved from your first role to your second role due to your boss right at the time. And I just reflect on the role of the mentors that you've had in your career to date and the importance that those type of people are to you. What would you say to the listeners out there today about the role of mentors and maybe even finding one, or what do you think of the benefits of it?

    Jacki Ellis

    Having mentors is really important. I've tended to sort of collect them along the way. I think mostly just because I'm a real coupon person, I tend to sort of really value people and relationships. And so I take that time to build relationships with everyone that I'm working with. And I've had the great fortune of working with some amazing people, including some really senior women who have sort of been there and done it all before and gave me some really great advice. He sort of, in many ways only realised later that they were mentors. It was never a formal. I've actually never done formal mentoring where there's like you're meeting every, I don't know, three weeks and you got an agenda and all this sort of thing. I was just taking the opportunity to have the extra chats or to ask questions or to seek their feedback and building that sort of rapport and trust so that they'll also kind of say, hey, in a minute, what are you doing here? Why do you think about this? Why are you doing this? Have you stopped to consider that maybe you're the person who is responsible for you in your career and you're the only one who can know really what you want and you have to figure that out and you can't wait for someone else to do that for you?

    Jacki Ellis

    If you don't know what inspires and motivates you or why you're doing what you're doing, it's really up to you to find that out, and then you can ask the right questions and ask for the right help and people you kind of can say, this is what I want. It's very difficult for your bosses or other senior people to help you. And I've had the great fortune of managing a whole lot of analysts, including pools of analysts, in my time. And it's a really common thing for people in the early parts of their career sort of almost expect a really high degree of hand holding in terms of what's going to happen with their career and promotions and opportunities. And by far the best thing is to put your hand up and just ask for it. Managers excited and allows you to sort of tilt your career in the direction, things that interest you the most and get you that extra experience that will give you that leg up. And so I'm just a big fan of sort of putting your hand up and kind of going for it.

    Camilla Love

    Yes, indeed. So either asking for help or asking for advice, or I always say, so my version of that is ask the next question. So can I have a coffee? Can I have a pay rise? Do you mind if I have your job? That sort of thing? That's my version of that.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah. Well, people actually love to help. It feels really scary to ask. Sometimes people love to help and they just need to know how to help. And I literally can't think of a single time that I've asked for help. And the answer has been no. And even if the answer was no, would have been a really apologetic no. But how about you try this? And I'm so sorry. In this instance, because of X, Y, and Z, and you still end up getting there in a slightly more roundabout way. But if you don't ask, well, that's a no before you started.

    Camilla Love

    Can I tell you a funny story?

    Jacki Ellis

    Sure.

    Camilla Love

    So I was looking for a mentor. This is a while ago, and one of the guys I worked with who I respect highly said to me, think about the most senior female in finance industry and just going up and ask her. And at that time it was Gail Kelly who was the Westpac CEO. So there I was, green eyes and bushy tails going, yeah, I'm just going to ask God College be my mentor. And I got back and no, can I tell you a funny story? Two years later, I went and did my MBA, and there I was sitting next to this person from Westpac, and I explained who I was. And she's like, You're Camilla love. What are you talking about? She goes, did you write to Gail Kelly to ask her to be a member? Yeah, that was ages ago. She goes, that was disgust at a meeting. And I'm like, Holy Moly. Serious. Anyway, that's a pretty funny story. So I did get a note, but I totally understand why.

    Jacki Ellis

    Maybe I've never been ambitious enough to get to know. I'm so not surprised that you were there. I love that.

    Camilla Love

    Well, if you don't ask, you don't.

    Jacki Ellis

    You don't get that's right. Absolutely, indeed.

    Camilla Love

    Anyway, so let's move tact a little bit. And I'm always interested in our guest point of view on what the trends that they are seeing in the financial services industry right now. And that could be anything but particularly from your view, what's out there that people who are looking at joining the industry or who are recent entrants in the industry should look out for?

    Jacki Ellis

    I think retirement is a big trend and that's we already talked about ageing demographics. The system is maturing. So we're finally seeing more and more waves of members retiring with quite decent superannuation balances and where that's quite a sizable asset for them in terms of their retirement. So it's getting greater importance placed on it from all avenues members, government regulators, and also choice is here to stay. And again, that's another very purposeful policy setting from the government's perspective. They want more members engaging with the system and making more choice to help competitive pressures ensure that that trend towards performance orientated cultures where that whole system, as efficient as can be, is maintained. And so I think that's one of the reasons why I'm so confident that personalisation is here to stay in the way of the future for super, because choice will push us there eventually anyway. And responsible ownership is another really big trend where you start to see that sort of positive virtuous cycle of capital coming into play, where we're aggregating up the wealth of millions of members into funds which have become really desensitised to the figures that I talk about these days.

    Jacki Ellis

    My fund has over 150,000,000,000 in assets under management, but we're managing on behalf of our members, and we're expecting to sort of double in the years to come in terms of that size. And so it's a really silly amount of money. And that means that we need to really take seriously the responsibility that comes with investing those assets and make sure that we understand all aspects of how that money is being used. And governance, environmental, social, thinking about societal impacts because the very long term horizon of our members. What's the point of retiring with all this money if you don't really have a planet to retire on, for example? And we have to think about all of the risks. And so increasingly, climate change is part of that opera is pushing funds, and members are pushing funds to think more and more about how we're managing for that and making sure that we're factoring in the risks of investing in coal because of stranded assets and things like that. Property is a long term asset class, and for years they've been leading the investment field in terms of green practises because it makes sense when you're investing in those type of time Horizons.

    Jacki Ellis

    And so that's another trend, I think that's here to stay. Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    And that's particularly poignant given that we've just had the week that's gone. We talk about sustainability a lot on this podcast, and it's nice to see the importance of the use of capital and putting it in the right places to sustain a better planet. And we've talked about it a lot in the episode. But it's also quite nice to think that the fact that going on the days that superannuation as an industry was like what I would deem as sleepy, I like the fact that it's now at the forefront and that people should really be thinking about that as a path in their career, not just something that goes off in your paycheck every month. I think that's great. So I asked this question to all of my guests, which is, what is the best career advice that you've ever been given? And why did it mean the most to you?

    Jacki Ellis

    I had a moment where I was really calling out for perhaps not believing in myself enough and maybe not really having sufficient ambition in the way I thought about my career and what I was trying to achieve and how I was conducting myself in a professional sort of setting and just that idea that I have your sights on the next goal and dress for that success. And maybe that's sort of less applicable today after the realities are locked down. And certainly dress codes have become more casual and we've got much more ability to have our whole selves with us in the office now. But I think it's a mindset that's really important because if you don't believe you can get there, then why would anyone else? And sort of having that just consumption in the way that you're working, that you will get there really does actually make a difference. It certainly did for me, much to my surprise. And actually I was almost annoyed that it did because I was really annoyed by the advice at the time. If I'm honest, sometimes you don't like getting called out. Yeah, that's right. You didn't want to believe it, but it was really true.

    Jacki Ellis

    It had a really big impact, that mental shift. And I think how we visualise ourselves and the things that we say to ourselves and the self talk that comes with that can be a really powerful force for good or a real roadblock. So that's probably the most fundamental thing, especially because of my imposter syndrome. I think it was really important for me to hear that from someone really directly.

    Camilla Love

    And it's good to note that imposter syndrome happens to everyone at lots of points in their career. You're not alone in this. If you're out there listening to it, everybody whether I can't sit on this panel, why would anyone be able to listen to me? Why am I even writing this strategy paper? Because what are my ideas mean? Yeah, it comes from everywhere, and I'm glad that person gave you that advice, Jack.

    Jacki Ellis

    I know, right? It was really good advice. Hard to hear, but it was really good advice. And I think the best advice is hard to hear, and you have to be really open to that, and you have to seek it out, and you have to kind of be willing to really embrace those gems and seek feedback all the time, just normalise that process. That's the beauty of learning, right? You're not trying to be perfect. You're just trying to be better than you were.

    Camilla Love

    Such great advice. Maybe you could have been that psychologist.

    Jacki Ellis

    Maybe a coach, maybe talking versus listening thing.

    Camilla Love

    Sure. Okay. At the end of every episode, we do this quick fire round. Have you listened to any of our episodes?

    Jacki Ellis

    Do you know what this is? Yeah, I'm ready. Hit me with it.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. If you could be any animal, what would it be? And why for sure?

    Jacki Ellis

    A Penguin? Because I really love Penguins and I really like the idea of sliding around on my belly on the ice. It looks really fun. Although I have to say, with climate change, melting ice caps and also just how hard Penguin life is, I'm not sure that it's a really sensible thing to want to be kind of fun. It does look fun, right? I want to do that all day. Yes, exactly. Dance around, slide.

    Camilla Love

    And so I went to the Zoo with Sabrina on the weekend and we get some Penguin. But no Penguins. They're not good. Who do you admire the most?

    Jacki Ellis

    I know these questions are usually talking about the famous people, the Balmers of the world, but I actually source my inspiration locally. I'm a real people person. I love my friends and family. I pick out pieces I admire from the people I know best. So I admire my husband's endless calm and consideration of others. I wish I was a calmer person. I am as a result of him, but I'm nothing on his scale. You would be one of the people in my life that I gave my camera. I know that sounds corny, but I just love your energy and commitment to making a difference and somehow managed to stay organised through all of that, which I never achieved.

    Camilla Love

    It's organised chaos.

    Jacki Ellis

    Organised chaos is better than just straight chaos, which is probably more true for my reality.

    Camilla Love

    If you could invite anyone to dinner, alive or dead, who would it be and why?

    Jacki Ellis

    Just at the moment post lock down. One of my oldest, very close friends is going through breast cancer at the moment and I haven't been able to be there. She's down in Canberra. We've been locked down, so if I could have anyone to dinner, it would definitely be her, so I could give her a big hug in person and see how she's really doing.

    Camilla Love

    That's beautiful.

    Jacki Ellis

    But she's doing great.

    Camilla Love

    Well, cross fingers. My favourite book is.

    Jacki Ellis

    Oh, I have always been a sucker for period dramas and I just love Pride and Prejudice. I always have. I must have read it a million times. And I really like Mr Darcy. Yeah. I don't know why we love Mr Darcy, but everyone does. I'm not going to go internally on that, but I just really like the sort of strong characters that female characters at Jane Austen wrote into books in a time when it was very difficult to be strong female and just, I don't know, the romance of the period combined with that. I've always loved it.

    Camilla Love

    So if you came back in another time, you'd come back in Jane Austin time, then?

    Jacki Ellis

    Only if I could be one of her book characters, maybe. I'm not sure that it was a great time for women generally.

    Camilla Love

    Not at all.

    Jacki Ellis

    I'm not sure. Maybe the future would be more interesting to find out about. See if I crack the retirement code.

    Camilla Love

    Yeah, we'll crack that one first and then we'll crack the time travel one.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah.

    Camilla Love

    Summer, winter. Autumn or spring?

    Jacki Ellis

    Winter. Hand down. I love skiing. Oh, my God. Just miss it so much right now.

    Camilla Love

    One day we'll get to do it.

    Jacki Ellis

    One day we still haven't have we? Cannot believe this year.

    Camilla Love

    But we were locked down.

    Jacki Ellis

    I mean, we've tried several times. It's going to happen. It's going to happen.

    Camilla Love

    Okay. Next year.

    Jacki Ellis

    Next year. Let's do it. Logged in.

    Camilla Love

    Tell me something that no one else knows about you.

    Jacki Ellis

    No one else. Oh, my God. That doesn't exist. I don't think I'm such an open book. Everyone knows everything about me. I mean, things that would surprise people today would be from my distant past. I was a springboard diver. Did you know? Were you? I did the double back pike thing. Yeah. I could do, like, the inward hike, one and a half of the three metre and things like that. I could dive off the five minute. I got a silver medal at the Australian Inter Schools Championships. Really? Well, no, not really. I grew up in Canberra, so opportunities are limited. Maybe if I grow up in Brisbane.

    Camilla Love

    So next time I want to see one of these.

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah, well, a little bit rusty, but we can always try.

    Camilla Love

    There's always a moment. My hidden talent is.

    Jacki Ellis

    My hidden talent is talking my son out of a tantrum. I'm the only one who can do it. They are really like, he's one determined little lad and those tantrums are epic. And he's so funny, especially through locked eyes. So funny. And he'd be like, mom, the tantrums are back. Help me. It's so funny. And I've always managed to crack the code.

    Camilla Love

    Eventually. Maybe you can come to my place.

    Jacki Ellis

    Sure. I charge by the hour.

    Camilla Love

    Free for friends, right?

    Jacki Ellis

    Yeah. Maybe my biggest investment mistake was to tell you what the worst investment I made recently was through lockdown. I invested in a trampoline for our backyard, for my kindergarten son. Vain hope that it would give him something to do. And all of those hours we were in work meetings and couldn't pay him attention. He was trying to, I don't know, entertain himself. But unfortunately, the Apple doesn't fall far from the tree. He's far too extrovert. And he refuses to jump on the damn thing without someone else with him. And he hardly ever used it as a result. It was the worst.

    Camilla Love

    So it doesn't count if no one's watching.

    Jacki Ellis

    No. Why would I play with toys without people to play with? And I'm like, I hear you, mate. It's really hard to. It's really hard to complain when that's your personality coming out back at you. My favourite song is probably anything from Julia and Angerstone. I love them. And maybe Bella in particular. That was my wedding song.

    Camilla Love

    It's really special for me. That's so nice. The last question is complete this sentence.

    Jacki Ellis

    A career in finance is never boring, sometimes challenging, but an amazing opportunity to make a difference.

    Camilla Love

    Jacki such a great way to end. And I loved our chat. I Think We've Given, as Always, Just Some Surprising. I Didn't Realise That It Was Like A Pact With Your Mates Which Made You Do Psychology Because That's What I Really Wanted To Do. And Then Into Finance. I Love The Fact That Your Worst Investment Decision Was Buying A Kid In Trampoline.

    Jacki Ellis

    Really?

    Camilla Love

    And It's Great To See That Super, Which Has Moved Forward And Trying To Reach For Better Retirement Outcomes For All Members And Personalising Them Is Really A Goal And An Achievable Goal, Which I Think Is Super Exciting. So Once You Get There, You Let Me Know.

    Jacki Ellis

    I Will. Absolutely. And For Everyone Out There, Pay Attention Early To Your Super. For Every Dollar You Invest In Your 20s, It Will Grown To At Least Around $4 by The Time You retire. It's An Amazing Way To Get Ahead In Life And Also Give You That Extra Freedom And Flexibility To Have Time Out Of The workforce later For Whatever Reason You Might choose And Still Have A Great Retirement Outcome. So Engage Early, make The Most Of It, and Don't Succumb To that. Oh, It's My Future Self Problem Kind Of Thing That We Tend To Do As Humans.

    Camilla Love

    That Future Self Comes Around Too Fast, huh?

    Jacki Ellis

    Oh, My God. It Has For Me.

    Camilla Love

    Wendy. So Jack, it Was Really Great To Chat and thank You For Being Funny And Entertaining As Usual. And I'm Just Really Glad That You Can Help Inspire The New Generation Of Talent Coming Into The Industry And What We're Trying To Do Here At Shares Not Shoes. So thank You For Being Open And Honest And Being Just Generally Jacki Ellis.

    Jacki Ellis

    Really thank You So Much For Having Me. It's Been A Blast As Always. And For Anyone Still On The Fence, Do It, just Do It. It's The Best.

    Camilla Love

    Just Do It. Exactly. So for More Information About Our Guests On Shares, Not Shoes And Further Episodes, head to SharesnotShoes.com. And for more information On F three Future Females In Finance, Head To F Three.com Au. As Always, I Look Forward To You Joining US Next Episode Where We Will Continue To Interview Some Fabulous People Just Like Jacki And To Give You The Inside Scoop On Careers In Finance. Bye. For now.

    Camilla Love

    You Know The Information That Is In This Podcast. We Always Talk About Finance In This Podcast. But It's Not Financial Advice. It's Actually Really Careers Advice. If You Really Want Financial Advice, I Recommend That You Speak To A Financial Planner Or A broker And Work Out Your Own Personal Circumstances With that. But this Is All About Career's Advice And How It's Finance Would Be A Fabulous Career For you.