Caryn Seidman-Becker: Becoming Indefatigable | E23 - podcast episode cover

Caryn Seidman-Becker: Becoming Indefatigable | E23

Jul 05, 20221 hr 14 min
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Episode description

In 2002 Caryn Seidman-Becker created and ran a successful hedge fund that ultimately grew to $1.5 billion assets - an amount that was unheard of for a woman to manage at the time.  When the financial crisis hit in 2008, Caryn - like thousands of other funds - closed her fund.  She loved managing money, but decided to do something different - buy an airport-focused biometric-identity company that had raised $90 million and had filed for bankruptcy.  She bid $5.87 million at the bankruptcy option, renamed the company CLEAR, raised $150 million in capital from various investors including Delta Airlines and United Airlines, and took the company public on June 30, 2021.  Today, CLEAR’s market capitalization is $3.5 billion, landing Caryn on the Forbes list of America's Richest Self-Made Women (2021).


Caryn’s journey to incredible success is one of pivoting, grit, instincts, determination, and leadership.  When she decided to close her hedge fund, it would have been impossible to predict that she’d go on to reach massive success with the purchase of a bankrupt biometric-identity company.  But if Caryn’s story teaches us anything, it’s that with insatiable curiosity, transparency, determination - and was she describes as being indefatigabel - you can accomplish your wildest dreams.


In this episode, Randall and Caryn discuss how her childhood experiences and time attending the University of Michigan shaped her future, the importance of great teachers and mentors, the ability to overcome challenges and make tough decisions, the experience of buying a bankruptcy company and turning CLEAR into a company with $450 million in annual revenues, and advice for female entrepreneurs trying to find funding.      


Topics Include:

- What values her parents instilled in her 

- Her first job in NYC in risk arbitrage 

- Why she started her hedge fund Arience Capital Management

- The decision to close Arience in late 2008

- Advice for people who want to start over and pursue their passions

- What is CLEAR? 

- Transparency and real-time feedback in the age of social media

- The impact of COVID on CLEAR and creating CLEAR Health Pass 

- The importance of preparation - and EXTREME PREPARATION - on the path to excellence 

- Caryn’s ingredients for success 

- Her view on making money

- Fill In The Blank For Excellence

- And other topics… 

Caryn Seidman-Becker is the Chair and CEO of CLEAR, an expedited airport security service that allows its members to quickly pass through airport security lines.  Caryn and a colleague bought CLEAR's predecessor out of bankruptcy in 2010, and after raising $150 million from investors including Delta Airlines and United Airlines, she took the company public in June 2021 at a $4 billion valuation.

Caryn serves on the boards of Home Depot and Lemonade, and in 2021 Forbes named Caryn the 27th  wealthiest self-made woman in the United States.  Caryn is also a dedicated philanthropist.  In 2004, Caryn created The Happy Elephant Foundation which supports education, child wellness, and the New York City community, and she serves on the Board of Trustees of the 9/11 Memorial & Museum and on the board of the Department of Pediatrics at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.  She earned her B.A. in Political Science from the greatest college on the planet - the University of Michigan. 


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Transcript

Caryn Seidman-Becker

If you think of yourself as something different or lesser than it's hard to overcome that I never have thought that anybody who looked at me different I was like, I'll show you and to me if you have a great idea and can demonstrate all the characteristics of success, nothing is beyond your grasp.

Randall Kaplan

Welcome to a Search of Excellence which is about our quest for greatness and our desire to be the very best we can be to learn, educate and motivate ourselves to live up to our highest potential. It's about planning for excellence and how we achieve excellence through incredibly hard work, dedication and perseverance. It's about believing in ourselves and the ability to overcome the many obstacles we all face on our way there. Achieving Excellence is our goal and it's never easy to

do. We all have different backgrounds, personalities and surroundings. And we all have different routes and how we hope and want to get there. My guest today is Karen Seidman Becker, Karen is the chair and CEO of the amazing airport service clear, which earned $254 million in revenue last year and has a current market value of $4.7 billion. From 2002 to 2009. Karen was the founder Managing Partner of her own hedge fund and asset management firm SP had $1.5 billion in assets under

management. She is a graduate of the great University of Michigan and serves on the boards of Home Depot and lemonade, a company that sells different types of insurance online. In 2021, Forbes Magazine named Karen the 27th wealthiest, self made woman in the United States. Karen is also a dedicated philanthropist, she created the happy elephant Foundation, which supports education, child wellness, and

the New York City community. She serves on the Board of Trustees of the 911 Memorial and Museum and serves on the board of the department of pediatrics at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. Last but not least, Karen and I have been friends for 28 years. Karen Welcome to In Search of Excellence.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Great to be here. I'm honored.

Randall Kaplan

I always start my podcast with our family because from the moment we're born, our family helps shape our personalities or values in the preparation for our future. You grew up in Rockville, Maryland well to do suburb that's a 30 minute drive from Washington, DC. Your dad worked at the Department of Transportation your mom Laurie worked for the immigration Naturalization Service who you have described as a supermom and a super worker who put her kids first. Can you tell us more about what your

parents were like? What kind of values they instilled in you?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Yeah, I should also mention, I'm a crier. So I'm gonna try not to cry as I get through this stuff. My parents and and my grandparents put forth education and hard work as a huge value. My grandparents were immigrants. Actually, my mom's mom was a principal at a New York City School way back when. And so work ethic and education is the great equalizer, were the real

value that my family pushed. I also think building community being a part of your community giving back and being accountable and responsible for your community. And there's different kinds of communities right in your neighborhood. And so we saw that from a very young age. And it was instilled in us that you work hard that gender didn't matter, which I don't know, it was a value that I understood at the time, except to say that my sister and I were not treated any differently by

our family. Because we were girls, we were held to the same expectation. And that expectation could be cleaning the gutters, or mowing the lawn, or helping around the house. And so it was you can do anything, you have to work hard. Failure is not an option. Keep moving forward. It was definitely the mantra in our household.

Randall Kaplan

Let's talk about your early life growing up. You were born with a triple A personality and with a tremendous amount of ambition. That's awesome. But not everyone is born with those genes. You tell us how cleaning the gutters mowing the lawn, raking the leaves and helping your parents with the dishes contributed to your future success. And as part of this, what's your advice to those who want to be successful, but they may not be born with that same ambition.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

I don't know that everybody would say it was a triple A personality. It was a view that I wanted what I wanted, and I was willing to work hard and run through walls to get it. That could be as simple as I wanted a dog. And my parents didn't want to get us a dog. So I protested. I was an activist in sixth grade. I had my parents sign a contract I you know, I went at it and then I

was responsible for the dog. And so I saw the word I use often to describe myself was indefatigable, persistent and tireless and how when you can try to turn every no into a yes, by coming at things from different angles. You just keep going. And so that was who I was at a very young age. I also think I had no fear of failure. I think we grew up I would say, very middle class and my parents worked in credibly hard. And everything that they did they

did for us to further us. And that could be anything from summer camp to different things. And we knew how hard they worked. And we took nothing for granted. And so it was just an appreciation and a feeling accountable and looking around and saying, if you want things you are accountable for going to get them, nobody is going to hand them to you. That's how we grew up, because those were our circumstances. And so it was that mindset of like, work hard, keep your head down, keep going.

I don't know what child doesn't want more than what they had growing up. And that could be material or non material things. And so it was just always wanting more and always striving. And I'm very competitive. So maybe that is part of the triple A. And so like if I was mowing the lawn, it was like, How do I do it faster? Right? How am I stronger, I can I beat my own time, it was turning cleaning

the gutters into a fun thing. So I would drop the slit on my sister's head from the top of the ladder that that was fun. You were so responsible and accountable for the outcomes. Nobody was doing it for you. You didn't have any options. I also was a voracious reader. I didn't leave the country till I was 13. My uncle took us to Mexico for the first time otherwise, it was kind of the auto train, or Eastern Airlines to Florida to

visit our grandparents. And so this world around us and reading the books and the stories and I was a big collector of Sports Illustrated magazines and Time Magazine and seeing what the opportunities were and saying, Well, why can't I get them? And so I think when you have little to lose, you have no fear of failure. And that fired up with the don't take no for an answer probably was foundational to who I am.

Randall Kaplan

You've talked about the chores you had around the house. What were you like as a kid? Were you popular? Were you a leader and what did you do for fun?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

I never know what the word popular means. So I'll put it in perspective. I was one of the last people asked to the ninth grade prom. So that doesn't seem in line with how that traditional definition is. But thank you Mark Fryman for taking me. I was probably at the time maybe a foot taller than him. So I was five, eight, probably an eighth grade. So as a girl that was sort of tall and awkward.

And then at first superlatives in ninth grade, because I went to a junior high that was seventh, eighth and ninth grade, lots of people got like best dressed or most likely to succeed, I got straightest. So again, that doesn't seem aligned with award winning quote, popularity as people historically have thought of that. But I was really happy. I had a great group of friends, more guy friends than friends who are girls, and I love my guy friends, they are still lifelong

friends of mine. Were there at my wedding and still on my text chain very closely and great supporters and buddies. So the answer is, I was happy I was fulfilled. I was hungry. I wanted to when I was a nonconformist, growing up in Maryland, I think a lot of my friends made fun of me for what I wore. So maybe I always knew I should come to New York City where there was more fashion freedom. My mother would say, I marched to the beat of my own

drum. I just kind of lived in my own world and was happy in it. But clearly, I was perceived as straight gaki tall and maybe not that much. As we went into high school, I was a Palmy, which is Maryland was a big thing. It's like a dance line. And I wrote for the newspaper, the school newspaper, because I thought I wanted to be a journalist and thought it was a great childhood.

Randall Kaplan

I think education is one of the most important ingredients to our future success. Your parents, as you mentioned, were very great focus, academic focused, as I mentioned, also, you went to the great University of Michigan, where you majored in Political Science and wrote for the Michigan daily, can you tell us how your experience at Michigan helped shape your future and as part of that, you tell us about Ralph Williams class, the history of premium Levi and why you still have books from the

oryx bookstore in your house. As

Caryn Seidman-Becker

I said, I'm a voracious reader and maybe a little packrat with books, it doesn't feel right to throw away books, because they're like a little part of your history. So I applied shocking to my children who I have one in college and one going to apply to college next year. I applied to four schools, the University of Michigan, University of Texas at Austin, UCLA and Northwestern I thought I wanted to go to

UCLA. I wanted to go to a big school with sports where I could write for the paper that had strong academics, indefatigable was actually one of the words that I used in my college essay. That was for Northwestern who rejected me, but I got into UCLA went to visit was so excited and then realized I was so type A I didn't think I would belong out there and loved Michigan, loved the spirit loved the academics. I got into the Honors Program loved the great books. Last and loved the diversity of the

programs. I don't think I necessarily visited in January, which is a authentic time to visit from a weather perspective. So there were winter days that I was like, could have been in LA, but neither here nor there. Michigan was another part of my foundation in that it's a big school, you got to find your own way. You can be anybody that you want to be there, you can do anything that you want to do there. There's a club for everybody. There's people from not only around the country, but

around the world. So you can find your people and your different groups, but nobody's going to spoon feed it to you, you got to go get it. And so again, just pushing yourself forward and making your way and learning from others and building communities. And that spirit, that passion for that community is so contagious, and you feel so embraced and supported by it, even though it's big. It feels small. It was very special for years.

Randall Kaplan

I grew up in Michigan, I knew I wanted to go to Michigan, it was the only school I applied to, Oh, wow. I did well academically at a private school in Detroit, Detroit Country Day, and I pretty much knew I was gonna get in there. And it was a good thing I did. I didn't know where else I would go. But I had the greatest four years ever going back a step, how important is education to our future success

and path to excellence? And is what you learn outside the classroom as important as what you learn inside the classroom.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So I think two points on that I think education is the great equalizer. I think education also doesn't stop after school, whether it be undergrad or graduate or vocational school. I think being a lifelong learner is crucial, right? Like, look where the world is today. There was barely an internet when I graduated Michigan in 1994. My first class was a simulation, and I was Les Aspin, the Secretary of Defense senior year

of college, right? Like that was a big thing at the time that everyone could join together in this group. And so I think being a lifelong learner and being obsessively curious, is an enormous path to success. And I don't think that that is just a degree. It's a life skill. And that's actually something that we really hire for here at clear and something that I would tell anybody, the world is evolving.

And whether that be about politics, whether that be about health, whether that be about science, technology, medical, being intellectually curious, obsessively curious and asking why and wanting to get to the bottom of it. And there's more resources today than ever, is crucial to success. Number one. And I do think that education, experiential learning is

everything. When I was at Michigan, I went abroad, I spent a semester in Madrid that really was the first time I lived outside the country, again, as I said, beyond my brief trip to the Yucatan Peninsula when I was 13. And when I got to Spain, I was like, wow, I am just a.on the map in Maryland, are in Michigan are now here in Madrid and look at this world and look at the history and the art and the culture and the people and the need to adapt and embrace

change. And so I think that experiential learning hands on learning is even more powerful than the classroom. I do think, the to go hand in hand, because teachers, I don't know if I answered your question last time on Ralph Williams, incredible teachers are transformational, their passion, their knowledge, bringing books to life, bringing history to life in an interesting way. Right. You always thought when you were little like history is boring.

When you have teachers like Ralph Williams, bringing the life of primo Levy, and his journey through the Holocaust, and his writings to life is mesmerizing. It's something that you keep with you forever. There's pieces of it, that you incorporate into your life. That is the reason why I keep those books, because they were a really important part of my life of building who I am, right, there's all these building blocks to who you are. I just believe that education is crucial.

Randall Kaplan

We just talked about it for a second. But I do want to focus again on the importance that a great teacher can have on our lives, something that many of us have had along the way. I had an amazing teacher my sophomore year of high school named Don Corwin, he taught econ and I lived for that class I love down and I knew then that I was going to pursue a career in business and own a

company one day. On a similar note, my daughter goes to Cornell and I was visiting her in New York a month ago, we had an amazing weekend, which included going to see Billy Joel at Madison Square Garden. For my Millennium viewers and listeners who don't know, Billy Joel sold more than 150 albums and he's one of the most successful

musicians of all time. So Billy is an hour into the show playing hit after hit and when he told the audience, my music teacher at high school is turning 90 years old today and he was the best teacher I ever had when you're 15 years old. And somebody says this is what you should think about doing for the rest of your life you really think about it told the crowd, his musers teacher's name was Chuck. And he had all of us 20,000 of us saying happy

birthday to him. And he said he was taping this, who's going to send it Chuck, Senator Chuck, which is really special, we talked about a little bit, but on our path to excellence, how important is it to have a teacher mentor who takes an interest in you and gives you the encouragement to succeed or pursue whatever it is that

interests you. And then on the flip side, we didn't talk about this, if someone doesn't proactively give you this encouragement, what's the best way to find a mentor who will take an interest in you and your future?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So for me, it was my sixth grade teacher, Elaine Cutler, who recently passed away. And Elaine Cutler gave me extra spelling words, probably partially because my father told her to, but it was always you can do more, Karen, you're capable of more and pushing me and encouraging me, I maybe I shouldn't say this aloud supported me when I brought my Cabbage Patch Kid to school and wanted to house her in the coat room or whatever, because my Cabbage Patch Kid needed a good

place to be for the day. And so right supportive and embracing who you are, and being your best self, but having people outside of your parents tell you that you can do more, and they believe in you, but also inspiring and caring. I think that's massive. And not everyone has incredibly supportive homes, right. And so teachers are that support system, network inspiration, motivation care. And so I do think that it is

transformational. Again, a teacher doesn't just have to be an academic teacher, we talk about mentorship now in business, and seeking those people out is crucial. I've been lucky enough to have people who believed in me in my career when nobody else did. Two people, specifically Harold Levy, and Bill Miller, who Harold really gave me my first job. And Bill has been an investor and a backer of mine and a strategic partner. Those people are incredible. So it's teachers,

it's non teachers. And when you find those people, you learn from them, you stick with them, you're fortunate to have them. But I think mentorship I think teachers are so important. I know a lot of people talk today about zoom and virtual, there's nothing better than being in person with someone who believes in you and building that relationship and that trust and it lasts for Billy Joel, for 65 years, or whatever it is

Randall Kaplan

amazing. Someone told me a long time ago when I was younger, the most the four most important words in the English language are I believe in you. And it's something that really made a difference in my life when I had nothing when I was in school as a young person. Then in college, I had a great mentor at David Paige who did

the same for me. So for everybody out there, who wants to inspire make a difference in people's lives, it's a very important message that will go a long way and maybe life changing for people.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Absolutely. Paying it forward, right?

Randall Kaplan

Paying it forward. Let's talk about the start of your career. And to do that, we'll go back to what you did in the summers in college, you were an avid Washington Redskins fan growing up, the team is now called the Washington commander's, at some point, you thought you may go into sports journalism. During college, you worked at a radio station than a TV station. And while you were logging baseball tapes, you also worked on the

1992 presidential campaign. And by doing these things, you started to understand the power of economics and politics and how the two are connected. From that you really became interested in business and

finance. When you went back to Michigan, you did a big research project on the bottle, the water industry, which was not a big thing back then you'll love doing the report and learning the finance aspects of companies and love understanding who ran them what their future was, then how the dollars and their business models reflected their vision. So you graduate, you moved to New York because you loved it there. But you moved without a job and your parents were not so happy about that.

You tell us about your first job, why you took a job and risk arbitrage which you didn't even know what it was when you applied and as part of that. You tell us what you said yourself. Once you got there, which is something I preach to my interns and my mentees, which I call Philo f i l o.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So I did move to New York City without a job. I had a job offer a consulting company in Chicago and I turned it down and my parents went bananas. But I love New York. I loved the energy and I loved the movie Working Girl. Right Melanie Griffith with her what seemed like a Coach bag at the time and our coffee and our Wall Street Journal and let the river run playing as she came out of the subway. And that's what I wanted to be. I had an interest in stocks. My dad was

an investment advisor. And so I used to put the value line sheets in a binder for him and I would look at them and I would hear him talk about stocks and companies in my own Go was an investment banker in New York. And so I had an interest because I think everything is qualitative and quantitative, even in sports. It's like your skills, but also your attitude and your leadership and things of that nature. Well, those are

companies. It's qualitative, like, what's going to happen with the bottled water industry? And what's going on with health and wellness and hydration and whatever. And then, what could that business look like? And how does it scale? And so I knew I wanted to come to Wall Street. And so I pounded the pavement, again, got a lot of nose and was just like, Oh, all right, and kept on going and got a job

offer from Arnhold. And Bly Schroeder, because Harold Levy, I guess, saw something in me and I literally said to him, I will be the first one in and the last one out and your lowest cost employee. And I'll do whatever is asked to make this happen. And so they found a job and they needed a junior analyst and risk arbitrage. I think they made a seat for me in the corner, like facing the wall by the whole punching machine. And off I went and everything I learned and I asked questions, and I had

people willing to answer. And when you make de minimis money and you have de minimis money, you can get to work early and you get free coffee. And if you stay late enough, someone will pay for your dinner and your car home and so it was a great place to start.

Randall Kaplan

You worked by Schroder for four years, then you spent four years at iridient Asset Management, then you join Glenview, capital management as a partner. Then on September 3 2002, right after your first daughter, Olivia, you started your own money management firm with Ken kornek, where you managed a hedge fund that focused on value order value oriented, long term equities. We'll talk about what the name

means in a second. But I want to go back to what you said before there were not that many people who wanted to invest it first. But one individual Bill Miller at Legg Mason did $50 million. For our listeners of viewers who don't know about Bill, he's a legendary money manager who famously beat the s&p 500 every year from 1991 to 2005. We're going to talk more about your firm in a minute. But before we do, can you take us through the thought process of why you started your own firm? You said

you weren't fearless. But but you had to be a little scared to start your own fun and the pressures you were feeling and I want to know about your green sweater and on our path to excellence. What's your advice to others who want to start their own business but are too afraid to try? We'll go with the name first.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So named the firm Aryans because my view of investing was always it's part art part science. And so put those two words together going back to qualitative and quantitative. My experience when you looked at companies that were growing, yes, it was about the numbers. But it was about the secular trend. It was about the management team. It was about the leadership, it was about the values. And so it's not just the numbers. It's a lot of qualitative factors that go

into business. And so investing is absolutely part art and part science. And I used to love reading proxies because it really told the story of the business and the management team and how they were incented and what the relationships were. So you got to really put all the pieces of the puzzle together in order to be a strong long term investor. And it's interesting from 1994 till 2002, I had seen incredible management teams and

stories and disastrous ones. And you would see people like Craig McCaw gobbling up wireless spectrum. And that was a new industry in the 90s. Or Brian Roberts building his company, small cable company into something much bigger, both through m&a through product development. And through organic

growth. You saw Jeff Bezos start Amazon in 1997, as a trader out of de Shaw, I could go on and on with the stories of the incredible people that I had a front row seat to and also some disastrous ones who either made their company go bankrupt or went to prison. But point being you saw it all. And so I guess I had this view of like, well, I don't know if he can I can, if Jeff Bezos can go from de Shaw to starting this book company

like I can do this. And so I think it was seeing enough and having both the combination of a belief in yourself and a lack of fear of failure that I believed I could. And then there were supporters who said you could the beautiful thing about Wall Street is that you have a report card. It's not sort of theoretical, did you? Were you responsible for this product? Did you come up with it, but the other people built it, like you have a report card, and those are your returns? Data doesn't

lie. And my data was great. And it was competence inspiring to me, maybe not to enough others at the beginning, but to at least a bill. I wanted to do things my way. I wanted to build a culture and a process that represented how I looked at the world and at the bright age of 29. I was like now's my time. And in fact, I would complain and Bill would say to me stop complaining and just go do it. So if you want it done, you want it done your way. You can't just

complain about it. You have to take action, and by owning it and being accountable and respond trouble for all of it. That was my action.

Randall Kaplan

What about the green sweater?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

I am very superstitious. And green was the color of money and green means go. So I wore a green sweater. It was a lovely green sweater for the first day of when we started investing at Oregon's Capitol. And we lost money that day. And I never wear that sweater again. It's a shame. It was a lovely sweater.

Randall Kaplan

It's interesting you you mentioned reading about Dubai, the same thing I was working at Sun America, I had a great job. I was the assistant to the chairman, Eli Brode was my boss at the time, he was one of only three people who started to Fortune 500 companies. The others were Wayne Huizenga and Jim Clark. And I remember thinking, I want to do more, I want to make an impact. I remember the Businessweek cover in 1996, they had all these tech guys, Jeff Bezos, and the

founders of Yahoo. And I remember looking at this cover saying, I gotta go do that I either got to go back to business school, or I want to just start my own company or join a younger company, I remember going to my boss, worried I was gonna get fired, and just telling him, I want to do something more, I want to make a difference. And it really is one of these things where you start to think about it, do I

give up what I have? Do I be truthful with my boss, and then do I go pursue my passion, and I decided to be truthful with my big break, I was very lucky. That job, I had a front row seat to everybody, all the CEOs of investment banks would come see us. It really was motivational for me to read about people who gave me the inspiration. That's one of the goals of my podcast to hear stories like you and other successful people to inspire and motivate them to pursue something that they love.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

It's interesting. I tell my kids, everyone puts their pants on one leg at a time, when you meet people up close, whether it be Steve Jobs as he came back to Apple, and nobody wanted to meet him in the basement of the Javits Center for Macworld, or you saw Amazon and would go visit the hospital headquarters that they had. And you know, the whiteboards in the elevators, and the energy and the passion

are you go. And I used to think you get a lot of information as an investor by going and hanging out in the ladies room for some period of time, because people have, you know, authentic conversations there. And you'd go to some interesting biotech companies and hear people talking and it was just everybody are just people. And you got to be willing to put yourself out there. And you have

to be willing to take risk. And if you also believe that, what's the worst thing that can happen, you will fail, you will have options, you can go do something else, but you can't just talk about it. It's about action and execution. Again, I go back to my childhood, I don't know that anybody was betting on me from last girl, or one of the last girls asked to prom to straightest. So it was like, All right, might as well just bet on myself and keep moving forward. And I think I've always had that

attitude. But it's hard. People shouldn't just drop everything and go follow their passion, they should really be thoughtful about it. They should think about What's plan B, you didn't apply to any other colleges. So apparently, there wasn't a lot of plan B thinking there. I applied the three more, What's plan B, what's Plan C? But why not me? Jeff Bezos or Steve Jobs, or Tom Brady. They didn't wake up as the anointed one when they were young. Right? They all had a story and a look at Tom

Brady story. Another find Wolverine right? He wasn't number one in the draft. Not everybody was betting on him. And I think a lot of has been written about that chip on his shoulder motivating him. I would say let the haters be your motivators. But everybody, they're just people. Why not you?

Randall Kaplan

I spread it out a bit. When I applied to law school, I applied I think to 14 law schools. I did very well in Michigan. I was Phi Beta Kappa, my junior year, but I didn't test well. And so I thought, oh, Jesus is gonna be a problem. My friends who had similar grades, they went to Harvard, and Northwestern was my backup school. So I did spread it a little round. Thankfully, I got in I didn't know what my plan F for G or why would be but I did spread it out a bit after after

I went to law school. Now you have your own firm and it goes well, for a while your returns were excellent. It's just two examples. You were up 17.57% at 2005. We were up 12.78% at 2006. At your peak at 20 employees, you're managing $1.5 billion in assets and then came 2008. Your started off pretty well. At the

end of February. We're up 7.77% for the year, and then disaster strikes the market crashed, losing 38.49% for the year, there was carnage everywhere on Wall Street 770 hedge funds closed down and liquidated their funds that year or the following year after they posted huge

losses. And then on December 12 2008, you announced that you are also closing your fund at the end of that year you wrote a letter to your investors that said we do not currently see a clear path to employer discipline process and gain the necessary conviction to become

reinvested. That decision stems from our belief that the current market environment is incompatible with our invest spent style and process for the last two months, we've been deeply under invested and we do not feel it is appropriate to sit with cash and collect management fees. At this point, you're managing around a billion dollars and you've returned 95% of your investors money by the

end of January 2009. I love reading your letter, which to me had two central themes, acknowledging the realities of what you were doing and could accomplish and doing the right thing, not for yourself, but your investors as a fiduciary of their capital, on our path to excellence. Most of us are taught to keep fighting when the going gets rough. And to never give up. What's your advice here? And is your advice different for money managers than people who start their own

company entrepreneurs? And as part of this, how important is it to leave your ego at the door when deciding what to do in situations like this where the Master of the universe syndrome is not going to cut it?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

I guess Lucky for me, I've never had the Master of the Universe syndrome. I've had the nervous, anxious dog wagging its tail very quickly trying to run fast. Look, we went to cash in September of 2008. Late but not too late. And so we went from that up eight, I think we were probably down 20 22%. At that. We just said we take concentrated positions, looking out five years, nine 10% positions, what the opportunities can be and we

didn't see it. We didn't and the shorts were not working the Long's we didn't have the conviction. And we just said, let's sit for a while and see what happens. We can redeploy. And that was a big decision we'd never made You're always saying what's the next thing I want to invest in? Not I want to sit in cash market went down further. And it was at that moment that I said, What do I want to do? Do I want to do this, I've been doing this almost 24/7 for 14 plus years. I don't know if I want to

do this going forward. And I I've seen people build incredible companies. And I kept saying I didn't want to die and have people say I pick good stocks. I wanted to build something that made the world a better place. And I thought that there could be interesting opportunities shaking out from the downturn. And so people kept saying, well, when are you going to reinvest? And I finally thought, I don't know if I want to, I don't think I want to I think I want to go do something

different. I want to buy a company and control the cash flows. When people were liquidity starved, we gave it back to them. We didn't want to collect management fees for sitting on people's cash. And it's not something that we want to do anymore. We did want to make sure that everyone found new jobs, and help them do that it was a difficult decision to deconstruct a company who had become like a little family. But I don't know that money management is any different than

anything else. It's like, are you passionate about it? Can you give it your all? Do you think you can be excellent at it. And I had a little bit of a change of heart about the opportunity and passion for what I was doing. And so that's really what drove that decision. And it felt like the right decision.

Randall Kaplan

So the fun goes down. And essentially it fails. When you start a new business. That's really the main worry that it goes out of business. For most people. It's embarrassing. And if you've raised money, like we both have, your investors are not very happy. And then of course, there's your mental state. When you close your fund, you said you had moments where you felt like a failure, you'd be at dinner and someone would say

what do you do? You didn't have the right answer, they literally pass right over you and then talk to your husband, Mark, who works at one of the most prestigious private equity firms in the world, Apollo, and that really bothered you that you were being defined by what you did, as opposed to who you were because you're obviously the same person. I lost my job. When I came to Los Angeles, there was after law school, I had $3,000 in the bank, I knew nobody here.

And I would walk around, I would go out to places myself, which is really weird. And I would meet a woman who I wanted to see if she wanted to go out with me on a date. And the first question was, what do you do? And I said, nothing. It was very embarrassing. And I didn't even know what to say I felt I felt really lost. We're going to talk

about clear in a minute. But before we do, I want to talk about the very important flipside to failure which goes against conventional wisdom that failure can be a good thing, or even a great thing. When I look at my own career. I've learned a lot more from my failures, of which there are too many for which I like to forget that my successes. And I have a saying that sometimes our biggest disappointments lead to our best opportunities on our path to excellence. How important is it to fail?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Yeah, look, I think failure is incredibly instructive and humbling, motivating. I will also say that I didn't look at Aryans as a failure. If you looked at the returns from the beginning, they were very strong. But if you invested at the beginning of 2008, they definitely sucked. I thought there was a lot that we achieved in 2008 sucked and I made a decision. But I think failure. You hear all these stories on failure. It's humbling. It makes you fear it less it makes you

believe in yourself more. It makes you think thicker skinned, right? I think that failure is defining. And there's lots of failures every day and every year and learning from them and motivating to do better, but also not fearing it because you strengthen and you move forward. It's crucial. They talk a lot about resilience and grit these days, with kids and as a parent failures, highly instructional, it's very motivating.

Randall Kaplan

You've talked about the change of heart you had when you're thinking about leaving your hedge fund, you're 36 years old at the time you have three kids, you've been working 24/7 For a long time. You're saying to yourself, I love Wall Street. I love the chaos. I love being busy. And then you had this, what the fuck moment where you said yourself? What am I doing? You didn't want to manage money anymore. You wanted to do something

materially different. And then you have this moment, it's a scary place, you're are in your daughter's kindergarten class or cutting scissors, patterns, you can't really focus, you're not so good on the scissors, Wall Street is melting down. And here you are, that people are trying to save the world and in Wall Street, what's your advice to others who want to start over and do something they're passionate about? But they don't have a confidence? You had you?

You were motivated by Jeff Bezos, Steve Jobs, Mike Bloomberg, and they were a huge factor in your life. But what does someone do to get that confidence in order to make the change, do something that they're passionate about?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Yeah, I would say reading other people's stories is very instructive, right? And understanding other people's path to success in history. I guess that's one of the reasons you're doing this podcast, I think is very motivating. I don't know it was me in that moment. I'm sort of an n of one. I wanted to do something that made the world a better place, I felt a moral obligation to be part of solutions to give back to communities to find meaning

every day, life is short. And are you using your time the way you want to do you get up every day excited and passionate. And you know that feeling when you want to go out and slay the dragons when you want to go out? You have a vision? And I don't know, I guess I always said if not me, then who 911 was defining for me, I looked at our country and safety differently. I wanted to be part of the solution. I never wanted to be a cog in the wheel. Never want it to be a number. That's just what

drove me. But I think people have to figure out what they want to look back on. And with no regrets say that they left it all on the field. What is that all for somebody?

Randall Kaplan

We're going to talk about the origins of clear in a minute. But before we talk about what happened next, I think most of our listeners or viewers know what clear is, which I think is one of the greatest things ever. I travel a lot. But for those who aren't familiar, please tell us what it is.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Clear is a biometric secure identity platform. And so this whole concept of your face your fingerprint your eyes, your voice, QR codes represent your identity. And identity enables frictionless experiences, we started in airports, which means that you do not have to take out your ID and have unpredictable experiences. But you use your fingerprints or your eyes today more your eyes as your ID to have a predictable and frictionless experience in

airports. And then we've taken it beyond airports into sports stadiums and other mobile products. But this whole concept of all you have in life is time. And you shouldn't spend your time waiting in line or unpredictable experiences is really the driver to clear.

Randall Kaplan

I travel a lot. I've been a clear member, I think for four or five years now. I've been a TSA member before that TSA cost $79. Yours for five years clears 179 per year, you just factor in your time I go to the airport, the TSA line, sometimes it can take you 30 minutes to clear line. I've measured this since I knew we're gonna do the podcast, which is a while ago, eight months ago, we said Alright,

we're going to do this. And thank you for this very, very much I went up to and I always like to tell my guests how we got here today. I went up to I saw at the Milken conference back in May we gave each other a big hug, how are you? How are the kids, et cetera, et cetera? Then I said, Hey, Karen, I've got this podcast, I told you. And I said, Would you be kind enough to do you even hesitate? said of course I would. So i i Thank you for that. And I was a huge fan of clear, as well. But

you look at the TSA line. And it can be very long. And I've measured now the average time it takes me to get to the front of the line, where I'm always greeted by someone who's super friendly, is less than two minutes and over half the time. It's less than a minute you walk up there. You look into a screen. They look at your eyes, it clicks, you get a little pass, you walk up to the TSA, the front of the line, that and Global Entry are the two greatest things in the travel

world. So I'm giving you a huge plug here. I love what you're doing. You've got an awesome company that you're running. Thank you. But I want to go back to the beginning and we'll go to your predecessor company that was called verified identity

pass. OS was founded in 2003 by a journalist author entrepreneur named Steven Brill, who had previously founded core TV the premise of VIP, as it was known was the same lettuce members bypass security lines that use the smart card that was reinforced by biometric data real started VIP as to shorten

the long lines after 911. Over the next five years, he raised $90 million in funding had 200,000 users and was in 17 different airports, was making a good amount of progress but burning a ton of cash and on July 26 2008, the TSA suspended it from a rolling travelers in his pre screening program after a laptop containing the records of 33,000 people went missing from San Francisco airport, the laptop contained unencrypted pre enrollment records of individuals interested in

joining the VIP program, including names addresses, driver's license, and passport numbers. It was a massive reputational blow to the company. In addition to that, the company had uploaded a cost structure and then it missed payments on a $32 million loan. And then it filed for bankruptcy in December 2009. And it shut down. So we'll fast forward to

April 16 2010. And that was the day you and Ken kornek formed a company called All Clear holdings, and you bought the company out of bankruptcy for $5.87 million, much of which was your own money. And you outbid a company named Henry Inc, by nearly $2 million. When your fund closed, you said you didn't want to die and have people say you pick good stocks. And I can assure you, Karen, nobody is saying that today. Can you take us back to the day you won the

bankruptcy? The auction? What did you see that others didn't see? And as part of that, can you tell us what was happening in Brazil and Asia and how you valued goodwill in the relationships with the government in major airlines?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Yeah. So we actually started doing due diligence on clear in August of 2009. And looked at it like we looked at any other investment, what could this business be, and even though it went away in a very non glorious way, which is bankrupt and it took people's money, and people didn't know where their data was, and when you call the call center, there was nobody there to answer. People missed it. Something resonated with the experience with the technology. And so we knew there was something there.

And we looked at it and said, again, no different than Amazon or Apple that we could build this platform company you started off in computers, where you started off in books, we started in airports, but this whole concept of making experiences safer and easier, giving people back their time of giving people control of using technology for the AR and for frictionless experiences, and trust and security, we thought that this platform could do and starting in the place where

identity and security were paramount, with that confidence. And with that research and with that data, and with our own capital and some outside investors that we went in in February of 2010, to buy it in a bankruptcy auction, if you haven't been part of a bankruptcy auction. It's an experience where you you go to your little room, you formulate a bid you come together, they kind of unwrap the bids, you go back, it was going back and

forth. When we won that day for about $6 million, as you said, and as I say a million dollars of legal fees. When we won that day, you went home like you did with your first child. And it was like, Oh my God. Now what do we do? I remember my knees were shaking, I think we also didn't eat from like 8am to 8pm. I wish I had pictures of that day, I did not. And then we started with a five page to do list, double sided split between Kevin and myself. And we went at it.

And every day, you're just learning and it's again, humbling. And you take the lessons that you had from the companies that you used to invest in and everything that brought you to this point, but it was like a holy shit moment of what we just do. You know, it's a very large purchase price wouldn't zero in money. But we went at it and rebuilding trust. We had hit the road before we bought the company, asking stakeholders from the TSA to

airlines and airports. Hey, what do you think if we bought this, and we shared our vision, we kept going back I can look at the emails we sent the night we want it letting all the people that who we had been talking to know that we had won the auction, and we were the new owners of the company. Actually, the deal fell apart once before it closed. So somebody once told me bankruptcies happen on the steps of the courthouse. And that is true. There's always a lot of back and forth and a lot

of stakeholders. But it was about those relationships and those consistent conversations which took years because there was a lot of angry feelings to what happened the first time and signed every email myself, to members to partners to just really drive accountability and ownership and transparency.

Randall Kaplan

You built a brand and it's still built around today trust in our search for excellence. How important is it to be very transparent If what you're doing it for people to trust you.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

It's everything. If I look at our 2010 member pledge, and again, we were doing everything ourselves, I was the email person Kenza doing technology and engineering, work and finance the whole thing. We did a customer pledge to members in June of 2010. And in it, it talks about what we will do. And one of those points is we will guard your privacy, right? That

is crucial. Starting in 2010, that was not some trendy thing, because people are talking about privacy or data security, it was like, This is who we are, this is what we do. And we're gonna sign our name to it, and you're gonna hold us accountable to it. And so I think trust and transparency, not only with your members, but with your team members and doing what you say you're going to do, and continuing to go back. And oh, by the way, doesn't mean you don't make a ton of mistakes

along the way. So when you make those mistakes, saying My bad, and I'm sorry, and we own it, and here's what we're gonna do differently. We changed a compensation program here at Clear, probably in 2014, with our amazing ambassadors, and it was not met with a lot of happiness, we changed it back. And I went on an apology tour to every airport to every break room at 430. In the morning saying I did this, I'm sorry, and we changed it back. And that actually buys you more trust.

Yeah, it's everything. Look at Brands today, you must have trust digitally physically, with your employees, and with your customers and with your partners. It's everything. And by the way, somebody once said to us, it is the staircase up and the elevator down, it takes a really long time to build it, and you can destroy it immediately. And so living that as part of your ethos and your culture every day, as you scale is massively important. Let's talk about the importance

Randall Kaplan

of customer experience and the success of any business. If your customers like the experience, there'll be a customer for life. And as an added bonus, they'll tell their friends, which will lead to more customers, which is also great, because there's no new cost to acquire these new members. In 2021, you had a lifetime value of customer acquisition cost ratio, approximately 18 times for members who join that year.

That's really good. So it's working on the flip side, if your customers don't like the experience, they'll stop paying your $179 a year and worse, they may tell their friends, it's not worth the money, which would likely lead to some potential customers not becoming

customers. When I've had a bad experience as a customer, which happens at times with large companies like Verizon where in some cases, I've had to spend hours waiting on hold than speaking to an entry level employee in a phone center, often not located in another country who can solve my

problem. When this happens, I get the CEOs email address or a paid service that we use now email the CEO directly, which works more than 99% of the time, but nearly all CEOs of public companies, I'm guessing 99% hide their emails, they sit in an ivory tower, they don't want to be bothered getting emails from customers, you do not do that you do something that most CEOs would cringe at your email is public, Karen at Clear me.com.

So when customers have a bad experience with clear you're inviting them to email you directly and rather than have somebody else who says they're calling from the executive team, but in reality, they're often sitting 1000 mile from the office, you often get back to people yourself, not in a day, but very quickly. You've done it

on a Saturday at 2pm. When you're at your son's soccer game, and our search for excellence on a scale of one to 10,000 How important is it to be in direct contact with your customers and to listen and learn from them. When you're building a company regardless of the size of the company

Caryn Seidman-Becker

12,000 I can't remember whether it was Crate and Barrel or William Sonoma, I read one of those CEOs who spends a few hours a week reading hundreds of customer emails. And we are here because of the trust of our members. We are here because of the trust of our team members. And the passion, we would not be here

without them. I tell every single team member at clear that every engineer, every product manager, people in legal and finance and ops, and that's where we learned this morning, we have a leadership team meeting and we had a focus group and about 14 Different ambassadors from around the country zoomed in to tell us about what we could be doing better from a product perspective. They see it first. And so I have gone to the lanes and and filmed our members feedback to share with other

team members here. It's everything feedback matters. And whether it's something we could be doing better or let me explain to you why you experienced that and be transparent about it. I think it's crucial you can learn so much. I am not a heavy

participant in social media. But I am humbled by it 20 years ago if you didn't like let's just say New Coke, for instance, right like that took a while to brew that would be instantaneous today and whatever the brouhaha was, however many decades ago that was, it would be 10x. Today, the real time feedback, I can see that we are having a problem this morning at Newark at 620 in the morning on Twitter, I can call over to that manager and say what's going on, that keeps everybody on their

toes. That kind of transparency, I think is really powerful. Sometimes it's also wrong and it's important to correct it. But it is a very viral, transparent, real time feedback world and you better be prepared for it. And you better be in the business of getting better every day, and responding and understanding and there is no hiding from it. Specifically, we are out in the middle of airports where two and a half million people around today are

going through every day. You can see what we're doing well, you can see what we're not doing well, you can see Rockstar ambassadors or somebody who potentially needs more training or feedback, and to not act on that to not want to get better every day is to die. And so you gotta want to get better every day you gotta want to win. And customer feedback is the best way to do that.

Randall Kaplan

On our path of access, we all face challenges and you had a monster one call the Coronavirus at the peak of a pandemic, passenger traffic was down 90% and airports became ghost towns just to put some numbers on this and April

13 2020. TSA screened at 7534 people versus screening on average more than 2 million people a day before the pandemic through January 2021, air travel was down 60% of the airline industry lost his top $370 billion as passenger volumes plunged 60% You cut your marketing spend you tighten your budget. And in March 2021, you created something called Health pass an app that tracks COVID test results and vaccination

status. Thankfully, despite the massive decrease in the number of people flying the pandemic only had a temporary impact on your business. And our search for excellence. How important is it to overcome challenges, especially those that may seem insurmountable.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So going back to learning, I learned a lot in the 2008 2009 market downturn. And you could map that market downturn back to what was happening in 2007. And burying your head in the sand is a sure way to not win. And so on February 25, Ken and I were on a train down to DC I believe the stock market was down four and change percent you were reading what was happening in in Asia and in Italy. And it was like the you know, there were a few cases in Seattle, right? Just a

few. And we thought that there was a big problem, you could read a lot of tea leaves, we talked to a lot of people, we put together a lot of data. And we started taking action on February 25. So being proactive, and not reactive is massively important. And your job as a leader is to look around corners, and to make predictions and to act on them not to wait till it hits you in the face

with a two by four. And so we did start taking action that day taking our marketing budget to zero, you could always what's the worst thing happened, you're wrong and you turn it back on, we did start to put our team members on a leave of absence plan and make sure we were taking care of them. And we also took our salaries to zero, just mine and Ken zero. And we contributed that to a clear one one clear fund where we could take care of team members around

the country. And so it was that action that allowed us to both communicate it to our company in aggregate on March 16. And then move on to health paths to see what was coming around the corner and leverage our assets. Again, our mission is to make experiences safer and easier. And we believe that there would be another card in your wallet. And we're all about digitizing those, and connecting people to all the things that make them them well, your vaccine or your test results are part of that.

And so we were able to move quickly because we were proactive because we had learned a lot from the markets for few decades. And you've got to act and you've got to look around corners. And you've got to put yourself in a position to lead and be proactive. And by the way your teams wants stability, your teams want leadership, your teams want to know that someone has a plan, that we're not making it up as we go along. And so we did those things. And by the way, traffic wasn't down 90,

it was down 98. If you ever want to stress test a model, and you are a subscription travel business, take it down to borderline zero and see what happens to your business. And I think because we built trust, and because we took care of our members and we were still there for them for the few who showed up every day. It went a long way to coming out of it with even greater strength.

Randall Kaplan

Let's switch gears and talk about the challenges of women and money managers and as entrepreneurs and we'll start with a few stats on the hedge fund front. According to IBI s world there are currently 3841 hedge funds in the United States Of these, only about 80 are led by women today. 2.1% back in 2002. You are 29 years old when you started your hedge fund and the number of women man managers would much lower than 80. I'm guessing it was less than 25.

And you were not only one of the few women who ran a hedge fund, you grew it to $1.5 billion in assets, which at the time was probably a record for a woman hedge fund manager and which is still ridiculously impressive today by today's standards for women or men. I think today there are only 10 Female hedge fund managers who manage over a billion dollars. Now let's talk about some stats on the venture

capital side of 2021. Venture capital investments totaled the record $330 billion, and Of this amount, only 6.4 billion went to women, it was an all time high buy dollars. But it was only 1.8% of the total, which was down from 2% in 2020, and 2.8%, in 2019. And it was the smallest share since 2016. In addition to getting only 1.8% of all VC dollars, women raise smaller rounds of financing than men, women, on average raise $5 million per round, ball man

average $12 million. You are a pioneer here as well, you raised $150 million, over six rounds in the seven years before you went public. And now let's talk about public companies in the United States. There are approximately 6000 public companies of the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ. The first stock exchange in the US is the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, which was created in

1790. And then the 231 years, three months and 29 days since then, there have only been 37 public companies founded by women ever, you probably don't think of this yourself this way. But you're one of the greatest pioneers for women and finance of all time and one of the OGs. And not only a role model for women, millions of women, but for men as well, millions of men, and I want to talk about women for a second, how do we change all this? And what can we

do to reverse this trend? And what's your advice to women entrepreneurs trying to get funding for their businesses.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So thanks for saying that. I didn't know the stats, I don't feel like an OG I just feel like a person who wants to make a difference. And I got to be very honest, I think it starts way earlier, you can't just wake up if I if I go back to the mowing of the lawn or the cleaning of the gutters. You can't just wake up at the age of

you know, 22 or 30. And decide that you want to do things and that you're going to be strong and tough and rough and tumble and that you're going to whether it be a man or a woman be indefatigable, turn the nose into yeses. Pursue your vision, not be afraid, I think that starts young and how we raise our children. I can't stand when women say I can't I don't understand the stock market or I don't understand finance, in a rocket science, right? There's

some very basic things. And so instilling that at a young age in everyone financial literacy and responsibility, right 16% credit card debt is not good for anybody, you shouldn't pay that it's not good. And so I never felt like a woman pioneer. I felt like a person who was overcoming the odds, people didn't believe in clear Silicon Valley certainly didn't believe in clear, or people didn't want to invest in orients capital. I didn't take it as because I'm

caring. I'm a woman, except for one guy who said something when I was raising capital and pregnant, I was like, oh, that's sexist, screw you, I'll show you. And then when he came back in to invest later, I wouldn't take his money. I think it starts with not thinking of yourself different race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, I think it goes much broader today. It's just, I'm a person. And I want to do

this. I'm sure that when I walk into people's offices, maybe more years ago than today, or maybe today, it doesn't strike people that I have the same strength or resilience or grit or network. You know what, I don't play golf. I'm kind of not that good at tennis. But I'm, I'm okay. I'm a mom of three. I'm a hard working human. I'm all about the outcomes. And that's how I want to be judged. I'm a person with high integrity, creativity, financial

responsibility. And I actually think if you look at the data that women actually can course correct, faster than men, things of that nature. But I don't think of myself as an OG I think of myself as a person, kind of how we started a girl from Maryland to girl with a dream, as I say to our folks here, SF GM, or STFM, simple girl from Maryland, and just continuing to

execute. And I think if you think of yourself as something different or lesser than, it's hard to overcome that I never have thought that and I do understand that lots of people today from all different backgrounds are raised to feel lesser than and that's not just gender, that's socio economic. That's great. That's sexual orientation. And I think therein lies the problem going back to education and how we started

this. You can't think of yourself as lesser than, I think diversity yields better outcomes, greater critical thinking, I believe in that, at my very core, and anybody who looked at me different I was like, I'll show you. And I think that it starts with how we raise our daughters and our sons, raising our sons to look at people as equal. And I have a 14 year old son is just as important as how we raise our daughters, and I have two of those, nothing is beyond your

grasp. And the more people that people can look at, I guess that's better, because it's competence inspiring for them. And it shows the art of the possible. But to me, if you have a great idea and can demonstrate all the characteristics of success, are that drives success, whether it be first in last out or obsessive curiosity, or an unbelievable work ethic, and a lack of entitlement. I think those are big drivers today. And it never occurred to me that I was a girl. It wasn't

part of my construct. It was, I'm a winner.

Randall Kaplan

You're definitely a winner. As I've told people, I said, I've had an amazing podcast with this amazing woman who's done more for women, they're shocked at the stats. And I wish people knew more about the story and what you've done, because and they will, on this podcast, I hope there's a million people eventually listen to this podcast, especially the women who don't know the stats, and they're afraid and they want to go forward. So I think you're an inspiration to many, both women

and to men. That's nice. I want to switch to one of my favorite topics, what it takes to be successful. And I want to start about the importance of preparation on our path to excellence. One of the main ingredients that got me to where I am today is that I am always the most prepared person in the room. How important has preparation been to your success

and going a step further? How important is extreme preparation going way above and beyond what would be considered great preparation, I'm talking about the kind of preparation that you spend 30 to 40 hours on for a single event or meeting.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

So I love that you said that. And that was evident because I didn't remember what I was up in February of 2008. So I was like, Oh, that was impressive for Andy. It's everything. So I think if you read the book, Grit by Angela Duckworth, it talks about Kevin Durant, and the practice time that Kevin Durant puts in before games, the game is an hour, that is just the Showtime of the 10s and hundreds and 1000s of hours of preparation. And it's not just practice, right? It's diet, it's

mental. It's all sorts of things. I always say in a meeting that I want to know you better than you know yourself when I go in. And by the way, Google incredibly powerful that wasn't there 20 and change years ago, and you are going into meetings, or at least not to what it is today. And so I think preparation is crucial. The meeting the conversation, the game is just the Showtime of the preparation. And it is the

gritty hard work. I remember when I was an intern at WRC TV, and we would go out for the 11 o'clock pm news to some sort of seen something usually terrible like a murderer or something like that. And I was like, This is not a glamorous job. This is a hard, gritty job. But you see the reporter on television, you know, giving their report for 120 seconds. But it is all the people behind that it is all the work behind that it is gritty,

it is not glamorous. And I think people just see the glamour the glamour of the actor, actress on the TV show or the movie. Well, I live here in New York City, you watch them shooting a scene on the streets at midnight. It is tons of people and tons of work. And it is really hard. And I think people today perhaps look at the shiny stuff. And not the hard work that it takes and winning is in the research is in

the data. Right? The half a page discussion when I asked someone to come have with me, you better have all the data behind it. Why do you want to do this thing? Here's the 25 pages of research behind it. But you need to synthesize that to a half page to make your case. You think about the hard work and research when lawyers go into court defend people to get something changed or turned over on death row. I saw Bryan Stevenson speak a few weeks ago and what he's done at the Equal Justice

Initiative. That is years of work years we just launched the San Diego airport it clear. I tell people depending on when you want to start the start clock, it took us seven to nine years to do right. It is the hard gritty work. It is the research it is the data analysis. It is the synthesis of it, it is coming up with Plan A

through F it is the pivoting. If you're in the stock market and you buy something and the stock goes down 30% You can't start your research then to decide whether or not you were right or wrong. You had to have had a thesis and maybe at that moment, the right thing to do is to not just double down but quadruple down. Dollar cost averaging but you had to have done work, you can't just wake up and be like, I don't know, let me start doing some work here. Obviously, there's incremental work to do.

Well, it's the same thing in business and in sports and in life. It is absolutely the research and the work and the grit. We've talked

Randall Kaplan

about a little bit about some ingredients for success. indefatigable is one word that describes you. It's also a reporter named Benjamin Mark Cole wrote a piece about me when I started a charity event, when I was 27 years old, called the Justice ball, in terms of me raising money, and he used that word. And that word has also been one of the hallmarks of my career as well as has work ethic

and preparation. We've talked about some of this before, what are the other ingredients to success and to achieving excellence?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

As I said before, I do think obsessive curiosity and one of the big words that I'm known for here at Clear is why, right? Why what keep peeling that onion, there's got to be root cause there's got to be learning the why the why the why. I do think teamwork and collaboration is no politics. My least favorite. I don't want my least favorite saying I don't want to step on anyone's toes. I don't even know what that means. Can't we work together for great outcomes? I do a lot of sports

analogies. Like if you're on a football team, are you stepping on somebody's toes if you get the cat but you know, somebody else kind of had it. But you get the touchdown, like, is that stepping on somebody's toes? I don't think so. We all wear one Jersey offense, defense, special teams, whatever the case may be. And so having that mentality of teamwork, of collaboration of all for one of it's just as good to get the assist as it is the

score. It's just as good to be on defense as it is on offense. Aiden Hutchinson, number two in the draft, just saying, right, like he's a star. He's not necessarily scoring touchdowns. And he's still incredibly important. And so I think teamwork and collaboration, obsessive curiosity, being a lifelong learner, I do think no, ego is incredibly important. Life is humbling. Business is

humbling. You can have a great day business, you go home and your kids think you're like the dumbest human being on the face of the planet. That's very humbling, and life throws you a lot of curveballs, and you better be prepared to deal with them. And you play the hand you're dealt.

Randall Kaplan

Hutchinson was standing next to me were in line for a Delta flight going to New York. This was the Heisman Trophy weekend, and I said, Hey, Aiden, Randy, I went to Michigan. Love you. Please let the lions draft. I hope he was supposed to go. Number one. I was praying and he was excited at the possibilities from the outskirts of Detroit, obviously played in Michigan. He's such a nice guy. By the way, his sister was there. His mom was there. He was so so humble about the whole

thing. Hey, you, thank you when he said if I do I do. I don't I don't. There's a lot of great players out there. I thought that was phenomenal. Let's switch topics. You're 40 years old, you've made a tremendous amount of money. You're number 52 on the Forbes list of America's richest self made women and worth many hundreds of millions of dollars. Was that part of the dream growing up when you started the business? And where did money rank to you when you started your career?

And what are you going to tell people where money is the most important factor of what they want to do? When I talk to my intern class? I have 36 kids every summer we have about 1000 applications. Now each summer is become a thing. And they always talk about, yeah, I want the experience, but I want to make a lot of money.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Yeah. So my first job was $24,000 at Arnhold. And vice versa with a $12,000 bonus. My first car was a Nissan stanza, I guess. And it was a hammer down from my sister. So when I think about what I aspired to money, wasn't it like did I think it was cool that people had Jeep Cherokees? You know, definitely did I think it was cool that someone had a, you know, convertible Ford Mustang, totally. But that's like, small increments on material goods. I wanted to win.

And I didn't know necessarily touted, define winning, if you are a teacher, if you're a nurse, if you're a doctor, if you're a lawyer, if you're a you know, an entrepreneur, like I just wanted to win and be the best and I wanted to keep moving forward and whatever marker I would see. So in college, there was a guy and he got a job at Goldman Sachs. And I was like, okay, everyone's celebrating him. Like, what's that? And I didn't know much about Goldman Sachs. But I was like, is that

that's winning. So I gotta do better than that. What does that look like in hedge funds? That person's doing that? How do I do better than that? So it's I think it's about finding people who are bar raisers for you, and winning. I think money is absolutely the wrong measurement stick. And it's interesting because I didn't really grow up

with it. It doesn't bring happiness, it brings toys, and the best feeling is giving it to others and making the world a better place and using it for good I think my grandfather who started a hardware store in Brooklyn first came over as an employee with nothing and then hardware store in Brooklyn and work six days a week. And that's one of the joys of being on the Home Depot board is really kind

of completing that circle. He gave most of his money to his siblings, one of whom still lived in Israel and, and friends and family who needed money, he kept very little for himself, and he had very little, and he was happy. And so it's not, to me the measure of success, it is the opportunity to make a difference, and toys and shoes and incremental shoes that that those don't bring happiness. It's the wrong measurement stick

difference making passion. It is a measure of success in some businesses, but in lots of businesses, it's not it should be outcome driven. It happens to be an asset management, that it is a huge measurement of success, because that's all you're dealing with, in clear how many members we have the difference we can make in our communities. And yes, that needs to drive financial equations of free cash flow. And that's how we measure success, revenue

growth and free cash flow. But on a personal level, toys are wonderful, but they don't drive happiness. And if you think that they will, it's a disconnect. They drive fun. Look at the outcomes. It doesn't drive happiness, passion, achievement, accomplishment, and most importantly, making a difference for others. Nothing feels better than that.

Randall Kaplan

Before we finish today, I want to go ahead and ask some more open ended questions. I call this part of my podcast fill in the blank to excellence, you ready to play? Ready? When I started my career, I

Caryn Seidman-Becker

wish I had known that taxes take a lot of your money. The biggest lesson I've learned in my life is turn every no into a yes. My number one professional goal is my number one professional goal is to have 100 million members who love what we're doing. My number one personal goal is to make sure that my family achieves all of their dreams and makes a difference in the world.

Randall Kaplan

My biggest regret in life is

Caryn Seidman-Becker

my biggest regret in life is not yet running a marathon.

Randall Kaplan

The person in the world that I admire the most is my husband. If you could meet one person in the world, who would it be? Neil Diamond? If I were the president of the United States, the first thing I would do is fix our education system. The one question you wish I had asked you but didn't is

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Randy us eschol. Excellent questions. I can't think of one.

Randall Kaplan

Do you have any last advice for those listening today?

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Anybody can really do anything and you have to believe and bet on yourself. And you have to be willing to put in the work to make it happen. It is hard. I think people think success comes easily because they focus on the few success stories as a percentage of them. They are small. And this is hard. And you have to be willing to do the incredible work to make it happen.

Randall Kaplan

Sure. And I've had the incredibly good fortune of meeting some of the most talented people in the world, and you're one of the most impressive of all of them. You've had an amazing career. You're an amazing role model, as I've said to hundreds of 1000s of women and men and there's no doubt you sharing your story today is going to influence and motivate 1000s of others to achieve greatness in their life. Thank you for being a guest today on In Search of

Excellence. I'm very grateful to you for sharing your story today.

Caryn Seidman-Becker

Randy, you are one of a kind host, your heart and your mind and your experience and your research and preparation for this interview is truly the best that I have ever experienced. And a standard that I hold myself to. So I am deeply impressed with all the hard work and preparation you did for this podcast. And it was really meaningful to me personally and professionally.

Randall Kaplan

Well, I'm humbled by that. Thank you, Jared. We'll talk soon. All right. All right. Thanks, Randy. I hope to see you at a nice conference or even some other time. Okay, thanks. Bye

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