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Chief Change Officer

#115 From Wall Street to What’s Next: Katie Curry on Risk and Reinvention

Sun, 22 Dec 2024

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Katie Curry isn’t just fluent in the language of risk; she’s turned it into an art form. From Bulgaria to Wall Street, from crunching derivatives to leading creatives, Katie’s journey is a masterclass in calculated reinvention. Whether managing teams of credit analysts, upskilling fresh graduates, or inspiring her kids to “witness the magic of spreadsheets” during COVID, Katie shows how resilience is more than just a buzzword—it’s a career superpower. She dives into the delicate dance between logic and intuition, embracing curiosity and even a little magic along the way. For Katie, success isn’t about climbing a ladder—it’s about hiking trails, salsa dancing, and leading with humility while creating impact. With a passion for mentoring and a knack for turning failures into growth opportunities, Katie redefines leadership as a long game of learning, laughter, and post-traumatic growth. This episode is packed with nuggets on pivoting with purpose, embracing risk, and, most importantly, making resilience look like a fine art. Whether you’re navigating Wall Street or your own career crossroads, Katie’s insights will leave you inspired (and maybe a little braver). Key Highlights of Our Interview: From Small Town Dreams to the Big Apple “I grew up in a small town in Bulgaria during communism. My first big transformation was coming to the United States. Traveling through New York City’s financial district, I thought, ‘One day, I’d love to work here.’” Risk as a Career Compass “Risk is the theme of my career—understanding it, quantifying it, and mitigating it. But it’s also about taking risks and seizing opportunities.” Mental Toughness Through Change “Change can be nerve-wracking, but I’ve learned to approach it with excitement instead of fear. It’s like lifting weights—you don’t just maintain, you grow stronger to tackle even bigger challenges.” The Joy of Discovery “With age and experience, I’ve learned to pursue paths less mapped out, finding joy in the unknown and seeing reinvention as a journey of discovery.” _________________________ Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Katie Curry ______________________ --Chief Change Officer-- Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself. Open a World of Deep Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives, Visionary Underdogs, Transformation Gurus & Bold Hearts. 6 Million+ All-Time Downloads. Reaching 80+ Countries Daily. Global Top 3% Podcast. Top 10 US Business. Top 1 US Careers. >>>100,000+ subscribers are outgrowing. Act Today.<<< --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.18 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 1.5% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>170,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<

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Chapter 1: What is Katie Curry's background and journey?

124.85 - 151.651 Katie Curry

Happy to be here with you on the podcast. I grew up in Bulgaria. I grew up in communism and I grew up in a small town. My first big part of my kind of reinvention or transformation was coming to the United States and getting educated. I was traveling on a tour bus in New York City. I was going in downtown in the financial district and I said, you know, I would really love to work here one day.

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152.781 - 184.823 Katie Curry

I was very fortunate to start my first role at Citi City is a great training place. At City, what really helped me was understanding what my skill set is and what I bring to the table. So I spent a few years there. It was a great experience. I learned a lot, but I knew that I wanted to get deeper in finance. I needed to really build my skills. So I wanted to go to business school.

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185.824 - 210.987 Katie Curry

I thought I was going to go to school in New York City, but was admitted to Yale. And I just wanted to go for one weekend to see what I would be missing by choosing NYU over Yale. Okay. And so I went. for the first time to visit the campus and the college. And I met a number of students who took me on a tour, complete strangers. They just took me on a tour.

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211.007 - 238.165 Katie Curry

They spent the day with me talking and sharing kind of their goals and their career journeys and why they're there and why they picked SOM. I just felt so drawn to the place. And I felt like, hey, this is where I want to be. So I had to make a pretty big pivot. I gave up my job. I went full time to the School of Management where you and I met many years ago.

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Chapter 2: How does Katie define risk in her career?

238.185 - 248.275 Vince Chan

Your finance career is centered around risk. So what does risk mean to you in life and in career?

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249.256 - 276.505 Katie Curry

After business school, I was interested in risk. Risk is a theme of my career and my journey. It's understanding risk, it's quantifying risk, it's mitigating risk, it's addressing risk, and it's also taking risk and taking opportunities. And so I took a role at S&P Global. I did about four different jobs there throughout my long tenure. I started as a credit analyst.

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276.705 - 301.299 Katie Curry

I work on the most difficult transactions, interest rate derivatives, credit derivatives. I wanted to delve deep and really have a good understanding of capital markets. Yeah. But after a few years, I had an opportunity to lead a credit analyst team. And I found that I really enjoyed the human aspect, the people aspect and the leadership aspect.

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301.94 - 322.427 Katie Curry

Learning about how to lead, what makes a good leader and how not to lead. I made a lot of mistakes at that time. And I learned a lot of things. Afterwards, I had an opportunity moving to operations. pretty big pivot going from credit analysis to leading operations teams.

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322.927 - 354.391 Katie Curry

There's a lot of talent and tools and companies in many cases overlook the impact of these teams and they overlook the process improvements and the value that these teams can So I enjoyed that team was one of my favorite teams to lead. Everyone was on there, typically on their first or second job out of college. And there was an energy and excitement and there's such an opportunity to upskill.

354.952 - 381.39 Katie Curry

So that was my favorite part about that team is using new tools and upskilling and trying new things. And then I pivoted into a very different team, leading a creative team, leading the global editorial and translation team. And so that was journalists and ghostwriters and translators. And this is a very different personality of a much more creative team.

Chapter 3: What are the key transformations in Katie's career?

381.71 - 403.705 Katie Curry

So how you lead a team of creatives is very different from how you lead the team of operators versus a team of credit analysts. And I love that evolution and learning as a leader what is needed. How can I be most helpful to this particular team? And then I pivoted.

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403.725 - 430.662 Katie Curry

And about a year ago, I moved from kind of the largest established New York company to an amazing company, Millennial Specialty Insurance and LeaseTrack. A company that's been in growth stage, it's a part of a public company, but it's a company that's still maturing and it's growing fast and it's expanding. And it's a very different challenge. And it's a really exciting opportunity.

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431.643 - 442.329 Katie Curry

Look at the themes of my career. Part of it is, like I said, it's around risk. Part of it is around people and leadership. And a big part of it is about learning.

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444.711 - 471.323 Vince Chan

ah, I'd like to learn more about your learning habit these days. We'll come back to you on this. But go back to your transformation, the changes you've gone through. So in your life so far, you've moved from Bulgaria to United States, from New York City to New Haven, Connecticut, then back to New York from banking into credit rating agency, and now into insurance in a growing venture.

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472.458 - 483.09 Vince Chan

So throughout all these different stages and forms of transformations, what's your approach to managing changes over time?

484.92 - 515.198 Katie Curry

I don't even think about these as transformations. It's more about kind of reinvention and reinventing myself and trying to understand and figure out what can I contribute to my new situation, to my new role? What impact can I have on my team? How can I drive business, drive growth and drive improvement for my company.

516.178 - 543.037 Katie Curry

You remember when you and I were at Yale, we heard Merrill Lynch's then chairman, David Komensky. He talked about when the market is calm, he actually creates challenges for his team so that they can learn and grow through these challenges. And when the market is turbulent, he just leaves them alone and lets them operate. And it gave me a lot of thinking. And at first I thought, what a jerk.

543.157 - 573.379 Katie Curry

I never want to work for him. But as I matured as a leader, I came actually to understand and maybe appreciate that this reinvention and assessing and seeing the new situation and understanding how can I be most helpful? What do I have to contribute? What have I done before that I may be able to bring here and help this particular problem, this particular team, this particular company?

574.813 - 601.082 Katie Curry

A key part of that is the ability to pivot, the ability to handle change and not to be, of course, there's a natural kind of nervousness and anxiety about switching roles or switching industries, but building that mental toughness so you can look at change more from the lens of excitement than from the lens of fear. even when it's forced upon you.

Chapter 4: How does Katie manage change and reinvention?

662.697 - 695.007 Vince Chan

Mental toughness. The border term is resilience. Now, since you bring up the term mental toughness, so let me move on to the next question about the mental side of things. You and I come from a very strong business education background. And in business education program, we are trained to be highly analytical, strongly logical,

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696.431 - 721.309 Vince Chan

especially for business, but even when it comes to managing our life and career, we have been very thoughtful, but also very analytical, a lot of back and forth analysis, pros and cons. But we have our psychology, we're after a human, and business education is light on that kind of training. So when it comes to your reinvention,

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722.421 - 728.184 Vince Chan

How you balance the logic side of you as well as the psychology side of you.

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729.344 - 751.394 Katie Curry

I think the way I approach this and the way I think about it is one is you have to know yourself and know your risk tolerance. And your risk tolerance evolves over time, right? You may have a high risk tolerance early in your career. Maybe your risk tolerance is a bit lower when you're raising your family. And then you may be ready for another exciting move or jump later on.

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751.974 - 767.841 Katie Curry

So knowing yourself and for me, knowing myself and my risk tolerance was very important. The second part is I had spent a lot of years being very focused on outcomes, being very intense and intent about what I'm doing.

768.351 - 791.392 Katie Curry

And I have now moved into a phase of exploration and looking at the various opportunities and being less focused on a precise planned path, but embracing these opportunities, embracing kind of the fun, the exploration, the curiosity, and even the magic. And that was a major shift for me.

791.692 - 812.485 Katie Curry

I think it happened with experience, with age, where I was able to kind of embrace, like you said, both the hard and logical decision, but also these intuitive, exploratory, pursuing, you know, fun and pursuing, exploring outside of my comfort zone.

813.746 - 850.067 Vince Chan

Speaking of resilience, of change, of reinvention, A lot of people are risk-averse, if I keep using the risk concept. You know, they have fear of failure. They're afraid that they will fail. That's also another fear, fear of judgment. They don't like to be judged. They don't like to be questioned. What's your personal definition of failure and success after so many years on the Wall Street?

851.894 - 872.12 Katie Curry

I've had many failures in my career and my life. And I look back and I think that people who have not had failures in their life or their career, they're playing it too safe. So there is a level of expectation that you want to approach your life, your choices, your career that differently.

Chapter 5: What is the importance of mental toughness in navigating change?

943.923 - 970.488 Katie Curry

Whether things turn out exactly the way I planned them or not, I mean, that's outside of my control, right? All I know is that I can do my best and every day I can ask myself, what can I do? How can I 10x what I'm doing? How can I drive and deliver value and growth? And that's kind of the only thing I can do. So I have to say I am less focused on

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972.367 - 999.022 Katie Curry

conventional definition of success i'm very focused on the different areas of my life and do i have energy am i healthy do i have the friends that you know i like to have do i have enough time to enjoy my hobbies i like hiking i like salsa dancing i like spending time with my family do i have time to do these and at the same time am i driving hard with my team am i teaching them things that they don't know am i helping them to

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999.782 - 1020.786 Katie Curry

uh grow and progress and there are many paths to success and we've seen it in you know in our accelerated society but you can be successful through growing your community and being an influencer you can be can be successful in a more traditional path you can be successful in being an entrepreneur and a founder there are many paths

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1021.286 - 1032.975 Katie Curry

So I think it's time for us to maybe put away the definitions of success that are preconceived and be a little more open to the journey and have fun with it.

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1034.476 - 1069.384 Vince Chan

In our culture, the way we've been taught, we often think that being a top-notch leader is all about having a flashy title, a fat wallet, and a ton of power. But we're in the era of change. Things are changing around us so rapidly. I believe the measure of success and what it means to be excellent as a leader has evolved. Now, excellence is all about resilience.

1071.145 - 1098.016 Vince Chan

It's not just about how big your title, how rich you are, and how much power you hold today. It's about how well you bounce back from changes and how long the game you play into tomorrow. Katie, with that in mind, how do you view your leadership style? And perhaps what kind of leader do you see yourself as?

1099.705 - 1125.631 Katie Curry

So as a leader, I'd like to be powerful enough to curb and charismatic enough to be followed. Because I think that this is the two sides of leadership. My focus is to one is get things done. Two is Deliver value with simplicity and incremental progress.

1126.391 - 1153.303 Katie Curry

And three, be recognized for having the humility and the wisdom to recognize others and recognize opportunities and ideas that are presented to me. And then at home and with my friends, I'd like, you know, for people to see that I am present, that I care and that I'm a hard worker. It was very important for me during COVID.

Chapter 6: What is post-traumatic growth and how does it relate to resilience?

1153.683 - 1187.102 Katie Curry

I was working with the operations team at that time and we were extremely busy. Our volume of work just skyrocketed. And day in and day out, I was at home, of course. My kids saw me. They saw me here working, making calls, solving problems, driving incremental improvement. And I knew that... This is, you know, I'm being a role model. I am teaching them. What does it mean to be a productive human?

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1187.122 - 1205.651 Katie Curry

And now I, we look back a few years and of course I enjoyed spending time with them during COVID, but I am also very grateful that they had an opportunity to see me in action because they usually would not have an opportunity to do that if I am traveling or in the office.

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1207.625 - 1242.514 Vince Chan

So Katie, you and I are Gen X, but you have another identity. You are a mother of two. They're both Gen Z. They're still in school, but at some point they will enter the workforce. In the office, you manage a wide range of generations. So as a mother and leader, leading generations, younger generations. Can you share with us about your take on working with them?

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1243.375 - 1269.246 Katie Curry

There's a lot that has been said about Gen Z being entitled and being impatient, but I think as leaders, we need to pivot and evolve and be much more clear, much more transparent, understanding that we're moving towards meritocracy. Gen Z appreciates a true meritocracy rather than a hierarchical culture. I enjoy working with Gen Z. They give me energy. They teach me a lot of things.

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1269.746 - 1285.613 Katie Curry

I have reverse mentors and I've had reverse mentors who are Gen Z and they teach me things that I have not known and I haven't experienced. And of course, I look to make it a relationship of reciprocity where I help them and guide them

1287.461 - 1316.226 Vince Chan

According to the World Economic Forum, Gen Z will account for more than a quarter of the workforce by year 2025. They will become a force to reckon with. These young adults are well-versed in technologies and social media. Recruiters and managers must learn how to lead, motivate, and work with this growing cohort. So next time, join me as we catch up with Katie.

1317.307 - 1341.678 Vince Chan

She got some real talk on leading Gen Z at work. She'll also be sharing three career tips specially tailored for them. And we'll take a sneak peek at Katie's personal learning routines and her top book recommendation. Thank you so much for joining us today.

1342.648 - 1363.744 Vince Chan

If you like what you heard, don't forget subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media. I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Until next time, take care.

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