Unleashing the Disruptive Business Strategy with Charlene Li

Brief Summary
In this dynamic episode of On The Homefront, Jeff Dudan is joined by Charlene Li—New York Times bestselling author, founder, and leading expert on disruption, innovation, and leadership. Charlene shares her personal story of growing up as a "walking disruption," her early internet career, and what it really takes to build disruptive organizations that thrive in uncertainty. From Adobe’s bold transition to the subscription model, to how leaders must create movements within their companies, this episode is packed with insights for entrepreneurs and executives seeking to lead transformative change.
Key Takeaways
- Disruption isn’t about technology—it’s about leadership and culture.
The tools change, but success always comes down to how well leaders manage people and vision. - Future customers drive innovation.
Companies must stay obsessed with unmet customer needs—especially from unhappy or fringe customers. - Innovation theater kills real transformation.
Disruption must be embedded in the core business—not delegated to side projects that never make it back. - Culture = beliefs + behaviors.
Change fatigue happens when leadership doesn’t commit to seeing transformation through. - Lore, rituals, and language hold culture together.
Symbols, stories, and even Slack channel names like “Pod Squad” create the glue that binds teams through change. - AI strategy must be built on values, not just use cases.
Charlene previews her next book, Winning with Generative AI, and shares how ethical frameworks will define success.
Featured Quote
“Make disruption and change a part of your everyday.”
— Charlene Li
TRANSCRIPT
Jeff Dudan (00:00.782)
Please forgive me.
Hey everybody, this is Jeff Duden. Welcome to On the Homefront. Today we have an incredible influencer and the author of The Disruption Mindset, Charlene Lee with us today, who is a New York Times bestselling author multiple times over, and somebody who I'm really interested to spend time with today and learn how we can all build better, more innovative, disruptive companies and lives. Charlene, welcome.
Charlene Li (00:30.681)
Thank you for having me.
Jeff Dudan (00:32.51)
Yeah, excited to have you on. So I've been consuming your content here and I actually think your book is going to be on our executives reading list now. I've been summarizing it and I really, um, getting out of our own thinking traps and understanding what disruption is like and what the culture needs to be inside of an organization to be able to tolerate it and live with it, uh, has, has been a particular interest to me. Would you mind just a little bit for the.
our audience sharing a little bit about your background and even, uh, you know, early, early years where you grew up, how you grew up, that kind of stuff.
Charlene Li’s Early Life: Learning to Live with Disruption
Charlene Li (01:09.689)
Sure. I grew up in Detroit. Um, I'm Asian American. So growing up Detroit as an Asian American, there were very, very few of us. And in fact, in my grade school, when I started, there were no people of color. So it was highly disruptive just being in an environment like that. Um, and so from an early age, I learned how to live with disruption because I was a walking, talking form of disruption in my community. So.
I got very used to doing this and I went into college, business school, professional career coming out of Harvard Business School in 1993. I decided to do something very different. Most people were going back to consulting or investment banking and I decided to join newspapers, which is not the most natural thing to do because I could see that the internet was coming, was going to disrupt newspapers. And I wanted to be in Silicon Valley at the middle of that disruption. And so I've made a career of...
looking at these new trends in technology and understanding how they will impact business and leadership. And I wrote my first book in 2008 while I was an analyst at Forrester Research on how companies can use this new technology called social media. And I just keep writing books about strategy and leadership and technology.
Jeff Dudan (02:23.503)
Open Leadership was another book? Yes.
Charlene Li (02:25.665)
Right. That was in 2010. And after I wrote my first book, people kept saying, OK, I get it. I need to be open and authentic and transparent. How open do I need to be? And that was a really good question I didn't have an answer to. So when I don't know the answer to things, I go do research, and a book sometimes pops out. So I wrote a book about how do you be open? I mean, systematically and strategically, be open. And how open? Because you can't be 100% open. So what are the ways to do that?
Jeff Dudan (02:57.166)
2007-2008 there's been a little bit of disruption in technology since then with all of the companies that launched in 2007. Is there anything that as an early...
Jeff Dudan (03:11.278)
someone who's studying that space early. Is there anything that surprised you as to where we are here today in 2024?
Charlene Li (03:18.349)
Actually, I've seen, again, I was early into the internet in 1993, 95. I covered the internet advertising, but that drove the dot com boom. So that was my coverage. That was my beat. So I briefed a lot of companies that I just shook my head like, what is your business model here? And so when I look at these disruptions today and people ask me, is this real? Are these new generative AI tools? Are they just a flash in the pan?
Again, I've seen disruption now for 30 years, and I've never seen a force as disruptive and potentially transformational as generative AI is. And that's from watching a lot of technology and business strategy. But the thing I keep coming back to, it always comes back to your business strategy and your people, and it comes back to leadership and culture. It always comes back to that. It is not about the technology. It has everything to do with leadership and culture. About how successful you'll be.
Jeff Dudan (04:12.706)
So the tools are just the tools, and then it's up to leadership to determine if we can disrupt our industry with these tools or if our strategy is good as it is. Sometimes, I think you mentioned in your book, sometimes you've looked at all the options of disruptive activities, but we think we're on the right course. What led you to write The Disruption Mindset?
From Social Media to Generative AI: 30 Years of Watching Change
Charlene Li (04:41.445)
Well, I've made disruption sort of my calling card of my career. And somebody asked me, again, a really good question. So how do you disrupt yourself? And there's a lot of work from Clay Christensen and some other great thinkers, like the innovator Salema, that basically said, if you're a large successful organization, you cannot disrupt yourself. And yet I was seeing all these examples of companies who were doing this quite successfully. So I said, what's the secret sauce here? How do you do this?
Jeff Dudan (04:44.843)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (04:57.186)
Yes.
Charlene Li (05:09.373)
And it typically, the advice has been take your innovation engine, stick it outside the mothership where they can grow unabated without any constraints. But the problem is bringing them back in to change the mothership was incredibly difficult. And so what I found in my research is that there's something that changes fundamentally in companies that if you're going to transform and disrupt yourself, you have to strategically and intentionally do that. And it's incredibly difficult.
But I found all these examples of companies that were doing this. And they weren't the usual suspects of like Facebook and Google or Amazon, because who can be those companies? It's like a university. It's an art museum. It is a nonprofit. It is, you know, communications firms and hospitals. So these are companies that are disrupting themselves quite successfully and growing exponentially as a result.
Jeff Dudan (06:05.682)
Most businesses start in a scrum. So are you suggesting that to innovate, many companies need to create that scrum, move it outside of the organization so that they're untethered from the daily ongoings and all of the head trash, the curse of knowledge, and all these things that are happening in the business of the business on the daily and put a kind of a team outside to really take a more of a holistic look at the business and then find a way to bring that back into the organization?
Is that what you're suggesting?
Why Innovation Theater Fails: You Can’t Outsource Disruption
Charlene Li (06:37.701)
I actually think that's one approach and it could work for most organizations, but what I've seen, it usually fails. And what happens is that team develops something beautiful and wonderful. It's really innovative. It's what the customers want in the future. The leadership from the core business comes and looks at that, cheers and applause, gives them a standing ovation. And then the lights go on and innovation theater has ended. They go back to the reality. So I call it innovation theater because that's what it is.
It's a lot of focus and lights and action. It's really great. It feels great, but you're not going to change anything that you do. And so my belief is that you've got to bring all of that change into the organization and start transforming and disrupting yourself. So it's really hard because you have your operations that you want to go and continue doing, and at the same time, you've got to change it.
And we think about change as a negative thing. We think about order and creating order, because that's what we as leaders do. Actually managers create order and maintain a status quo. Leaders by definition create change. And so if you want to lead, you have to be changing something. And the level of change determines how destructive you're going to be. You say, this is the way we see things today. We see things being done differently in the future.
So what does that future look like? Why is it better than today? And if you can get people to identify what that future could look like, it could be just one step. It could be a lot of different steps, but you do not become highly disruptive and transformative overnight. It is a skill and a mindset that you must develop over time. And you have to train your organization to take these steps. And it's hard to do if that engine just isn't there.
Jeff Dudan (08:26.526)
One thing that tech has done particularly well versus maybe other industries is creating future customers that didn't exist just by, because the customer didn't know either what was possible or how they could use it, or that they even needed something like that. You speak to future customers in your work. How do companies identify who their future customers might be?
The Secret to Finding Future Customers
Charlene Li (08:50.981)
Well, in the beginning, they're probably your existing customers. You just don't serve them very well. And so what I encourage people to do, go look at your unhappy customers, the ones who are complaining, the ones that you sort of on the fringes, they're not the core best customers that you love, who love you. They're the ones who begrudgingly give you their business. And so ask them, what could we do to win more? What could we do to get that 10 out of 10 on the recommendation list?
and really stay close to them and identify and figure out if these are new needs that are emerging that other customers are sharing, is it an opportunity that's unmet? So it's knowing and talking to your customers constantly to identify these new opportunities. And as you grow your market, you get more comfortable with having other adjacencies and sometimes even taking huge leaps. But what I like to say is if you're very clear on
you're who your future customers and everyone in the organization knows what that future model is, then people in the front lines can say, wait, I think I found one here. They shoot up a flare literally inside the company and say, everyone come around, we have a, we have a future customer here. Let's listen, let's learn from them. Or they can identify these needs that may not be heard, but the hierarchies are broken down. The communications are broken down so that we can actually collaborate and identify this, the information from the front lines.
gets up to the executives who actually can make decisions to go in these strategic directions. And before you couldn't do that, you just didn't have that connective tissue. And that's what's really different now than what it was 10, 15 years ago. We actually have these communication tools that shrinks down the organization and allows us to be much more connected to the front lines and to our customers.
Jeff Dudan (10:41.898)
Have you worked with a client who was in a situation where they realized that their current customers were going to be obsolete and they were forced to find new future customers? And how do they go about it?
Charlene Li (10:58.101)
Yeah, I'll give you, um, you know, an oil company, you know, very traditional customers, and they know that the market is changing, like, you know, just process, you know, oil, but no engine, like engine oil, gas, automobiles, exactly. So they knew that the market was changing and the way they characterize it is that we traditionally have pulled stuff out of the ground and find markets to sell it to.
Oil Companies and Green Energy: Transforming When You Don’t Have To
Jeff Dudan (11:04.846)
Cooking oil, what kind of oil are we talking here? Body oil, oh, just oil oil. OK, got it.
Charlene Li (11:23.953)
Now we have to switch our mindset to say, what does the market want in alternative oils and green oils and non-carbon oils? How do we develop these new things and then make them? It is a completely different mindset. And my work with them was they knew strategically what they needed to do, but culturally and as leadership, they didn't know how to do this.
And if you've been around any oil refinery manufacturing or delivery, safety is a major issue. And so their thinking was for 30 years now, you've told me I'm successful as a leader when nothing goes wrong and nobody gets killed. Now you're telling me break things, you know, fail fast and break things. I'm like, that doesn't compute. So what's the model for this? And again, when you focus on customers.
Jeff Dudan (12:01.774)
That's right.
Charlene Li (12:14.281)
It takes it out of that internal focus. Like what are we doing versus what is it our customers want? And you become very, very focused on what is it that they need a tuning to them. And then changing the things internally because you're of your desire to meet the needs of these future customers.
Jeff Dudan (12:32.918)
Just by definition, successful companies are companies that hit their forecast, top line and bottom line. They, from a very little variance from a Six Sigma perspective. So they're efficient, they're effective, they deliver not early, not late, but right on time. So these are the types of companies that get rewarded for lack of variation, which could imply lack of variation. How difficult is it sometimes? I mean...
You know, sometimes a new broom sweeps clean. Uh, when your companies are going through this transformation, do they, you know, how deep do they have to go in changing people, process technologies, uh, to be able to really unlock something new? I, so my, my business coach for nine years was the president of Husqvarna North America for 18 years, and he took them from 29 million in sales in North America to, uh, $530 million in sales.
through a dealership network. And what he shared with me was that at every $100 million of growth, that they needed to take all of their assets and put them out on the curb and only bring the things back into the building that were gonna get them to that next $100 million worth of growth. And at $500 million in sales, they had less than half the staff than they did at the $200 million in sales because automation.
technology, efficiencies, the supply chain, all of those types of things. So being innovative and disruptive is it takes a toll on an organization in lots of different ways. And I can see how companies don't have the courage or the stamina. The motivation must be great for a company to disrupt themselves. That being said.
The market's a great motivator and if you don't disrupt yourself, then the other fear is that you're going to get behind somebody else is and they're going to service those future customers and they are no longer your customers.
Adobe’s Big Gulp: Losing Profits to Win the Future
Charlene Li (14:34.413)
Right. And so which is where I find the future customer focus to be so compelling because this is not about becoming number one in the marketplace. It's not about getting the most profits. It's about really this external goalposts of your future customers. And it's constantly moving forward. You always try to catch up to that. I'll give you an example of Adobe in the book. And I found this amazing back in 2011 or so they'd realize that the cloud was coming.
Nobody was pushing them to move into it. All of their customers were perfectly happy buying CD-ROMs. And they said, we need to move to the cloud because there are these new customers, pro consumer users, people who don't want to pay thousands of dollars to use Adobe products. And the customers hated this idea. The employees like, what do you mean? We don't know anything about how to do this. And as a publicly traded company, when they ran the numbers, they knew they would be unprofitable for eight straight quarters.
And yet they went ahead and did this because they believed that this future customer would be so much more lucrative and they could also provide them a better product by having things in the cloud constantly updated, not updated every 18 to 24 months. So they did this. They went to wall street and gave them the guidance. We're going to make this progress, this change. It'll start hitting a year from now. Expect that we're going to lose a lot of money, but the number you should look at is how many people subscribe. And they had so much confidence.
they could hit their numbers going down. So to your point, Wall Street likes predictability. And because they told them a year ahead, we're gonna lose this much money, and they hit that number, their stock started taking off as they lost money. So you can see this amazing graph, red line of their profits going down and their stock prices is going up in a fishhook. That just doesn't happen by accident. It was absolutely intentional, strategic.
And this team executed so incredibly well. They were practicing the ability to run the business, know the market and they could pull these switches to make these things happen. They had the discipline inside of the organization to hold things together as they went through this transition. And I can tell you as an analyst following Adobe at the time, I kept getting phone calls from so many people saying, you will not believe the crazy things we're doing as a company right now. It is insane. We are.
Charlene Li (16:59.209)
up in arms and like so focused on this change. It is incredible. If we can pull this off, it'll be a huge change in the business. And that's exactly what they did. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (17:11.062)
What was happening in Adobe the two or three years before that, that led them to explore this option? Obviously, recurring revenue is the darling of Wall Street and all of our FP&A analysts. Everybody likes recurring revenue. So there's that. The ability to hang on to a customer and create lifetime value of a customer through a subscription model. People getting hooked on your product for maybe a lower.
cost monthly versus having to invest in it and then upgrade it and it getting obsolete. So you know, there's all of these things, the way we buy things today, but they were early to adopt to it. Were they in a red ocean? Was their market share shrinking? Were they concerned about their ability to update their technology? What forced them or what led them to be this bold and courageous?
Charlene Li (18:03.685)
Yeah, but again, they, like everyone else in 2008 to 2010, had suffered because of the financial fallout. And then in 2010, they talked about having one of those epic strategic planning off-sites. And it was then when they started thinking, could we actually do this? And so let's figure this out. So they said, this is two thirds of our business. Our business is $3 billion, $2 billion we're putting on the line here.
But this seems like it's really interesting. It makes a lot of sense. No one was doing subscription businesses at that point. Nobody was. And their business looked great. They had 95% in the market. Nobody was really competing against them. They really didn't have to do this, which is why it was so fascinating to me. Because what drove them wasn't competitive pressures. It was from them saying there was a market with unmet needs out there. And we believe we can serve them.
So they started creating the products, tested it in Australia, really found the numbers to be pretty compelling. They launched it in the U S they still kept the CD-ROM product as a hedge. They were nervous, like looking at the numbers and it was when they finally cut off the fact that said, you know, we'll keep supporting the existing CD-ROM, but we're never going to do that again. Everything, if you want all the updated stuff can only come from the online subscription and when they did that.
Jeff Dudan (19:11.031)
Mm. Sure.
Charlene Li (19:27.449)
50,000 customers signed a petition saying, let's go back. And they said, no, we burned the boats. There's no going back.
Jeff Dudan (19:34.75)
Well, so anybody that was in possession of a CD-ROM was able to continue to operate, but then the new subscription people were incremental, but it was a fraction of the revenue. They probably had a whole new support model, uh, infrastructure that they had to support, so they were probably upside down in their development and their R and D costs, all of that. So, well, kudos to them because now there's a dozen things on my credit card that, uh, get paid every month to different people like them. Uh, so.
Kudos to them. Now, is that, you talk about a big gulp in terms of your future customers. Can you explain what that means?
Strategic Inflection Points: How to Know When to Leap
Charlene Li (20:12.269)
This is when you make that bet. When Adobe literally stood around the executive room, they were literally holding hands with each other, looking each other in the eye going, we're gonna do this, right? This is our big gulp moment. We take that big gulp.
Jeff Dudan (20:14.507)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (20:24.022)
All right, so big lump in your throat. That's what you mean. Big lump in your throat. If this doesn't work, we're all out of a job. And.
Charlene Li (20:29.985)
Yeah. I mean, like you're betting things, right? And people are so reluctant to make big bets, to take that big goal, to step over that line. Because what if we're wrong? Well, this is why you have contingency plans. This is why you do scenario planning. This is why you have lots of different options there to mitigate the risks. So this takes practice.
Jeff Dudan (20:32.641)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (20:36.354)
Yeah.
Charlene Li (20:52.805)
to take those big gulps. You take the little gulps along the way and you don't necessarily do nothing and then one day make a big gulp, you just won't be able to do it. But when that moment comes, can you make that decision? Can you take that big gulp? And this is, again, if you're choosing to go in, but also when things are coming at you, when disruption is coming at you and you must take that big gulp, make that decision, will you be able to make the decision? Or will you be frozen?
and unable to decide. So this is almost insurance to say that if you can handle disruption that you create, when disruption is coming from the outside, you'll be in golden position. You'll know exactly how to deal with that. You and your entire organization will be geared toward being able to handle these kinds of situations.
Jeff Dudan (21:40.754)
I imagine you work with mainly Fortune 500 or even 100 or Fortune 50 companies in the consulting that you do. Is there a size of company that is better at being intentionally internally disruptive than others? Is there a pattern that you've been able to see when you walk into a client opportunity and you're like, oh, I think these people can, I think these people are going to be able to pull this off.
Charlene Li (22:07.873)
Yeah. I work with a lot of different size companies, again, the sort of largest companies that you can imagine, but also fairly small ones, even startups. So it just keeps me fresh and looking at lots of different options. It has less to do with the size of the company or the industry, and has everything to do with the leadership. Has everything to do with, does a leader have a vision? Do they have the determination to stick with it?
Jeff Dudan (22:14.9)
Okay.
Yeah.
Charlene Li (22:34.853)
Because it's great to have growth plans, but the reason why growth plans are so difficult is you run into a wall at some point. And that wall, it just hits you in the face. You're like, okay, I did not anticipate this. What do we do about it now? And the resilience of your leadership and your team, the culture that you have built up to say, what do we do when we fall into that wall? We run smack into it because it will inevitably be there. And the companies who are not prepared for that, they're just like, yeah, we're just going to grow.
but they don't anticipate these obstacles. They haven't prepared themselves for this journey. It's like, I go to Burning Man and you prepare and you prepare, you bring water, you bring food, and you're prepared for anything that could go wrong, including showers and blood storms. And I've just gone for three years and I'm a complete, so I'm a complete addict to it, but I love the disruption that it causes and the way, the perspectives I see.
Jeff Dudan (23:11.967)
Yes.
Jeff Dudan (23:15.986)
How many years have you gone to that? Just three? That's three? That's pretty good.
Charlene Li (23:29.229)
But it's the same thing when you go on a disruption journey, you have to be prepared. You've got to know that your organization is strong, resilient, and be able to compensate when things don't work out well. So it is not a pretty picture. I think of it as a very messy process. And when you're in that messy middle, that liminal space, you've left the safety of what you've known, but you haven't arrived at where you want to be yet. That is an incredibly.
frustrating, but also invigorating space, because you're no longer constrained by either the past and the future. And you can be incredibly creative. You can look around and say, how we can do anything we want? What are the constraints that we want to put on ourselves? And I do think constraints are extremely important for people to know, this is the direction we're heading in, not north-south, but we're going in this direction, we're going east. Like, what is that direction? I mean, people go off that path.
heard them back in. So I like to say that organizations should be able to answer three questions. Every person in your company should be able to answer three questions. Who is our future customer? Where are we headed? What's our vision for the future? The second question is, what's our strategy to get there from where we are today to that future? And the third question, each person should be able to say, this is my contribution to making that strategy a success.
How am I going to execute? What am I doing every day to make that strategy successful so we can reach that future and serve that future customer? We call it alignment. We call it communications. It is something that leaders don't do enough. We think we say it once and everybody knows it. And I like what the CEO of LinkedIn, Jeff Weiner, would always go and say, I'm Jeff Weiner, I'm the CEO of LinkedIn.
Home Depot, Burning Man, and Getting Close to the Customer
Jeff Dudan (25:18.498)
That's right.
Charlene Li (25:26.381)
purpose is to connect the world's professionals and he would bring up a value or a strategic asset that they were looking at. And then someone said, you know, you do this all the time. When are you going to stop doing it? And he said something very wise. He said, I will stop doing it when people stop looking surprised.
Jeff Dudan (25:46.07)
That's brilliant. So I have a mug here and it says, speak a bold future into existence. And that's kind of my catchphrase. Because I believe it's the leader's responsibility in your parlance to create a movement, but also to speak a bold future with clarity a thousand times, not just once. You can't just tell the company story one time or when you have a new employee.
over and over and over again as that vision is changing, as market opportunities present themselves. So I built a business in the restoration, remediation, emergency service, disaster response type space. So interestingly, we had a DNA that was when we hit that wall, as you described, I would look around the room.
And I would say, am I willing to bet my house, my kids' education? Am I willing, what am I willing to bet on the people sitting in this room that they're going to, they're going to follow through on whatever it is we decide, whatever course of action it is. And sometimes it was a drastic play that we needed to make. And every time I would, I would be like, these people are going to commit. They're going to get it done. I mean, up to including, I mean, having people that really worked in the office, you know, in hurricane Katrina down in the pit, you know,
retrieving medical records from a VA hospital, you know, under armed guard by the military, you know, and making sure that these secure medical records got to where they needed to get to because you had to have security clearance to do it. So now the challenge, the flip side to that in our organization was we were entirely reactive. Like we were like firemen. So something would happen and there was nobody better. Like we would leap into action. We knew where our stuff was.
You know, but then we would get back and just like firemen, we'd clean our stuff. We'd set it back up. We, you know, do the business of the business, you know, somebody would be there making dinner now. Um, and then, uh, you know, and then we would, but, um, we struggled, I think a little bit to innovate, to, to think about future customers because, um, so on one hand, you know, we, we had that, uh, responsiveness, reactiveness, that resilience, uh, I mean, it was very addicting to be helping people in the way that we helped people. And.
Jeff Dudan (28:03.874)
the complication of trucking to the Caribbean or halfway across the country to set up in a disaster zone with no power, no water, all of that. It was an exhilarating thing and when done well, it was something worth celebrating. But we probably didn't have that disruption mindset. We're working in a very red ocean with lots of competition and just kind of scratching it out. So I wonder if something would have happened to us.
where we needed to make a material shift in the way that we did business, acquired customers, you know, how effective could we have really been at that?
Charlene Li (28:43.637)
Well, I think it again, I came out of a business myself where it was highly competitive as an analyst and again, these giant billion dollar companies, hundreds of million dollar companies like Gartner and Forrester and IDC. And I was starting a tiny little firm. It was four of us. Like how do we compete? And so we just did a blue ocean strategy move where we said, we're not going to charge for the research, we're going to give it away for free, but we're going to pump exactly, exactly. Yes.
Jeff Dudan (29:06.366)
Yeah. Oh, getting naked by Lencioni, right? Have you read Lencioni is getting naked? Yeah, perfect strategy. Yeah.
Charlene Li (29:14.273)
Exactly. And so free is a business model they couldn't compete against. And, you know, and so it was understanding our customers that people were dying for this research. They really wanted it, but they couldn't afford it. And so they were trying to piece it together from various news reports. We're just going to give it away for free. And then we'll make it back because if a hundred thousand people versus five thousand people would read it. So at 20 times the people reading our research, we had to have a very small percentage of them convert.
Jeff Dudan (29:32.703)
Mm-hmm.
Charlene Li (29:43.385)
to highly repeatable consulting projects for it to make money. So that was the business model and everything was written so that it made people just call us out of the blue. So it was a hundred percent inbound for business. So it was great. It worked really well. But the thing is, is that when you're in the business, when you're working in the business constantly versus working on the business, and this is a constant leader issue, when do you have time to withdraw?
Jeff Dudan (29:57.346)
So you would go in. Yeah.
Charlene Li (30:13.189)
to step back. And one of the most interesting interviews I had for the book was with the president of Southwest Airlines. And he asked him, how much time are you spending on strategic issues, like medium to long-term issues? He goes, about 50% of my time. I'm like, that's a lot. Most people say, spend 70% of your time on immediate operations, 20% on medium term and 10% on long term. He's spending 50%.
on medium and long-term and most of it was long-term. And his response was, if I don't do it, who will? Everybody else, they can do all the operations. That's why they're there. They don't need me, I just get in the way. So I come in and on an exception basis, deal with the things that my operation leads can't deal with. No one else is gonna look and be able to tie all these connective tissues to be able to see what the future opportunities are for us to grow.
Jeff Dudan (30:48.878)
That's right.
Jeff Dudan (30:53.623)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (31:11.394)
And that's why that person's in that position. I had Vern harness on the podcast. Uh, we're a scaling up company here and, uh, Vern was great and he came on and he said, our biggest recommendation today to executives is that for four to six hours a week that they find a studio or somewhere to go that's just them that nobody can get to them and you have whiteboards and you have paper or whatever your preferred methodology is, and just to get.
turn off everything and just think about your business. That will give you more clear thinking and more clear, all of your insights and directions are going to come out of that time. And I've started doing that as well. Okay, not every week, but I'm doing it. And I have to tell you, it's the most I come out of there energized. I feel like the daily grind of the business is
kind of not wearing on me anymore. And you really think optimistically about the future, the people that are around you in the business. So I see that. And again, if I'm not doing it, if everybody's punching their cogs out here, whatever it is that we do, they could be working on solving the wrong problem. Their ladder could be up against the wrong building. So somebody has to have an idea. And I also think that getting out into industry, getting out...
Like you had said, speaking to customers, spending time out in the field. We're shooting a television show with our franchisees. It's called Heroes on the Homefront, and every month we're going out and spending a day with a franchisee and their family, and we're shooting, and just really, the things that come out of that, the ideas that come out of that, what do these people really need to be successful? It's very, very meaningful, so.
Charlene Li (32:59.994)
Yeah. I worked with a client, Home Depot for a little while. And the amazing thing, you couldn't find any executives in the home office on Thursday afternoons because every single person takes off Thursday afternoon to go work in a store and they have an assigned store they go to every single week. They put them on apron and they're serving customers or they're stocking the shelves and they're out there talking to employees and talking to their customers. And it's a requirement that everybody in the home office, executives home office do this.
Jeff Dudan (33:03.639)
Mm-hmm.
Jeff Dudan (33:09.792)
Okay.
Charlene Li (33:27.109)
and they were assigned a store to go out there and do it. So it's, again, the thing that we don't do enough unless you deal with intentionality. So staying close to your customers, understanding what's going on, that visual connection can't be substituted. You can't hear it from people coming up the hierarchy. You have to experience it yourself.
Jeff Dudan (33:51.47)
I like to move on to culture. I know you really have defined your future customer. Leaders need to create a movement and then there's all this great work around culture and I think some really unique thinking around it. Where would you start if I was a client of yours and you had questions around my culture other than the three that you've already mentioned? Like what would you look for to assess?
my culture in our organization.
The Three Beliefs of Disruptive Culture: Openness, Agency, and Bias for Action
Charlene Li (34:23.497)
Yeah, I have three beliefs of disruptive organizations and they are openness, agency, and then a bias for action. And so I try to take the pulse for where the organization is. Are people open in the way they communicate? Again, I wrote a book on open leadership, so with a lot of background on the fact that is when you have greater transparency, you have then people taking responsibility also for it and creating accountability. People are like, I'm trying to get people to be accountable. I'm delegating to them.
That doesn't happen unless they have ownership, which is where agency becomes very important. When people have agency, they feel like they own the problem and they own the solution. And they believe they can solve this problem. They have all the resources. They don't have to ask for permission from somebody else to be able to make a change in impact. And the third bias reaction says, we have no time to waste here. Our future customers are moving further and further away from us.
So instead of trying to be perfect, we're gonna aim for done. Perfect is the enemy of done. And yet in business, we are not given permission to fail. We can't take, we won't go further than what we can be successful at. We wanna hit 100% all the time. We wanna get the A's. And that doesn't work when you're in a disruptive transformative state because things will not go right. And so when you reward people for taking on the ability to act.
regardless of whatever the outcome is, the confidence comes from knowing that no matter what the outcome is, you're going to be okay. You're gonna be fine. And so when you know that, then you can take a lot of risk. You can take a lot of things within, again, guidelines if we'd agreed to. And if it doesn't work out, we're fine. Thank you for taking that risk, because we would know so much more than we have now.
Um, and so this whole idea of fear and failure and how we deal with it as an organization becomes really important. So the way I like to work with an organization, we do a very simple thing. We get people together in groups, if we're in person or again, online and with, you know, virtual whiteboards and we take sticky notes and we write down the beliefs that are holding us back. Cause culture is just simply your beliefs and the behaviors that stem from those beliefs. So what are the beliefs?
Charlene Li (36:42.797)
What are the behaviors that we show up with? What are the things we say, the things that we do, the things we believe that are holding us back from being successful? And it's not an issue. People write down tons of things. You put these little sticky notes into the middle. As a group, you figure out, like, which are the common ones here? And usually there were like two or three that really rise up to the top, but everyone goes, yeah, we don't wanna believe that anymore. Then as a group,
Very importantly, you decide we're not going to believe this anymore. We're going to replace it with a belief that is going to move us forward. And one organization I worked with had this beautiful value of respect. And over time, it had morphed from being a place of we respect that great ideas can come from anywhere to respect is a behavior where you do not agree with your senior person in the room. If you're going to disagree.
You have to take it out of the room, go through all the back channels, make sure everybody's agreed, and then you can bring it back. And then the leader will come back and be like, okay, we've changed things. And as you can imagine, that just didn't work. Right. And so they realized that for them to do the transformation they wanted to, they were going through a huge business strategic change, they were going to have the change of one value of respect. And so they systematically replaced that old value with a new definition of it.
Jeff Dudan (37:48.011)
Right.
Culture Isn’t Soft—It’s the Difference That Makes a Difference
Charlene Li (38:05.517)
define the bad behaviors, and they said, these are the good behaviors we associate with the new beliefs. And they intentionally took a year to systematically change that up and down throughout the entire organization. So I look at companies like Uber, where the CEO came in and said, we're going to change our culture now. We're no longer gonna be tech boys. We're going to really figure out what the kind of culture and they intentionally did that and change your culture in six months.
They had conversations with people who didn't believe in working this way. They were no longer a cultural ad. They were a cultural detraction from what they wanted to build. So they were like, this is not a place for you. So you can systematically change your culture, but you have to intentionally do it.
Jeff Dudan (38:48.055)
You sh-
Jeff Dudan (38:52.958)
Right. What would be an example of openness inside of a culture? Is that being collegial? Is that being doors open? Is that the Ray Dalio thing where, you know, radical transparency, where everybody's rating what everybody's saying on this big board as it's going along, like what, I mean, what does an open culture look and feel like?
Charlene Li (39:16.293)
The open culture is when there's tremendous trust in the organization and you can trust they will speak the truth. They feel like they have the safety, they have a psychological safety to be able to speak the truth and know that the consequences will not come down on them individually and that the truth will be welcome. One of the interviews I had was the chairman of Nokia and he had a saying, no news is good news. I'm sorry, bad news is good news. If you have bad news.
Jeff Dudan (39:19.426)
Okay. So people will speak the truth.
Charlene Li (39:45.509)
Tell us so we can fix it. No news is bad news. So if nothing, if I'm hearing nothing from people, like what's going on? That's not good. Trust isn't there. People aren't telling me what's really going on. And good news is no news. In other words, good news is great. OK, this is what we expected to happen. That's fantastic, but it's not really news that we have to deal with. This is what we expected. So the fact that he would welcome bad news, like you've got to bring it forward.
And people hate being in the messenger because they're afraid they're going to be the ones who get shot. So when you can make it safe, when people can trust that they can bring things forward, the Amazon has this beautiful leadership principle that is disagree and commit, that means we can strenuously disagree with each other. I have so much respect for you that I'm going to tell you the ultimate truth, what I think the situation is, and I'm going to really fight for my place, for my position.
And yet when that decision is made, I'm gonna be 100% committed to that decision, regardless of whether it's my idea or not. Like truly committed, no sandbagging. No, it wasn't my idea. I'm not gonna help his idea or her idea become successful because I don't think it's the right direction. No, you're 100% committed to that. Therefore, if it succeeds, it's because it was the right idea and we put everything against it. But if it doesn't succeed,
that it was the wrong idea, even though we put everything against it, and we'll know so much more, and then we can go on to Plan B, which might be your idea. But you won't know this until you're 100% committed. So this ability to disagree and still maintain strong relationships is an incredibly difficult thing to do. Think about just in our personal relationships how hard it is sometimes to tell somebody, to give them feedback.
that you know is going to help them, it's going to help your relationship, but it's hard because you want to be nice to them. And you realize I'm not being nice to them if I'm just not transparent and honest, and do so and tell them in the most caring way possible. So disagreeing, giving feedback that's constructive, being open and having those strong relationships that allow you to do this is a really important foundational thing to all of your culture.
Jeff Dudan (42:08.814)
One thing I stumbled across in the book, which is particular of particular interest to me is this concept of lore and it falls within your culture operating model, your structure, your process, and then your lore. But it's something that I talk about a lot. I've got infographics about I've got in my book, I have an infographic that talks about rituals and routines, but you say that the lore is the soul of an organization and that lives in its rituals in its symbols.
and it's in its stories. And that is, I have, I've been preaching that exact, almost verbatim message in my companies for the last, um, I don't know, 10 or 15 years because, uh, and, and I think I got it from, um, Herb Kelleher, the nuts book. I think I got it from Southwest where he said, uh, an organization's culture is in a culture as an organization's memory and it lives in the stories or something like that.
And when I do initial training, whenever I do a training, sometimes I'll train groups of people and I will, it is just full of stories that share the examples. You know, if you've got to water what you want to grow. So I'm sharing stories that exemplify the behaviors that make you a hero within this organization, this industry, this network or whatever it is. How did you.
First, you incorporate that as a big part of your model. Can you speak a little bit to that and how you developed your thoughts on lore?
Lore, Symbols, and the Stories We Tell Ourselves
Charlene Li (43:38.805)
Sure. Again, the three parts of the operating model were structure and process and then lore. Structure and process are things you can write down. It's visible to everybody. And so you can communicate that fairly easily, essentially. Here's a decision and you go. But the softer side of culture, this lore, it's not written down. And it's also shared. It's created over time. And it's probably the most powerful way that we create culture.
Jeff Dudan (43:48.567)
Mm-hmm.
Charlene Li (44:07.593)
And it's probably the use, the least intentionally used aspects of these levers that you can pull. We just don't intentionally create stories and rituals and symbols that can really reinforce these things. So that company I was talking about, about the respect, they started changing the stories. They went back to their founder, found all these really rich stories about how he exemplified and, and use the.
value of respect in the original way it was meant. They went through rituals about how they would hold meetings to make sure everyone's voice was heard, and in particular, to look for dissenting ways to do this. So they had different ways of using these operating systems to pull the lever to make respect, to retune what respect meant. So I think the best way to think about these things is they are all narratives that you are building.
and allows each person to build their own meaning, their own stories on top of that narrative. Because it's again respecting this belief of agency that everyone can understand where this comes from and that they have the ability to act, but they need that foundational understanding. So the best strategies are ones that are stories where you are telling, this is the journey, we're beginning here, this is the battles we will fight, the obstacles we will overcome, how we are going to win against.
the competition and really save the customers and serve them. And this is where we're going to end up in this glory in the future. So when people can remember that story, they make it their own. They add their own embellishments to it. They become engrossed in that story. They want to be a part of that story because it's so compelling. So stories become very, very important because it's part of that creating of a movement.
because it's no longer my boss's story or the board's story, it's my story too as well.
Jeff Dudan (46:06.27)
You know, we use some assessment tools and there's all different types of personalities and work styles and characteristics that go with these different profiles of people that are good fits for good jobs. So remembering details, you know, engineer type people might remember certain details really, really well. Other people might remember numbers, finance things really well, but you know, universally.
Everybody remembers stories. We're tribal people. So we communicate, we curate stories intentionally. Our franchisees can use stories that have been curated from other franchisees and they can say, we, we worked with a hospital that had this problem and there was this situation and this happened and then this is what we did. Well, it wasn't them necessarily, but it was us. So they can lean into that story while they're out there creating their own. And like you said, building their stories on top of it.
Can I add one more item to lore? You don't have to rewrite the book, but maybe a blog. Unique language.
Leadership Requires Time to Think
Charlene Li (47:06.029)
Peace.
Charlene Li (47:14.929)
I love that.
Jeff Dudan (47:15.35)
So I talk about stories and I talk about unique language. And here's a simple example of that. We started this podcast maybe last April or last May. And it was a project and we had several people working off the side of their desks. And it was, you know, is it gonna work? You have to commit to something like this for a long time.
And we were very fortunate that we had some team members that were very talented and creative so that they could set up the, you know, do the creative, we could do the editing, we had some other team members that were really good on social and were able to slip into people's DMS and get some really good guests really early, which helped us get additional guests. So, so it started building through the year and we look at it and we said, you know, marketing matters, promotion matters, brand awareness matters. This is really working well. If we put some dedicated resources behind it, then
You know, we think that we can do something really great with it. And a handful of people raised their hand and said, I'm willing to take a chance and give up my other job in the, in the main company and come to this one. And, you know, just please don't cancel the podcast after I give my job up to somebody else, right? So there was that, there was that risk. And, um, but immediately within a day, a tech screw popped up and it said pod squad, right? So.
You know, and we call that out in our training. As you, you know, when I, there's, we run call centers, we run sales centers, and there's unique language that refers to how appointments are set in there. We have a homecoming instead of a convention. There's unique language that is created, you know, sometimes people get a little bit crazy with the three letter, you know, the abbreviations of things, and that gets a little bit, like new people can't catch up on that, but.
Anytime there's a club or a group or an organization that people care about and want to feel a part of unique language pops up inside of it. And if you, you identify that and then you work that into your talk and you work that into your rituals, and if you tie all of this together, it really creates. Um, uh, a sense of belonging and a sense of connectedness. And, uh, I found it to be very powerful because.
Jeff Dudan (49:28.738)
Culture matters a lot when things get really hard. Cause it's easy to say, why am I doing this? I know that we have to do this for the business and it's probably gonna take some evenings and maybe some weekends or some travel or whatever it is. There has to be something that ties people together, a sense of belonging and a sense of real agency. I love the word agency. I hadn't really used it or seen it, but it fits so well.
inside of this discussion. So yeah, really that, that all of that really resonated with me. And it's, it's not the soft stuff. It's the difference that makes a difference inside of companies that thrive and survive and ultimately do great things.
Charlene Li (50:12.505)
Yeah, I have yet to see a an organization thrive without the soft work. And we may think of it as soft, but it's only because it's not like numbers driven. It is incredibly hard to do this. And it's, it's a testament to the people who do it well and spend a lot of time thinking about it to your point. Culture eats strategy every single day for breakfast. You could have the most fantastic strategy.
Jeff Dudan (50:24.382)
Right. Yes.
Charlene Li (50:40.685)
but if you don't have the culture, it will not be executed. And at the same time, you can have a great culture, amazing culture, and a medium-okay strategy, and you will be wildly successful.
Jeff Dudan (50:52.886)
Yeah, that's fair.
Charlene Li (50:53.065)
And so I will always over invest in culture. And one of the hardest things you deal with when you're trying to create a lot of change is change fatigue. And the reason you have change fatigue is when you're trying to create change and you put all this effort into it, and then at the very last minute, it fizzles out. It's not continued. The leader just says, they got bored or they switched opinion. They said, this is too hard. Let's try the new change of the day.
And people just get exhausted because there's no payout at the end. So to understanding the temperature, understanding how do you have that responsibility and accountability, the agency to help carry the burden, it all ties together into making sure that when you're starting on that road for change, you can actually get someplace. Cause there's nothing worse for a change than for the change to stall and just loses that momentum. If you're not truly committed to it, people can then.
they're going to be less likely to follow you.
Jeff Dudan (51:53.206)
Well, change implies an inflection point. And in my experience, an inflection point in your life or in a business really includes three things. Number one, people, the people you're responsible for, the people that you care about, the people that wanna do something with you or for you or whatever. The second thing is there's a great adventure at hand and an opportunity to capitalize on, and then there's a risk of loss.
So those three things, when you identify that you're in a point and you're saying, well, I'm going to have to give something up, but this could be great. And now we've got all these people involved, like, wow, this might be a point of disruption or at least a fork in the road that you need to consider. And I see, you know, the change, um, uh, the change, how did you say it? Fatigue, the change fatigue. Uh, I experienced that. So we, we were a straight up contractor type.
business where we did a lot of reconstruction, a lot of heavy stuff that was done in the industry. We wanted to change our model to something that was higher, all the services were high margin. We didn't have our cash out on the streets. The services were complimentary. So we really wanted to change our model. We knew it would be probably a smaller model on the top line, but we knew that our franchises would be safe and they could be much more profitable at a much lower revenue volume. And still there was work to get there and all of that.
So what we did was, well, we started running, trying to run both models at the same time and people got exhausted. And ultimately we never stopped doing the other stuff in favor of the new stuff. So there was a day and we had basically 33 main clients, insurance companies and insurance adjusters, and I wrote a letter, uh, well, I typed a letter and then I printed it and then I signed it and then I put it in the fax machine because that's when it was.
And I don't know we had email yet, but so I faxed it to all of our customers. And within a week, all of our work stopped. A hundred percent. And I knew though, that now we would either sink or swim because we knew where to get this new work and we had to recondition our clients just to send us that work and we, we had to create some new diversification of lead sources for this other stuff, but until I basically stopped this, this other work.
Jeff Dudan (54:20.014)
the company, the team was just reverting back to the norm and doing that. And that's really the challenge with change because there's self preservation too. And, oh, if we do this change really well, maybe it eliminates 20% of our staff. And so there's, there's all kinds of things that you have to really, as a leader, make sure that you are very intentional in the communications and in the process and in the order in which you do things. And then at the end of the day, to your point, people just have to trust you.
I mean, they have to believe that you're making the right decision, that they've had a voice in it, that there's been due consideration to the new strategy, and that, you know, it's likely to work out. And then they can commit fully to it. They might disagree, but they have to commit. So yeah, fascinating. Fascinating the work that you get to do.
Charlene Li (55:12.245)
Yeah, I really enjoy it because it points to the optimistic side of leadership and also the very pragmatic side of it. I am extremely pragmatic in thinking about what's feasible, what's not. And also what are the steps you have to take to get to that point? But I believe in having it because as a leader, you're just optimistic by nature. You believe that change can happen. Otherwise you wouldn't step into that leadership role, into that position to make that change happen.
Jeff Dudan (55:16.753)
Mm.
Jeff Dudan (55:40.47)
What was your undergrad in? Oh.
Charlene Li (55:40.569)
Um, and, and I just admire leaders who have the gumption and belief that change can happen. So, and there are so many things in our world that need to change to be better. Big and small. And we're not going to get there by incrementally turning the screws a little bit. We have to take these leaps of imagination, of optimism and believe that we can actually do this and then take the pragmatic steps to build the foundation so that we can get.
Jeff Dudan (56:10.198)
I'm interested to know what was your undergrad in?
Charlene Li (56:13.697)
My undergrad was in basically international relations. So it was looking at all the social sciences. It was called social studies, but my focus on comparative government and international relations.
Jeff Dudan (56:17.151)
Okay.

Winning With Generative AI: A Sneak Peek at Charlene’s New Book
Jeff Dudan (56:23.022)
Okay, all right, fascinating. All right. So you now have a group called Quantum Networks, and there are programs available here, newsletters, circles, and groups and things. Would you care to talk a little bit about what that is and who typically takes advantage of that content?
Charlene Li (56:44.365)
Yeah, right now I'm not running the groups. It's primarily just the newsletters, the content, the live streams that I do, and then the speaking advisory, and also do coaching, executive coaching. And so most of the coaching work that I do is around executives who already do a great job of running their companies, but now want it to become much more disruptive. So it's a different mindset, different skill sets, as we talked about. So how do they get that gear moving for themselves, but also for their organizations?
Jeff Dudan (56:54.434)
Okay.
Charlene Li (57:12.037)
The advice we work is mostly, again, you want to go through a transformation around culture. Increasingly, the advice we work I'm doing is around generative AI. It's the topic of my next book. I've been deep, you know, just up to the eyebrows in terms of generative AI over the past year. And that's what I'm working on right now is a book on that called Winning with Generative AI. And it's a 90-day plan and a blueprint of how to create your generative AI strategy. So beginning to end, nuts and bolts, you'll walk out of it.
in about three months with a full-blown plan that will include execution plans for the next 18 months, six quarters.
Jeff Dudan (57:49.166)
That's a lot of value in a book.
Charlene Li (57:51.585)
Yeah, fingers crossed that, you know, the reality is to publish a book when something's changing so quickly, people think I'm insane. But again, I think that there are some true visions about how do you create strategy. And in my research and talking to companies who are early on, the thing that allows them to deal with all this change is they created a firm foundation of their purpose and mission, their vision, their values and their business strategy.
Jeff Dudan (57:53.44)
Yeah.
Charlene Li (58:20.813)
These are the things they could start with. They didn't start with use cases, they didn't start with the technology, they started with these foundational ideas. And they worked in particular on having a decision-making framework, an ethical framework, responsible AI framework that was integrated into their business strategy right from the very beginning. So this is not something that was separate from the core of what they did. And the other really interesting thing is they looked at it very strategically and treated it like a transformational force.
So the top people in the company, the CEO, the C-suite, the board was engaged with this. It was not treated as a technology that was shunted over to the IT department to figure out. They treated it like a transformational force that it is. And as a result, their strategy really talks about how do they build competitive advantage? How do they protect it? And how are the business opportunities also changing and evolving with this view of the future customer?
Jeff Dudan (59:18.558)
I think it's going to be high value because you have access to these early adopters and the people that are really driving dynamic change in their organization. And then the majority that's going to follow, you know, people like me that want to see, you know, how, how did it help these other companies? I think, I think, uh, and then giving them the plans. I think it's perfectly timed and very appropriate, uh, for you to do. And I'm looking forward to get my copy. When's it going to come out?
Charlene Li (59:42.602)
We're targeting end of April at this point.
Jeff Dudan (59:45.17)
Okay, so that'll be Charlene Lee winning with Generative AI coming out in April. And it will, we will, uh, now I'm not going to wait until then to start our transformation, but you know, I'll let you speak into our journey at that point in time. So, but well, Charlene, uh, this has been great having you on here today. I really appreciate your time. Uh, I've learned a lot and I really respect your work. I really, uh, it resonates with me a great deal and we will be.
incorporating some of it into our company very, very soon here. Final question for you. If you had one sentence to make an impact in someone else's life, what might that be?
Charlene Li (01:00:26.514)
Make disruption and change a part of your everyday.
Jeff Dudan (01:00:30.622)
Even my marriage.
Charlene Li (01:00:32.973)
Even more so. So, because when you get, when you are, I made it a goal of mine to have an adventure every day. And I did this a couple years ago. I saw a woman with a tattoo that said adventure. And I go, why do you have that? And she said, I've traveled all around the world and I have to be home here now. It was happened to be an awesome for a conference called South by Southwest was I have to be home. But I, this is a reminder to me that I can have an adventure every day, just simply sitting even with myself. I can have it.
Jeff Dudan (01:00:36.589)
Keep it fresh.
Jeff Dudan (01:00:43.207)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (01:01:03.022)
I love it.
Charlene Li (01:01:03.558)
And it serves me so well to be curious, to look for ways to learn, to have disrupt, to change, to just appreciate how much is still unknown in the world. And it helped me so much during COVID when these four walls are shrinking in on most of us. I was like, how can I have adventure today? What can I do to keep things fresh?
So to look for change, to embrace change, to look for disruption, it is a mindset. It is a lifestyle. So I would encourage people to seek out change and disruption because of the way it makes you feel, makes you feel alive. It makes you feel curious and adventurous.
Jeff Dudan (01:01:45.09)
love it perfectly said. Charlene Lee, how can people get in touch with you if they would like to connect with you?
Charlene Li (01:01:51.993)
You can connect with me through my website, follow me on LinkedIn, message me there, subscribe to my newsletters. I have an email one and also a LinkedIn one. So please stay in touch. That's how I learn from your own, it wants questions and their experiences.
Jeff Dudan (01:02:05.89)
Fantastic. Thank you for being on the Homefront today. This has been Charlene Lee with Jeff Duden on the Homefront. Thank you for listening.
Charlene Li (01:02:08.889)
Thank you for having me.
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