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Jeff Korzenik

Episode: 53

Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast, we welcome Jeff Korzenik. Jeff is the Chief Economist for Fifth Third Bank and a leading voice on one of the most overlooked issues in our economy.

His focus is on helping bring people with criminal records back into the workforce.

In his book, Untapped Talent, Jeff makes a compelling case for why second-chance hiring isn’t just the right thing to do; it’s one of the smartest business strategies leaders can embrace.

Join us as Jeff shares the data, stories, and practical steps that can help leaders better understand the economy and tap into this hidden talent pool while transforming both lives and organizations.

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Jeff Korzenik's Intro

0:06
Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast, we welcome Jeff Corzanik. Jeff is the chief economist for Fifth Third Bank and

0:13
a leading voice on one of the most overlooked issues in our economy. His focus is on helping bring people with

0:18
criminal records back into the workforce. In his book, Untapped Talent, Jeff makes a compelling case for why

0:24
second chance hiring isn't just the right thing to do. It's one of the smartest business strategies leaders can

0:30
embrace. Join us as Jeff shares the data, stories, and practical steps that can help leaders better understand the

0:36
economy and tap into this hidden talent pool while transforming both lives and organizations.

Welcome Jeff Korzenik

0:43
Jeff, thank you so much for being on the servant leadership podcast. Delighted to be here. Thanks, Chris.

0:49
I am so excited uh because this is going to be such a unique conversation. Uh, I

"Second Chance Hiring" Background

0:55
bumped into your content and heard you talk about something called second chance hiring and I didn't know what it

1:04
meant, but I had a lot of quick thoughts that came to mind and when you got into second chance hiring, my mind was blown.

1:12
Uh, I would love for you to share about this concept of second chance hiring

1:17
with our audience and kind of how you stumbled into this world. Sure. Well, let's start with the definition. Second chance hiring is the

1:24
intentional and I have to underscore intentional seeking out of people with criminal records as a talent pool for

1:30
employment. And uh I stumbled into it by my day job if you will is I'm chief

1:36
economist for Fifth Third Commercial Bank. So one of the larger commercial banks in the country and uh about 10 12

1:43
years ago there was a big question among economists uh namely why were we missing so many people from the workforce and

1:49
why was our what's called labor force participation rate so low and notably

1:55
missing were young men and uh economists by and large just kind of moved on put a

2:01
new number in their models but but it it nodded at me and I started to ask questions particularly of the CEOs of

2:09
companies we bank as I meet with them around the country and I started to see a pattern emerging and uh by by 2014 I I

2:17
I think I had figured it out and we were missing people in the workforce uh because of three social ills which were

2:24
present this century in ways we had never seen before at least not altogether. Number one, long-term

2:29
unemployment. Number two, the opioid epidemic. and number three the number of

2:34
the vast number of people who had a criminal record. And so by 2014 I felt I had identified the problem. By 2015 I

2:42
very fortunately uh walked in on recommendation of my wife's niece walked into a second chance employer um a

2:51
restaurant in Charlotte called King's Kitchen. um it's a faith-based organization and met a lot of people who

2:58
had criminal records who had exited prison who were absolutely great employees and that piqued my interest

3:04
and I started reaching out to employers very notably um a company um uh in

3:10
Cincinnati called Nhemiah Manufacturing um which was named after a a a

3:16
historical figure in the Bible um and um although it's not a faith-based company

3:22
that they were inspired by by this story of rebuilding and they currently are one of the best second chance employers in

3:28
the country and I started as I collected all these stories and and met all these business leaders I realized didn't

3:36
matter the industry didn't matter the geography they all had the same pattern of success the the same model of success

3:43
and looking at demographics knowing the labor shortage was was coming I thought well here's a great solution I'll start

3:48
sharing it and uh that's been my journey for the last dozen years or So,

3:54
wow. It It's such an interesting concept. I I would think in some cases

The Risks Of Second Chance Hiring

4:00
like you've seen a lot of a lot of this work well. And does it always work well?

4:05
It seems like there's a lot of risk as well potentially. Well, um, every business, every hire has

4:11
risk. It's do you have a process for controlling that risk? And my work is

4:17
all about the process that works. And unfortunately, not every business has known how to do this in a way that's

4:24
effective. Um, so you have many um I was surprised after meeting all these great

4:29
companies that had figured it out started sharing it with an audience and said what a great experience, what a great um opportunity and people in the

4:37
audience would come up to me last year and say let me tell you about what happened to me when I tried it. And um I

4:43
came to know that there are essentially three models for doing this and only one works. And the the one that works is

4:49
what I call the true second chance model. And it's one where you have an effective process for selecting who

4:55
among this vast population of people with criminal records is ready to be a good employee. And then second process

5:01
you need is one for giving them support. Employers support all their employees, you know, a good employer. But the

5:09
supports needed for this population which might have some special restrictions based on um their their

5:15
conviction or more typically um it's nothing to do directly with a criminal record but it's coming from

5:21
multi-generational poverty lives with no coaching no vision of what their future can be and so employers have to find

5:28
ways to provide supports. When you put that together you have a really effective business and talent model. How

Stepping Into The Second Chance Hiring World

5:35
does somebody first get into this world? Like they're compelled by what they hear from you. They read your book that talks

5:42
a lot about this. How do they step into this world? I talk about what I call bridging the

5:47
box. You know, there's this policy that largely has been unsuccessful called ban the box. Um and where government mandate

5:54
that you can't ask upfront about whether someone has a record or not. That's that's had a lot of um problems.

6:00
Sometimes it's effective, sometimes it's counterproductive. Um but but I I like

6:05
that phrase of bridging the box. Um and for me that starts with employers who

6:10
are interested go finding another employer that is already doing this then

6:16
and talking to them about their experience. What I found is second chance employers are amazingly willing

6:22
to share. they really um embody, you know, this concept of servant leadership. And part of the ways they

6:27
can serve is not just serving their customers and serving their employees, but also serving their communities by

6:34
helping see that second chance hiring spreads. Um it's also valuable to go and meet with nonprofits that are in this

6:41
space. They can often be great partners. Um I suggest starting to even if you're

6:46
not ready to hire people with criminal records, when you get a background check, read it. really understand, try

6:51
to understand what happened. In most cases, um, people who get criminal records, uh,

6:58
are not criminal masterminds. They're not committed to a life of crime. They're just dumb kids or young people.

7:05
And it's helpful to have that uh, perspective. Um, so those are some of the key ways and certainly um, dropping

7:13
the universal restriction that I'll never hire anyone. If you're hiring someone who had a 20-year-old criminal

7:20
conviction and has since led an upstanding life, why would you care?

7:25
None of us want to be judged by something that happened 10 or 20 years ago. You alluded to this right at the

Resistance To Second Chance Hiring

7:31
beginning, and you hold a really important title, chief economist to one of the nation's largest banks. Uh you

7:38
alluded to this is not something that other people in your sphere necessarily

7:43
thought about, right? What did people think when they started hearing you talk about this from your position?

7:50
Well, there was a lot of resistance. Uh, you know, people assumed it was a social crusade. Um, a friend of mine, um, Don

7:56
Riss Miller is chief economist for one of the top macro research firms. Uh, Strategus, um, used to um, uh, be part

8:05
of an organization that promoted interaction with the Federal Reserve Bank and and industry professionals like

8:11
myself. and I spoke at a couple of Federal Reserve banks, uh, the regional Federal Reserve banks, the Chicago Fed,

8:17
I've spoke at the Philadelphia Fed, some some others. And, um, he he he pointed

8:23
out to me that when I got up there to start speaking about this, all the economists in the room had their arms

8:28
crossed, you know, in in sort of a defiant venture. And and by the end, they're all, you know, leaning forward,

8:36
recognizing this is the numbers speak for themselves. this is a business proposition. This is a datadriven

8:43
conclusion, not a social crusade. But but there was a lot of resistance at first, of course. Well, I think that's

Business Case For Second Chance Hiring

8:50
such an interesting perspective because a lot of times people think about it when I heard about it uh for the first

8:57
time. Initially, it really does sound like, oh, this is just a really good thing to do to help people out, but it

9:04
seemed more serviceoriented. And from your standpoint, there's definitely an aspect to helping and a huge aspect to

9:11
servant leadership, but the business case is so sound. Uh, and you've seen it

9:16
work. A and it has to be the business case. One of the things that I think I've

9:22
accomplished is influencing the nonprofit community in this space who um

9:27
in many which in many cases were taking a this is for a societal good that's why you should do it um stance. And my

9:36
response to that has always been uh businesses will write checks to charity

9:41
but they'll only hire people who can add value to their enterprise. And that means there's got to be a business case.

9:48
And it's not a case that works for everyone. I'm not about to say that um of the tens of millions of Americans

9:55
with a criminal record, all of them are going to be good employees. I'm saying out of a pool of 70 million people with

10:01
some criminal record, 19 million people with a with a felony conviction. Out of those vast pools, you can find people

10:08
who are not only ready to work, but they're eager to prove that they're worth more than their worst mistakes.

10:14
And that's a recipe for a great employee. Wow. You talked a little bit about the

Effects On The Macro Economy

10:20
labor shortages for years and you've talked a lot about bit like a lot about how to tap into untapped potential all

10:26
all of these things and I really uh am interested from the macro point of view

10:32
because we we obviously get the numbers every month and you always hear about okay labor numbers are up down whatever.

10:38
Uh how do you see this helping that conversation in the long term? You know, economists talk a lot about the the

10:45
multiple uh economic reports that come out every every week, but economic

10:51
growth really boils down to two factors and two factors alone. How fast can you grow your workforce? And how fast can

10:58
you grow the productivity of your workforce? And workforce growth is a function of births 20 and 30 years ago.

11:06
Um deaths that are going on right now or retirements that are going on right now.

11:12
um immigration factors, productivity is usually thought of as um investment in

11:17
machinery and software or other forms of technology, but it's also human development. You know, part of getting

11:23
your workforce, making them more productive is giving them the opportunity to rise to jobs of greater

11:29
productivity and contribution, giving them caring about them, giving them the mentoring. All those things that um

11:36
allow people to move up the economic ladder also benefit the macroeconomy.

Servant Leadership Perspective On Wall Street

11:43
We talk a ton about servant leadership on this podcast as as you know uh this

11:49
concept of servant leadership I don't think from the outside is a natural word

11:55
that people are using in the world's largest banks uh the world that you live

12:01
in um how do you see servant leadership playing out and are other people taking really bold steps as you have done to

12:08
bring to light ways to serve other people and really empower people. You know, I I I'll be honest with you. I

12:14
don't think about what others are doing a lot because I'm focused on what what I'm doing. I I I do think that you would

12:21
be surprised at the heart people have for servant leadership even in on Wall

12:27
Street and in the banking community. Um what's been interesting to me is some of the early supporters of my work um were

12:35
people on Wall Street. Um, you know, I'd mentioned Don Rissmiller. Uh, Jason Trener, who founded that firm was a huge

12:42
supporter early on, as are others in that, uh, in Strategicus Research Partners. Um, Ed Yard Denny is one of

12:48
the most noted economists in the country, has been a big supporter. Um, uh, when I first came out with the, um,

12:55
when the book was in pre-publication, um, a a money manager came up to me, a

13:01
very noted one, said, "I'd like to help." and he ended up financing sending 500 books into prisons because it's

13:08
essentially a message of hope. You know, it's the target audience is business CEOs, business leaders. Um so there is a

13:15
uh particularly in the investment industry uh people believe in opportunity

13:21
and people get that not everyone is set up to take advantage of opportunity and

13:28
that we'd all benefit if if people could move up and could contribute more to the

13:34
economy and to their own lives would benefit all of us. Um so so

13:39
what people don't realize often at the top ranks they think they have to do

13:45
this after they retire and uh there's some great initiatives I've

13:51
worked with sort of for instance the leadership and society um initiative at the University of Chicago and you meet a

13:58
lot of retired CEOs or uh retired business owners who want to contribute

14:04
and my message to them and and the the folks in Chicago would very nicely give me a little opportunity to talk to some

14:10
of these people over the years is do it before you retire. Open up your hiring

14:15
to give opportunity in ways that make business sense. Not an act of charity, but you can change a lot of lives,

14:23
change a lot of communities if you do it while you're in a business leadership role and don't wait and see this as a

14:29
charitable act for when you retire. How do people find companies that are

Can This Work In My Industry?

14:34
doing this? Because I'm thinking as listeners are listening, a lot of them are wondering, could this work in my industry, you know, and and they there's

14:42
not a ton of models out there, I'm guessing, that have totally adapted this. What industries does it work for?

14:48
And how do people find like-minded people? It it essentially works in every

14:53
industry. There are very few. It's usually a question of regulations sometimes um get in the way or can there

15:01
are regulatory restrictions. Um, what's important to realize is, uh, when you

15:08
talk about someone having a criminal record, it can mean all sorts of things. So, certainly I don't want, um, someone

15:15
with multiple DWIs driving a school bus. We all get that. Um, but, uh, if someone

15:24
made a mistake in youth and shoplifted and now they're 40 years old,

15:30
what do you care what they do, right? I mean, you know, could they drive the school bus? Sure they could. Um, and if

15:37
you look, most industries, even the regulated ones, still offer opportunity.

15:43
You may have to have some workarounds. There are exemptions. There may be exemptions you have to apply for. Um, but it does work in lots of places. I

15:50
will say it's been softer ground, more fertile ground in certain industries. So

15:56
manufacturing um construction uh tend to be what's sometimes termed

16:01
felony friendly uh industries. I think part of it is the objections go away.

16:06
Say in manufacturing many of these roles first of all pay very well and so that helps people sustain uh a living wage um

16:14
which helps keep people on the on the on the right track. Um number two they're typically roles where they're not

16:20
handling money. So any temptation um that might have if money was temptation

16:25
that drove crime in the past, money is out of the picture and you're not customerf facing in most roles. So those

16:31
relieve some of the objections and that's why you see um some of the leaders are in manufacturing and

16:38
construction, but we see it across every industry. Where to go? Um there's no easy directory of these. There's things

Finding Employers That Give A Second Chance

16:44
like the second chance business coalition um is about 50 companies. They tend to be large companies. that was

16:50
what this was designed for. That's one place um one place to start. Um often um

16:55
if you go to local workforce boards or nonprofits that are in this what's

17:01
called re-entry space, they'll know who who good employers are. Um but but it's

17:06
not easy. Um and for me it was in just an act of constant networking.

17:12
Wow. From the outside, we often hear about young men, which is one of the

Helping People Not To Re-Offend

17:18
populations you mentioned had you kind of first interested in this or that you first noticed some some oddities with

17:24
young men who go into prison and get out of prison. Uh, and we all the time hear

17:30
stats about they're so likely to reenter prison and to go back. Uh, how do you

17:37
help from the prison side? uh or how do you see people jumping in and making a

17:42
difference where that doesn't become the norm? Cuz the goal is re-entry and re-enter stronger than ever and move

17:49
past that point of whatever that foolish decision was or whatever led them there. But certainly um it's important to frame

17:56
that those statistics. Those are people coming out of state prison. If you are

18:02
in a state prison, it's likely you are already a multiple offender. Even when you look at the amount the the vast

18:09
number of felonies, 19 million Americans have a felony conviction, the majority

18:14
of them, the slight majority of them never even had to serve a prison term.

18:19
So, um, when you're getting to people who are already coming out of prison,

18:24
it's likely they are multiple offenders or convicted of a very serious crime already. So, they're not representative

18:30
of everyone who has a criminal record. So, that's important to understand. Um certainly the earlier you can intervene

18:38
in someone's life the better. The majority of people who have a criminal record committed a crime only once. Um

18:46
they're not the people who went to prison. They're not that, you know, it's often a fairly, you know, minor offense.

18:52
Um they learned their lesson. They, you know, it was a momentary lapse and they they don't do it again. So we should

18:59
kind of understand that framing. Um but what we have seen is uh employment that

19:07
follows this true second chance model is a really powerful way of intervening. Um

19:13
it g part of the reason people reaffend is if they come out of prison and they

19:19
have no opportunities not only is their sense of hopelessness but there's a monetary need and that

19:26
often drives them back into the same cycle. Um the hope factor is really

Countering Prisons As A Place Of Hopelessness

19:32
important um too to take into account. Prisons are places of hopelessness. Um I

19:37
I um I have visited numerous prisons. Um there are pockets of hope and and you

19:43
know wonderful faith-based community intervention and support. Um but for a lot of people it's a place of

19:49
hopelessness. And one of the reasons it's a place of hopelessness is because they don't think they can turn their

19:56
life around. And um so second chance hiring the word does get back into

20:02
prison that your life is not over that you still have an opportunity and that allows people to um invest in education

20:10
or gaining skills or rebuilding character. Um I I I believe second

20:16
chance hiring done right is actually a character filter. you higher on character. And sometimes that is

20:22
something hard to to square with people with coming out of prison. But the

20:28
reality is um you know I don't want to speak for you but I most people and I

20:34
can speak for myself you know come out and do the right things and stay out of trouble because that's the life we were

20:39
raised in. Our parents made choices. They put up guard rails in our life and we just kind of take that as the way to

20:45
go. If you weren't raised with that, got into trouble and had to rebuild your

20:50
life and you consciously decide to lead a good life, um that's a really powerful

20:58
moral pedestal uh on which to build your build your life foundation, moral foundation to to

21:05
build your life. And so I found that um and certainly among my friends who've gone to prison, they are the most

21:12
standup people in my life because they have had to make these choices consciously. And um it's it's um it's

21:20
really powerful. The more this goes on, it will create a positive feedback loop and will prevent a lot of that

21:27
recurring, you know, prison revolving door. How do you encourage people to get

Encouraging People To Get Involved

21:33
involved in this space that are not business owners, they're not in HR, but

21:38
they're working in companies or just living out a great life in their community. They're not post prison. How

21:44
do you encourage them to care and make a difference? Uh it depends on the person, the place,

21:51
all those sort of things. It is hard to influence company policy. Um, second chance hiring works best where you have

21:58
someone in senior senior leadership, preferably the CEO or the owner who's driving this forward. Um, it's very hard

22:06
for someone in the middle or lower ranks of a company to go and try to get this going. But there's a lot that people can

22:11
do to help people um who are trying to turn their life around and rebuild. Um,

22:18
mentoring is possible. um visiting prisons uh uh prison ministry is very

22:24
very powerful way to help support people. Donating books to any of the nonprofits that send books to to prison.

22:32
All of these things um help. The more personal the touch the better. It's not

22:37
for everyone. Often that comes you know across over years. um but having that

22:43
kind of um connection to the outside world. I will say for business junior executives for instance in businesses I

22:50
encourage people to um become educated. Those are our future leaders and those are the people who in 10 or 20 years are

22:57
going to be able to drive this forward. One of the ways I've been encouraging that is there's a great nonprofit called

Defy Ventures And Other Nonprofits

23:03
Defy Ventures and they teach entrepreneurship training. There are a couple other great ones too. The prison

23:08
entrepreneurship project in Texas. um uh Hustle 2.0. Um there's there's a number

23:14
of of these um out in the country, but Defy Ventures is is the largest and and

23:20
um very successful. They have what are essentially Shark Tank presentations in prison where uh residents of these

23:27
correctional facilities come up with an idea. Some of them are absolutely great ideas and they ask people from the

23:32
business community to either coach um or come in and judge. And I think that's a great thing for uh for uh people early

23:40
in their business career or frankly anyone to do. I'm sure a lot of people come to you and

Common Questions About The Economy

23:47
ask questions about the economy, right? Being chief economist of such a large

23:54
institution, uh people ask you general economy questions all the time. What are

23:59
some of the common questions that you're hearing especially in this uh unique

24:05
time in history and with this current economic client climate? And how are you

24:11
uh how are you navigating from your standpoint everything going on? The the questions tend to fall into the

24:18
same categories no no matter the environment. Um a are we going into a recession or will an expansion continue?

24:25
What are interest rates going to be? what's credit availability going to be our our my target audience as an

24:32
economist or business people and um but then you get a lot of policy questions

24:37
um particularly today on uh tariffs immigration um and I will say uh we have

24:44
for many years been getting consistent questions about the federal debt and deficit and uh what what part of the

24:52
value like like any economist we're wrong a lot um we try not to be but but

24:59
what what we do try to do and I think do well is give people a framework for thinking about this and that often means

25:06
being a a student of history. So for instance, in the great financial crisis in 0809 when it seemed like the world

25:12
was trying to end, I had a piece in the Chicago Tribune that basically counted that as the 15th uh crisis of that kind

25:21
we had seen since the nation's founding. And um and there characteristics of it is what used to be called a financial

25:27
panic. And um they all have certain similar characteristics. You come out of

25:32
them with very slow growth, which is exactly what happened. you get through them and helping people have that

25:39
framework is helpful. Um I fortunately uh right before uh the COVID um

25:45
shutdowns I had been reading about the Spanish flu, the great influenza uh

25:50
pandemic um in the early part of the 1900s and um had some historical

25:56
framing. Those are the ways that I think we help our customers best is is help them get some perspective, tell them

26:02
what to watch uh or what we're watching and give them a sense that they have

26:07
some control over how they can respond or what they can expect. Are there any economic trends that you

Economic Trends For The Public To Study

26:14
point people to to stay ahead of just what's going on? Obviously, not knowing good or bad necessarily, but just that

26:20
you encourage people, hey, read this, study this, understand this. I'd like to say we were

26:27
very helpful in getting our customers to start thinking about the labor shortage early. Um, I've been publicly talking

26:33
about the la the what we used to call the looming labor shortage back in 2015

26:38
or so and um uh by 2018 it was apparent

26:44
and now it's well understood that we have a demographic um challenge for for

26:49
growing our labor force. So that that's a great example uh of it. We're talking today about trends in the US currency.

26:57
Um we think we it's a little early to talk about but but we think we as Americans have to be very careful about

27:03
the impact our debt is having on confidence in the dollar um as well as business confidence. Uh those are the

27:10
kind of trends we we talk about. A lot of them are are are demographic. We talk a lot about the impact of automation.

27:16
And so we're pretty wide ranging um and uh have been pretty successful I believe

27:22
in not getting everything right at least helping our customers navigate these

27:28
challenges which really is the ultimate goal. I think a lot of people hear the news

Are You Hopeful?

27:34
and they get really discouraged. Uh they they just get really down because it

27:39
it's like the world is falling apart. Everything is going wrong. the news cycles these days are going faster than

27:44
ever before. Uh, as much as you can share, and I know you

27:50
can't share a ton necessarily on a public platform, but at the same point, are you hopeful for where we're heading?

27:56
Do you feel like people should be watching out for stuff? I'm factbased, and the facts of the matter are the

28:03
optimists are always right in the long run. And the reason for that in a capitalist free market economy is the

28:11
participants you and I and everyone else who are working are trying to

28:17
support and do better provide better lives for ourselves and our families by producing goods and services of values

28:24
to others. When you think about capitalism and free markets in that way, it becomes apparent that things are

28:31
going to improve over time because you and I are driven to offer the better service, the better product. Um because

28:38
that helps us and helps us and helps our families and that gives positive that

28:44
that's why the stock market is not a zero- sum game. That's why the economy expands over time. It's because we're

28:50
always trying to trying to do better. And um that I hope provides some comfort

28:56
for for the long run. Um you know I can't tell you where the stock market is going to be in in the in a year but um

29:03
Sir John Templeton used to have this wonderful thing and he'd say in 50 years don't you think it's going to be better

29:09
and of course in 50 years I would believe that I I just won't be here. But um but but um you know these are the

29:16
kind of the kind of perspective that I think is really important. The news cycle is destructive. um you have uh bad

29:24
news cells. We've all we've always known that. What is different is instead of seeing it in the morning paper, you hear

29:31
it throughout the day on social media, cable TV, it gets reiterated and uh

29:38
there's not and so we all have to bring this balance into our own lives and this

29:44
perspective. And uh I I think that's one of the things that um one of the ways

29:49
that I and the team at Fifth Third have been able to add value over the years. And just as you say that, one thing that

Market Moving On Emotions

29:55
I think is interesting and I don't know if this is true or not or if you can comment on it or not, but it feels like

30:01
sometimes uh in the last decade and even more recently than that. Um there's been

30:09
a lot of movement based on emotion, not necessarily based on the logic. And you

30:15
you mentioned like you like to think in facts. Is that frustrating when you see sometimes the market moving purely based

30:21
on emotion, not based on the facts, or is that just built in anyways in people's systems?

30:26
I it's long built in. When um I started in the industry many decades ago with a

30:32
company called EF Hutton, I sat next to a guy named Steve Niss. Steve Nissen is a a real pioneer and he's written

30:39
several books and on on what's called technical analysis to bring century old

30:45
Japanese techniques to the US. and he said, "You have to read this book." It was called Reminiscences of a Stock

30:50
Operator. And it was written in the 1920s. And it became apparent that fear

30:55
and greed have always been driving emotions in investing. And um when you

31:03
see distortions based on that for the wise investor or

31:08
for people who um you know I I don't handle the investment side anymore at fifths is very ablely handled by Tom

31:15
Jollix our chief investment strategist and his team that those are opportunities to take if if the market

31:21
price gets distorted by emotion that's an opportunity for investors who can stay sit back take an objective view and

31:29
that's what we try to do for our customers and clients. Wow, this this has been so good. Jeff, I

Ten Rapid-Fire Questions

31:36
want to finish with 10 rapidfire questions. Sure. Wow. We're you just say the first thing that

31:41
comes to mind, and there's no wrong answer. Okay. I'm bad at free associating, but I'll do my best.

31:46
Who's the first person you think of when I say servant leadership?

31:52
Well, one of your one of your guests. Uh I was just watching one of your earlier podcasts. I I encourage anyone to watch

31:58
it with Steve Preston who's the CEO of Goodwill International. He's also very kindly contributed a chapter to my next

32:04
book and I think he really exemplifies that in so many ways. Wow. He's he's amazing. Uh five words

32:11
that most describe you. uh intellectual um fun-loving um

32:20
adventurous uh curious

32:26
caring I hope. All right. Favorite book or movie?

32:32
I um love the movie Lawrence of Arabia.

32:40
I've traveled in the Middle East. I had the it's not called a minor but the equivalent of a minor certificate of

32:45
proficiency in near eastern studies and um it's just one of the greatest it's a

32:50
masterpiece of the cinema and the first time I saw it was in the Ziggfield Theater in New York which was before

32:56
there were IMAXes before there were big screens there was the Ziggfield and it was an enormous screen and beautiful

33:02
chandelier and luxurious setting in New York it's it's gone unfortunately but I saw it there with then my girlfriend now

33:10
my wife of 35 years, who's a film buff as well. Wow. All right. Favorite food.

33:16
[Music] Um I'm going to stay on that Middle East theme. Uh there's a Persian dish uh

33:23
called fessenjun or fessen john. Uh that is um yushi poultry duck or chicken

33:29
served in a walnut pomegranate sauce. And uh my my wife who's

33:36
Midwest American as as can be makes a great version of it. I used to cook it for her when we were dating and and uh

33:43
it's a it's a fabulous dish that you can find occasionally in some really good Persian restaurants. I'm gonna have to Google that later.

33:50
Barbecue, by the way. I got to give it I'm a big barbecue fan, particularly uh Kansas City style barbecue.

33:56
Love it. Favorite thing to do in your free time. Um

34:02
sailing. Um my boat is not in the water this year because I'm gone so many weekends. I I just couldn't put it in.

34:08
But um I I I love being on the water whether it's kaying, sailing. Um I have

34:13
an a wooden classic wooden small sailboat and uh it's it's a pretty happy

34:20
place for me when when I'm out under sail. Wow. This might lead into that. It might not. a surprising fact about you.

34:29
You know, to be honest with you, I think the most surprising fact is what I actually do with working with people

34:34
with criminal records and and uh you know, it's taken me to the White House twice. Uh but probably the most

34:40
interesting fact is there's an episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians where um Kim Kardashian was speaking at an

34:47
event at the White House that was I was at and you can see me in the background. So, I think I'm the only bank economist

34:52
who's appeared. I'm keeping up in the with the Kardashians. I love that. Favorite place you've been.

35:01
Wow, that's tough because there lot lots of places um that I absolutely adore. Um

35:07
I I I um first went to Paris in um

35:13
1989, I think it was, or 1988, excuse me. And

35:19
um I remember thinking I didn't believe cities could be this beautiful and I

35:25
still uh Paris still takes my breath away with it with its beauty and uh the

35:30
constant surprises and things to discover there. Um I don't speak any French. Uh I'm embarrassed to say um I

35:36
try um and you know get people to revert to English as quickly as they can to

35:42
stop hearing me butcher their their beautiful language. But um Paris is hard to beat. Where's somewhere you want to

35:48
go that you haven't been? Oh, Budapest. Um, that's a good one. Yeah. Yeah, I'm really interested in uh

35:54
some of the older European cities. Budapest, Prague. Haven't been. I've been to a lot of European cities, but uh

36:00
but not uh not Budapest. U my boys went around the Europe together with a URL

36:06
pass and uh Budapest was their favorite stop, and that's really in intrigued me.

36:12
All right. And final two, what's the best advice you've ever gotten?

36:21
Um I'm not sure who told it to me. Um

36:26
but I share this um with others. Um do the right thing.

36:32
And uh I I I meet with young professionals and I have these three rules and number one is earn a

Three Rules For Young Professionals

36:37
reputation for hard work and integrity. Number two, live up to that integrity.

36:43
Do the right thing even when it hurts. And number three, help others along the way. Wow, those are good. All right. And

Why A Servant Leadership Podcast Is Important

36:49
finally, why do you think a podcast on servant leadership is important? Because it helps model servant

36:57
leaderships for those who aspire to be that kind of leader. It helps them frame it, see they're not alone, see how

37:04
viable it is, see people who've been successful, who followed it, and maybe, I hope, get a few tips for how that they

37:11
might incorporate into their own version of servant leadership. Wow. Well, Jeff,

Closing

37:16
thank you for being on the podcast. Thank you for sharing so much insights with us and for all the work you're

37:21
doing just to help bring to light so many amazing opportunities that people can dive into.

37:27
Thank you, Chris. So, appreciate the time.

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