Motherly Entrepreneurship | Lindsey Pinchuk | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
Lindsay Pinchuk turned a $500 idea into a multi-million-dollar media brand by building community before community was a buzzword. In this candid conversation with Jeff Dudan, she opens up about founding Bump Club and Beyond, selling it before COVID hit, surviving corporate burnout, and launching a second act as a marketing consultant and podcast host. The episode is packed with practical strategies for organic growth, brand building, and what it really means to be unapologetically yourself in business.
Key Takeaways
- Community is stronger than audience: Lindsay's success came from treating followers like real people—not passive consumers.
- The best marketing is organic and integrated: Her SWEEP method combines Social, Website, Email, Events, Partnerships, and Publicity to build trust and visibility.
- Sell at the right time: She exited Bump Club just before COVID, turning a risky pivot into a digital success story.
- It’s OK to evolve: Just because your business started from your life stage doesn’t mean you’re stuck in it forever.
- Be radically authentic: Sharing her truth—even when controversial—brought her more clients, not fewer.
- Podcasting builds trust: Her podcast Dear FoundHer has been her #1 marketing tool, client pipeline, and source of collaboration.
Featured Quote
“When you show up as yourself, the right people gravitate toward you. No apologies.”
— Lindsay Pinchuk
TRANSCRIPT
Who Calls Lindsay and Why: Burnt-Out Founders and Brand Strategy
Jeff Dudan (00:02.514)
Lindsay, how you doing?
Lindsay Pinchuk (00:03.646)
I'm good. How are you?
Jeff Dudan (00:05.406)
Good, thank you for being on.
Lindsay Pinchuk (00:06.966)
Thanks so much for having me, it's great to meet you.
Jeff Dudan (00:09.478)
Yeah, my pleasure. Excited. So Lindsay, can you tell us who calls you and what do they call you for these days?
Lindsay Pinchuk (00:18.986)
I will tell you a lot of people call me. My kids call me the most. But outside of my kids, outside of my kids who call me mom 90 million times a day, the people who call me are generally small business owners and other female founders. And they are often calling me because they are time-stretched and they are burnt out and they are busy and they do not know how to market their business. And that is what I help them with. In addition,
Jeff Dudan (00:22.378)
Hahaha
Lindsay Pinchuk (00:47.854)
People also often call me, small business owners and female founders call me because I'm a connector. And I've always been a connector. And oftentimes if they need someone for something, they know that I know who to connect them to.
Jeff Dudan (01:02.526)
Fantastic. I am excited to talk to you today and I would like to dig into your journey a little bit. Would you mind sharing where you grew up?
From Detroit to Leo Burnett to Bump Club: Lindsay’s Unexpected Founder Journey
Lindsay Pinchuk (01:15.102)
Yeah, so I grew up outside of Detroit, Michigan in an amazing suburb called West Bloomfield. And even though I've been gone for longer than I lived there, Detroit is still my home. It will always be my home. And I went to the University of Michigan and I moved to Chicago right after I graduated from U of M.I.C. You're smiling. Did you go to Ohio State or something?
Jeff Dudan (01:35.57)
Oh no, even better, I went to Appalachian State. So, you know. Occasionally, we did, I don't remember exactly when. Oh wait, no, September 1st, 2007, 34 to 32, blocked the field goal in the last play of the game. But regardless, that's ancient history.
Lindsay Pinchuk (01:38.666)
Okay. Oh yes, we play you guys in football a lot. Yes.
Lindsay Pinchuk (01:55.522)
So you played football. Oh, and that's awesome. Okay, I'm digressing. I'm sorry. I said I'm digressing.
Jeff Dudan (01:57.782)
I did. I did. We were at Appalachian State, but I'm a big Michigan fan. What's no, that's fine. I'm a, I'm a big Michigan fan. Um, I've got some, uh, I got a friend there, uh, that, that does all their NIL work now. Uh, so I really have a lot of respect for the program. They're doing well this year too.
Lindsay Pinchuk (02:15.966)
Yes, they are. Go blue. So after college, I moved to Chicago, and I was supposed to start a job at Leo Burnett on September 10, 2001, so the day before the Twin Towers fell. And a few weeks prior to that, all of our jobs were rescinded because of the economy. The economy was in the toilet at the time. And when 9-11 happened, there were no jobs, and everything was just kind of done. Everyone was at a standstill. And so I ended up taking a bit of a pause. I studied for the GRE.
Jeff Dudan (02:17.971)
Yeah.
Lindsay Pinchuk (02:45.83)
I had received a signing bonus from Leo Burnett, which that's so not a thing anymore. I'm totally dating myself because no company gives a signing bonus like that now out of college. And I went to Montreal. I hung out. And when it was time for me to come and start my career, I was like, I got to find something else. And I ended up landing a job in advertising sales at Sports Illustrated. And I started an amazing 10-year career in advertising and marketing, selling programs to Fortune 100 companies.
to get their businesses out into the world through the many amazing properties that I worked on. And when I got pregnant, I ended up, we were living here, we have no family here, we were transplants and none of my friends were pregnant. And we all have seventh graders, I was just first. And I was really looking for a community. And just people to hang out with and like be pregnant with. I wasn't going to happy hour anymore, I wasn't going to the bars.
And I started hosting events for expectant parents. We had some workouts, we had some shopping events. And what really came out of this was the need for community. And you have to remember this was 2010. This was before social media was even a thing. I mean, Facebook was around, but there were no Facebook business pages even. It was just like your personal page. And so I started hosting events and word of mouth traveled fast. And these events went from 50 people to 75 people to 100 people. And given my background in advertising and marketing,
How Bump Club and Beyond Was Born with $500 and a Need for Connection
I started reaching out to brands. Brands love pregnant women. They really love pregnant women and they have a very short window of opportunity with them. And before I knew it, I had a lot of brands who were paying me to be in our gift bags and sponsor our events. And one thing kind of led to another. I ended up not going back to my corporate job after I had my first daughter. And I took on this company that I was building, Bump Club and Beyond, full time.
and I built it from the ground up. And I started with a $500 investment and I built it to reach 3 million people per month. We were generating seven figures in revenue for the last six years that I owned it. We were working with brands like Target and Nordstrom on really big activations where I would create a program for those entities and then bring my community to the program. And...
Lindsay Pinchuk (05:06.866)
Essentially, I ended up selling my company in 2019 to a large agency holding company outside of Orange County who wanted my brand for my relationship with Target. They were trying to work with Target in the baby space and I was preventing them from doing so and so they ended up buying me. And I ended up working there for a couple of years. It really was awful and I have no problem saying that, but it was really awful going back to corporate America.
Why Pregnant Women Are Every Brand’s Dream Customer
It was, there were a lot of things about my deal that didn't pan out the way that they should have. And about two and a half years in, I realized it wasn't mine anymore. I asked myself, why am I working to make someone else money? I had a lot of brands calling me, asking me to do large and small scale marketing projects for them at a much higher rate than I was being paid by this corporation. And so I left. And I left and I started taking on clients.
And I really made it a goal to help other women business owners, female founders, especially those who are over 40 and really kind of starting something new for that second chapter. My goal is to help them to succeed and to work with them on building their brand, growing their brand through these organic marketing practices that I implemented with my first company and now my second. And I'm.
Also, I started a podcast. So my podcast is called Dear Found Her, and that is, it's a part of my community, it's a part of my new company. It really is the backbone of everything that I do. It's my number one marketing vehicle for my services and my classes and some upcoming projects that I have going on. And that's what I do. So that's my story. I mean, that was a really long story. I'm not that old, but that was a really long story.
Jeff Dudan (06:50.118)
Well, it's exciting. So I'm interested, why, other than the obvious, why do brands want to connect with people that are pregnant?
Lindsay Pinchuk (07:03.49)
So when you are pregnant, you have like, you're really outwardly pregnant, like six months, right? And so that first three months when you're pregnant, you're kind of doing a lot of research, you're looking around, but no one knows you're pregnant. The internet might know, but no one else really knows you're pregnant. So you have the six month window when people know you're pregnant. And there are so many choices to be made. There are so many different strollers and car seats and products and...
foods and there's just so many things that come along with pregnancy and everyone wants what's best for themselves because that's what's best for their baby, obviously, and there's a lot of choices. And so when I started this company, a big thing was that I put my face on it and I said, you know, we don't take and we didn't take money from any brands that me and my team wouldn't have used ourselves. It was a very trusting environment.
Jeff Dudan (07:36.307)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (07:57.65)
I would use a product and then they would want to work with us. It wasn't like they were paying me to use the product and then, you know, it was very different than what goes on now with influencers. But expectant moms have a huge, they control a lot of spending and they make a lot of decisions. And when you get in with them with like a diaper or a wipe or a cream early on, usually they're using it for that whole first baby, when they have a second baby, maybe a third baby.
Jeff Dudan (08:07.85)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (08:25.302)
So it's really important to reach them when they're newly pregnant.
Jeff Dudan (08:28.242)
Yeah, it's almost like a brand new customer or even a customer and a half, right? Because you've got the mom customer and then at some point, you've got a baby or two and they're a new customer for all new types of products and services. So basically, you would give them an avenue to catch these people early, to create a relationship with these people and then hopefully to be able to make a buying behavior with them.
Lindsay Pinchuk (08:55.37)
Yes, and they did.
Jeff Dudan (08:57.606)
So Bump Club and beyond, what were the channels that you used for your membership and to build your community?
The SWEEP Method: Organic Marketing That Actually Works
Lindsay Pinchuk (09:08.426)
Yeah, so when I first started, it was events. We did events. And honestly, I will say that even today, and I can get into this in a minute, events are so, so important for connection and building that in-person trust. But we were an events-based company first. Like I said, there was no social media, so I would write things on our blog. We would send out emails. And then as social media started becoming a thing, we started working social media into our marketing mix, Facebook first, then Instagram.
Jeff Dudan (09:12.304)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (09:36.126)
Mm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (09:36.974)
Twitter, Pinterest. I left kind of before the big TikTok boom, so I never really had to deal with that with Bump Club. But social media obviously was a very big part. And then partnerships were huge. And publicity. As I grew with the brand, I became a trusted source and an expert in the parenting space. And I would be called on all the time by news outlets, websites to comment, to come on TV, to...
Jeff Dudan (09:45.223)
Hehe.
Lindsay Pinchuk (10:06.398)
share product knowledge and my favorite products and whatnot. So publicity played a really big role as well. And it's funny because when I left Bump Club and I started doing this for other clients, I looked back at what it was that I did. Like why was this successful? I took a pause and I said, what did I do that made this so successful and able to reach so many people and generate so much revenue? And it was the fact that I was able to use all of these avenues together.
And I always tell my clients, like, you can't just rely on social media. There's so much more that goes into this, and there's so much more outside of social media that goes into building up your social media. So at that point, I coined what I call SWEEP, and that's like my method that I use with clients. And SWEEP stands for social media, your website, emails, events, partnerships, and publicity. And essentially, all of those things need to be working together in your organic marketing play in order to be successful.
And when they are working together, it makes it a lot easier to get out there, to get more awareness. And you can use one piece of content and take that piece of content and its message and sweep it through all of those platforms and all of those strategies. And that's what makes things work.
Jeff Dudan (11:21.61)
Fascinating. So, you sold the business in 2019. What was that decision process like for you?
Lindsay Pinchuk (11:27.655)
I did.
What It’s Really Like to Sell Your Business (and What She’d Do Differently)
Lindsay Pinchuk (11:31.638)
So in 2017, I had a part-time finance guy that I, and I had said to him, I really wanna sell, either sell this business or raise money before I turn 40. And I turned 40 in 2019. So, and I just, you know, part of it was, this was a life stage business for me. My kids were growing up, I was the face of a brand that was pitching things to brand new moms and I wasn't a new mom anymore.
And people were relying on me to give them advice and information on things that happened in my life like five to seven years ago. And it just it felt kind of weird. And I didn't feel like I could be enough. And I built this brand off of like my own experiences and authenticity. And I didn't feel like it was that authentic for me to be telling someone what stroller to buy when I was no longer pushing a stroller. It just felt weird. And I had said if I sell the business, I would like to work for the new company. I could do the strategy for the business.
cows come home. I mean, I loved what we had. I loved what we built. And what ended up happening, what
Jeff Dudan (12:35.479)
And now you understand that that's never gonna happen when you sell your best.
Lindsay Pinchuk (12:39.89)
No. That's never gonna happen. And I know that. Now I know that. I knew it wouldn't work out exactly, but it was not great. So...
Jeff Dudan (12:43.974)
You know, I had an investment, I sold a company also in 2019, by the way. And I was watching what was happening and I called my investment banker and I said, do you think I should get in touch with somebody there and let them know my view on what's going on? And he said, no, stay out of it because sometimes there's a strategy behind the madness.
But most often, it's just madness. But either way, stay out of it.
Lindsay Pinchuk (13:18.058)
Yeah, yeah, I mean, that's essentially why I left. But so what ended up happening was, fast forward to 2018, I had a new financial, a fractional CMO that was working with me who I loved. She helped me broker the business, she helped me prepare everything for the deal. And while I was working with her, I had three entities reach out to me on LinkedIn. And we had discussed, like, we're gonna get a deck together, we're gonna start taking this out, I really wanna move forward with this. And three people came to me.
Jeff Dudan (13:31.145)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (13:47.906)
The first one was not a fit, I never would have entertained it. The second one was the one that I actually ended up going with and part of why I did go with them was because they wanted me, my brand, my people, they wanted everything. And then the third one was a company called SumSpider and they bought a brand called Scary Mommy which was another big brand in the parenting space and they ended up wanting an aqua hire. So they wanted to hire me, dissolve my brand and they wanted me to do...
Jeff Dudan (13:59.056)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (14:14.466)
for them what I did for Bump Club and I said, absolutely not, like I'm not starting over. Yes, I mean, yes, I mean, it was, I said no thank you, like, we're done here. I was actually supposed to go out to New York to meet with them and when they wouldn't sign my nondisclosure, my nondisclosure, I said forget it because I'm not gonna give you the secret sauce to my company if you're not gonna sign my nondisclosure. So I ended up, I ended up pursuing the...
Jeff Dudan (14:17.834)
Oh, I call that a staff acquisition.
Jeff Dudan (14:37.642)
Mm-hmm. That's right.
Lindsay Pinchuk (14:42.966)
the second entity that pursued me. And they, like I said, really wanted me because of my relationship with Target. And they're a company that, they're called Advantage Marketing Solutions. They own a lot of different brands and agencies. And one of their agency's brand connections was the acquirer of Bump Club. And it was not an easy process, but it wasn't as hard as a lot of people think it is. I mean, they really wanted this to happen.
And so they pushed it along and it really was only like a seven month process. But for me, I knew I wanted to move forward with something like this. I was so sick of bootstrapping the business. I was so sick of having to worry about making payroll. I didn't want to work like that anymore. And I just really, they promised me rocket fuel to make Bump Club a household name. And that's what I really wanted. And I just felt like I had to take the chance. Now, I, even though it didn't turn out the way I wanted it to,
I do not regret selling this business. You have to think of the timeframe that I sold it in. I sold it in 2019. And in 2020, when COVID hit, all of my competitors went out of business. I ended up turning Bump Club, I was still there, and I ended up turning it into an online events company. And within literally three days of COVID, we were hosting events online. We were the very first company to do so in the parenting space. And so...
You know, I do not regret making that sale because I would have gone out of business and gotten nothing for my company. And you know, things happen for a reason hindsight is 2020. This was an amazing experience. It, you know, it allowed me to learn so much and to be where I am now because of what I went through.
The COVID Pivot: Turning Live Events Into a National Digital Powerhouse
Jeff Dudan (16:23.422)
associated with some trade show businesses, and they also in COVID did an online show with rooms where people could go into and talk to the various vendors didn't work that well. So I'm interested what your experience was, because I could see with people that are pregnant, they have to get inside of a group. So they would, I could see that being very, very effective, because if they can't go out and meet you in person, they
still want to get and collaborate with people that are sharing that same experience. Is that what you found?
Lindsay Pinchuk (16:54.814)
Yes, it was the experience and the knowledge. So what ended up happening was we kind of had an early heads up that like something was coming with COVID because we were in the process of executing this very large activation with Target. So when I owned Bump Club, our Target activation was like a low six figure activation. And when we were acquired after the first year, we ended up securing them for this huge program. It was a...
large seven-figure program and it was supposed to take place on March 21st, 2020 in 300 stores nationwide. And the whole point of this program was to get people into the stores and sampling products and to take home all these samples and to interact with a bunch of the brands that we were going to have on site. Now, obviously with COVID that couldn't have happened, but at the end of February...
we got a heads up from Target that was like, there's something coming, we're being told about this, we're canceling all events ahead of time. And what ended up happening was we ended up hosting a webinar on March 8th, it was the very last time a person at Bump Club got on an airplane. We came together, we did it in a hotel ballroom, and we ended up having thousands of people tune in to this webinar, and it was before COVID even took place. And then what ended up happening was all of these brands that were participating, we ended up hosting Facebook Lives with them.
all throughout the months of March, April, and May. And we would get on with their representatives. We would talk about the category. We'd talk about the product. We'd give advice. We'd do a lot of giveaways. And we ended up all these gift bags that were supposed to be given out at the 300 stores, we ended up shipping them. We shipped like 10,000 gift bags out from our fulfillment center. It ended up being a wild success. I mean, we had millions of people watching us on Facebook. This was, again, like we started it before, like,
before everything really got crazy. And we ended up from there, hosting music classes for parents and kids and workout classes for parents and kids. And just all of our events that we did in person, all of our talks and our seminars, we turned into webinars. And we ended up creating a really robust online community filled with the same information you would have gotten in person from one of our events. And we did it online.
Lindsay Pinchuk (19:10.97)
And we ended up being able to make money from the brands who wanted to get in front of these people. And we were reaching millions of people. I mean, it was really, really wild. I mean, millions of people were tuning in to watch these live events on Facebook.
Jeff Dudan (19:24.554)
But that is a great pivot. Congratulations on that strategy and that execution. How did it change coming out of COVID?
Lindsay Pinchuk (19:27.927)
Thank you.
Thank you.
So Target ended up buying into the program all of 2020. So we did it in three different waves. And then in 2021, they contracted with us again. They were not gonna go in store. We had part of the country not really doing anything and part of the country was kinda living their life like normal, but because it was expectant parents, they were a very high risk group.
and we stayed online. So in 2021, we were online as well. I left in the fall of 2021, and when I left, they were talking about going back to in-person events at the beginning of 2022. And they ended up never going back to in-person events. They ended up closing Bump Club. But that happened in the beginning of 2023. So they never went back to in-person events.
They maintained online events and they worked with Target through the end of 2022. Um, but I do think that like, you know, there was this pivot and people did still want to learn, learn and meet people online and they were connecting and they were connecting with information and that was really what pregnant people needed. And really and truly it wasn't until the beginning of this year, end of last year, end of 2022, beginning of 2023, that pregnant people really started going out of the house again. They, pregnant people
When Big Brands Don’t Understand Their Audience (or Zika and Pregnant Women)
Lindsay Pinchuk (20:58.266)
Generally, I mean, you're reaching people across the country, but generally speaking, we're probably the last people to really resume normal life. A lot of people that I knew that were pregnant were being very careful. They were wearing masks. A lot of them still do. And, you know, they're protecting themselves and their baby. We know a lot more now than we did in 2020. So it's a much different situation.
Jeff Dudan (21:21.066)
Well, we were hosting events. I was hosting an event actually in Turks and Caicos, and it came up as a Zika area, where it was at Zika, right? It was the disease that was born by mosquitoes, and anybody that was even thinking about being pregnant would not travel to those areas.
Lindsay Pinchuk (21:30.762)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (21:40.098)
So it's funny you say that, we had this huge activation with Nordstrom during Zika, and one of our Nordstrom events at Bump Club was in Miami. And Miami was also a Zika hotspot, and the OBGYN Association was telling pregnant people in the Zika hotspots to stay home.
And I had an argument with Nordstrom. I said, we can't have this event. It's going to flop. It's such a waste of money. Let's not do this. And they were like, that's crazy. People are still leaving the house. I said, like, no, really. If this is what the Medical Association is saying, we're not going to look like idiots by showing up and hosting an event for pregnant women. But we made a lot of changes during that time as well.
Jeff Dudan (22:22.75)
I heard much about that lately. Is it still a thing?
Lindsay Pinchuk (22:25.078)
I don't know if it's still a thing. I don't think it's still a thing. I'm not in that world anymore. So like I don't really pay much attention to it.
How She Felt When Bump Club Was Quietly Deleted by Its New Owners
Jeff Dudan (22:33.47)
How do you feel that Bump Club is no longer a brand?
Lindsay Pinchuk (22:38.914)
So it makes me really sad, to be honest. But I will say, in the beginning of 2021, it was January of 2021 that I decided I was going to leave. And I told my manager at the time that I wanted an exit. And she didn't believe me. She actually ignored me for months. She wouldn't get on the phone with me. It was really crazy. And by the time I finally said to her, I said, OK, my last day is July 23. So either he had it.
Jeff Dudan (22:42.512)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (23:07.754)
you work something out with me or I'm taking the keys to the kingdom because a lot of stuff was still in my head. I mean, I actually was at the time the only one who knew the Instagram password. So you know, I mean, like it was just like a lot of ridiculousness. And so during that process and there was a lot of legal back and forth and a lot of discussion, it was really taxing. It was like I had lost like 10 pounds. I wasn't eating. I wasn't sleeping. I just wanted a fair exit. I wanted to be able to.
leave and not disappoint my team and not disappoint my community that relied on me. And I didn't want to just disappear. I think they would have loved for me to have just like disappeared and that's it. But like you can't do that when you're the face of a company. It's weird. And it would look really bad on them. And also it would have looked bad on them with Target and Nordstrom and all of their clients. So during that time was really the stressful time for me. And that was like kind of when like I was just...
so upset with the whole thing. And then afterwards when I left was a little bit when I call it my sitting shiva period, right? Like I really was like having to deal with the fact that I had left and what am I going to do and all that stuff. Now when they finally got rid of the brand in the beginning of 2023, it happened kind of oddly too. In a matter of two days, two of my really close work colleagues
had said to me, well, first they laid off everyone in the beginning of 2023, and we helped my last colleague get a job at an amazing company within the space. And she and another colleague of mine reached out to me within like 24 hours of each other and said, do you know that the Bump Club stuff is gone? And it was really like one of them went online to like grab a picture or grab a logo or something from the website, and that's how we found out that it was gone. And...
You know, it was sad. It's like an end of an era, and I think that... I just think it was so mishandled because to them it was nothing, you know, you have these big corporate bohemists, they could give a shit about anyone, anything. But like, this was my livelihood. It was a brand that I built, and I made a post about this, and I said it doesn't matter that it's not there. Like, the millions of memories that we made with so many people, and the friendships and the relationships and the connections, like...
Lindsay Pinchuk (25:23.766)
Bump Club will always be a part of this generation of parents, and I'm so proud of it. The one thing that is so annoying is that there's no footprint of it anywhere. Like, I mean, you can Google it, and there's press releases and news articles and TV shows, but there's no website, there's no social media, and it's kind of a waste. Like, I can't believe that anyone would get rid of, like, an Instagram account that had 75,000, 85,000 people or a Facebook account that had...
200,000 people, like that's such a waste to just get rid of. And that's kind of just what made me sad is that they didn't sell it off. They didn't do something with it. Um, and it just was gone one day.
Jeff Dudan (26:01.626)
Looking back on the entire experience, would you have played your hand any differently?
Lindsay Pinchuk (26:08.01)
You know, I think the one thing that I would do, I would have done, was I would have shopped around the business a little more and maybe looked to see if there were other people who were interested. Now, had I done that, I might have missed my window of opportunity and I might have never been able to sell the business before COVID. So, I don't know. It's really hard to say, right? Like, the timing was right. The world we were living in was crazy and upside down.
That would have been the one thing. And I think the other thing that I would have done differently is I really felt like they rushed me. They really rushed me. And the woman who sold Scary Mommy, actually, Jill Smokler, I had her on my podcast. And the one thing that she said to me in terms of advice, and I always give this to people who are selling their business, is that if someone wants you, the ball's in your court and you need to take your time.
And I felt really rushed by it and I felt like there was a sense of urgency and I would I wish I would have slowed down a little bit. I think I could have gotten a couple of different things um in my favor had I done that and I don't know. But again hindsight's 20-20. I do not regret it though.
Jeff Dudan (27:17.606)
Yeah, there's a great book called How to Sell Your Business for an Unreasonable Price or something like that. And there's four, run a competitive process, have a competitive advantage, hire a qualified investment banker, and then keep your mouth shut as a founder. Like those are the four things that I remember from that. But that being said, there's been some wonderful deals and some great partnerships built by
picking the right strategic partner. So, and regardless if you run a process, that doesn't mean that you would have picked any differently or you would have, you know, you'd have had a better, any better outcome than you already did. Well, what a great testimony to building a great brand and winning with it. And then also to kind of stick in the landing and getting paid. And now you've been able to use that in, not only the experience, but probably your resources to have some optionality and choices in your life to be able to.
build what you're doing now. So, Lindsey, share a little bit with us about your business today, if you don't mind.
What Lindsay’s Marketing Consultancy Looks Like Today
Lindsay Pinchuk (28:21.89)
Of course. So, Lindsay Pinchuk Marketing and Consulting is my business and brands big and small hire me to come in and really overhaul their whole organic marketing strategy. I don't do paid marketing, I don't do SEO, I don't do that, I do organic marketing. So, all of those things that I talked about in the beginning, social media, website, emails, events, partnerships, and publicity, and it's all surrounding the brand's community.
So I come in and I work with them and their team on how to implement an effective strategy for growth. And I've worked with some really incredible clients, dozens of clients. And then from that, I also have had a lot of smaller founders or newer founders or solopreneurs who have wanted to work with me. So I have started a one-on-one mentoring program as well that is not consulting. It's me coming in and meeting with people a couple of times a month and telling them what to do and going over their homework that I give them.
And so that's essentially what I do. And then I podcast as well, and I share the stories of female founders of our time, like really amazing founders. I've had Bobbi Brownham. I've had Dr. Becky Kennedy on. I've had Arielle Kay. I had Joanna Griffiths from NYX. She sold her business for $320 million. Just really amazing women who have empowered my community. And as we move into 2024, I'm really
My goal is to harness that community a little bit more. I've started hosting in-person events in Chicago for women in business. They've been wildly successful. We've only had two and it's, we've like outgrown the spaces already. And as we move into next year, I'm gonna be launching a new program, which I told you ahead of time. I'm still deciding on what the name is, but it's coming soon, so I need to decide. But, um, it is an... Funny you should ask me that though, because I have all these names.
Coming Soon: A Mentorship Community to Make Marketing Simple
Jeff Dudan (30:07.778)
Do you know any marketing people that could help you pick a name?
Jeff Dudan (30:13.822)
haha
Lindsay Pinchuk (30:15.43)
And one of my very best friends is also a solopreneur. She's a writer. And we brainstorm all the time together, which is so important when you have your own business to have that village of people around you, right? And so I called Samantha today and I was like, can we please talk about this? And so she and I are, she's helping. You know, sometimes you just need that, you know, that other voice, that others, you know, you need that other opinion, especially when it's something about you. It's, I think, the hardest to market your own stuff and to...
Jeff Dudan (30:37.054)
Yes.
Lindsay Pinchuk (30:44.866)
come up with your own creative juices, right? So...but I'm really excited what I'm about to launch. It's an online group mentorship where you have access to all of my resources, my ebooks, my checklists, courses, and we're doing three monthly strategy calls, group strategy calls together. And really just, it's an extension of your marketing team, or it could be your marketing team for those people who are solopreneurs. I'm just finding that a lot of...
Women business owners who are solopreneurs only have one or two team members do not have time to market. They don't know how to market. A lot of them are really insecure with social media. And so I'm really working to make marketing simple. That's my whole tagline is like, let's make marketing simple and make it easy. It doesn't have to be complicated. You don't need a million followers. You don't need a million dollar budget. There are things that you can do to set up your processes to really build and grow your business effectively, simply.
Jeff Dudan (31:29.971)
Mm-hmm.
Jeff Dudan (31:45.738)
So you are consulting and advising. And very similar path, when I sold my business in 2019, I got involved with a lot of different things, but basically walking into the door and saying, hey, look, I'm gonna invest, I will consult, I will advise, and I will leave. And I had to get comfortable with myself. I had a great coach and a mentor and basically said, you need to.
You need to value your knowledge and you need to get paid for what you know, and you need to value your intellectual property. And so it sounds like we were kind of on a similar path. And then about two and a half years in and about two and a half years ago, by the way, my non-competa is up January 1st, 2024. Hey, we have been, we at Lindsay, we have been living parallel, parallel lives. Um, and we're both, well, you're from Detroit. I'm from Chicago. So.
Lindsay Pinchuk (32:27.639)
So was mine!
Lindsay Pinchuk (32:32.194)
We're living parallel lives.
Jeff Dudan (32:39.894)
It would be weird if I now lived in Detroit and you now lived in Chicago, but that's another way it is so do you think in the future that you might Operate a business again other than you are operating a consultancy in an advisory business Do you think that you would say you know what you get a client? They've got this great idea You love their energy you can bring something to the table They've got something that you can leverage and that you can help them make great
Lindsay Pinchuk (32:44.849)
Hehehehehehe
Jeff Dudan (33:09.106)
Do you think that is possible or are you gonna stay where you are with your career?
Lindsay Pinchuk (33:13.91)
You know, I think that anything is possible, and someone asked me this the other day, and I said for the right opportunity, if I was really passionate about it, I would absolutely entertain going to work somewhere full-time if it was the right thing. But there would be caveats, right? Like, if I'm going to work for someone or go help another business, I still want to have my podcast. I still want to be able to take on projects if I have time, if they don't impede on what I'm doing.
You know, I think anything is possible and I would never want to say, no, I'm never going to work for anyone else or, you know, take, run another business. Um, you know, I hope that I continue to run my own business and that's really the goal. With Dear Found Her and all of these events I'm starting to host, truly, it's starting to look a little bit like Bump Club for female founders, but, um...
You know, and so I don't know what's gonna happen there. I've had some sponsors who have been interested in sponsoring our events and sponsoring my podcasts, and that's really how I built Bump Club. I'm really trying to leave doors open. And, you know, this is like, this is the part of my life where I feel like I should be doing what I love and I should be happy every day. I was so unhappy at the end of the time at Bump Club, and my kids felt it, I felt it. It was a strain on everyone.
And I just want to be happy and I want to be able to show up for my kids. Everything I do is for my girls and I want them to be proud of me and I want to be present for them. So to answer your question, I think anything's possible. But for right now, in this moment, I'm really happy taking on projects and consulting and watching other businesses succeed because of my guidance.
The Power of Podcasting: How Dear FoundHer Became Her #1 Lead Generator
Jeff Dudan (34:56.361)
Podcasting is accelerating and you have a great one Can you share a little bit about your experience in starting that podcast and maybe what you've learned along the way?
Lindsay Pinchuk (35:08.01)
Yeah, absolutely. My podcast was not, I knew it would be a marketing vehicle for me, but I never ever expected it to do for me what it has. So basically what I did was in 2021, in the fall, I put out a trailer and I started interviewing people. I really started interviewing people in my network and I had a vast network of female founders that I knew from...
my past life and they were all happy to interview with me. And in January of 2022, I, after talking about the podcast and I really hyped it up a lot and people were excited about it, I dropped four episodes on the first day. And my intention was that I was going to do one a week. And what ended up happening was when I dropped these four episodes and all four of the guests shared, they were all big guests. One of them was me, like I had someone interview me, but.
The other three had huge followings. And within minutes, I was getting pitches in my inbox for amazing women to come on the show. I also had 20 episodes in the can that I needed to push out, and so I started dropping to a week. And you know, I really, I've learned so much from my guests. I did not do a solo episode until probably, I don't know, six or eight months in.
But what I have found is that, it's very similar to Bump Club, showing up as myself, sharing my experiences, just like you have in this conversation with me, has really let people in to my knowledge and my experience and my life, and people trust me. And they know that what they see is what they get, and they show up every week for me. My guests have hired me. I've had many of my guests hire me. I've had many guests refer me to other female founders. A lot of these women have...
you know, so many people in their network as well. And then I've had listeners who have hired me for mentorship and who have taken my classes. And it really happened very naturally. You know, I think similar to Bump Club, it wasn't forced. You know, it was like I built the community and I built my trust and authority. And now I'm starting to put products out and people are naturally buying them because they trust me and they know that I am who I am when I show up.
Lindsay Pinchuk (37:32.738)
The podcast journey does not have to be a difficult one. I think a lot of people overcomplicate it. And all you need is a mic and a computer and someone to help you. And there are plenty of people out there who you can hire that will not break the bank. And it's a really great medium to get into people's ears and to really target your community and who it is that you wanna reach and talk to them. And I...
I don't know, I wanted to be a journalist before I was anything. And so this is really allowing me to fulfill that passion, but it's also coming back to help me with my business. So it's really been an amazing journey.
Jeff Dudan (38:14.034)
an advantage for you to have this community marketing mind because you naturally, I would think, create the content that is going to be tailored and navigated towards the community that you're looking for. Although I will say, as we've only been doing the podcast for six months, and we've been turning kind of blue ocean strategy on it. Now we have numbers to look at and try to discern.
who's listening, why they're listening, how long people are listening. We're making tweaks about the intro and trying to make sure that we're using best of class standards and practices like that. And then we're trying to figure out where we go from here with it. So we're really in a heavy, heavy learning phase of it. But we're shocked, to your point, at the level of guests that we've been able to have on the show has been really crazy.
Jeff Dudan (39:09.382)
I mean, we didn't get the response that you got with dropping your four episodes. I mean, I think we had like eight downloads you know, the first couple episodes. I mean, it really wasn't a lot. And then, and you know, we had some great, we're probably gonna re-release some of those. I mean, we had Kara Goldin, the founder of Hint Water and she was amazing. Amazing. And we had Stacey Madison, Stacey's Pita Chips on that. And you know, they were so early in the process, they probably didn't get the play. So I think we're probably gonna, you know, recut up, what's that?
Lindsay Pinchuk (39:24.423)
Yeah, she's an amazing guest.
Lindsay Pinchuk (39:36.13)
Did they share?
Jeff Dudan (39:40.09)
Yeah, yeah, they did. And then, you know, and their networks helped with it. But now, like, it's, I mean, we have across multiple platforms, we've got a lot going on. I mean, we're in top, we vacillate between like top 36 and 40 on Apple podcasts for entrepreneurship. And we were doing much better on YouTube, and we're figuring it out on TikTok. So but it is a it is a, you know, when you really get down, like any business, you get down to the fine tuning of it.
Lindsay Pinchuk (39:41.526)
Okay. Yeah.
Lindsay Pinchuk (39:54.454)
That's awesome.
Jeff Dudan (40:09.862)
You go from considering eight or 10 variables down to, now there's a hundred little things that matter, whether it be the thumbnail or the intro, how long does it take? We just had a little kind of three second intro made to try to create a connection between, oh, this is a on the home front podcast coming at you. They see it, they hear a little noise and something, and then they're gonna give us.
They'll give us 10 seconds to see if we can get their attention or whatever. So it's fascinating. And you know, it's been a it's been a really interesting journey. And I will agree with you that it's a very, very powerful medium. Now yours, I'm not I've listened to a couple of the episodes, but I don't know how similar they all are. But you know, we're a franchise business. And we're you know, so there's a whole franchise ecosystem.
Lindsay Pinchuk (41:00.78)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (41:04.818)
but we've only had by count of our 40 episodes, only four have been franchising related people to it because our position was, we wanted to build a broader audience. So we're trying to be more mainstream, so comedians are booked in, scientists, DNA specialists, founders with great founder stories, people like you with a great founder story and now another business. So I think that we're still,
learning who we are as a podcast. But, you know, wherever it ends up, you know, it's been worth doing and we're having a good time with it. So...
Lindsay Pinchuk (41:48.514)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (41:55.13)
Your business today, in terms of working with people in this capacity, is this work that you self-perform? Do you have other people that are experts in things that they do and you can use them for different parts of it and refer them into your clients for things that they need?
How do you deliver services to your clients?
Lindsay Pinchuk (42:27.778)
So when a client hires me, they hire me. I am the person who's going to create the strategy. I am the person who's going to start executing the strategy. But there might be people I need to call in for copywriting or for graphic design. Or a lot of times, a lot of times, actually, people will hire me. And they'll say, I have an assistant running my social media. And then when I get in to work with them, we realize that the assistant really is not the person who should be running the social media.
Jeff Dudan (42:30.91)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (42:56.49)
Sure.
Lindsay Pinchuk (42:57.278)
or the intern should not be running the social media, that's a huge no-no. And so I have a lot of freelance social media managers that I, does your intern run your social media?
Jeff Dudan (43:07.306)
I just looked at my social media person with a... ..
Lindsay Pinchuk (43:10.414)
Sorry, sorry, but a very big, if you have a good one, okay, let me rephrase that. If you have a good one, that is great. But what I have found is that there are a lot of companies who like will hire a summer intern or a seasonal intern to do their social media. And that's not gonna be the person to do your social media at this point of the game. That was how it was run 10 years ago. And so I have a lot of different freelance.
Jeff Dudan (43:13.982)
Fortunately, she is amazing. And...
Jeff Dudan (43:22.807)
Alright.
Jeff Dudan (43:27.912)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (43:33.326)
Right. Yeah.
Lindsay Pinchuk (43:39.434)
social media managers that I can bring in, fractional, you know, so people don't have to make a full hire. So I do have people that I look to that I bring in, depending on what the project is. You know, it really depends what the project is. I have a web designer I like to work with. I have a lot of clients who end up needing their websites redone. So there's a lot of different pieces to this. And when I need to, I will bring someone in. But I am the one who manages the whole thing. I put my stamp of approval on everything. I create the strategy.
And oftentimes, especially if I'm working in social media with them, I will actually create like 20 to 30 different posts for my clients so that we use those as teachings and as examples of how I'm going to teach their team how to implement my strategy through my own process. So.
From Peloton to Podcast: Jen Sherman’s Impact and an Unlikely Friendship
Jeff Dudan (44:27.782)
Awesome. Of all your female founder guests on the podcast, is there anybody that comes to mind that has been particularly inspiring for you?
Lindsay Pinchuk (44:39.714)
They're all very inspiring to me. Okay, like I will say.
Jeff Dudan (44:42.426)
Boy, I saw that politically correct answer coming out. But if you had to pick, but if I had to pick one.
Lindsay Pinchuk (44:49.516)
No, I will. I will give you one. I have, this is actually a really crazy story. I love to ride my Peloton. And I will share this with her after, because now we're friends. So I love my Peloton. And throughout my whole time of when I was trying to decide if I was going to leave Bump Club, it was COVID, and I would ride with Jen Sherman. And my best friend,
would say to me, like, you and this Jen Sherman are, like, the same person. It is crazy. Like, you guys are gonna be friends one day. I just know it. And I knew...I've had her three times. I mean, she...I've hit her on three times. But she...I don't even know how I got...I got to her through one of her...she has a PR person who helps her with things and I happen to know her.
Jeff Dudan (45:18.842)
I saw that episode, by the way. I saw that you had her on. Ha.
Lindsay Pinchuk (45:36.542)
and I saw that in her profile, this girl's email was in the profile, and I emailed the girl and I said, hey, it's been a while since we worked together at Bump Club, but here's what I got going on. Would Jen wanna be on my podcast? And within minutes, she said, yeah. She said, sure. And so Jen and I get on the podcast and we have this great episode, and at the end she says to me, I'd love for you to come ride with me. And you know, a lot of people throw out empty.
promises and empty invitations. This was not an empty invitation. Jen followed up on the invitation and I ended up going to the studio in New York and I rode with her and we met in person and we have become very good friends. I mean, I talked to Jen a couple times a week. She's referred me to clients, which is amazing. And I'm gonna see her next week when I'm in New York, but she's so inspiring to me because when I was going through this whole process, like,
Jeff Dudan (46:14.506)
No, that's fantastic.
Lindsay Pinchuk (46:29.674)
She was the one who was yelling at me, JFDI, on the bike. I didn't even know her at the time, and she's still yelling JFDI at me today. And I just, I'm really thankful to our friendship in that this podcast brought us together. Like, it's really wild what can happen.
Jeff Dudan (46:46.75)
big of stars are some of these people on Peloton. I know that my wife rides, she loves some of the people that she just really connects with these people. I mean, so this person has her own publicist and her own PR company.
Lindsay Pinchuk (47:03.815)
She does not have a publicist. She has someone who helps her with partnerships. And that's the person that I know. But a lot of her colleagues do have publicists or representation.
Jeff Dudan (47:08.174)
Okay, okay.
Jeff Dudan (47:15.566)
Okay, and then they endorse products on social media because they have, what would be an example of a large following for somebody like this?
Lindsay Pinchuk (47:25.706)
Um, I mean you look at like Someone like Allie Love or Tundi I mean, I think I don't know what their followings are but like they like Allie Love for example is a Peloton instructor who Is now on the Today Show regularly. She is a regular correspondent she's a regular correspondent in the third hour on the Today Show and That's it. I mean, that's I think a really a really big deal
Jeff Dudan (47:43.433)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (47:48.786)
Yeah, so we talk to millions of followers or hundreds of thousands.
Lindsay Pinchuk (47:51.378)
I think so. I'd have to look. Some of them I think have millions. I think Cody has over a million. It's funny because I'm not super, super ingrained in the Peloton community. I love my Peloton and Jen and I have become friends, but there are people who are like live and die for Peloton and that's not really me. I actually don't love to work out. It's a struggle for me to get to work out.
Jeff Dudan (48:00.81)
Sure.
Jeff Dudan (48:12.414)
Yeah, it's, I mean, to me, it's just amazing, you know, and we just had our, our first conference for home front brands. It was called Homecoming. There are 260 people there. It was an amazing experience. Probably the best vibe of any conference that I've ever experienced. I'm very excited about it. And one of the things we talked about is building an audience and all of the different ways that we're.
going to build an audience for this brand. I mean, we rolled out a partnership with Carson Scholars, Ben Carson, Candy Carson's charity, where we're going to be building reading rooms and schools across the country. Operation Homefront helping transitioning veterans and all the PR around things like that. And then, you know, but like, I mean, we had 260 people in the room. That should be at least 500 social media posts from the event.
We do a lot of interviews and articles. We're doing podcasting, encouraging our franchises to get on podcasts in their local towns and communities. It's amazing, like the groundwork that people can do to build an audience now without spending dollars, just investing time and doing the right things and making the right clicks. And then when somebody does build an audience, like a Peloton instructor, or even the girl that said, catch me outside on Dr. Phil.
who now I think has made millions of dollars on that. It's, you know, once you have the audience, it can be monetized in so many different ways directly, but even more so if you have a product or a service that is not, you know, I'm not a social media influence where you're gonna pay me to post something.
Audience vs. Community: The Marketing Mindset Shift That Changes Everything
Lindsay Pinchuk (49:35.598)
I'm sorry.
Jeff Dudan (49:58.194)
but you get a following and you get an audience, but then you have another business that you're directing people's attention to. It's just, it's fascinating, and it's really interesting how almost anyone can take a stab at it.
Lindsay Pinchuk (50:13.518)
100% and one of the things that I want to say about that is there's one word that I would have you change if I had you change a word and it's the word audience because I don't look at my audience as an audience. I look at them as a community and that's actually what I teach and a community is different than an audience. An audience consumes like when you're in an audience at a movie you're watching you're not interacting. You know when you're in an audience at a play you're watching you're not interacting but when you are
Jeff Dudan (50:28.938)
Mmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (50:42.79)
marketing to a community, it's a two-way street. And once you have a community surrounding your brand, you can start asking them to do things for you. So all those things that you were just mentioning, you can start asking them to share your podcast episodes. You can ask them for their opinions on things. You can ask them for testimonials. You can ask them for their email address in exchange for a discount or a deal. So that is like really the backbone of everything I teach. It's really in the messaging and how...
you look at the people who follow you as a community and you don't just get on and post things, but you really engage with them and you converse with them and you leave them voice notes and you really get to know them and then they start to trust you and then you have this community surrounding your brand. So, it's interesting, I was brought in by a franchise last October, this amazing franchise called The Tutu School. They have 90 locations. They're kids ballet studios.
and they brought me into their summit and I taught a workshop on how to do that. And then I continued it online with about 15 of them afterwards. I created a special workshop just for them and I taught them how to market their business. But it really is like looking at the people who follow you as a community.
Jeff Dudan (52:01.93)
The difference between audience and community is subtle but significant. And when I gladly put in my contact information, email, whatever it is, it's somebody that I'm excited to do it because I've gotten something from them. They've given something for free. It's made a difference in my life. And I gladly give them my information and have them send me stuff where other times if I if it's if I'm just
Lindsay Pinchuk (52:18.67)
100%.
Jeff Dudan (52:29.882)
If I'm not connected in that way, I won't put my information in at all. I'm just not interested in doing it. So that's important. That's very insightful. Thank you for sharing that. Yeah, absolutely. Well, what is next for you? Is there anything more specific that you'd like to share about your upcoming group mentorship program that you're going to be rolling out online?
Lindsay Pinchuk (52:39.502)
Of course.
Lindsay Pinchuk (52:55.07)
Yeah, so it's rolling out the week of Thanksgiving. So that's, which it's like all built. I just am trying to, like I said, figure out the name for it. Yeah, I mean, honestly, I think that anyone who needs help with marketing, any small, it's really for small business owners who have lean teams and no time, they will have this group to look at as an extension of their team. And essentially you can keep it open all day long. You can ask questions of each other, of me.
Jeff Dudan (52:57.627)
Okay.
Lindsay Pinchuk (53:22.846)
and really have a lot of access to great resources to make marketing simple. And that's really just what I want. I mean, I want people to understand exactly what you just said, that there are, yes, so many different ways that you can put the boots on the ground, but it's really just building the process and following the process and having the right tools in place and following them and having a little support along the way. And that's what my group mentorship is gonna be giving to the members.
Jeff Dudan (53:49.531)
and it's a monthly membership model.
Lindsay Pinchuk (53:52.042)
It's a monthly membership model you could also pay annually and I'm going to be allowing a few lifetime members in the beginning that will also get one-on-one mentorship with me throughout the first year.
Be Yourself, Unapologetically: The Clients Will Follow
Jeff Dudan (54:04.306)
Okay, what time's that drop? Cause I'm going to make sure we get that.
Lindsay Pinchuk (54:07.975)
It drops on November 20th. Let's say no. No, but thank you. That's a really nice compliment. I appreciate it.
Jeff Dudan (54:10.802)
I have to stay up all night, like 12 or 1 a.m. I have to do it. I'd love to be in it. And are you do you have we have different levels of membership or is it a one membership gets it all?
Lindsay Pinchuk (54:22.026)
You know, as of right now, we're doing a, I'm going to do a founding membership. It's going to be the lowest price I'm ever going to offer. And after the first week, it's going to go up. So I did a survey last week and it was really, you know, I love to survey. I love asking people questions and using that information. And I've been surveying since my very first event at Bump Club. And what I found in this last survey is I had 90% of the respondents say, I need help now. And...
Jeff Dudan (54:28.362)
Sure.
Lindsay Pinchuk (54:51.33)
which is like very like, oh my god, and they all basically said I would pay a monthly fee to be in a mentorship with you to do this. I mean it was like over 70% said yes. So you know, I definitely think there's a market for it and for right now I'm just gonna keep it easy. Like you know, I'm not like, I'm a big believer in putting it out there into the world and it might not be perfect at first, so we're gonna keep it simple, one membership and...
Maybe later I'll add some levels and add some bells and whistles and we'll see. But the founding members are always gonna get everything because they're gonna be the ones that take the chance on me first.
Jeff Dudan (55:30.666)
Well, Alex Ormozzi, build the community, then make the offer.
Lindsay Pinchuk (55:35.551)
Yeah, absolutely.
Jeff Dudan (55:37.542)
Lindsay, if you had one sentence to make an impact in someone's life, what might that be?
Lindsay Pinchuk (55:44.77)
Just be yourself.
Jeff Dudan (55:45.182)
What? Hmm? Just be yourself.
Lindsay Pinchuk (55:50.526)
Yeah, and you know, and I don't know if you're gonna want to share this or not, but I had a really eye-opening experience over the last month. I've never been one to not be myself. I've never been one to not stand up for what I believe in, but over the last month on social media I really have stood up for myself. I am a Jewish American woman, and you know, a lot of people said to me, like, how many followers have you lost? And I have lost five or six hundred, but okay.
Like to me, I don't care. I've gained over 2,500. And it just really goes to show that when you show up as yourself, the right people gravitate towards you. And also within those 2,500 new followers, I have had more requests for my services than ever before. And when you are yourself and you show up as yourself and you don't hold back, the right people gravitate towards you and the right people wanna work with you and the right people are surrounding you.
And so no matter what it is that you believe in or whatever it is that you're doing, there's just, you just have to be yourself. Period. End of story. No apologies.
Jeff Dudan (57:00.198)
Be unapologetically you Love it. Thank you so much Lindsay I have really enjoyed this Thank you so much for being on the home front with us today and for investing your time with us
Lindsay Pinchuk (57:02.58)
Mm-hmm.
Lindsay Pinchuk (57:14.582)
Thank you so much for having me and for investing your time with me.
Jeff Dudan (57:18.598)
Absolutely. Take care.
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