From War Torn Liberia to Entrepreneur | William Ward | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
In this moving episode, Jeff Dudan sits down with William Ward, a Liberian war survivor turned American entrepreneur, to explore how resilience, purpose, and passion can transform adversity into opportunity. William shares his harrowing story of fleeing civil war, building a life in the U.S., and founding Flexi—a tech platform solving labor shortages while empowering the next generation. This conversation is a masterclass in grit, innovation, and building with meaning.
Key Takeaways
- Purpose-Driven Entrepreneurship Wins. William’s journey from war-torn Liberia to launching a tech startup in America is powered by a deep desire to solve economic inequality through youth employment and education.
- You Learn By Doing. His work with Flexi aims to close the growing skills gap by giving students real-world, flexible work experience while teaching financial literacy.
- Bootstrap Grit Beats Perfect Conditions. William worked five years for a two-year degree, built his company with $200K of self-funding, and still refuses to quit without purpose-aligned investors.
- Intrapreneurship Builds Founders. His corporate experience at Honeywell and United Technologies gave him the confidence to solve problems and eventually build Flexi.
- The Team Is The Mission. From his co-founders to advisors, William prioritizes values-aligned teammates who’ve faced and overcome adversity.
Featured Quote
“Never give up on yourself. Everything is possible if you believe.”
— William Ward
TRANSCRIPT
Surviving Liberia’s Civil War and Finding Refuge in the U.S.
Jeff Dudan (00:01.86)
William Ward, welcome to the home front.
William Ward (00:05.794)
Thank you, Jeff. It's an honor to be on the show today. Appreciate it.
Jeff Dudan (00:09.84)
Yeah, excited to have you on. We recently met at an event where I was speaking at Liberty University and you were there. I'm interested to know what you were doing there when we get to it. But we had a conversation and I was just really intrigued with your story and with your journey and how you grew up in Liberia and migrated to the United States, put yourself through school.
great career and now you're an entrepreneur. And I really wanted to learn more about that and share that with our audience. So thank you so much for being on today. Would you mind sharing with us what it was like growing up in Liberia?
William Ward (00:53.458)
Yeah, thank you, Jeff. I'll do my best to abbreviate that. Yeah, but it's been such a journey. So for those in the audience that might not know about Liberia, just to give a brief history and where it's geographically located. So Liberia is in West Africa.
It's one of the few countries in Africa that was not colonized during the slave era. However, the history of Liberia is deeply tied with the U.S. because free slaves from here went back to Liberia after the abolition of slavery and informed Liberia. And that's how it came to being. And so I was born and raised in Liberia.
I grew up, had a very beautiful start of my childhood. Up to the time I was about six or seven years old. And that's where things started to go head wire. So I am a survivor of the civil war in Liberia. I survived several outbreaks of that civil war. And my family,
My family had a terrible experience with the various outbreaks of war in Liberia, even before I was five or six years old. Earlier on, I think it was in 1985, I lost one of my uncles in the war, who was one of the most permanent journalists in Liberia.
So he got killed for apparently reporting something against the sitting government. And due to that, my grandparents and some of my uncles and aunts migrated to the US, you know, as political asiles fleeing that situation with my uncle.
William Ward (03:03.546)
And that was how my grandmother, my grandfather, and a few of my aunts and uncles came and settled here in Charlotte. So fast forward, the most brutal war that I went through was around 1989, 1990, when there was a huge civil unrest to unseat the sitting president at the time. That war was very brutal.
saw a lot of bad things, saw a lot of children my age, six, seven, eight years old, bearing arms and doing bad things. My family nearly got killed. You know, when days without eating, when days being homeless, when days walking miles and miles fleeing the fighting.
And after the outbreak of that war, there was a little bit of stability and then things got unsettled again. That's when I had the opportunity to go to Ghana, another country in Africa, as a refugee, laid on the refugee camp for a bit, and then got the opportunity to come to the U.S. as a refugee around 1999, early 2000.
Jeff Dudan (04:27.912)
Iberia is a, by all accounts, a beautiful country. It has a large coastline. It's bordered by Guinea and Sierra Leone. And it, the history that I read, yes, it was.
There was definitely an extreme time when you were a child growing up there with a coup and a murder and then you even had some bordering countries send in some forces and some troops and it just, it's easy to find on the internet and I can only imagine what it was like for you and your family.
As you're going through that, when did immigrating to somewhere else start to manifest as an idea for you? And why did you pick the United States?
William Ward (05:32.586)
Yeah, so I picked the United States because, as I said earlier, my grandparents were here. My aunties and uncles were here, and they were connected with the Catholic Church and through the Catholic Relief Services. That's how come, you know, we came to the States. One part of the story that I didn't tell was what really drove us to Ghana.
So my father was also targeted because he was working at the oil refinery company at the time, which was associated with the government. And so there was an incident where our house was set ablaze, you know, targeting my father. And we were, again, blessed to flee that situation. But my dad wasn't as lucky.
He survived it, but he had like third degree burns, you know, because he wanted to see that everyone was safe and he was like one of the last people. So it was through that, that was the straw that grew the canvas back for us to go to Ghana and that my grandparents, you know, set up for us. And that's how, you know, the connection with the US came into play.
Jeff Dudan (06:55.676)
William, you've shared with me previously that you lost a sister a year ago. How many children in your family?
William Ward (07:05.966)
Yes, I lost my sister yesterday. Yesterday, that's when it happened, right? Yes, so we have a big family. So between my mom and my dad before they got married, so my dad had three before he got married, my mom had two and they had three together. So together it's like seven, seven kids. Yeah, so yeah, so.
Jeff Dudan (07:09.38)
Oh, yesterday.
Jeff Dudan (07:27.494)
Okay.
William Ward (07:33.314)
grew up with a lot of siblings. I'm the second youngest of my siblings.
Jeff Dudan (07:41.576)
Okay. And then do many of them still live back in Africa?
William Ward (07:47.722)
Yeah, so two of my siblings were in Africa up to yesterday, so one passed away and so there's one still in Africa today.
Jeff Dudan (07:55.048)
Mm-hmm.
Jeff Dudan (07:58.808)
Yeah, very sorry for your loss. Yes. Um, what's it like in Liberia today?
William Ward (08:01.72)
Thank you.
William Ward (08:08.85)
Um, it's interesting. Um, so there's no war right now, but there is a lot of, uh, impoverished situation. Um, there is a huge wealth gap between the half and the half not. Um, and that kind of makes me nervous because they saw my own research with what, uh, caused the war in Liberia. That was one of the reasons.
the huge wealth gap between people that have access to resources and people that didn't. And so that is still the case today. There is a huge illiteracy rate in Liberia. It has a big youth population, but almost half of the youth population don't have access to education as we know it.
And this flip side of it, it's a place that when you go, you know, it's peaceful, it's no stress, you know, get to connect with, you know, people from your past that there are a lot of beaches and stuff because it's located on the coastline. But I wish there was, you know, more access to opportunities for young people to better off themselves.
Jeff Dudan (09:32.54)
Right?
Jeff Dudan (09:36.56)
So you came to the United States in 1999 or 2000? Okay, so what was it like for you establishing yourself here at the States?
William Ward (09:41.707)
Yes. Yeah.
Struggling Through School and Staying the Course
William Ward (09:51.198)
Yeah, it was a journey. So when I came to the States, it was right around the time where I'm transitioning from high school to college. I tried to go to the community college here in Charlotte, Central Piedmont, and that was tough. It took me almost five years to complete my community college degree because of one degree saying access to the financial capital to take me through college.
And, you know, the time because I needed to support myself and go to school. So no money and that flexibility was in there. And so it took me up to five years to complete my community college degree. But anyway, I went on to get my bachelor's. I got my master's in information technology.
as well as an MBA from Northeastern University. And, you know, through persevering and, you know, connections and opportunities, I was able to work at great companies like United Technologies and Honeywell before I transitioned to becoming a full-time entrepreneur.
Jeff Dudan (11:06.588)
That's an incredible testament to really your persistence and your grit in pursuing your degree. And then I've got your LinkedIn profile right here. You've had an incredible career in the aerospace industry, project management, supply chain. How did those experiences, having those jobs prepare you to be an entrepreneur? And when did entrepreneurship first?
pop into your head.
William Ward (11:37.418)
Yeah, so you know, Jeff, it has been like a breadcrumbs, a breadcrumb of activities. I kid you not, every role I got in into corporate, it was either something brand new that I either had to start or become part of a team that started that journey. So,
Jeff Dudan (12:01.808)
So you had entrepreneurial experiences inside of these companies.
Intrapreneurship at Honeywell and United Technologies
William Ward (12:06.006)
Correct. Yeah. So I had an entrepreneurial experience. And even before my professional experience, I just had a knack for creating things, whether it was putting a group of people together to start a cause or looking for a specific problem in the community that needed to be solved either through a specific process or technology. I was always
know, a part of something like that. And then when I went into corporate, it was always me coming up with some kind of original idea to solve a problem, whether it was like a global project that I'm part of, or it was like an inter-department need. I would always come up with ideas that I would drive for inception to completion.
And that's how I think it got started. So my career started in deep technology stuff. So playing with routers and switches and systems administration type of work. And then I started to fall in love with project management when one of my managers assigned me to a project. And that's how I gradually went into leading application
projects for line of businesses, and then eventually started to lead global projects throughout my career.
Jeff Dudan (13:43.884)
That's incredible. I find it interesting that you use the word intrapreneurship because at home front brands, we are launching an intrapreneurship program. Uh, one of my favorite sayings is you have to water what you want to grow. And what that means is you have to invest in the things that you want to see happen. And you have to give people the tools and the resources and the know-how to be able to execute on whatever it is. And.
William Ward (13:57.486)
Hmm.
Jeff Dudan (14:11.824)
being entrepreneurial inside of an organization when you have so many departments, every department should know what are the goals, how are what we do here aligned to the overall goals of the organization, how can we do it faster, more efficiently, or maybe an even more important question, do we need to be doing this at all? And those are the questions that entrepreneurs wake up in the middle of the night thinking about.
you know, I mean, are we are we wasting time, energy or money? Are we are we solving the right problems? These types of questions, I think people need to be given permission to ask. And did you find in these entrepreneurial pockets that you were able to find in Honeywell and UTC and these other places?
Were you encouraged to do that? Was, did they, did they set the table for you to be successful in solving problems creatively, or was it something that you did that kind of went against the grain or against management?
William Ward (15:21.482)
Yeah, it was mixed backed. Some people in leadership encouraged those types of things. Other were more status quo and legacy driven. But most of the time, it was based upon my own being intellectually inquisitive, being a little bit of a rebel, challenging the status quo. It can be done.
other ways. It doesn't have to be done this way. And it was me being adept with what was going on in the technology world and finding new ways of doing things. Some were discouraged until they saw the fruitful reward of it and then it was embraced, you know, eventually. So yeah, so it was an aspect of those things.
Jeff Dudan (16:16.928)
Isn't it funny how people, uh, and I'm making an assumption here that, that you didn't land in the United States with big bags of money strapped to you. Uh, you were, uh, you, you needed to be resourceful to put yourself through school, uh, build a life here in the United States. And I just continue to find that people that started in that condition are less fearful.
of challenging the status quo, they don't seem to have time to worry about someone else being right, as opposed to what's true and what's best in the moment. And once you see it, William, you were probably like, this is clearly the way that this needs to happen. And I don't, you know, I really don't care if it's the way we've always done it or not. Is that fair?
William Ward (17:06.978)
Yeah, that's fair. Yeah, and in my journey as an entrepreneur, like talking to investors and other people, with resources and they see what I'm doing and they say, oh, this can never be done. That's not how it has been done traditionally. And I'm here to prove them wrong. It's not because it has been done a certain way that it cannot be done differently. Yeah.
Smile Liberia: Education as a Weapon Against Poverty
Jeff Dudan (17:40.656)
Why don't we pause for a second because we're going to get into your entrepreneurial journey now, but I'd love to hear a little bit about Smile Liberia International and what that is and what your involvement with that organization was.
William Ward (17:50.729)
Okay.
William Ward (17:55.174)
Right. Yeah, so smile. I beer is near and dear to my heart. And so when I came to the States after I got myself settled, you know, got a job at United Technology, it was good reach at the time before the merge with United Technology. And I look back, one thing I never forget where I come from. So I look back and I asked myself,
How can I contribute to the country that I came from, you know, Liberia? And that's so deep research. I got to know that the war in Liberia that I went through, it was mainly caused by the high level of electricity, the high level of wealth gap between, you know, people that had and people that didn't have. And...
my just my drive to help the future generation to circumvent that situation. That's how come I formed Smile I Be Here and Smile I Be Here overall goal was to use education to better of the generation that is here now. And so we were able to impact over 5,000 kids that
They didn't have the resources to go to school, and even if they went to school, Liberia does not have anything such as free education. So even the government institutions, people had to buy uniforms, they had to buy textbooks, you know, those types of things. And I kid you not, there were a lot of people, over 80% of the population cannot afford those bare necessities.
And so that's what Smart Liberia did. We looked for the most impoverished communities and we impacted them with scholarships, school supplies, and giving them all of the essentials that they needed to go to school. My big goal for that was to build an institution which I'm gonna get back to once I get to the place of success with my journey.
William Ward (20:16.654)
So to create a school that would teach these children skills, life skills, that they will become entrepreneurs, that they will learn sustainable skills to, you know, provide for themselves and create businesses so that the middle class, you know, is bigger in Liberia.
Jeff Dudan (20:37.96)
That is a worthwhile vision and I applaud you doing it. Yeah, that's great. And let me know if I can help you with that in any way. All right. So at some point you've been intrapreneurial in all these companies and you've got ideas popping into your head and you see problems that you'd like to help solve. For people. How did you transition to full-time entrepreneur?
William Ward (20:41.838)
Thank you.
Quitting Corporate to Build Flexi: Uber Meets Financial Literacy
William Ward (21:07.166)
Yeah, so I transitioned a full-time interpreter in 2021, June 2021, when I was at Honeywell. First of all, the thing that really propelled me was the fact that I could not think about anything else but working on my company at the time. And so it was right before I launched Petty Gigs at the time. So Flexi started as Petty Gigs.
at the time and the goal behind Flexi and Pedigase still the same to empower this generation to succeed and thrive financially through giving them opportunities to work and make money and then turn that money worthwhile by saving and investing and becoming financially responsible. So, you know, that's the goal behind it.
And the reason why I want to do that, again, Jeff, when I look back at my childhood and how I saw an entire nation devastated because of the wealth gap between the haves and the have-nots, that propels me as an entrepreneur. So I love building things. I can build anything when it comes to technology, right? And so that's my God-given gift.
that I think I want to use to change the world through entrepreneurship.
Jeff Dudan (22:40.528)
So it's really a two-prong approach. Number one, connect high school and college students with gigs that they can make money. And then two, educate them in terms of, which we do a horrible job of in schools, is teaching people how to set just basic budgeting, saving, investing, these types of things aren't really taught.
early enough or often enough in our schools today. So that was the concept of it. You started in 2021. At some point, you got connected with Techstars. Can you tell us how that happened?
Techstars, Pivoting from B2C to B2B, and Scaling Smart
William Ward (23:24.734)
Yeah, so when we started Pedigigs, we had some early success with the user signups. So we launched the app and that app helped kids to find jobs in their neighborhood. So it was like an Uber for finding jobs for young people. So if Jeff needed his lawnmow, he will get in the app and say, okay, I need my lawnmow.
and then a kid in the neighborhood that has subscribed to that type of service would get notified and they would come and work and get paid in the app. And then we had integrated investing so that they would be able to save a portion of that money that they made. So we started on that journey. We were able in a short time, in less than a year, we were able to get over 13,000 users on the platform.
And so when we applied to Techstars, they accepted us into the program because of our early traction. But then we had the opportunity to go and de-dive and just look deeper into the business model. One challenge that we had, even though the young people were flocking to the app, people like neighbors were not putting in enough work. And we knew that was a sustainable model over time.
And so we saw a bigger issue in the labor shortage arena. And we started to have companies come up to us and say, oh, I need help with my business, even though I don't have a person of need. And so we were able to modify that business model coming out of Techstars and turning it into something that will provide services to companies.
And that's where we changed the name to Flexi and transitioned to more of a B2B business model.
Jeff Dudan (25:25.22)
OK, so you flip, you use the same concept, but you basically flip the customer. And can you share a little bit about what Techstars is?
William Ward (25:37.066)
Yeah, so PEC Start is one of the largest incubators for early stage startups in the world, because they're global, they're not only in the US. So they are a peer organization with the likes of Y Combinator, and those big incubators for early stage startups. So they take you through, they invest.
$120,000 in early stage startups and take you through a three months training to prepare you for growth and fundraising through their program and connect you to their network of mentors and advisors and businesses that you could eventually work with. And so they invest in tech and tech enable.
promising tech and tech-enabled companies worldwide.
Jeff Dudan (26:37.656)
Is anybody that we might know behind Techstars or affiliated with it?
William Ward (26:43.198)
Yeah, so yeah, I have a brand freeze here with the founders. But yeah, yeah. But I'll speak more specifically with Amos, Amos Saspart. He was, he's the one that invited me, accepted my company into his program.
Jeff Dudan (26:51.496)
That's all right.
William Ward (27:10.734)
And Amos is super focused on looking at a talent and looking at, you know, not only what the company is at the moment, but what that leader can become eventually. He is big on grit and resilience and perseverance, more future focus rather than fast growth.
Um, and, um, Emma's he's, he has written some books on growth. Um, one is, uh, sell more faster. And another one is levers. Uh, you know, those two books, like really kind of, you know, he takes me his classes through the framework from the, uh, from those books and, and really prepare people, you know, to succeed. So Emma's, uh, was one of the people that saw.
the potential of our company and invited us into his program.
Jeff Dudan (28:10.472)
During that three months, is there a co-working space that you go to? I know of some incubators that are really local or regional, and they have a building where they give everybody space so that people can collaborate together. Is it similar with Techstars, or is it a remote organization?
William Ward (28:29.482)
It's similar to Techstars. Because of the COVID, some of their programs became virtual. But historically is what you described. We have like a co-working space where companies go, together, built together, go through curriculums that would drive different stages of your business in different parts of your business from.
you know, organizing pieces to fundraising, to how you, you know, even built your board of directors as a company, right? So they prepare you, you know, for that. I had to move to Austin, Texas for three months to attend, yeah, to attend the Techstars program. And it was one of the best experiences I had since I've been, you know, in the history of my business.
Jeff Dudan (29:14.3)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (29:24.872)
That's fantastic. And then did the $120,000 go into the company and then the company supported you and moving and all of that stuff. So that's, so it wouldn't work if they didn't, they couldn't get people to do it if they didn't have the resources allocated to do it. So I, that, uh, that makes a lot of sense. And then now you've got this incubator of entrepreneurs that are
William Ward (29:42.753)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (29:49.288)
probably working day and night because they're out of town, they got nothing else to do, they're excited, they're passionate about what's going on. And I can only imagine the ideas that come out of such a place like that. So from a tech star's perspective or from an investor's perspective, you're sitting there just watching the ideas come out and watching people try things. And I'm sure that there's some pretty good early stage investments that...
William Ward (29:58.166)
Alright.
Jeff Dudan (30:16.976)
they take advantage of in those situations.
William Ward (30:19.498)
Yeah, so at the end of the program, there was something called Demo Day, where all of the companies in the cohort go and present their businesses to investors. Yeah. At the time, with hours like, it was after the COVID, we came out right when it was before Thanksgiving and Christmas. And then there was the economic downturn.
Jeff Dudan (30:23.663)
Uh huh.
William Ward (30:48.906)
So that made it more challenging for companies to raise coming out of those programs. But apart from all of that, the experience was just great.
Jeff Dudan (31:05.308)
Let's talk about Flexi. Flexi is having success in markets where you have signed up some national brands to use the app and then use the app for staffing into certain situations and events and things like that. So where is Flexi today and what's next?
William Ward (31:30.186)
Yes. Yeah, so when we came out of Techstars, we started to pilot Flexi with the business to business model. We had the opportunity to partner with one local cheek fillet that really had a pressing need for staff. And that cheek fillet happens to be at the Charlotte Spectrum Arena. So.
Jeff Dudan (31:55.128)
Is that the one that Rob Rogers is affiliated with? He, uh, Rob, if you're listening out there, I'll drop you a copy. That is a fine man right there. I've known him for many years. He was a consultant to me back in the early mid two thousands, and he is just a, um, a giving thoughtful, uh, servant leader. And I'm, I, I was.
William Ward (31:57.79)
Yes, that's the one Rob Rogers is affiliated with.
William Ward (32:08.738)
Hmm.
Jeff Dudan (32:20.164)
When I heard that he was affiliated with you, I just, it reminded me that I need to reconnect with him.
William Ward (32:26.41)
Yeah, Rob Rogers is awesome. He's a trailblazer. He's very innovative. He saw the opportunity that Flexi could, the value that Flexi could provide for his business. And he was the first one to raise his hand to pilot Flexi. We started with 10 high school students with the pilot. Over time, through word of mouth, we have
recruited over 150 high school students. We helped that cheek filet location fill 100% of their roles for big games and events last NBA season. And they started to spread the word to other cheek filet owners. And so right now we have about four other cheek filet in the pipeline.
And during the pilot, we have had to work with about 10 to 12 local companies, filling over 900 roles and giving over 150 students access to opportunity. So we saw that it worked. We were scrappy during the time of the pilot using spreadsheets and manual invoicing until we recently built.
the technology around Flexi to expand and scale. And so we are in the fundraising phase right now after testing out the pilot, after having early success with the pilot. And so we're raising money now to grow and scale, to reach other businesses and eventually be nationwide.
Flexi’s Business Model and The Power of Reliable Youth Labor
Jeff Dudan (34:18.952)
Let's get, let's get, talk about the money while we're, while we're on it. And let's start at the app level. So Chick-fil-A or anybody else that's looking to staff, they're a customer and they pay for access to the site and maybe a, a fee for associated with placements.
William Ward (34:39.574)
Right, yeah, so we, at the core of Flexi, we study the youth and we know what they want in terms of how they wanna work. Some of these students, it's high school students, they are in after school activities, they are committed to other things within school, so they cannot work a regular job, part-time or full-time.
Jeff Dudan (35:08.477)
Yeah.
William Ward (35:08.49)
So the Flexi platform helps them to get access to both flexible gigs and traditional jobs, part-time, full-time internships, right? All on one platform. Now companies looking to get access to the young talent, they can either do a pay as you go model, using to either find people in view, or find people that can come and do one-off shifts at their location.
If they use that model, they pay a $20 fee every time someone shows up to work, or every time they get connected to someone to interview, or they can pay a $400 subscription for unlimited matches or unlimited shifts. So that's how it works monthly. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (35:57.296)
And that's monthly? That's monthly? Okay, got it. Okay, so you can pay as you go, or you can get a subscription base to it. And then for the, what do you call the workers? Flexers? You have a name for them? You do call them flexers? Okay, I made that up, but I guess you beat me to it. So, all right, so what are the, I've known a lot of flexers. I don't like it when they do it.
William Ward (36:04.234)
Right. Subscription.
William Ward (36:11.37)
We call them flexors. Flexors, yeah. Correct.
William Ward (36:19.621)
Hahaha
Jeff Dudan (36:26.18)
Now, what... Are they charged as well?
William Ward (36:32.286)
No, they are not charged. The platform is free for them to use. However, we have an embedded digital wallet that we use in Flexi, especially for the ones that do flexible ships. If they want immediate access to their funds, they pay a small fee to get immediate access to their funds. And we're big about quality.
Jeff Dudan (36:34.812)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (36:52.625)
Got it.
William Ward (36:59.806)
you know, and reliability. So we have this thing called reliability score. If they fall below a certain threshold, they pay a higher percentage to get immediate access to their funds. If they are like a higher reliability rating, they get, you know, so it's 2.5% if they have a low reliability score and it's 1.5% if they have a higher
reliability score.
Jeff Dudan (37:30.82)
what activities and behaviors make up the reliability score.
William Ward (37:35.202)
So we look at four general factors. One is their overall performance rating. So if someone came to do work for Jeff, after that shift, Jeff can review them. So we look at that review rating. We look at the number of call-outs. We look at the number of tardiness. And we look at the number of no-shows. So we have an algorithm that look at all of those factors and provide a reliability.
outscore for that. And yeah.
Jeff Dudan (38:08.112)
And is that rating then visible to the companies that are looking to hire people? OK, so it's very Uber like. How quickly does somebody get their money when they've how quickly does a flexor get their money after working?
William Ward (38:13.888)
Correct.
William Ward (38:23.838)
Yeah, so it's either three business days if they wait for their money or it's instantly if they, yeah, if they want access to it right away.
Jeff Dudan (38:32.995)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (38:36.948)
Okay, and then I guess there's some float opportunities inside of that, depending on where that money comes from and all of that. So creating transactions on this platform, there's lots of different ways to monetize it while providing great value to both parties inside of the equation. All parties, I would say. Okay, well, fantastic. And as far as capital raise,
William Ward (38:55.95)
Correct.
Jeff Dudan (39:05.372)
How have you gotten to where you are and what do you need to go forward?
William Ward (39:12.606)
Yeah, so it's mostly bootstrapping. Also, we had, when I left my corporate role, I put a little bit of capital in Fusion to get the software to where it was with Pedigigs. And then we raised some money from friends and family, and then the Techstars investments. So that's the only capital, about 200,000 since we started.
that got us this far and you know mostly both strapping but If we need a skill Quickly, we need some more capital infusion for sales marketing enhancing the technology Bringing all the team full-time I'm the only full-time, you know person right now wearing a lot of different hats and so if we can raise between
Jeff Dudan (39:43.12)
Okay.
William Ward (40:08.79)
750 to 2 million that could take us between 12 to 18 months or up to 36 months of really execution.
Jeff Dudan (40:20.584)
Do you have a capital raise formally put together or is this something that you're just starting to conceptualize?
William Ward (40:30.858)
Yeah, so we have that put together. We just kicked it off, and we are actively fundraising right now. So my goal is to, I have four people that are executive leaders of Flexi, but they cannot afford to leave their full-time jobs right now, they are not as crazy as I am. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (40:32.955)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (40:53.222)
Right.
William Ward (40:57.642)
But yeah, so once we fundraise, we will bring them on full time. We'll spend a lot of that money with marketing. I want to eventually get every school in Charlotte, every high school in Charlotte on the platform. We're targeting to get all of the full services, retail, events and entertainment companies on the platform.
That's the goal to market for Flexi. So all of the companies you can think about that usually hire high school students and college students and youth. We want to bring them on the platform. Now the longer term goal for Flexi wants to be fundraised because we don't only want to look at, you know, those types of jobs. We want to introduce students to career and technical education.
William Ward (41:57.498)
pair them up with companies that will provide them engineering skills, solar energy, you know, those high tech skills and stuff so that they will have livable earnings when they, you know, finish with school. And you know, I'll pause here and later on I'll tell you the reason why, you know, we're doing all of that. But yeah.
uh, pertaining to the race. Um, that's where we are.
Jeff Dudan (42:30.464)
AI, particularly with coding, has come a long way in 2023. If people aren't paying attention to the efficiencies that some of these early tools have provided, then they're really not paying attention. Do you perceive you will get a lift from using some of these tools as you, there's a lot of coding that's gonna have to go on as you build this app.
Do you incorporate those tools and has that changed your technology roadmap or your technology investment thesis?
William Ward (43:08.214)
Yeah, so we are using AI right now with Amplexi. We try to stay ahead of the curve. So we use AI to do automatic matching of the ships or interview. So if you're a company and you require a certain skill and we use AI to match them with people that have those skills.
And so they have instant access to talent. We also use AI for skills gap analysis. Say if a young person wants to move from full service to retail, we look at the skills required for retail and full service. And we say, OK, you have these skills. These are the skills required in retail. These are the things you can do to develop the skills as you move into.
into retail, right? So yeah, so we are using, you know, subgenerative AI, using OpenAI as the backend right now, and we will just keep enhancing that as we grow.
Jeff Dudan (44:21.328)
William, you clearly care a lot about people getting opportunities that need them, young people in particular, and taking whatever it is you've learned and sharing it with others so that they can improve their lives. What advice would you give to somebody that is starting their very first business today?
Advice to First-Time Founders: Passion and Market Fit
William Ward (44:47.794)
Yeah, so right. I mean, obviously everybody is, you know, not, you know, like, like me, um, but I would say, um, care deeply about what you want to do. Um, that is the thing that's going to keep you going. Uh, when you, um, enter a desert of resources, when you don't have any resources, when you don't have, um, you know, the money and, and
you know, the things to keep going. If you deeply care about that thing, if you're deeply passionate about what you're doing, eventually that is going to keep you going. So it's the first advice I will say, care deeply about what you're doing. I also test the market a lot, you know, because if you don't test the market enough, you could run into serious roadblocks.
We had that problem starting up. So, you know, we knew how to build technology. So we built the technology and we thought that's what the market wanted. And we found out that, okay, you know, this is, I mean, the market doesn't really want this. And so we had to pivot and start over and rebuild. It was a tedious task, but...
It was a great learning experience. So I say do a lot of customer discovery, do a lot of testing out the market before committing to, especially if you're a technology company, before committing to build a technology. And be patient because things really never turn out the way you plan.
There's always going to be something that comment through a curve ball. So don't be stuck on the product or whatever, but be stuck on the mission, your overall goal, what you're trying to achieve.
Jeff Dudan (46:56.103)
It's.
That is such a great answer because as you were speaking earlier, I made some notes and I just really wanted to point it out to all the entrepreneurs or people thinking about being entrepreneurs or starting a franchise, whatever it is people are doing. I wrote purpose first, top of the house. You come from this country, you escape a civil war, you come over here and have to establish yourself. It takes you five years to get a two-year degree.
family now.
William Ward (47:28.15)
Yes, I do have a beautiful wife and four children. Yeah. Yes. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (47:32.644)
Okay. You're and, and you're building a family over here with four children. So you're, but you're, but you're, but then you take time inside of all of this back in 2008 to create smile, Liberia international and impact 5,000 kids, you know, thousands on the other side of the world, where you came from, because you're purpose driven. So when you say care deeply about what you're doing, uh, it, that aligns perfectly because then the second thing I wrote was passion.
You've got to be passionate enough about something not to quit when there are no resources or when you're the only one that had the courage to quit your job and to commit to this. So the passion is what carries us through and what gets us keeps us going. And, and, oh, by the way, most businesses need more than one person. So your passion is what attracts other people.
to your vision and your purpose. And if you're not passionate, then you're probably gonna have a hard time getting other people to jump on board or invest in your business. The third thing I had was alignment. You've aligned everything in your life from seven years old and everything that happened to you into a business that really solves the problem that you saw created issues in your country growing up, which was the widening wealth gap, lack of education, lack of...
basic financial tools and all of that, and then connecting people with opportunities and then intensely focused. You're just intensely focused on doing it. That's a recipe for success. And very, so impressed with what you've done and really thankful to get to hear your journey today. You said there was something else you wanted to chat about a few minutes ago.
The Power of the Right Team: Building With Purpose-Aligned People
William Ward (49:20.426)
Yeah, so two things, you know, you talk about team, you know, and yeah, so again, that's one, that one thing is that it's very important when you're building the company, make sure that you align yourself with people that share, you know, your vision. And it's one mistake that I made earlier to coming, starting this company.
Jeff Dudan (49:25.532)
Hmm.
William Ward (49:47.258)
So I've had to part with a co-founder who was very well intent with the business, but he had his focus on something else. That was equally aligned to our background and our struggle coming from a war-torn country. So he was more involved and passionate about politics.
figured that out until late and it caused a lot of something. And that's somebody that was close to me, really close to me. He was a blended sibling, right? And we had to make the decision to part ways. But that didn't deter me. The team that I have now, I really handpicked them because all of them have been through some kind of adversity. Like David, who is my head of
tech. He came from the Philippines, you know, in a published situation as well with a single mom who had to come to this country with him, not speaking any English. But David Persevere started coding when he was 13 years of age and now got a senior programming role at a great company here in Charlotte.
the guy who runs my operations, Emmanuel, he's from Liberia as well, suffered from epilepsy growing up and his teachers told him that they almost removed him from the school because of his epilepsy attacks. And they wrote him up and said that he wasn't going to amounts to nothing. But Emmanuel now came and got his MBA here in the States.
He got the 20 under 20 degree, I mean, award at UNCC. Worked at great companies. And then Armah, Armah is my head of growth. Armah, he came to the States, he couldn't speak any English, and he got bullied in all of the whole nine yards. Now Armah is a writer. He got the award for being one of the,
William Ward (52:11.042)
the upcoming speakers in the space, the high school business, and just really great guys that I surrounded myself with and hope to see what we've built today.
Jeff Dudan (52:26.588)
William, it's not a mistake that somebody doesn't work out. It's just part of the process. And we start with this in our training. If you do the people piece well, and you care for, and nurture, and treat fairly, and create opportunity, then you'll have the right kind of people because you've set the game up for them to have success for whatever it is they need in their life, right? And you've created the conditions where they can align what they need
William Ward (52:37.494)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (52:56.522)
personally with what the company needs. And when you get the people piece right, everything seems to go bigger, better, faster. And when you don't have the people piece right and there's something missing, then the friction which leads to entropy, which leads to cultural issues and all this other stuff, so it's and it's just part of the process because they might be the right person, but just not the right person right now.
there might be something going on in their life that, you know, had it been three years ago, it would have been the perfect three years that they could have spent on the team. But so it's just that's the art of building teams. And we I'm very interested in that. That's a big thing that I spent a lot of my time thinking about. And, you know, I do have a passion for other people.
hoping, you know, I really, it means a lot to me to see people succeed and, you know, find a way to win while we're winning here. I mean, that's really what it's all about at the end of the day, because that's, that's the impact that, that we want to make in the world. And I can tell that you do as well. William.
Is there anything else that you would like to cover while we're on the home front here today?
The Macro Mission: Solving the Labor Shortage Through Youth Skills
William Ward (54:21.502)
Yeah, so there's a bigger on a macro level what we're doing, how it could contribute to the overall economy later on. And that's the big picture aspect of Flexi. So if you look at the labor shortage issue in the US, it's not lack of people to do stuff.
Jeff Dudan (54:28.026)
Mm-hmm.
William Ward (54:50.902)
the lack of skills in key areas. And that's what Flexi is helping to do here, cultivate key skills so that the future of work is better than it looks now. Because if you look at things as it is right now, the school system, the college system is actually filling the young people of today.
you learn by doing, you know, you learn by gaining hands-on experience, you know, from a lot of things. You know, when I got my MBA, for example, like things that I'm learning now, running my business, I didn't learn half of it in my MBA program. And so these are the key skills that we're trying to cultivate from young people so that the future workforce is more prepared.
Excuse me. It's more prepared to do things that matter for companies, right? So Flexi is right now cultivating that talent to help the young people to be better workers tomorrow. And also, if you kind of look at the way things are set up right now, it's like you really need a college degree to be successful in the U.S.
But then people are graduating from college without the necessary skills to do the work that they need to do, especially Black and brown and low income whites that settle to go into certain kinds of schools. Because they don't have the skills, they go to low paying jobs. And now they get stuck with student loans. They get stuck with those things. And all of those things are broadening the wealth gap.
you know, in the US. So a platform like Flexi is trying to close that gap by providing the key skills that people need, getting them access to opportunities to build those skills. And so that even if they don't go to college after high school, they can become entrepreneurs because they have learned some kind of career and technical education with a...
William Ward (57:10.958)
local company and they have learned some kind of vocational training and now they can form their own businesses and make meaningful living. So that's like the grand picture of Flexi and that's what we're trying to do.
Jeff Dudan (57:26.856)
Creating opportunity and impacting lives through closing the skills gap in this country and many others. William Ward, thank you for being on the home front today. One last question for you. If you had one sentence to make an impact in someone else's life, what's your go-to sentence? What would that be?
William Ward (57:52.47)
Never give up on yourself. Everything is possible if you believe.
Jeff Dudan (57:55.441)
Oh.
Jeff Dudan (57:58.856)
I love it. That's brilliant. I have nothing to add to that. Never give up on yourself. Everything is possible if you believe. Awesome. William, it's been a pleasure to have you on here today. How can people reach you if they're interested in maybe talking to you about investing in Flexi or perhaps using Flexi to help them staff their businesses?
William Ward (58:07.159)
Yes, sir.
William Ward (58:13.355)
Yes!
William Ward (58:23.594)
Yes, so I'll share my email so I can be reached at william at go flexi.com that's william at go F le x i e That or let's connect on linkedin. I'm very active on linkedin Or you can visit our website At go flexi.com and you can send a message from there. I'll be very interested in talking to you
And Jeff, I just want to say I've got a lot of respect for you. And I'm glad that we connected. I'm glad that you gave me the time of the day. You know, when you meet a lot of people, and they're sketchy people that promise to get in contact and never do.
And that's the expectation, to be honest, that I set free for a lot of people, especially people with resources nowadays, because of the experience I've had. But you're one of the few folks that are true to your word and you follow up on what you say, I'm just very blessed that I met you and I'm happy to be on the podcast. And one last thing I will give a shout out to John Bingley.
That's another super beautiful him being, you know, a great friend and mentor. Um, and it was even through him that I met you. So, um, I'm appreciated, uh, appreciative for you guys.
Jeff Dudan (01:00:01.156)
William Ward, it has been our honor and our pleasure.
William Ward (01:00:11.362)
Thank you, Jeff. Bye.
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