Chief Change Officer - #374 Nicole F. Roberts: Turning Science and Story into Impact—Part Two
Episode Date: May 17, 2025What do janitors, jazz musicians, and neuroscientists have in common? According to Dr. Nicole F. Roberts, everything.In Part Two, the Doctor of Public Health and co-author of Generosity WINS unpacks h...ow she and Monty Wood turned a business book into a narrative experiment—part fiction, part real-world leadership case study. She shares how they chose a fictional hotel manager named Emily to guide readers through generosity’s ripple effects, and how each chapter’s QR code links to a real leader with real lessons.We also explore her annual Brain Health Summit, hosted during Super Bowl weekend with NFL stars, neuroscientists, and 5,000 guests. It’s science, story, and social impact—all rolled into one unforgettable conversation.Key Highlights of Our Interview:Why No One Buys Healthcare Books—But Everyone Needs This One“People won’t read about systems. They’ll read about people. So we built a fictional character, Emily, to carry real wisdom forward.”Inside the Writing Process: Spreadsheets, Stickies, and Storytelling“We tracked every theme. We mapped each arc. It was my dissertation mind meets Monty’s business brain—and it worked.”Real Leaders, Fictional World: How Emily’s Journey Became Everyone’s“Each person Emily interviews is real. Every QR code leads to their profile. We didn’t make this stuff up—we brought it to life.”Redefining Generosity: It’s Not About Giving Money“Generosity is any act of kindness or support, given without expectation of return. If you expect something back, it’s just a transaction.”The Ripple Effect Is Real—And Unmeasurable“You can’t plug karma into a spreadsheet. But trust, reputation, and relationships? They’ll open doors years later.”A Thank-You Changed Everything“One reader started thanking hospital staff daily. It brought him—and others—to tears. That’s the ROI no one talks about.”Why They Made Emily a Woman—and Placed Her in Hospitality“Hospitality is about anticipating needs. It’s the perfect metaphor for generosity. Emily’s age and role made her ready to learn, not perfect.”Can Generosity Be Taught? Yes—With Grief and Grace“We found our answers in boys’ schools and in people who’d lost everything. Generosity grows when modeled—and when it’s all you have left.”Brain Summit at the Super Bowl? Yes, Really.“5,000 guests, jazz museums, NFL players, and neuroscientists. Every year, we throw a party with a purpose.”Next Year: San Francisco, Brain Health, and the Environment“Mark your calendar: Super Bowl weekend in SF. Brain Summit’s next theme? The intersection of neuroscience and nature.”_________________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Dr. Nicole F. Roberts --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.17 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 1.5% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>160,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone. Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer. I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today, we are diving into the no-strict lines journey of Nicole Robbins.
Nicole is a doctor of public health, co-authoring a business book called Generosity Wins with
a seasoned CEO, Monty Wood, who happens to be one of our guests on the show. Nicole once
posed her PhD to start a human rights firm. Just to give you a sense of how
things go, in this two-part series we talk about what happens when you let purpose guide your world instead of a perfect plan.
We get into the science behind generosity, how real human stories shaped her book,
and why the best leaders know when to ditch the real book.
when to ditch the rule book.
And she also helps run a bring summit every year during the Super Bowl.
So this conversation goes places. Let's jump in.
Now, going back to your book, Generosity Wins. What brought you in the very first place to write something like this and with Monty as
your co-author?
So I had always wanted to write a book and not for the sake of writing a book.
It's because I just, I had ideas.
I've actually outlined, I think three books at this point, like full outlines.
And I took one of them.
So I've written healthcare for Forbes, maybe like 14 years now.
I feel like that really ages me, but I've written for Forbes for a very long time.
And it started with Forbes
because they launched a book line.
And of course they started with some of their longest
running writers who they had written columns and columns.
And so, you know, would you be interested in writing a book?
Here's our book line, here's what we're gonna do.
And so I submitted
my first big idea to them and they were very helpful, helped with my first outline.
We started the process and I was told then, no one buys healthcare books for off. And it's true.
The data validates that. People will buy books that are like longevity, right?
Cause it's a bit more in the self-help category, but books on actual like
healthcare, how to fix the system, our social determinants of health, like,
no, people are not interested.
And so I had always wanted to do it, but I had, I won't say I got rejected
because we now live
in a space where you can self-publish, you can pay to play, right?
Like you can pay and someone will publish for you.
I could have pushed it forward, but I just thought if there's not a type for it, why
spend time and money?
I really, especially because I was in graduate school, didn't have to force something.
It just didn't feel right.
And then I had this wonderful experience where actually one of those people that
I had known from the Forbes world was no longer there.
They were working for a different publisher and they reached out and said,
there's someone I really want you to meet.
He's writing a book.
said, there's someone I really want you to meet. He's writing a book.
He's thinking about a co-author because he
wants someone who has a different perspective.
And he said, I'm going to put a few people in front of him.
And he probably said this to everybody,
but he said, I'm going to put a few people in front of him
that I know, but I think you're one.
I think you two just would work so well together."
And he said, I know you're deeply passionate about what he wants to do.
And that was it.
He said, can I just make an introduction and set up a Zoom call?
And I said, okay.
But I had no idea.
I was like, what I want to do?
What does that mean?
And I met Monty Wood.
And Monty, he had me not at hello,
but about five minutes in, he had me.
And he had this premise for a book
that he was calling attract success.
I don't know if he told you this part.
I actually intentionally,
I was going to listen to his episode.
And then I thought, no, I don't want to,
because I don't want to.
So I don't be biased.
But had this book idea
it was called attract success but his premise was when you put good out into the world when you are
generous particularly because he is a business expert Monty is the go-to guy and mentor for
business and but that when you genuinely hear about and give of yourself to your colleagues, to your teams,
to your family, to people, they will give back to you.
And what they will give back to you will propel your success, whether it's in the business
or it's in your family life.
And so the premise for him was to attract success, to be successful.
You actually have to give. And that was the
key to receive you must give and you should give first and freely of yourself. It can't
be transactional. Otherwise, it's not really giving. And so he had me right at that premise.
And like, absolutely. And I said, there's plenty of science to back this up. I said, what you're not gonna be able to find
that I know of is real literature and data
to show the ROI.
You can't show in data points, you can't show karma.
Yep, yep.
And so I say, this is a really tough thing
to think about from a science perspective.
And I slept on it, we talked, and then it hit me that I needed to stop thinking about all these
different things. There's like public health is what I know, and you know, neuroscience.
And so I took this different lens and I said, someone we have to talk to is named Beth, and I
told them all about Beth, and I said, she's the person I would go to ask a bunch of these neuroscience questions
about it's not just job, career, business.
It starts in here.
When we give, what happens?
We know the dopamine, the oxytocin, you get like a runner's pie, like those sorts of things.
But then that cascade event, because it actually improves your health, people who are truly
generous have marriages that last longer, like they're literally healthier and happier.
The Harvard study, it's almost 100 years old now, the happiness study, it shows consistently,
right?
People who are kind and give live longer.
And so I said, okay, there's something here.
Let me live in my space.
And Monty and I each brought our parts of the equation together.
And then something really cool happened.
We worked on what does the outline look like?
What does the book read?
Is it a self help thing?
Is it like a business?
Be successful, climb the mountain?
The things felt exactly right.
They all felt like they were circling around the answer, but none of them were like, that's
it, we got it.
And then it bent and the idea was presented to us and we went, yeah, we get it. We got it. And then it bent and the idea was presented to us.
And we went, yeah, we get it.
And it was, let's do something that I don't think
has ever been done before, which is always scary,
especially in the publishing world.
They don't love the let's do it.
They love the thing.
Yes.
Yeah.
And it said, why don't we write a business fable?
Who moved my cheese? some of those classics.
But you keep talking about all these people
that you wanna talk to in interviews,
so why don't we use the real people?
And it's an easy read.
In fact, I've had multiple people tell me
they knocked it out in two days.
Like they'd started on a plane
and then they'd finished the next day.
Because it's a story.
It's a story about a woman named Emily the next day. Because it's a story.
It's a story about a woman named Emily and she thinks things are great in her career.
They're not going.
She thought it's a hard lesson, but she's sent on this sort of work mission and along
the way she is tasked with interviewing people and she then discovers what like her real
purpose is. And anyway, I won't give away at the
ending. So it's an easy read, but every person that Emily meets along the way is a real person.
And what we did is we added a QR code at the end of each chapter. So you can, it literally takes
you to their LinkedIn page. So you can actually meet, talk to all the people who are in our book.
It's a little longer than 50 chapter, but 12 interviews. I had actually played around as well
with the idea that there are 12 months in the year, or maybe we do like a curriculum,
and each month is grounded in one person's. Because we have a neuroscientist, a behavioral scientist, we have an educator, we have a philanthropist.
The people we interview, we chose them specifically
because they are the most, I really cannot underscore this,
they are the most thoughtful,
talented, generous individuals.
Some we knew before, which is why we said, oh, I know, right?
I know the neuroscientists we need to talk to.
Monty said, I know the philanthropists we need to talk to.
Others were brought to us.
Others we went out seeking because I treated it.
Again, Monty and I approached it very differently. In the end, I treated it again this get Monty and I approached it very
differently in the end I treated it like my dissertation I had a whiteboard and I
had spread a spreadsheet and I had every chapter's name and I had chosen one or
two themes that I thought were so unique to that interview things that no one
else said or did and then I had things that everyone said
or did. And that's early, I used the word karma. Every interview people used, I think
only one or two people actually use the word karma, but they used a synonym of like how
things come back to you, the ripple effect of people. And so that I knew we were really
onto something there. And so that would then send me on the next sort of iteration of my quest, which is if every person, people who do not know each other, people who are all wildly successful in their very different definitions of success and lives, all say the same five things. I need to learn more about those five things. Let's dig into those things."
And so for me, even laying out the interview process, because we wanted Emily to grow and
learn. And so it was that part I also found fun because we had sticky notes and we were
moving them around that, well, she meets this person, wouldn't it be fun if she then got
to take that lesson and go talk to so and
and yeah, that part even now thinking about it, like that brings a smile to my face. I
really enjoyed that creative part of how do we tell this story through a young woman's eyes as
she's learning and growing and at times feeling really disappointed and let down. And it was a very fun way to do the book.
I think are very, very happy with the outcome.
And the number of people who reach out, send emails,
they've brought me to tears.
Someone saying, I want to start doing X every day
or Y every day.
One of them, a man emailed, and he works in a hospital.
And he said, I started saying thank you every day
to someone different.
And he was saying the most impactful were
especially the janitorial, the cleaning staff at the hospital.
He would stop people he had never met.
A woman one day was washing the windows
and he just said thank you.
And he stood and talked to her and she was like,
no one says thank you for that.
And he said, people are scared many times,
they're nervous when they come to the hospital,
especially in this hospital.
And he said, you keep it clean,
the light shines through these windows,
like by what you do, it makes their lives
better.
It makes what we have to do here better, easier.
And he said they both ended up in tears because someone had noticed what might look like a
menial task, but that it had a huge impact on the hospital, on the staff, on the patients, and for him
to then learn about her and her family.
Anyway, it was just this whole email.
I was just in tears.
And he was like, it's because every day I've decided to just say thank you.
It's a small act, but I just stopped one person and say, thank you for doing this.
Thank you for doing that.
And he said it led to some wonderful relationships.
And he now feels like he knows everybody in the hospital and he knows about them and their
children. And it's just, he said his life is better. Let me say this. When I interviewed
Monty, he shared a lot from his business background. He's work with some major players, real tech titans.
And he said things like,
Vince, I saw them literally do this, build that.
You could really feel impact through his stories.
What stood out was how he brought a business lens to everything.
And now with you bringing in the science angle, I think the two of you really complement each
other.
Since Monty had that business focus, and I come from a business background too, having
studied at Chicago Booth, I naturally asked
him about something really specific, the ROI of generosity.
Love it.
Ever since I first learned the term ROI, it was in a finance class of course. we did all the usual calculations.
But generosity, that isn't something
you can plug into a formula.
You can't always measure it.
Or maybe you can somehow monitor it in a different way.
That's why when Monty brought it up,
this idea of generosity having a ripple effect,
it really landed for me.
Honestly, I buy that concept.
I've seen it play out in my own life and career, doing things with no expectation,
and then somehow, more opportunities, more trust, more value come
back around.
So I definitely believe in it.
But putting it into business context, trying to tie generosity to metrics, that's where
it gets tricky.
I asked Monty about it directly. If ROI is what we track in business, how do you
track or even explain the ROI of generosity? You are not coming from the business world,
but you know how strong this concept is in business. How do you think about measuring or recognizing
the return on generosity?
That's a great question, by the way.
And I love when people do ask us the same question,
because this gets to what we started the conversation about,
which is you'll never get the same answer.
You did bring up something very quickly,
and I'm answering your question.
But you brought up something, and thank you, which is when we were looking at the definition of generosity,
so often, particularly here in the United States where we live, it was the definitions
and examples were related to donor dollars, philanthropy, giving, writing of a check.
Yep.
And that is not, you can be very generous with your treasure, but your time is certainly
the most valuable thing that you have. Talent, your skills, mentorship, what we found is
those are much more rewarding in terms of being generous. But you said you do it with
no expectation. And so I just wanted to quickly say when we wrote the book, we redefine generosity
and the definition that we had is any act of kindness or support given with no expectation
of exchange or return from the recipient. It truly is a gift. If you give it, it is
then out of your hands. If you give expecting something, one, you're probably going to be
disappointed. Two, you've now made it transactional.
And as humans, we know when something is transactional.
Our BS meter can be hit and miss sometimes,
but for the most part, we inherently know
when someone is being authentic or genuine,
and we know when someone is listening
because they care about us, versus, I'm going
to listen to you for a minute and then I need you to do this for me.
I'm only doing this because I want something from you.
We know when people aren't being authentic and we don't engage in the same way.
We don't build trust.
You have to trust and relationships come from being generous, even if it's as simple as listening,
giving someone your time, giving them your energy. And so I just wanted to bring up that definition,
but it also brings me to that ROI. What I have found is, and we heard this from a lot of people
that we interviewed, and I've heard it from a lot of people since, but again, in different ways. Everyone has different examples.
But when you truly invest in others, their successes become your successes,
their work ethic, their relationships, the relationship you have with them, all these things grow. I can tell you in my experience, there's one particular example that comes to mind immediately,
but I won't use names.
I knew someone very not well at all, and it was a husband and wife and they were older.
And there were things that I did and volunteered and said
yes to that were a giant pain in the butt, but I felt like it was the right thing to
do. And I worked well past what I should have. And I really thought like nothing came of
it. I was like, that's okay. I want to say that five or six years later, one of them reached out and said, hey, there's
an opportunity.
And we recall not only the way that you stepped up and gave of yourself when you were needed,
and it wasn't expected, but we've also through LinkedIn or what, like we've monitored your
career.
We've been so impressed by this and this.
When someone told us about this opportunity, you were the first person we thought of to
recommend would you be open to.
And it led to the next thing.
It opened this door that I didn't even know existed, but it was because I put good out.
And it was honest and I didn't expect anything.
I thought it was a complete waste of time.
Not a waste of time, but you know what I'm saying, like in terms of-
Yeah, yeah.
There was no tangible ROI.
There was no, I did this, I got this in return.
I was compensated in this way.
I was, but what it did is it put what we call a spirit,
like a spirit of generosity.
And I tried to live that way before we even defined it in the
book. And I have found that it does come back, it comes back in ways you don't expect. You cannot
measure it with, I gave $5, so I expect 10 back. It may look like volunteering for something,
and a job opportunity comes out of it or a recommendation or I met
this person and you two need to meet and it may become the person you marry, you build
a business with, you just become friends with, I don't know.
I think network and introductions are some of the greatest forms of ROI. Speaking from my own experience, there are so many stories like that.
One great example is actually this show.
I've never asked any guest to refer someone else.
Not once.
Every guest who comes on, either I invited them or they reached
up to me. My only focus is creating the best possible experience for them, making sure
the episode is meaningful, smooth, and enjoyable. What happened? More and more guests have told me they genuinely
enjoyed the experience. Afterwards they will say, hey Vince, I actually know
someone who would be a great fit for your show. One guest even referred five
new guests, completely unfronted. No commission, no referral fee,
no expectations. It's not transactional. It's just the natural return, if I can use this word,
that comes from being a generous, thoughtful host. That's the ripple effect you were talking about.
You put forth yourself, you ask thoughtful questions, you give, I can now say 50
minutes in a fun, great experience that speaks volumes. And people naturally say
Amant and Monty did it. He chatted with you and he said, I had the most delightful
conversation and told me all about it from his perspective. And so that's why And Monty did it. He chatted with you and he said, I had the most delightful conversation
and told me all about it from his perspective.
And so that's why again, when you reached out,
I was like, heck yeah, I wanna talk.
Cool, great.
I heard such wonderful things about you.
It's absolutely, I think that's a good point to make
because it can be hard to say, I did this
and then they gave back.
That doesn't make it transactional.
It genuinely came from a place of interest and passion.
And that person received it and they gave it to someone else.
It really is just a series then of generous acts.
The approach you took with the book is unusual for a business book.
Interviewed real people, experts from different areas. But then, you built a story around a fictional character, Emily.
Why that choice?
Why bring in a fictional element in a non-fiction visual setting?
And I'm also curious, why Emily?
Why a female character, not a male one.
Was there a particular reason behind that decision?
Her boss who becomes like her mentor isn't real either.
And the hotel chain isn't real.
We chose Emily works in hotels, very high end hotels.
And the reason for that was we thought hospitality was the place to set this because it is about
giving and meeting people's needs and doing it selflessly.
So we chose hospitality.
Anyway, when we created Emily, there wasn't a discussion about gender or anything like that.
I think, I wonder how much was subconscious in a sense because Monte is a little older
than I am and I now certainly think of him as not only a friend and colleague but a mentor.
And I think there was maybe an inherent bias in both of us, that dynamic of someone older and someone younger learning.
We did have a couple of discussions about her age.
And that, I think, again, I don't think gender had anything
to do with it.
I think it was more of, we want someone who is at a place
in their career where they are respectable, they're believable, they've worked hard.
They're ready to advance so they have enough experience that they want to.
They're eager to learn and still do, but they're not so far along in their career that it doesn't make sense to go on this learning journey.
And so we decided it needed to be someone about 30,
late 20s to early 30s,
so that she had gone to hospitality school,
she had worked with for five or six years in this company.
So we actually,
we spent, I think, more time thinking about
where she would be in that trajectory of her life and what made sense
of how long would she have been working here.
You can't give someone like an SVP title and they've been out of school for four years.
No, we didn't.
But she is a, we'll say ballpark 30, 30 year old woman and her mentor is an older gentleman.
I don't think we gave him an age person,
but he definitely, he's president of a major hotel.
It's experience and very wise and is in a position
to give thoughtful people opportunities,
but also to tell her where she's misstep
and where she didn't put people first.
and where she didn't put people first.
And our interviewees, we made sure, were all over the place in terms of, like I said,
even how they measure success is very different.
In the end, I saw two gaps,
and those are two people we went in search of,
and I think we found the right two people.
But one was, and I know we are short on time,
but the two areas that
I saw that we needed to hear from someone was in education. And the reason I say education is
because one question that we asked everyone, and I didn't feel like we had gotten a really good
answer, was about can you teach someone to be generous, especially people who have not grown up in
an environment that was generous to them.
And they lived in families or households or communities where people aren't working from
a place of generosity.
Can you teach that?
And so it was wonderful to find, we told people what we were looking for and it took a going,
I know exactly. And it's someone who had built schools for boys. And most of these boys come
from cities and neighborhoods where generosity was not a way of life for them or the people that
were raising them. And the remarkable stories about the unity and the brotherhood and the
stories about the unity and the brotherhood and the kindness and the generosity that these boys exhibited really showed us that you can teach people, but they have to see it. You have to
demonstrate and you have to give them grace and be generous with them to help foster that. And so
that one, and then one in that came from a place of grief. And I said, it's easy for people who haven't lost everything to talk about being able to
give.
And I said, I really want to sit with someone who the well was just dry.
And how did you find, because to me, that's when you really have a spirit of generosity.
If you can find a place in you to be truly genuine
and generous with people when you are hacked out, then it's natural to you. It's not something
you can use when you've got it. And so we did talk to a woman who I just adore who had
suffered great loss. And her story was so touching. And in fact, her story is the one,
I think it was the very last interview we did. And it is the one I've gotten the most
outreach and feedback on. Let's come full circle to end our conversation.
You mentioned that your long timetime interest has been neuroscience.
And every year, you produce a summit focused on brain health.
I'll admit, I don't know much about this event, so I'd love for you to walk us through it.
It's called Brain Summit.
It happens around the Super Bowl weekend, which is interesting.
And yes, athletes deal with serious brain health issues due to the nature of the sport.
But it's not just about them.
Brain health is something that matters to everyone.
So tell us more.
What's the role in this event?
What are you hoping to achieve? Not just with the summit, but overall?
What's the bigger mission behind your work in this space?
Yeah, I do this annual event that is it for me it fit perfectly under the umbrella of things
But it is a little off the wall
So I 12 years ago along with Lee Steinberg and I'll tell you briefly about Lee
But started the Brain Health Summit at the Super Bowl.
So every year in the host city, I get to live there for a week and host the day before the
Super Bowl this Brain Health Summit.
So essentially speaking of generosity, so Lee Steinberg is an agent and he is, people
call him the real Jerry Maguire, basis for the bassist for the movie Jerry Maguire.
I think at one point he had half the starting quarterbacks in the NFL. So it was basically
just like his teams playing his teams or his clients playing his clients. Anyway,
Lee is one of the, literally, the most generous human beings on this earth. And he and I met at
the UN too many years ago. And I didn't know who he was. And of all silly things, we found out
we had the same birthday.
Which in our book, we were like, oh, so we're friends.
We're friends.
Yeah, birthday to us.
What we ended up doing is he did,
again, the most generous thing,
especially to someone younger in their career,
not in sports.
He said, I used to do these concussion summits
and I'd bring my athletes.
And he called it his crisis of conscience.
He said, I have guys who have won the Super Bowl
and don't remember being in the host city.
And these are our clients, our friends, like our colleagues.
And we have to have honest and hard conversations
because we love the sport of football.
It's not going away.
So how do we make it safer for the people we love?
It came from such a genuine place and concern for the people he loves.
And he gave me, literally gave, he gave me the opening hour of his annual Superbowl party and said, do good.
He challenged me to do good.
And so I created the brain health summit is what I call it's vague enough that
every year in the host city, we can lean into the Brain Health Summit is what I call it's vague enough that every year
in the host city we can lean into the city and yeah what's going on in the world. And so every
year the theme changes, the city changes this year, the Super Bowl's in New Orleans and so
our entire party, the Brain Summit and the broader Steinberg Super Bowl party theme is music and the
mind. We have rented out the New Orleans
Jazz Museum. And so everyone who comes to the party not only gets to be in a very haunted,
by the way, museum in New Orleans, the birthplace of jazz, but they also get to do a full array of programming from super cool, like, punchy, like, exhibits
and activations of neuroscience and music and the power of music to literally change
your brain to a party.
It is a party.
And then to the red carpet, the celebrity, all this stuff.
And we do humanitarian awards and recognize people who are truly having an impact in the
world.
And this year, obviously, we'll be honoring people in sport, but people in music. And
what it does is to me it essentially is the ultimate culmination of my
dissertation. Honestly going back I wrote a dissertation on how to build
public-private partnerships. And we, to me that is what this is. We get to bring
people together,
as I see it, that would otherwise never have an opportunity to be together, to talk, to
mingle, to ask questions. And so you have retired NFL players showing up to ask these
neuroscientist questions, to try out new technologies. We have cool startup companies with big ideas
that may get in front of somebody who says, we want to fund that clinical trial, or
we love the work you're doing, we'd love to see X or Y. And it gets a lot of these people with big
ideas in front of media, which for better or worse, it makes a difference because you can have all the big ideas in the world if
you can't explain it, if you can't get the message out, it doesn't go anywhere. And so
the power of what Lee and his platform can do for people in healthcare and science and
philanthropy is just, it's undeniable. And I still 12 years in have a hard time wrapping my head around it.
But it's fun.
It's a pain.
It's hard.
As Lee says, we have 5,000 of our closest friends come.
It's a big lift, but we have a wonderful production team.
Lee knocks it out of the park every year.
It's invitational and lay, but you can find me.
You can find me.
Next year, San Francisco, and we are going to use the power of sport and neuroscience
and next year's theme is going to be around the environment.
Great.
Then I need to start planning for this trip this year.
The good news is the NFL has a very predictable schedule.
Second week of February, San Francisco.
That would be, by the way, that would be my birthday because my birthday is the middle of February, San Francisco. That would be my birthday. Because my birthday is the middle of February.
Then that's a birthday treat for you.
Absolutely. Make sure I'll mark it down.
And thank you again, Nicole.
Both you and Monty have been incredibly generous.
With your time, your energy, your honesty, it really means a lot.
And I genuinely appreciate how open and thoughtful you've been throughout this entire conversation.
And yes, we overran a bit, but it was totally worth it.
This was such a fun and inspiring conversation.
And anything else you need, just ask how to reach me.
And that brings us to the end of this series.
Nicole's Journey is proof that you don't need a perfect plan to make a real impact. You just need purpose,
a little courage, and a lot of listening. Whether it's neuroscience, generosity,
or hospitality, her work reminds us that generosity isn't fluff, it's the talk and the work in life
and career.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget to 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.