00;00;00;09 - 00;00;03;18 I have a a tissue issue. 00;00;03;20 - 00;00;04;26 A tissue issue? 00;00;04;26 - 00;00;07;16 You know, that was one of our bad ideas a long time ago. 00;00;07;16 - 00;00;10;03 I think we shared it. The tissue issue? 00;00;10;03 - 00;00;10;27 I think so. 00;00;10;27 - 00;00;13;03 That was the the finding... 00;00;13;03 - 00;00;15;01 tissues in the... 00;00;15;01 - 00;00;17;24 I mean... scanning for tissues in your smart washing machine. 00;00;17;24 - 00;00;21;23 Yeah, it's a terrible name, but the idea is interesting because... 00;00;21;24 - 00;00;25;02 Because I think our devices are getting smarter, 00;00;25;05 - 00;00;27;10 you know, and now with A.I. 00;00;27;10 - 00;00;30;09 I think you could probably do this pretty easily. 00;00;30;09 - 00;00;36;12 Uh, scan your clothes and find things in it that shouldn't be there, like tissues. 00;00;36;12 - 00;00;39;13 The amount of things that I don't need to have 00;00;39;13 - 00;00;42;17 more technology put into it is insurmountable. 00;00;42;24 - 00;00;45;14 Like I don't need it. 00;00;45;14 - 00;00;48;13 I'm sure other people can agree and other people are like, you know what? 00;00;48;13 - 00;00;52;20 No, embrace it, like technology and wifi in washers everywhere. 00;00;52;25 - 00;00;54;21 Yeah, it just. Yeah. 00;00;54;21 - 00;00;56;27 Total side tangent. Hello! Hello. 00;00;56;27 - 00;00;58;01 How are you? 00;00;58;01 - 00;01;02;26 I'm good. How are you? I'm good. I think... 00;01;02;29 - 00;01;07;18 I would say I'm struggling with podcast scheduling. 00;01;07;20 - 00;01;10;06 Yes, we're doing our best. 00;01;10;06 - 00;01;11;00 We're doing our best. 00;01;11;00 - 00;01;13;00 We’re actually recording this a couple of weeks. 00;01;13;00 - 00;01;16;15 I think after our original interview. I think weeks. 00;01;16;15 - 00;01;20;09 We we had for some transparency, 00;01;20;11 - 00;01;24;14 We recorded a wonderful podcast, which we'll talk about in a moment, 00;01;24;16 - 00;01;26;15 And then completely forgot 00;01;26;15 - 00;01;30;13 or ran out of time to record the intro that we usually do right here. 00;01;30;15 - 00;01;33;22 And so then it got put to the wayside with all the projects that we had. 00;01;33;25 - 00;01;36;10 So here we are, we're in a totally different location 00;01;36;10 - 00;01;37;25 we’re in different clothes. 00;01;37;25 - 00;01;39;19 The video's going to look really different. 00;01;39;19 - 00;01;46;01 Um, but it's... I am still very delighted to talk about this conversation 00;01;46;01 - 00;01;49;25 that we had and get it out because it was so good and so informative. 00;01;49;25 - 00;01;52;12 And so let's, let's get into it. 00;01;52;12 - 00;01;55;10 So we sat down with Rachel Murray, 00;01;55;10 - 00;01;59;08 She is the co-CEO of She+ Geeks Out or She Plus 00;01;59;08 - 00;02;02;19 Geeks out, as you'll see it, written in a lot of places. 00;02;02;22 - 00;02;06;20 And she's been running the business for about ten years now. 00;02;06;20 - 00;02;07;26 A little over ten years. 00;02;07;26 - 00;02;09;26 They just celebrated ten years last year. 00;02;09;26 - 00;02;12;12 And in 2023, which is wonderful. 00;02;12;12 - 00;02;17;25 And they are in the space of abolishing inequity in the workplace. 00;02;17;28 - 00;02;23;01 So she does a lot of work on, like many CEOs, 00;02;23;01 - 00;02;27;06 she's wearing many different hats working on, you know, H.R. 00;02;27;06 - 00;02;32;09 and tech and finance and operations and everything in between. 00;02;32;09 - 00;02;37;29 I think her I think her title was Chief Everything Else Officer, which is pretty good. 00;02;38;01 - 00;02;40;01 It's very good. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 00;02;40;01 - 00;02;44;15 So, so she does a lot of really incredible work and is just... 00;02;44;18 - 00;02;48;02 the company is very mindful and very like we just... 00;02;48;04 - 00;02;51;07 we align with their values a lot in terms of how they're approaching things 00;02;51;07 - 00;02;54;20 and thinking about the world and how to make better workplaces. 00;02;54;20 - 00;02;59;16 And so without spoiling anything, we, I think we should just get right into it. 00;02;59;16 - 00;03;02;18 But it was a delight, delight to talk to her. 00;03;02;21 - 00;03;07;01 We had a lot of fun and I think we have taken away a lot from our conversation. 00;03;07;01 - 00;03;08;20 So we hope you do too. 00;03;08;20 - 00;03;11;01 Yeah. So let's jump into it. 00;03;11;01 - 00;03;12;02 Let's do it. 00;03;26;23 - 00;03;32;05 Rachel, thank you so much for taking the time to be on the podcast. We're so, so happy to talk to you. 00;03;32;05 - 00;03;36;28 I think you and I have had many conversations over the years 00;03;36;28 - 00;03;40;15 and just have dived a lot into different topics. 00;03;40;15 - 00;03;44;13 So I want to make sure that we have time first for our audience who 00;03;44;13 - 00;03;48;11 might not know who you are and what you do and what She+ Geeks Out is all about. 00;03;48;13 - 00;03;52;28 Can you kind of give us a rough overview to start of, you know, how you got started 00;03;52;28 - 00;03;56;21 and how She+ Geeks Out has been successfully doing 00;03;56;21 - 00;03;58;21 amazing work for the last ten years. 00;03;58;21 - 00;03;59;26 Oh, you're so kind. 00;03;59;26 - 00;04;01;28 Well, thank you both for having me. 00;04;01;28 - 00;04;03;28 It's a it's a pleasure. 00;04;03;28 - 00;04;05;17 Yeah, I'm happy to share. 00;04;05;17 - 00;04;11;16 So, yeah, I'm the co-founder and co-CEO of a company called She+ Geeks Out. 00;04;11;16 - 00;04;14;19 And I also like to explain, you know, our name is pretty unique. 00;04;14;19 - 00;04;16;09 So we actually started out as a women 00;04;16;09 - 00;04;20;06 in tech group in the Boston area and this was in 2013. 00;04;20;06 - 00;04;23;13 We actually had our first event, so a little over a year ago 00;04;23;15 - 00;04;28;10 where my business partner and I now business partner and I that's how we met 00;04;28;13 - 00;04;34;09 and I kind of call myself the Chief Everything Else Officer a little bit. Cause I do a lot of 00;04;34;09 - 00;04;38;26 Different things I you to do, like, you know, tech, finance, H.R. 00;04;38;26 - 00;04;39;25 sales, marketing. 00;04;39;25 - 00;04;43;02 That's me and my side of my amazing business partner, Felicia, 00;04;43;02 - 00;04;47;18 She runs all the DEI training and consulting because in 2017, 00;04;47;18 - 00;04;51;15 we started adding the DEI training and consulting to our work. 00;04;51;15 - 00;04;55;16 And for those who aren't familiar with the acronym, I don't want to presume 00;04;55;18 - 00;04;58;08 that means diversity, equity and inclusion, 00;04;58;08 - 00;05;02;21 where we teach about unconscious bias, microaggressions, allyship, identity, 00;05;02;21 - 00;05;06;24 intersectionality, how that all shows up, particularly in the workplace. 00;05;06;27 - 00;05;08;27 And so that's what my lovely business partner does. 00;05;08;27 - 00;05;12;23 And so when we started out in 2013, 00;05;12;25 - 00;05;15;24 we were really focused on events and we really shifted gears. 00;05;15;24 - 00;05;20;25 Everything, as you I'm sure know, changed in 2020. Actually, which is the year that we met. Yes. 00;05;21;00 - 00;05;24;09 And so now the focus is really pretty much solely 00;05;24;09 - 00;05;27;13 on the DEI training and consulting side of things. 00;05;27;13 - 00;05;28;18 So that's a little bit about us. 00;05;28;18 - 00;05;32;07 Yeah, fully remote. It's a great time. 00;05;32;09 - 00;05;36;15 Yes, we are big proponents of the only remote lifestyle. 00;05;36;15 - 00;05;39;15 As you can see, we're in New Mexico today. So. 00;05;39;19 - 00;05;40;25 It's wonderful. 00;05;40;25 - 00;05;42;29 I'm okay. Well, Will, do you have a question? 00;05;42;29 - 00;05;44;27 Because otherwise I'm going to jump right in. 00;05;44;27 - 00;05;49;08 So I’m trying to think of some of the work we’ve done and DEI before 00;05;49;11 - 00;05;51;04 that has been either animation work. 00;05;51;04 - 00;05;54;03 So let me just give you a little rundown of the background of the podcast. 00;05;54;03 - 00;05;56;05 So the reason we've run the podcast in the first place 00;05;56;05 - 00;05;59;05 is to kind of try to teach people before they get to our doors 00;05;59;08 - 00;06;02;19 what to do, what not to do, what to expect, that kind of thing. 00;06;02;26 - 00;06;07;16 But it's also on the side of communication where we're talking about, you know, 00;06;07;18 - 00;06;11;00 there's some topics and yours is really particular 00;06;11;03 - 00;06;13;16 that lend themselves to animation 00;06;13;16 - 00;06;17;02 and how that sort of communication that how we sort of work together. 00;06;17;02 - 00;06;19;13 You've we've done a project for you in the past. 00;06;19;13 - 00;06;22;08 We've done a couple other ones that I maybe you haven't seen around DEI 00;06;22;08 - 00;06;22;21 Yeah. 00;06;22;21 - 00;06;25;20 And I kind of wanted to get a sense of like 00;06;25;26 - 00;06;29;25 there's crucial communication happening between your organization 00;06;29;25 - 00;06;34;10 and do you have members or is it is it just folks who sign up? 00;06;34;10 - 00;06;38;09 Like, I want to kind of understand a little bit of like how it works? 00;06;38;09 - 00;06;39;19 How do you get your work done? 00;06;39;19 - 00;06;42;18 Like paint us the Bob Ross picture right now. 00;06;42;18 - 00;06;47;05 Where we get those happy little trees for you. 00;06;47;08 - 00;06;47;17 Yeah. 00;06;47;17 - 00;06;49;07 Thank you for asking the question. 00;06;49;07 - 00;06;54;10 So so the way we typically work is primarily it's corporate clients, 00;06;54;10 - 00;06;55;28 so they typically find us 00;06;55;28 - 00;06;59;21 through our website and they reach out and they're interested 00;06;59;21 - 00;07;03;25 in bringing us into their organization for training purposes. 00;07;03;27 - 00;07;07;09 And before the pandemic, I would say about 90% of their training 00;07;07;09 - 00;07;08;19 was probably in person. 00;07;08;19 - 00;07;11;19 And I think that that has flipped since then. 00;07;11;24 - 00;07;17;09 We're really fortunate in that a lot of people found us pretty early on in 2017. 00;07;17;11 - 00;07;20;10 One of my prior my my prior life 00;07;20;10 - 00;07;23;19 before S+GO was in tech. 00;07;23;19 - 00;07;26;24 So building websites. Ao it's great to be able 00;07;26;24 - 00;07;30;04 to do that, to have that skill when you are building a business. 00;07;30;06 - 00;07;34;29 And so, yeah, so we found that when we first launched our training, 00;07;35;01 - 00;07;38;15 we wanted to be really intentional about making sure that we were providing 00;07;38;15 - 00;07;42;02 thought leadership, that we were showing that we knew we were talking about. 00;07;42;02 - 00;07;44;14 And so we wrote a lot of articles. 00;07;44;14 - 00;07;47;19 So I did a lot of the writing of the blog posts. Felicia, she's 00;07;47;24 - 00;07;48;27 she's really the face. 00;07;48;27 - 00;07;53;03 So this is very is a very odd experience, me being the face of the voice. 00;07;53;05 - 00;07;55;08 But Felicia is typically the face of the voice. 00;07;55;08 - 00;07;57;06 So she would go out and do speaking engagements 00;07;57;06 - 00;07;59;16 and I would be behind the screen doing a lot of the writing. 00;07;59;16 - 00;08;01;26 And that's how a lot of people would find us, 00;08;01;26 - 00;08;04;19 thank goodness, were really good with search engine optimization. 00;08;04;19 - 00;08;06;20 So that's a blessing. 00;08;06;20 - 00;08;10;27 So we we actually did attempt a few times to create community. 00;08;10;28 - 00;08;12;18 We have had webinars 00;08;12;18 - 00;08;17;00 that certainly bring people together as well as virtual meet ups. 00;08;17;02 - 00;08;19;01 We have our podcast that I think 00;08;19;01 - 00;08;21;21 it's not really community, but it's certainly listeners. 00;08;21;21 - 00;08;24;29 We have our newsletter where we have people experiencing us 00;08;25;04 - 00;08;29;02 and that way and it's wonderful and people reach out and respond. 00;08;29;04 - 00;08;32;29 We did try a community last year. 00;08;32;29 - 00;08;37;03 What is time? Really tricky to get people to talk about it and happy 00;08;37;03 - 00;08;40;23 to dive more into sort of my philosophy, sort of 00;08;40;26 - 00;08;44;22 where the space is right now, because I think it's certainly evolving. 00;08;44;24 - 00;08;48;16 But you didn't really sort of have a lot of conversation. 00;08;48;16 - 00;08;50;10 So we're like, okay, we get it. 00;08;50;10 - 00;08;51;21 People are tired. 00;08;51;21 - 00;08;54;05 So now we have a new community actually that we just launched, 00;08;54;05 - 00;08;56;14 which is really focused on online learning. 00;08;56;14 - 00;09;00;18 So it's us really just providing resources to folks. 00;09;00;20 - 00;09;02;27 So that's different ways that people can engage with us. 00;09;02;27 - 00;09;05;11 Yeah, Yeah, that's wonderful. 00;09;05;11 - 00;09;08;21 I'm I'm curious about you have kind of a couple different 00;09;08;22 - 00;09;10;11 audiences that I'm hearing here. 00;09;10;11 - 00;09;14;19 And in each of those, I imagine that they have, especially 00;09;14;19 - 00;09;19;22 with such a deep and purposeful subject like DEI, 00;09;19;24 - 00;09;23;11 I'm curious about the communication challenges that happen there, like 00;09;23;18 - 00;09;28;23 do you find that there's more resistance to teaching in some way or another, or 00;09;29;00 - 00;09;32;15 where do you find sort of those communication successes that are like 00;09;32;15 - 00;09;35;25 this opens the door to a whole new realm that people are excited about, 00;09;35;25 - 00;09;39;07 and then the opposite side of like we're trying to communicate, 00;09;39;07 - 00;09;42;25 but also we can see the defensiveness or the like, the, 00;09;42;28 - 00;09;46;24 the freak out of like, Oh, I don't know if we're ready to talk about this yet. 00;09;46;24 - 00;09;48;25 Where do you find those challenges? Come in. 00;09;48;25 - 00;09;50;14 Yeah, that's a great question. 00;09;50;14 - 00;09;54;06 So I think the way we like to approach the work is 00;09;54;09 - 00;09;58;01 understanding that everybody's coming into this from different 00;09;58;04 - 00;10;02;00 experiences, different lived experiences, different understandings. 00;10;02;03 - 00;10;06;09 And so when we come into this space, we honor that. 00;10;06;09 - 00;10;09;17 So understanding folks have deep lived experiences. 00;10;09;17 - 00;10;12;27 Other folks are maybe really curious about it. 00;10;13;00 - 00;10;15;14 And then to be perfectly frank, they're going to be other people 00;10;15;14 - 00;10;18;05 that are like, I don't know why I'm doing this, Why does it even matter? 00;10;18;05 - 00;10;22;01 I just want to get my job done and like then go back and hang out with my kids. 00;10;22;01 - 00;10;23;04 You know? 00;10;23;04 - 00;10;26;23 So an understanding that I think, yeah, you do absolutely meet resistance. 00;10;26;23 - 00;10;30;23 And there's a couple of ways that we talk about approaching this. 00;10;30;23 - 00;10;32;21 First of all, being honest right? 00;10;32;21 - 00;10;37;03 This is this space that we're living in. An understanding for... 00;10;37;04 - 00;10;42;11 If it's so, if it's not a mandatory training, you'll usually get people who are 00;10;42;14 - 00;10;43;08 curious and 00;10;43;08 - 00;10;46;11 ready to go for the trainings that maybe are mandatory. 00;10;46;11 - 00;10;49;17 That's when you sort of meet, I think, a little bit more resistance. 00;10;49;19 - 00;10;51;04 And when that happens, you know, we 00;10;51;04 - 00;10;54;28 we do use a couple of visuals around talking through some of this. 00;10;54;28 - 00;10;57;28 So one is a visual that we use in the beginning 00;10;58;03 - 00;11;01;05 of our workshops typically, 00;11;01;08 - 00;11;03;28 which is if you can envision three circles, a small circle, 00;11;03;28 - 00;11;08;03 which is your comfort zone, a larger circle, which is your 00;11;08;04 - 00;11;11;21 learning zone, and then a larger circle, which is your panic zone. 00;11;11;23 - 00;11;14;23 We talk through that and we say, folks, you know, 00;11;15;00 - 00;11;18;00 if you stay in your comfort zone, you're not going to really learn anything. 00;11;18;06 - 00;11;20;29 If you get that panic zone, you're definitely not going to learn anything 00;11;20;29 - 00;11;23;19 because your brain's going to shut down and not be interested. 00;11;23;19 - 00;11;30;10 So we want to keep folks focused on that learning zone or that learning edge So that's one way that we do it. 00;11;30;10 - 00;11;35;11 And then of course, as our facilitators go through the workshop, 00;11;35;11 - 00;11;36;19 there are going to be moments 00;11;36;19 - 00;11;40;20 of discomfort, which we also acknowledge upfront that that can happen. 00;11;40;20 - 00;11;41;16 And, and, 00;11;41;16 - 00;11;45;12 and we do refer to the pause framework, which is what we actually worked with 00;11;45;12 - 00;11;49;26 you on as a way to address some of that resistance 00;11;49;26 - 00;11;53;17 that can come up for really anyone, whether you're curious or not. 00;11;53;17 - 00;11;55;24 You know, it's, it's, it's, it's a tough subject. 00;11;55;24 - 00;11;57;07 Yeah, definitely. 00;11;57;07 - 00;11;57;16 Yeah. 00;11;57;16 - 00;11;59;05 Do you feel like, sorry, do you feel like 00;11;59;05 - 00;12;01;13 most of the people you're working with are like 00;12;01;13 - 00;12;03;16 right on the edge of that panic zone? 00;12;03;16 - 00;12;08;23 Because I feel like everyone's anxiety is like turned up to 20 right now. 00;12;08;25 - 00;12;10;28 What are you talking about, Will? 00;12;11;10 - 00;12;13;11 There's no mental health crisis in this country. 00;12;13;11 - 00;12;16;11 I never heard of it. 00;12;16;18 - 00;12;17;16 Yeah. 00;12;17;16 - 00;12;21;23 You know, I think that it is really it is a challenge. 00;12;21;23 - 00;12;24;00 I think that there are a lot of people who are struggling with it. 00;12;24;00 - 00;12;27;04 And I think workplace dynamics 00;12;27;04 - 00;12;32;21 in general outside of DEI, I think are just they're in a new 00;12;32;24 - 00;12;36;03 we're just we're just entering this completely new phase. 00;12;36;03 - 00;12;37;24 I think COVID set it off. 00;12;37;24 - 00;12;41;02 It's probably been boiling under the surface for a while, 00;12;41;09 - 00;12;44;09 but it's all sort of coming out and coming to a head 00;12;44;15 - 00;12;47;15 where there is just a lot of lack of trust 00;12;47;20 - 00;12;55;00 and a lot of sort of this understanding of, you know, I think for a lot of employees, 00;12;55;00 - 00;12;59;11 it used to be, oh, we're really committed to this company, We're really invested. 00;12;59;11 - 00;13;02;13 We we believe in what we're doing or what we're building, 00;13;02;15 - 00;13;06;27 to this sort of shift of, you know, sort of goods for services now. 00;13;07;00 - 00;13;10;07 And I think what that does is it creates when we are going in 00;13;10;07 - 00;13;13;24 and having these workshops and having these discussions, 00;13;13;27 - 00;13;15;20 I think they can that can bubble up. 00;13;15;20 - 00;13;17;25 And I think it does. 00;13;17;27 - 00;13;18;12 It does. 00;13;18;12 - 00;13;22;00 Maybe, you know, our facilitators are incredibly skilled 00;13;22;00 - 00;13;24;01 and I'm not a facilitator, 00;13;24;01 - 00;13;27;23 so I just give them so much credit for the beautiful work that they do 00;13;27;25 - 00;13;30;25 in really managing that 00;13;30;27 - 00;13;33;27 line to really help people stay 00;13;33;27 - 00;13;38;17 in that learning zone as much as possible and not be in that panic zone. 00;13;38;17 - 00;13;43;25 And if they are to the very best to find a way to regulate so they can come back. 00;13;43;27 - 00;13;44;28 No, that's a great point. 00;13;44;28 - 00;13;49;09 The reason I bring it up, I mean, yeah, obviously because the world is crazy, 00;13;49;11 - 00;13;53;22 but I do find that sometimes with a new kind of tool, communication 00;13;53;22 - 00;13;54;23 tool, medium, 00;13;54;23 - 00;13;57;19 something that you've never really done before, we come across 00;13;57;19 - 00;14;02;04 that a lot in animation, when we're talking to folks like you who kind of, 00;14;02;06 - 00;14;05;15 you know, might be afraid of something or don't know if it's actually going 00;14;05;15 - 00;14;08;16 to work or something like that, They also tend to be like 00;14;08;21 - 00;14;09;24 on the edge of that panic. 00;14;09;24 - 00;14;12;29 So I just want to just like, okay, how do you bring it back, how do you reel them down 00;14;13;02 - 00;14;15;10 from like, this is not going work, right? 00;14;15;10 - 00;14;17;15 It's building trust and community and... 00;14;17;15 - 00;14;18;22 Oh, go ahead. Yeah. 00;14;18;22 - 00;14;21;00 No, I agree with you, Kathryn. That was perfect. 00;14;21;00 - 00;14;22;27 I, I think that's absolutely right. 00;14;22;27 - 00;14;26;24 Building trust, showing data, I think also helps a lot. 00;14;26;24 - 00;14;29;27 And I know that that's probably something that you both do as well 00;14;30;02 - 00;14;33;20 is is proving the value. You know why... 00;14;33;22 - 00;14;39;13 people's are nervous to spend their time and money on on a lot of things. 00;14;39;13 - 00;14;42;13 And so how do you show that it's valuable and how do you trust that 00;14;42;13 - 00;14;46;20 that is going to be a not only a good product that you're creating, 00;14;46;22 - 00;14;50;16 but also a good working relationship, which I don't think gets valued enough? 00;14;50;19 - 00;14;50;27 Right? 00;14;50;27 - 00;14;54;29 As a one of the things I love about you is that it's always been a pleasure 00;14;54;29 - 00;14;57;03 working with you. So yeah, we've. 00;14;57;03 - 00;15;00;05 Always talked about this idea of like wanting to build 00;15;00;06 - 00;15;04;07 partnerships and relationships that never feel like just transactional. 00;15;04;07 - 00;15;05;17 Yes! Because there's there's 00;15;05;17 - 00;15;08;23 so much of that in the world that we do on a day to day basis. 00;15;08;23 - 00;15;09;09 You know, I'm 00;15;09;09 - 00;15;13;06 sure I'm sure hundreds of thousands of people are shopping on Amazon right now. 00;15;13;08 - 00;15;14;06 So yeah. 00;15;14;06 - 00;15;19;20 But there's there's something so much more purposeful and meaningful and like, 00;15;19;22 - 00;15;24;10 so people who are excited to embrace that, that idea... 00;15;24;12 - 00;15;25;27 like we're all for we're like, 00;15;25;27 - 00;15;29;08 yes, let's get into the weeds of this because it's it's a beautiful thing. 00;15;29;10 - 00;15;33;01 I'm curious because you you kind of touched on this idea of, 00;15;33;01 - 00;15;35;07 you know, in a lot of the work that you're doing, 00;15;35;07 - 00;15;40;10 you're kind of in this like mixed toolset in terms of communication, of trying 00;15;40;10 - 00;15;44;05 to get different ideas across, trying to, to your point, have 00;15;44;12 - 00;15;47;10 like visual references that are almost like you're 00;15;47;10 - 00;15;50;29 sort of like a guiding light for everyone to be like, this is, you know, 00;15;50;29 - 00;15;53;12 you can always refer back to this in some way. 00;15;53;12 - 00;15;55;21 So I'm kind of curious how, 00;15;55;21 - 00;15;59;16 how do you even decide which tool to use in certain moments? 00;15;59;16 - 00;16;03;12 And even the idea of like when you were at the time deciding to use 00;16;03;12 - 00;16;05;20 animation, like how did how did those come about? 00;16;05;20 - 00;16;09;10 Like, how do you make those choices, especially for a topic like this? 00;16;09;16 - 00;16;11;04 That's such a great question. 00;16;11;04 - 00;16;16;21 And I will defer to my facilitation team to to to get into the specifics 00;16;16;21 - 00;16;21;26 about communication in those workshops, which is, 00;16;21;28 - 00;16;24;18 you know, I think I’ll just say one thing is different 00;16;24;18 - 00;16;27;18 learning styles is of course, a key 00;16;27;19 - 00;16;31;24 component to to understanding how to communicate because everyone 00;16;31;24 - 00;16;36;02 does have different ways of of processing, as you both obviously know. 00;16;36;05 - 00;16;37;17 So that that's one aspect 00;16;37;17 - 00;16;41;18 that I'll sort of put over here because that's not my area of expertise, 00;16;41;21 - 00;16;46;05 but I can share a little bit about so the broader audience. 00;16;46;05 - 00;16;51;16 So, you know, we do a lot in communicating via a lot of different media. 00;16;51;22 - 00;16;55;15 So whether that is we have a podcast as well. 00;16;55;15 - 00;16;59;09 So there's the audio, there is our blog post. 00;16;59;10 - 00;17;02;11 So we want to make sure that we have a lot of written content. 00;17;02;15 - 00;17;04;21 We we also use YouTube for it. 00;17;04;21 - 00;17;08;11 We have quick little Ask S+GO videos to get information out. 00;17;08;14 - 00;17;10;19 We have long form courses. 00;17;10;19 - 00;17;12;26 How we make those choices. 00;17;12;26 - 00;17;16;24 It really depends on what we're trying to deliver. 00;17;16;26 - 00;17;20;07 So long form versus short form content, right there 00;17;20;07 - 00;17;23;07 is... how are you going to decide what to do? 00;17;23;14 - 00;17;25;04 Understanding that there are going to be people 00;17;25;04 - 00;17;28;22 who are going to want that information differently 00;17;28;24 - 00;17;31;19 with DEI in particular, it's... 00;17;31;19 - 00;17;36;16 it's certainly not impossible, but it is certainly more challenging 00;17;36;18 - 00;17;41;23 to create short form content communication because a lot of the comments... 00;17;41;25 - 00;17;44;24 a lot of the learnings are complicated 00;17;44;24 - 00;17;47;24 or they just require they're just more nuanced. 00;17;47;24 - 00;17;50;29 So a lot of times they require a little bit more exposition 00;17;51;01 - 00;17;56;25 then a lot of what today's media really loves. 00;17;56;28 - 00;17;58;21 When we got to 00;17;58;21 - 00;18;02;29 deciding about the creating an animation for the Pause framework. 00;18;02;29 - 00;18;06;27 So our director of training, Fatima Dainkeh, who is absolutely incredible, 00;18;07;00 - 00;18;09;21 she developed this framework, 00;18;09;21 - 00;18;13;14 which is PAUSE, which is a P-A-U-S-E, that I can... I'm happy 00;18;13;14 - 00;18;17;00 to explain what each of them means if that's of interest. 00;18;17;03 - 00;18;22;06 But essentially it's a way for folks, it's a framework for folks to literally pause 00;18;22;06 - 00;18;26;17 and take a minute when they're in moments that feel particularly 00;18;26;17 - 00;18;31;16 fraught or stressful that are around these topics of DEI. 00;18;31;18 - 00;18;33;21 Sure, we could have had it all written down. 00;18;33;21 - 00;18;36;06 We do. We have it in a text. 00;18;36;06 - 00;18;37;09 That's fine. 00;18;37;09 - 00;18;39;13 We could also have had a talking head. 00;18;39;13 - 00;18;43;15 We could have had Fatima just video say what they mean. 00;18;43;18 - 00;18;46;05 But with these concepts, we really wanted 00;18;46;05 - 00;18;49;20 to push it a little bit because we wanted it to tell a story. 00;18;49;22 - 00;18;53;01 And this is where I find where animation comes in so handy. 00;18;53;01 - 00;18;55;08 And it's it's just done so beautifully. 00;18;55;08 - 00;18;59;28 Is that it can it can just take the viewer 00;19;00;02 - 00;19;04;10 deeper, I think, into the understanding of what the 00;19;04;13 - 00;19;07;13 what the information is that's trying to be delivered. 00;19;07;13 - 00;19;13;12 So that was how we decided to do the pause framework as an animation. 00;19;13;14 - 00;19;15;03 Yeah, that's very cool. 00;19;15;03 - 00;19;15;14 Can I? Yeah. 00;19;15;14 - 00;19;18;20 Can I ask a, sorry, can I ask a offshoot question there? 00;19;18;22 - 00;19;19;07 Love it. 00;19;19;07 - 00;19;22;18 Do you ever like how many metaphors are in there? 00;19;22;18 - 00;19;26;23 Like we've done a DEI sort of training thing for someone else 00;19;26;23 - 00;19;31;06 and it was in the workplace and a lot of the themes that we kept 00;19;31;06 - 00;19;33;23 hearing in the conversation was we don't want to show people, 00;19;33;23 - 00;19;36;20 we don't want to show like, we don't want to make it super personal 00;19;36;20 - 00;19;39;02 because, you know, everyone's going to look at it differently. 00;19;39;02 - 00;19;42;06 So how can we show this like DEI thing differently 00;19;42;06 - 00;19;46;01 in our solution to that was making them pens and pencils. 00;19;46;03 - 00;19;50;24 So we were kind of talking about like different writing styles in a way. 00;19;50;25 - 00;19;54;05 Like there are different ways to approach that. 00;19;54;05 - 00;19;57;28 So have do you find yourself using metaphors more 00;19;57;28 - 00;20;01;09 and more in these trainings, or is that not something that happens? 00;20;01;12 - 00;20;02;25 Or do you get right into it? 00;20;02;25 - 00;20;04;23 You're like, Nope, this like is 00;20;04;23 - 00;20;08;19 if I feel like on the flip side of that, like there's times where it probably calls 00;20;08;19 - 00;20;13;12 for being super direct and literal just because of the subject matter. 00;20;13;12 - 00;20;17;12 So I'm imagining there's probably like a place and time for each of those things. 00;20;17;17 - 00;20;18;13 Exactly. 00;20;18;13 - 00;20;18;27 Yeah. 00;20;18;27 - 00;20;22;08 And I would say it is true if we are talking about something, 00;20;22;08 - 00;20;25;24 ...something particularly tied to an identity. 00;20;25;26 - 00;20;29;01 We would want to be specific about that, I think. 00;20;29;08 - 00;20;34;04 But you know, when when we do use imagery, illustrations, 00;20;34;06 - 00;20;37;19 you know, they can be of people that's usually like non-descript. 00;20;37;19 - 00;20;41;28 One of my favorite illustrations is is actually a graphic 00;20;41;28 - 00;20;45;19 where it describes the difference between equity and equality. 00;20;45;22 - 00;20;46;26 I don't know if you've ever seen it. 00;20;46;26 - 00;20;48;21 It's not the one with the baseball field. 00;20;48;21 - 00;20;50;12 That's not a good one to use. 00;20;50;12 - 00;20;54;19 Don't use that one. For the listeners, don’t use that one. 00;20;54;21 - 00;20;56;05 Is not a good one. 00;20;56;05 - 00;20;59;26 But the one that I love is if you can imagine at the top, 00;20;59;29 - 00;21;01;20 there's there's basically two panels. 00;21;01;20 - 00;21;07;24 The top panel is showing what equality looks like and it has a bicycle. 00;21;07;24 - 00;21;11;17 Everyone's on a bicycle, but there's a tall man, 00;21;11;18 - 00;21;15;11 there's a woman, there's someone with a disability. 00;21;15;14 - 00;21;18;24 There is, I think, a little a child. 00;21;18;24 - 00;21;22;05 And they all have the same adult bike. 00;21;22;08 - 00;21;23;08 So that's equality. 00;21;23;08 - 00;21;25;06 Everyone's been given that bike. 00;21;25;06 - 00;21;27;24 Then on the bottom is equity. 00;21;27;24 - 00;21;32;13 So equity is the same people, but everyone is given a bike that suits their needs. 00;21;32;13 - 00;21;36;06 So the child has a smaller bike, the really tall person 00;21;36;06 - 00;21;40;01 has a bigger bike, the disabled person has a recumbent bike. 00;21;40;04 - 00;21;43;04 And so they all so that's really what equity is. 00;21;43;05 - 00;21;46;26 And I find that visual to be so powerful 00;21;46;29 - 00;21;49;14 that when as soon as someone sees it, if they had 00;21;49;14 - 00;21;53;13 any sort of questions around the difference between the two, it 00;21;53;13 - 00;21;57;04 instantly clears it up because it's like, Oh, okay, I get it. 00;21;57;10 - 00;21;58;21 That is what equity is. 00;21;58;21 - 00;22;02;25 And then and then it translates into everything 00;22;02;25 - 00;22;06;15 that we think about in the world, whether that's in the workplace 00;22;06;18 - 00;22;12;13 or in literally, you know, on the streets and in our world. 00;22;12;18 - 00;22;16;04 So I think it's a really powerful image. 00;22;16;06 - 00;22;17;09 That's really interesting. 00;22;17;09 - 00;22;17;14 Yeah. 00;22;17;14 - 00;22;18;27 I mean, well, also, you're very good 00;22;18;27 - 00;22;22;05 at just like describing the visual as, oh, good. 00;22;22;07 - 00;22;23;01 Also. Yeah. 00;22;23;01 - 00;22;26;08 Which is also, I think a key component now like especially nowadays 00;22;26;09 - 00;22;31;24 and in being mindful of accessibility and to use descriptors and like words 00;22;31;24 - 00;22;35;10 are just as important as visuals and finding the, you know, the balance 00;22;35;10 - 00;22;38;29 between the two is a beautiful thing when it can when you can nail it. 00;22;39;02 - 00;22;40;04 That's a great point. 00;22;40;04 - 00;22;44;08 And I would imagine that that's harder with animation 00;22;44;11 - 00;22;45;19 in the work that you do, right? 00;22;45;19 - 00;22;46;29 It's easy to describe a picture, 00;22;46;29 - 00;22;49;05 but you saw how long it took me to describe a picture. 00;22;49;05 - 00;22;50;21 Imagine an animation. 00;22;50;21 - 00;22;51;17 That's it's always 00;22;51;17 - 00;22;55;03 one of the interesting things we find is that whenever we're working with 00;22;55;03 - 00;22;59;14 like a script and someone comes to us, they say, This is the idea we have. 00;22;59;14 - 00;23;01;04 This is the script we've written. 00;23;01;04 - 00;23;05;23 A lot of times our job is to kind of read through the words really deliberately 00;23;05;23 - 00;23;09;20 to say, you know, a lot of this section that you're going for here, 00;23;09;20 - 00;23;12;07 I totally understand why you want to say it that way, 00;23;12;07 - 00;23;13;29 but you can just show it in a visual 00;23;13;29 - 00;23;16;26 and then you've eliminated like some of the the language 00;23;16;26 - 00;23;18;18 in the script or you've you've shortened the video 00;23;18;18 - 00;23;21;05 in some way or like and sometimes it's a mix of both. 00;23;21;05 - 00;23;25;09 Sometimes we'll take the written words and say, okay, well, this is so important. 00;23;25;09 - 00;23;28;09 We need to emphasize it again through text on screen, 00;23;28;12 - 00;23;30;15 like so that you hear and visually see. 00;23;30;15 - 00;23;35;02 Because I think in a lot of times you might come across this as well, where 00;23;35;05 - 00;23;38;11 you're finding a balance and like the webinars and trainings that you're doing, 00;23;38;14 - 00;23;41;08 the balance between showing visuals 00;23;41;08 - 00;23;44;27 and lots of text while somebody's talking 00;23;44;29 - 00;23;47;17 and making sure that like, yes, no one's 00;23;47;17 - 00;23;51;17 spending too much time reading the text and not hearing what you have to say. 00;23;51;17 - 00;23;54;17 So I imagine you're you're experiencing that as well. 00;23;54;22 - 00;23;57;13 Exactly. I mean, that's a huge, huge thing. 00;23;57;13 - 00;24;01;01 I mean, one thing that we talk a lot about when when facilitating 00;24;01;01 - 00;24;04;18 really anything, but certainly this work 00;24;04;21 - 00;24;08;19 is it's really important to make sure that you're not just, you know, a body 00;24;08;27 - 00;24;14;05 that's reading off of a slide like, oh, my gosh, like I'm not interested, right? 00;24;14;05 - 00;24;15;12 Like, 00;24;15;14 - 00;24;17;07 so you want to keep it engaging. 00;24;17;07 - 00;24;21;15 You want to use different tools, You want to have different visuals and 00;24;21;15 - 00;24;26;18 videos to keep focusing, especially in the virtual world, 00;24;26;18 - 00;24;30;00 where if you're doing a virtual session, I mean, my goodness, we're competing 00;24;30;00 - 00;24;34;26 with the world's knowledge and information and inboxes. 00;24;35;02 - 00;24;37;07 So yeah, we get it. 00;24;37;07 - 00;24;40;03 We're going to keep them entertained. Yes. 00;24;40;03 - 00;24;40;12 You know. 00;24;40;12 - 00;24;43;13 That's because I was going to ask you the sort of like side question, but 00;24;43;13 - 00;24;48;20 it's like, how do you make DEI feel fun to learn? how. 00;24;48;22 - 00;24;50;17 Do you put it? I know I have one. 00;24;50;17 - 00;24;51;27 You put it in the metaverse. 00;24;51;27 - 00;24;54;16 Of course. A training you take through the metaverse. 00;24;54;16 - 00;24;58;12 Yeah, you're all in VR headsets in a virtual office. 00;24;58;15 - 00;25;00;02 So authentic, you know. 00;25;00;02 - 00;25;00;17 You know. 00;25;00;17 - 00;25;03;13 It's funny, you're laughing, but there's actually 00;25;03;13 - 00;25;06;09 there's probably several companies I know of, at least one 00;25;06;09 - 00;25;10;13 that and I will say back and I think I was like 2019, 00;25;10;13 - 00;25;14;05 I actually turned to Felicia and I was like, “Should we get into VR?” 00;25;14;08 - 00;25;18;00 Like, I feel like this could be a thing because 00;25;18;02 - 00;25;21;16 if you want to get that simulated experience. 00;25;21;16 - 00;25;21;28 Yeah. 00;25;21;28 - 00;25;25;00 So that's one of the things about how to keep folks engaged. 00;25;25;02 - 00;25;28;16 Honestly, it's making it as relevant to the work 00;25;28;22 - 00;25;31;19 that they the what they are experiencing as possible. 00;25;31;19 - 00;25;34;07 So one thing that's important for us is making sure 00;25;34;07 - 00;25;36;00 that we're not doing anything cookie cutter. 00;25;36;00 - 00;25;40;29 So when we deliver a workshop, there's always going to be some element 00;25;40;29 - 00;25;41;29 that's going to be relevant. 00;25;41;29 - 00;25;44;01 So we're industry agnostic. 00;25;44;01 - 00;25;46;27 So what that means is we have a conversation with the companies 00;25;46;27 - 00;25;51;05 that we work with and then we learn about what their needs are. 00;25;51;05 - 00;25;53;01 We learn a little bit about their industry sometimes. 00;25;53;01 - 00;25;56;26 So one client we had a while ago is Central Park Conservancy. 00;25;56;28 - 00;25;58;23 We had never worked with 00;25;58;23 - 00;26;02;14 a public parks system, but they had unique challenges, right? 00;26;02;14 - 00;26;06;22 I mean, in DEI and it was really important 00;26;06;22 - 00;26;10;10 for us to make sure that we were creating scenarios 00;26;10;12 - 00;26;14;19 that were specific to the parks and they appreciated that. 00;26;14;19 - 00;26;20;01 And that's how they say, I think, I don't know about fun, maybe fun? 00;26;20;03 - 00;26;22;13 Certainly engaged. Engaging. 00;26;22;13 - 00;26;23;27 Yeah, Yeah. 00;26;23;27 - 00;26;29;10 I think fun... Fun is such an interesting word because. 00;26;29;13 - 00;26;30;02 Right. 00;26;30;02 - 00;26;32;03 Like how do you keep it? 00;26;32;03 - 00;26;34;00 How do you keep it fun? 00;26;34;00 - 00;26;38;09 I don't know that that's, that's a realistic goal, but I do think. 00;26;38;12 - 00;26;41;03 That's probably fair. Keeping engaged is definitely. 00;26;41;03 - 00;26;42;18 It's a it's a solid question, though. 00;26;42;18 - 00;26;45;29 And I'm like, how do we keep it fun. 00;26;46;02 - 00;26;46;28 ... 00;26;46;28 - 00;26;49;07 Going back to this... circling a little back to this 00;26;49;07 - 00;26;54;11 VR thing, there was a project we did once that was like a training video 00;26;54;14 - 00;26;57;22 for like workplace safety in a warehouse. 00;26;57;28 - 00;27;00;05 And it was it was all through VR. 00;27;00;05 - 00;27;01;29 So that you were actually... that way. 00;27;01;29 - 00;27;02;29 They could like 00;27;02;29 - 00;27;07;15 they could recreate the environment with animation so they could say like, 00;27;07;15 - 00;27;09;21 Oh, somebody is about to get hit by a forklift. 00;27;09;21 - 00;27;11;00 What do you do in this moment? 00;27;11;00 - 00;27;12;15 And so you feel like you were there. 00;27;12;15 - 00;27;16;26 So it again, it's it's so interesting that like sometimes we'll laugh about it, 00;27;16;26 - 00;27;21;25 but there are like very real practical applications of every medium 00;27;21;25 - 00;27;25;01 that you can... as long as you know how to tap into each one of them. 00;27;25;01 - 00;27;26;07 That like 00;27;26;07 - 00;27;30;16 it just allows you to do so much more than we might have thought otherwise. 00;27;30;24 - 00;27;33;02 Yeah, I completely agree. Yeah. 00;27;33;02 - 00;27;37;08 You talked about long form and short form content and I just I guess I want to get 00;27;37;08 - 00;27;40;19 a little bit of your strategy in here, just so that I understand. 00;27;40;19 - 00;27;45;08 Like, who are you like shooting short form content to versus long form content? 00;27;45;08 - 00;27;49;01 Is it someone who maybe perhaps doesn't 00;27;49;04 - 00;27;51;24 care as much or is maybe a little bit more removed? 00;27;51;24 - 00;27;55;23 You give them the short form content because like I'm thinking of like a DEI funnel 00;27;55;29 - 00;27;56;28 in a way, like, 00;27;56;28 - 00;27;59;28 you know, a marketing funnel where like the at the very top 00;27;59;28 - 00;28;02;08 you have folks who don't know anything about it 00;28;02;08 - 00;28;05;19 and maybe a short form thing makes a little bit more sense. 00;28;05;21 - 00;28;08;29 And as soon as you go sort of down that funnel, you might get more 00;28;08;29 - 00;28;10;04 into the longer form content. 00;28;10;04 - 00;28;13;26 So I'm curious as to is that what you're doing? 00;28;13;28 - 00;28;15;16 Is that a different...? 00;28;15;16 - 00;28;16;27 I mean, you nailed it. 00;28;16;27 - 00;28;18;04 So that is. 00;28;18;04 - 00;28;20;16 Yeah, that is that's absolutely one. 00;28;20;16 - 00;28;26;08 One aspect of it for sure is getting folks that maybe are curious, 00;28;26;08 - 00;28;30;06 but you know, it's not a priority that they can sort of 00;28;30;06 - 00;28;33;14 get into that and then it's possible that they want to go in deeper. 00;28;33;14 - 00;28;35;20 We, you know, our name is She+ Geeks Out. 00;28;35;20 - 00;28;39;02 We talk about geeking out about things like so we say 00;28;39;05 - 00;28;41;25 if you want to geek out about stuff, we've got you covered. 00;28;41;25 - 00;28;43;22 Got a lot of stuff for you. 00;28;43;22 - 00;28;46;22 And then I think there are just folks that learn differently. 00;28;46;28 - 00;28;50;27 So that's the other reason is there are or not even learn differently, 00;28;50;27 - 00;28;52;10 but just literally don't have the time. 00;28;52;10 - 00;28;56;12 So they may be super curious, but they have so many things that are going 00;28;56;12 - 00;29;01;08 on. They just need something that is going to give them some information 00;29;01;10 - 00;29;02;05 that they're looking. 00;29;02;05 - 00;29;03;08 So the Ask SGO, 00;29;03;08 - 00;29;05;14 The purpose of it is there's you know, we have like 00;29;05;14 - 00;29;06;27 sort of a frequently asked questions. 00;29;06;27 - 00;29;10;10 We get people sort of asking the same questions over and over again, 00;29;10;13 - 00;29;12;24 but want to just answer it in video format. Great. 00;29;12;24 - 00;29;14;19 That's wonderful. We get it. 00;29;14;19 - 00;29;17;19 But there are other folks that, so long... I consider the podcast right 00;29;17;19 - 00;29;21;12 is a long form content and so there are people that 00;29;21;14 - 00;29;23;12 don't want to be in front of their screens anymore. 00;29;23;12 - 00;29;25;29 Wonderful. Take us with you. 00;29;25;29 - 00;29;30;14 Bring your little ear buds and we'll we'll, we'll travel with you. 00;29;30;14 - 00;29;34;18 And while you're on your walk in, getting fresh air and then that works out 00;29;34;20 - 00;29;38;20 so it's it's it's really meant for having people who have just 00;29;38;20 - 00;29;43;03 different needs and then how we choose the content is really based on 00;29;43;03 - 00;29;47;11 what's feasible, what what are the things that we can actually provide 00;29;47;11 - 00;29;50;20 that are in smaller bits versus the longer. 00;29;50;27 - 00;29;55;00 Yeah, it feels like what I feel like I'm hearing there is there's this idea of 00;29;55;00 - 00;29;58;28 in your marketing strategies and even in just the, the work that you do, there's 00;29;58;28 - 00;30;03;02 a lot of like meeting people where they're at so that you can 00;30;03;02 - 00;30;06;02 then adapt to their needs and then they, they feel 00;30;06;05 - 00;30;06;18 when you, 00;30;06;18 - 00;30;09;16 when you show them this kind of level of like respective like, okay, 00;30;09;16 - 00;30;10;22 we understand where you are 00;30;10;22 - 00;30;14;06 and we're happy to work with you to get to this other place like that's 00;30;14;06 - 00;30;18;14 so much more inviting and warm and like, you know, purposeful 00;30;18;14 - 00;30;22;08 than just saying like, oh, you might need this 40 years from now. 00;30;22;08 - 00;30;24;24 Like, it's like if you if you don't need it 00;30;24;24 - 00;30;26;29 now, it's okay if you do need it here, we got you. 00;30;26;29 - 00;30;30;28 Like, there's just something about that that I think is really wonderful to see. 00;30;30;28 - 00;30;34;24 So I applaud you for doing that work because I think I think sometimes 00;30;34;24 - 00;30;39;10 it can seem like more work on the side of like the communication side 00;30;39;10 - 00;30;43;03 to, like, be like we've had discussions with different companies 00;30;43;03 - 00;30;44;13 over the years that are like, 00;30;44;13 - 00;30;48;01 how do we really need to put in all these closed captioning and all this here? 00;30;48;01 - 00;30;51;27 And like, you know, take our blog and make it short form over here. 00;30;52;04 - 00;30;54;02 It's like, yeah, yeah, yeah. 00;30;54;02 - 00;30;56;16 That's important work if it makes a big difference. 00;30;56;16 - 00;31;00;07 So I think it's a just a testament to the work that you're doing. 00;31;00;10 - 00;31;01;11 Well, I love this. 00;31;01;11 - 00;31;02;05 Thank you so much. 00;31;02;05 - 00;31;04;24 I'll take in all of those wonderful compliments. 00;31;04;24 - 00;31;06;16 I always, always. 00;31;06;16 - 00;31;09;29 Are you familiar with the platinum rule versus the Golden Rule? 00;31;10;01 - 00;31;12;23 No. No. So it's what I'm ready to learn? 00;31;12;23 - 00;31;16;08 Yeah, it's one of my favorite things that I think about it a lot. 00;31;16;08 - 00;31;18;06 And it's I think it's related to what you said. 00;31;18;06 - 00;31;22;10 So the golden rules, you know, treat people how you want to be treated. 00;31;22;12 - 00;31;25;20 The platinum rule is treat people how they want to be treated. 00;31;25;22 - 00;31;29;09 And when I started out as a people 00;31;29;09 - 00;31;32;21 manager many, many moons ago, I was terrible at it. 00;31;32;21 - 00;31;38;01 Absolute garbage. You know, partly my fault, partly the fall of the company, 00;31;38;01 - 00;31;42;17 that for not giving me any training, which is very true, I had a lot of places. 00;31;42;19 - 00;31;45;19 But as I've evolved and learned more, 00;31;45;21 - 00;31;50;19 the Platinum Rule has always stuck with me and I think about that 00;31;50;21 - 00;31;53;04 with regard to everything that I do, 00;31;53;04 - 00;31;56;29 is do your best to be empathetic to what is happening on the other 00;31;56;29 - 00;32;02;09 side of the screen or the desk or the table or wherever you are, 00;32;02;11 - 00;32;04;10 because you have no idea 00;32;04;10 - 00;32;08;10 what stories are happening, what is going on with that other person. 00;32;08;13 - 00;32;12;08 All you can do is lead with empathy and try to be... 00;32;12;10 - 00;32;16;21 try to recognize where that folk, where that person's coming from 00;32;16;24 - 00;32;20;07 and provide information and be as helpful as you can. 00;32;20;10 - 00;32;23;10 If we all did, that would probably have world peace. 00;32;23;11 - 00;32;26;01 It would be nice. It would be lovely... 00;32;26;01 - 00;32;27;18 Wouldn’t we all love that. Yes. 00;32;27;18 - 00;32;27;29 Yeah. 00;32;27;29 - 00;32;31;22 I think that this touches a little bit on a question I have because 00;32;31;25 - 00;32;33;13 you're kind of tapping into it already. 00;32;33;13 - 00;32;37;19 But, you know, in this in this idea of doing communications work, trying 00;32;37;19 - 00;32;43;08 to get your message out there, what advice might you give to other organizations 00;32;43;08 - 00;32;48;05 who are looking to do like any, you know, marketing communication efforts? 00;32;48;05 - 00;32;51;16 But even within animation, like where would you recommend they 00;32;51;18 - 00;32;54;11 how they think about it or how they approach it 00;32;54;11 - 00;32;57;13 if it's something they've never done before, what advice might you have? 00;32;57;14 - 00;32;58;29 Yeah, yeah. 00;32;58;29 - 00;33;00;19 I mean, I don't think I'm going to say anything 00;33;00;19 - 00;33;05;02 that's particularly brilliant here or surprising. 00;33;05;02 - 00;33;07;03 You just blew me away with the Platinum Rule. 00;33;07;03 - 00;33;07;29 I know. I did it. 00;33;07;29 - 00;33;10;13 That was it. Yes, yes, yes. 00;33;10;13 - 00;33;11;27 Interview over. 00;33;11;27 - 00;33;14;15 oh right the like, what is it, like a one hit wonder? 00;33;14;15 - 00;33;16;14 Exactly, exactly, exactly. 00;33;16;14 - 00;33;21;14 I did it. We’re done. Go out on top. Yes. 00;33;21;17 - 00;33;21;26 Yeah. 00;33;21;26 - 00;33;24;09 I mean I think that there's a lot of practical advice 00;33;24;09 - 00;33;27;08 that I think we're all pretty familiar with, which is, 00;33;27;09 - 00;33;29;09 you know, just be really intentional, 00;33;29;09 - 00;33;32;06 really understand why you're doing what you're doing. 00;33;32;06 - 00;33;34;23 I just think that we can kind of get shiny 00;33;34;23 - 00;33;37;26 ball syndrome and be like, Oh, I want to do this thing. 00;33;37;26 - 00;33;42;07 It looks really cool, whether it's VR or animation or whatever it is. 00;33;42;09 - 00;33;43;27 But be really clear. 00;33;43;27 - 00;33;48;18 And also think about the longevity, because I think when you're investing in 00;33;48;18 - 00;33;51;18 something like animation, it is a little different than when you're 00;33;51;18 - 00;33;53;22 writing a blog post where you can just like 00;33;53;22 - 00;33;57;11 that change up the words that you needed to write or the link 00;33;57;14 - 00;34;01;06 When you're committing to animation, it's something that you know, ideally 00;34;01;06 - 00;34;04;05 you're going to want it to last for a while 00;34;04;08 - 00;34;08;19 and think about what its applications are and why you're doing it, 00;34;08;19 - 00;34;12;06 and ideally partner with some really smart folks 00;34;12;08 - 00;34;13;28 that I happened to be talking with. 00;34;13;28 - 00;34;17;04 But I think that that intentionality piece we we talk a lot 00;34;17;04 - 00;34;20;04 I think in business about like what are your goals 00;34;20;11 - 00;34;24;03 but and sometimes it can sound nebulous 00;34;24;05 - 00;34;27;08 but I think if you can really ground it in practical terms, 00;34;27;08 - 00;34;30;08 really, what is your goal for this form of communication? 00;34;30;08 - 00;34;34;04 Why are you doing... If your instinct first is, 00;34;34;04 - 00;34;37;04 I want to do an animation, but I'm not sure what I want to do it on. 00;34;37;11 - 00;34;39;24 Well, ask yourself why? What? 00;34;39;24 - 00;34;40;21 What is it? 00;34;40;21 - 00;34;43;11 What is it that you're trying to achieve here? 00;34;43;11 - 00;34;45;25 And then sort of try to work the other way around. 00;34;45;25 - 00;34;48;22 Like I said, nothing sort of like mind blowing, but. 00;34;48;22 - 00;34;51;15 Yeah, crucial. Yeah. 00;34;51;17 - 00;34;54;04 No, these are things that we need reminders of too. 00;34;54;04 - 00;34;57;04 I think a lot of times it's especially in the, in the, 00;34;57;10 - 00;35;00;06 the day and age of like feeling like 00;35;00;06 - 00;35;05;14 the need to just pump out content as much as possible is like 00;35;05;16 - 00;35;09;01 there's that I think we go into that panic zone of like, 00;35;09;08 - 00;35;10;28 how are we going to put out all this content? 00;35;10;28 - 00;35;12;28 Okay, let's throw this here, let's throw this here. 00;35;12;28 - 00;35;17;21 Like without that, that time and care pause to think about, 00;35;17;24 - 00;35;22;16 is this the right decision like it's I so I applaud you for like 00;35;22;19 - 00;35;25;07 just everything that you're doing because I think that there's 00;35;25;07 - 00;35;28;07 there's something really important about needing 00;35;28;09 - 00;35;32;06 and honoring the time it takes to do this type of work. 00;35;32;08 - 00;35;32;28 Thank you. 00;35;32;28 - 00;35;34;00 It's it's great. 00;35;34;00 - 00;35;37;25 You know, I feel very fortunate to 00;35;37;27 - 00;35;38;21 not only 00;35;38;21 - 00;35;42;14 do this work, but also the fact that we do. 00;35;42;14 - 00;35;45;23 I personally love being able to work in different media 00;35;45;23 - 00;35;49;20 and different forms of communication because I get bored really easily. 00;35;49;26 - 00;35;54;11 So so it's really nice to be able to to do different things 00;35;54;11 - 00;35;59;14 and to challenge myself in different ways and and have our our team 00;35;59;14 - 00;36;03;23 to sort of grow in all these ways as well. 00;36;03;25 - 00;36;06;29 So I want to just quickly circle back to the 00;36;06;29 - 00;36;10;16 I know that's a business term I love every time I say it, but it's. 00;36;10;16 - 00;36;13;13 No, let's get some synergies going. I'm ready. 00;36;13;13 - 00;36;17;20 Yes. So I want to just acknowledge earlier you mentioned, too, 00;36;17;20 - 00;36;22;28 that you could kind of touch on sort of where the DEI space is right now. 00;36;23;00 - 00;36;23;25 Oh, yeah. 00;36;23;25 - 00;36;27;14 So I want to just leave space for that because I think that that's important 00;36;27;14 - 00;36;29;27 for people to hear, because we've had conversations 00;36;29;27 - 00;36;33;19 over the years with different folks in in many, 00;36;33;25 - 00;36;36;19 I guess, other industries as well, but mostly in the animation space. 00;36;36;19 - 00;36;40;05 And we're asking questions like when budget cuts happen, 00;36;40;05 - 00;36;43;04 how do you make sure that DEI is not cut from that budget like. 00;36;43;04 - 00;36;46;25 So there's I'm kind of curious where in our current moment in time 00;36;46;25 - 00;36;49;11 you're seeing the space overall? 00;36;49;13 - 00;36;51;24 Yeah, it has been a wild ride. 00;36;51;24 - 00;36;56;11 So, you know, back in 2017 when we started this work, 00;36;56;11 - 00;37;01;00 I like to call it like it was it was the Wild West 00;37;01;03 - 00;37;04;06 and I mean not that this work hadn't been being done and called 00;37;04;06 - 00;37;07;27 something else multicultural work, whatever, for decades, 00;37;07;29 - 00;37;10;25 but it was kind of the Wild West, you know, not no real 00;37;10;25 - 00;37;15;13 formal education around it, nothing really specific. 00;37;15;15 - 00;37;17;22 And then and that was evolving. 00;37;17;22 - 00;37;21;18 And there were more programs, more certificates, more master's programs. 00;37;21;18 - 00;37;24;29 You're seeing more of that, you know, those concentrations. 00;37;25;02 - 00;37;27;16 And then in 2020, with the murder of George Floyd 00;37;27;16 - 00;37;32;17 and so many others, what we found was there was a gold rush 00;37;32;19 - 00;37;35;19 and it went from, you know, 00;37;35;21 - 00;37;41;07 a lot of really dedicated people doing it to a lot of folks who maybe saw 00;37;41;15 - 00;37;44;25 financial opportunities and ran with that 00;37;44;25 - 00;37;47;25 and in a variety of different ways. 00;37;47;28 - 00;37;51;06 And then in I would say over the past a year 00;37;51;07 - 00;37;54;22 or so, there was a downslide. 00;37;54;25 - 00;37;57;20 Not only was the market sort of saturated, 00;37;57;20 - 00;38;00;11 but there was fatigue, diversity, fatigue. 00;38;00;11 - 00;38;02;28 And I think that that still exists. 00;38;02;28 - 00;38;07;22 And it has been compounded with all of the news in the world 00;38;07;24 - 00;38;11;17 that's happening, whether it's I'll just pick two big items, 00;38;11;20 - 00;38;16;07 you know, climate change and Dobbsl. I think that are both, 00;38;16;07 - 00;38;20;06 I think, related to the work that we do and critically important. 00;38;20;09 - 00;38;22;04 So There's fatigue. 00;38;22;04 - 00;38;24;14 Meanwhile, there are so many crises. 00;38;24;14 - 00;38;27;02 I'm not even going to talk about the politics right now. 00;38;27;02 - 00;38;29;26 There are so many crises that are happening. 00;38;29;26 - 00;38;34;15 And I think people the workplace is evolving. 00;38;34;17 - 00;38;35;15 I think 00;38;35;15 - 00;38;38;10 with also the advent of remote work 00;38;38;10 - 00;38;41;22 because of COVID and that shift happening. 00;38;41;25 - 00;38;46;19 And then I think there is in a way, an awakening where folks are realizing 00;38;46;21 - 00;38;51;02 that companies aren't necessarily going to care 00;38;51;02 - 00;38;56;14 as much about their employees as they maybe said that they did in 2020, 2021. 00;38;56;16 - 00;38;57;07 Right. 00;38;57;07 - 00;39;00;28 And that's that's been proven out with layoffs and with cuts 00;39;00;28 - 00;39;04;11 on benefits, with sort of heartless acts 00;39;04;12 - 00;39;06;05 I think. 00;39;06;05 - 00;39;10;05 Yeah, we've seen this very greatly recently on the animation side, 00;39;10;05 - 00;39;15;00 I think it was something like 16,000 jobs have been cut over the last year or so. 00;39;15;00 - 00;39;17;26 So, yeah, totally understand where you're coming from. 00;39;17;26 - 00;39;18;24 Exactly. Right. 00;39;18;24 - 00;39;24;17 So how, so if you think about it, it behooves companies to continue to 00;39;24;17 - 00;39;27;21 do this work because employees 00;39;27;29 - 00;39;32;12 are caring less and less about companies. 00;39;32;14 - 00;39;34;27 So I think we're in this 00;39;34;27 - 00;39;39;07 really interesting time where I think not only are we seeing companies 00;39;39;07 - 00;39;43;06 sort of scale back their efforts around DEI. Not all of them, 00;39;43;06 - 00;39;44;09 mind you, 00;39;44;09 - 00;39;46;22 there are definitely still companies that are totally committed to it 00;39;46;22 - 00;39;49;05 because they get it and they know that it's important. 00;39;49;05 - 00;39;54;00 Yeah, I think you also have the compounded factor of employees 00;39;54;00 - 00;39;57;10 caring less about the workplace 00;39;57;12 - 00;40;01;19 because they why would they care about the workplace when they're focused on 00;40;01;21 - 00;40;05;11 They've got to focus on their home and their family 00;40;05;12 - 00;40;08;16 because that's the stuff that matters and it ends up becoming it's 00;40;08;16 - 00;40;13;01 more of a transactional relationship, I think, within companies now. 00;40;13;08 - 00;40;15;26 So I think there's going to be some sort of a reckoning. 00;40;15;26 - 00;40;19;23 And I think that's what we're sort of facing now, is employers and employees 00;40;19;26 - 00;40;25;08 needing to find a way to trust each other again, which has been broken. 00;40;25;14 - 00;40;29;07 And then I think that there's a possibility that DEI in whatever 00;40;29;07 - 00;40;34;06 format, whether it's its current iteration or it evolves to something else, 00;40;34;08 - 00;40;37;28 I think that will still need to happen because, 00;40;38;01 - 00;40;41;16 you know, until the robots take over, we've got humans. 00;40;41;19 - 00;40;43;05 Yes. No. 00;40;43;05 - 00;40;45;11 It's a great point because I think that's also true, too. 00;40;45;11 - 00;40;48;24 Like a lot of what you were saying terms of what's been happening 00;40;48;24 - 00;40;52;11 is sort of parallel on our side with like what's happening with AI and like, 00;40;52;18 - 00;40;53;28 you know, everything's evolving. 00;40;53;28 - 00;40;57;18 So it's it is interesting to kind of 00;40;57;20 - 00;41;01;03 see everything that's happening, especially as like 00;41;01;05 - 00;41;04;03 as owners and trying to understand, okay, how do 00;41;04;03 - 00;41;08;13 how do we as as one company navigate this very big landscape. 00;41;08;13 - 00;41;12;00 So yeah, I appreciate the transparency that you're sharing. 00;41;12;00 - 00;41;15;16 So I think there's there's a lot there that I think 00;41;15;18 - 00;41;20;06 I think is helpful for people to see that it's yeah, you're very conscious of 00;41;20;06 - 00;41;25;28 and it's not just a going back to that idea of like DEI is not a transaction, it's 00;41;26;00 - 00;41;30;15 Yeah, it's a change in like in the way that companies 00;41;30;15 - 00;41;35;17 have been run for a long time and that's, Yeah, that can be very Panic-Zony. 00;41;35;17 - 00;41;38;18 But yeah very Panic-Zony. Yeah. 00;41;38;18 - 00;41;40;22 Yeah that's my new term now. 00;41;40;22 - 00;41;41;13 I love it. 00;41;41;13 - 00;41;46;05 Well and you think about it I mean companies have been making 00;41;46;07 - 00;41;48;27 millions and millions and millions of dollars 00;41;48;27 - 00;41;52;12 with still primarily white men in charge of everything. 00;41;52;14 - 00;41;56;05 So I think there's this sort of short term view of like, 00;41;56;05 - 00;41;57;29 well, it's just going to be this way. 00;41;57;29 - 00;42;01;01 Like while the demographics are shifting, I think. 00;42;01;01 - 00;42;02;02 Mark Cuban, 00;42;02;02 - 00;42;06;29 I don't know if you saw any of that debate between Mark Cuban and Elon Musk. 00;42;07;01 - 00;42;09;29 Elon is not one of my favorite people. I’m just going to have 00;42;09;29 - 00;42;11;29 to, you know, put it out there. 00;42;11;29 - 00;42;14;00 I feel very comfortable saying that because I don't 00;42;14;00 - 00;42;18;00 I think I'm pretty small potatoes. I don't think he's going to come after me. 00;42;18;02 - 00;42;18;16 Yeah. 00;42;18;16 - 00;42;18;29 Yeah. 00;42;18;29 - 00;42;21;29 So but he sort of, you know, he made some so he said 00;42;21;29 - 00;42;24;29 DEI must DIE, right. 00;42;25;05 - 00;42;29;26 Lovely, pithy, little annoying statement And Mark Cuban, who for the 00;42;29;26 - 00;42;33;19 for those of you who may not know him was, you know, he's a shark tank 00;42;33;22 - 00;42;39;06 entrepreneur, millionaire, Dallas Mavericks owner, blah, blah, blah. 00;42;39;08 - 00;42;40;02 He sold. It. 00;42;40;02 - 00;42;43;02 He did just sell it. He just sold it, right? Yeah. 00;42;43;07 - 00;42;45;13 It was a great interview with him. 00;42;45;13 - 00;42;48;04 I highly recommend the Trevor Noah podcast. 00;42;48;04 - 00;42;48;26 Yeah. Oh yes. 00;42;48;26 - 00;42;50;11 Yeah, definitely. Right now. 00;42;50;11 - 00;42;52;05 Yeah. What now. Exactly. It's great. 00;42;52;05 - 00;42;55;20 And he was on there and they were talking about DEI 00;42;55;20 - 00;42;59;05 in the future DEI because he basically was like, 00;42;59;08 - 00;43;03;12 Elon, you're an idiot because the future is DEI. 00;43;03;15 - 00;43;06;09 Yes Yes, we this is the world that we live in. 00;43;06;09 - 00;43;11;03 The generations after us are like, What are you even talking... 00;43;11;03 - 00;43;15;27 Why would there be these crazy power dynamics that don't make any sense? 00;43;15;27 - 00;43;18;08 Like, we need to get it together? So. 00;43;18;08 - 00;43;19;25 So, yeah. 00;43;19;25 - 00;43;20;14 Thank you. Thank you. 00;43;20;14 - 00;43;22;07 One last question, and it's a big one. 00;43;22;07 - 00;43;24;02 And so anyway, we can cut if it doesn’t work. 00;43;24;02 - 00;43;25;06 Yeah. 00;43;25;06 - 00;43;28;21 I'm seeing a lot of parallels between how you describe 00;43;28;23 - 00;43;31;20 how DEI training started 00;43;31;20 - 00;43;36;08 and like how animation is currently. 00;43;36;10 - 00;43;39;05 Like there is this like old way of doing it 00;43;39;05 - 00;43;43;09 that like Disney built, but then all these like new tools 00;43;43;09 - 00;43;47;25 started to come up and different ways of working started to become available 00;43;47;25 - 00;43;51;26 and more accessible to people like us and other folks who are running 00;43;51;26 - 00;43;54;05 maybe their own smaller shops. 00;43;54;08 - 00;43;56;08 And there 00;43;56;08 - 00;44;00;08 seems to be, as time goes on, these like new tools 00;44;00;08 - 00;44;04;10 that keep popping up and making and maybe this is not true, 00;44;04;10 - 00;44;09;04 but I'm making a connection to like DEI’s like core things. 00;44;09;04 - 00;44;12;04 Are they changing as time goes on? 00;44;12;04 - 00;44;16;19 Because like, the way we work in, the tools that we use are changing. 00;44;16;21 - 00;44;19;08 They're changing internally as like standalone tools, 00;44;19;08 - 00;44;23;09 but also other new tools are coming in and changing the way we work. A.I. 00;44;23;09 - 00;44;24;11 for example. 00;44;24;11 - 00;44;29;10 So is that happening at like sort of a more conversational level 00;44;29;10 - 00;44;32;14 with DEI where like something is, you know, something's the norm. 00;44;32;14 - 00;44;36;12 This is how we talk about the DEI and then some other new thing pops up 00;44;36;12 - 00;44;40;28 and then you have to like, adjust your whole training set. So 00;44;41;00 - 00;44;41;27 yeah. 00;44;41;27 - 00;44;45;26 Oh, okay. 00;44;45;29 - 00;44;49;15 DEI is is ever evolving. 00;44;49;15 - 00;44;51;26 Got it. As humans evolve as generations. 00;44;51;26 - 00;44;56;21 So I'll give you one example is like so She+ Geeks Out, right 00;44;56;23 - 00;45;02;21 is women in tech and then we learn more about gender fluidity 00;45;02;23 - 00;45;04;28 and we're like, well, how do we bring in folks 00;45;04;28 - 00;45;08;18 that are non-binary, that are trans women that, you know, we want to make sure 00;45;08;18 - 00;45;11;16 that we're being inclusive and we really struggle with it 00;45;11;16 - 00;45;14;25 and so we decided to add a plus after “She” to 00;45;14;25 - 00;45;18;15 to that's why we did that was to sort it to bring that in together. 00;45;18;17 - 00;45;22;02 And I will give credit to Molly Walters in a conversation in case she is listening 00;45;22;02 - 00;45;23;03 or watching this. 00;45;23;03 - 00;45;25;25 She she and I had a conversation in front of a 00;45;25;25 - 00;45;28;00 I think it was like a Lesbians Who Tech conference. 00;45;28;00 - 00;45;30;11 We had a conversation and she was like, why don't you add a plus? 00;45;30;11 - 00;45;33;06 And I was like, That's a brilliant idea. 00;45;33;06 - 00;45;35;21 So I give her credit for that 00;45;35;23 - 00;45;38;13 and and to follow that and that, that has been great. 00;45;38;13 - 00;45;42;23 We we still have that to follow that we, we for a little while 00;45;42;23 - 00;45;46;05 there decided to get rid of the E in women and 00;45;46;09 - 00;45;49;08 and woman and put an X there instead 00;45;49;08 - 00;45;52;17 and when we did that we learned that we were actually alienating 00;45;52;17 - 00;45;56;27 some other folks who were really trans women who were like, No, 00;45;56;27 - 00;46;02;08 I'm actually I want the I want the A like I am a woman like and I don't want it. 00;46;02;10 - 00;46;03;21 I don't want to change that. 00;46;03;21 - 00;46;07;26 Don't don't change that to make it not that. That's an example. 00;46;07;26 - 00;46;10;13 So it it's really individual right 00;46;10;13 - 00;46;12;19 because you'll have a group of folks that feel that way 00;46;12;19 - 00;46;14;21 and then you'll have another group that feels this way. 00;46;14;21 - 00;46;19;25 So you try to understand that and provide context, even using gender pronouns 00;46;19;28 - 00;46;23;11 on the regular, there are folks that they're like, I will never forget. 00;46;23;11 - 00;46;28;02 I had a conversation with a woman who said, You know, I have been fighting 00;46;28;02 - 00;46;32;15 all my life to be in leadership and not have it be about my gender 00;46;32;22 - 00;46;36;26 and just respect me for like being a person doing this work. 00;46;36;29 - 00;46;40;04 And now you're asking me to, like, constantly refer to my gender and I don't 00;46;40;04 - 00;46;41;20 want to do that. 00;46;41;22 - 00;46;43;11 So it's it's always nuanced. 00;46;43;11 - 00;46;44;14 Yeah, it's always nuanced. 00;46;44;14 - 00;46;48;20 It's always complex, and it is absolutely evolving all the time. 00;46;48;20 - 00;46;50;09 Those are just like a few examples. 00;46;50;09 - 00;46;52;13 I have like 30 more, but no. 00;46;52;13 - 00;46;54;05 Yeah, no. That makes perfect sense. 00;46;54;05 - 00;46;55;04 Yeah. Yeah. 00;46;55;04 - 00;46;57;13 I think we're trying to be mindful of your time 00;46;57;13 - 00;46;59;03 because I feel like we could probably go for hours. 00;46;59;03 - 00;47;00;12 Oh, you're so sweet. We. 00;47;00;12 - 00;47;01;01 Yeah, we could. 00;47;01;01 - 00;47;03;22 We I mean, we, we probably a lot to talk about with Elon Musk. 00;47;03;22 - 00;47;07;04 But that'll be another podcast for another day. 00;47;07;06 - 00;47;10;26 But yes, so in the midst of things, if you know, if people are wanting 00;47;10;26 - 00;47;14;26 to learn more about She+ Geeks Out and where to go and they're saying, 00;47;14;26 - 00;47;17;03 you know what, I need to get in on the DEI training 00;47;17;03 - 00;47;19;29 or I need to be part of a community, where can they go? 00;47;19;29 - 00;47;23;28 How can they either follow you or contact you or anything of that nature 00;47;23;28 - 00;47;25;29 that you're that you're comfortable with? Yeah. 00;47;25;29 - 00;47;28;10 Yeah. Well, thank you for asking. Definitely. 00;47;28;10 - 00;47;33;10 SheGeeksOut.com is the number one best place, and there's offshoots from there. 00;47;33;10 - 00;47;38;26 We have SGOlearning.com, which is our online asynchronous learning platform. 00;47;38;28 - 00;47;39;25 You can find me 00;47;39;25 - 00;47;44;23 I actually my name is incredibly generic so you have to like Google Rachel Murray. 00;47;44;23 - 00;47;48;02 She geeks out really to find me but I'm on LinkedIn 00;47;48;04 - 00;47;53;10 and we're also on LinkedIn, YouTube, Instagram and the pod's so... Awesome. 00;47;53;10 - 00;47;55;23 Yeah. What's the what's the podcast called? 00;47;55;23 - 00;47;58;23 The She Geeks Out podcast. Oh Ok. 00;47;59;01 - 00;47;59;26 Love it. 00;47;59;26 - 00;48;03;05 Best branding pretty clear. That’s pretty clear. 00;48;03;07 - 00;48;04;03 That's all you need. 00;48;04;03 - 00;48;06;00 That's all. You need. 00;48;06;00 - 00;48;06;23 That's amazing. 00;48;06;23 - 00;48;06;27 Well, 00;48;06;27 - 00;48;11;04 yeah thank you so much for taking the time today for this wonderful conversation. 00;48;11;04 - 00;48;14;09 I felt like it was very it's very organic every time we talk to you 00;48;14;09 - 00;48;16;16 that it's there's just like we have a flow 00;48;16;16 - 00;48;19;08 that I'm just like, oh, yeah, let's talk about this. Okay, let's go on that. 00;48;19;08 - 00;48;21;07 Yeah, it's a. Wonderful thing. 00;48;21;07 - 00;48;22;01 Yeah. 00;48;22;01 - 00;48;23;11 I had a great time. 00;48;23;11 - 00;48;25;23 Yeah. Thank you. And we'll we'll talk to you soon. 00;48;25;23 - 00;48;27;00 Sounds great. 00;48;27;00 - 00;48;27;28 Thank you. 00;48;27;28 - 00;48;33;17 Bye bye. 00;48;33;19 - 00;48;36;26 This episode was brought to you by E-Media. 00;48;36;28 - 00;48;38;16 Our producer is Jackson Foote. 00;48;38;16 - 00;48;41;21 Our music was created by Hidden and licensed through PremiumBeat.com. 00;48;41;26 - 00;48;44;12 And until next time. Stay honest. 00;48;44;12 - 00;48;45;09 Stay creative. 00;48;45;09 - 00;48;47;00 Stay open. Open Pixel Studios. 00;48;47;00 - 00;48;48;27 We will see you in the next episode.