Chief Change Officer - Overalls COO Alison Stewart: Would You Let Your Employer Do Your Laundry? – Part One
Episode Date: October 31, 2024Part One. Thinking about leaving Corporate America? Or maybe you’ve already taken the leap and are still navigating the journey? This episode is tailor-made for you. Today’s guest, Alison Stewart,... made a bold move from a decade-long career in finance and insurance into the fast-paced world of startups. A switch she made in the midst of the pandemic. Even more inspiring? She landed this opportunity through networking on LinkedIn. While many of us turn to LinkedIn for job searches, skepticism around job postings is common. This is actually part one of a two-part series. Today, we’re diving into the personal changes Alison has experienced: her motivations, the steps she took, and her LinkedIn story of connecting with her current co-founder. Tomorrow, we’ll talk about her new venture, Overalls, which is making waves in the employee benefits space. They’re building a network of “life concierges,” including stay-at-home parents, the underemployed, and retirees, and linking them with employers to help reduce the day-to-day stress on employees. Will this model make employees feel more loyal? More willing to return to the office? We don’t know yet, but it’s definitely an idea worth exploring. Key Highlights of Our Interview: "What Am I Doing?” – Hitting Pause on the Corporate Grind “During the pandemic, time started blending together. I had to stop and ask, what am I doing? Am I happy?” Those months at home made me realize how I’d been running on autopilot, stuck in a cycle of new leadership teams and constant resets. With every change, it felt like we were taking ten steps back just to make one forward." “The Safety Net of a Strong Company” – Navigating Stability vs. Fulfillment “You can get caught up in…having a strong company, great group of colleagues…new opportunities coming at you. But it might not be what truly motivates you.” “Controlling for Risk Factors” – Making Thoughtful Career Moves “I was trying to control for those risk factors, or at least account for them…what was I comfortable with? How would it impact my family?” “Overalls Caught My Eye” – The Power of an Unexpected Spark “I was sitting at work…reading about the launch of Overalls, and I got really excited. People almost stopped me, saying, ‘Allison, nothing gives you as much excitement as this opportunity." “Taking Skills Beyond Insurance” – Exploring New Industries on LinkedIn “I was interested in exploring something outside the insurance industry…how does my experience, how do my skills translate, and how do I communicate them effectively?” Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guests: Alison Stewart ______________________ Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 3% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI 1.8 Million+ Downloads 50+ Countries
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone, welcome to our show Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist community for change progressives in
organizational and human transformation.
Are you thinking about stepping away from corporate America? Or maybe you've already left. You're still trying to figure things out.
If so, this episode is just for you. Today, I'm sitting down with Alison Stewart,
with Alison Stewart, who made the big shift from the stability of corporate life, specifically over 10 years in finance and insurance,
to the chaotic world of new ventures. Her new baby focuses on redefining employee benefits and experiences.
And she made this leap right in the middle of COVID.
This is actually part one of a two-part series. Today we are diving into the personal changes
Alison has experienced, her motivations, the steps she took, and her LinkedIn story of
connecting with her current co-founder. Tomorrow we'll talk about the new venture called Overalls,
which is making waves in the employee benefits space.
They're building a network of live concierge,
including stay-at-home parents,
the underemployed, and the retirees,
and linking them with employers to help reduce the day-to-day stress on employees.
Will this model make employees feel more loyal, more willing to return to the office?
We don't know yet, but it's definitely an idea worth exploring and building.
Let's dive in.
Morning, Vince. Thanks for having me. Alison works in the employer-employee space.
Before we look into that though, let's get to know her a bit better.
Alison, tell us about your career journey, your evolution and the transformations along the way.
Then we'll explore different elements of what has brought you here.
Yeah, I'm Allison Stewart.
I get to call Massachusetts home in the United States, just north of Boston. And my career has largely been focused in the insurance industry.
Right out of college, I think I actually prioritized location over job, but moved to Washington, DC.
I had a great group of colleagues and worked as the insurance broker.
Didn't think that's what I wanted to do long term.
Broker didn't think that's what I wanted to do long term. Spent about five years with that company and then went back to business school to figure out my next step.
And from there, I took a really interesting internship, spent some time learning about coffee and doing marketing.
Had a lot of fun, but really found that I enjoy change.
I don't want to be in a vertical in my career.
I didn't want to grow up in a specific lane,
which was the case at the company that I was working for
in that marketing role,
just continuing to only touch marketing.
I found I really gravitated towards operational roles
where you just naturally have your hands in more things.
And so despite my best efforts after business school, I ended up back in the
insurance industry at a large insurance carrier that had this program where they
took really talented folks and moved them around in an organization in an internal
consulting role, which really helped be that desire in me to keep learning and
try different things.
And so that was a really great experience. And through that, you know, my business unit was sold
and I was introduced to a new company, another Fortune 100 company, very large environment,
and got to a point where I just felt like the impact I was having wasn't
what I wanted it to be.
Large companies are great.
They offer a ton of benefits, but I really wanted to try to do something that was a little
bit more risky.
I wanted to find something that I could learn and grow faster, and that's how I ended up
where I'm at today.
I'm at a company called Overalls, and we're an employer benefit personal assistant
for the workforce.
And I've been growing this company for the last three years,
and it's been amazing.
Earlier, you mentioned you actually enjoy change.
We talked about growth, about risk, and I find it interesting because the show is called
Chief Change Officer, where we dive into change from all angles, organizational, personal,
and beyond.
But when you say you'll enjoy change, let's be real, most of us enjoy change when we own
it, when we are in control.
So tell me, what is it about change that resonates with you personally?
I remember you once told me that growing up, you experienced quite a bit of change.
Would you say those early experiences prepared you for all the transitions you've navigated
as an adult?
Yeah, absolutely.
So growing up, I moved around a good amount.
Nothing crazy, but between
the ages of five and 14, I moved five times. Moving from South in the United States to
North, not cross-country, not international, not these like crazy cultural changes, but
these shifts where as an elementary school student, as a middle school student, as a
high school student, very trying times school student, as a high school student,
very trying times or big developmental changes going on at that age and then having to navigate
new communities, make new friendships. And I think certainly that experience growing up has
helped me really get excited and look forward to change in ways that I think some people around me are maybe
more hesitant. And when we first started moving, I think the first two moves I was
hesitant and I had built great friends and I was very sad to leave them. But
then once I got to the new community, I realized that I didn't have to leave my
old friends behind. I could still, this is before Facebook and all of the means of
communication that we have today, but I was still, this is before Facebook and all of the means of communication
that we have today, but I was still able to keep in touch writing letters, visiting friends,
but at the same time build a new network and meet new people. And that was always very exciting to
me or became very exciting to me through my experience moving around. And I do believe that's what has kind of shaped
how I think about change and understanding that sometimes,
as you mentioned, change happens to you,
and that is a very different experience
than you driving and controlling that change.
But I really think that it's a mindset shift.
So change is being forced on you in some cases.
When I was at a company and my business unit got sold, that was a forced change. I didn't
necessarily want to go to this new company. I wasn't sure if I was going to have a job at
that new company. I was also pregnant with my second child. I gave birth a week after that
deal had closed. So there was a lot of uncertainty
and it could have been a very trying time for me.
But I always like to think that it's a new beginning.
What good am I going to make out of this?
How do I take control of the situation?
Because I believe that there's always an opportunity
to take control of the situation and help shape where it goes.
And I think a lot of that is from my experience an opportunity to take control of the situation and help shape where it goes.
And I think a lot of that is from my experience moving around as a child, owning my new community,
taking advantage of the opportunity to meet new people and explore new things.
It sounds like your childhood set the stage. You got used to going with the flow, adapting to new places
and people, and it seems you even enjoyed it. But then, as you grew up, you took a more
stable path. You went to business school, joined well-established companies like Wells Fargo, Liberty Mutual,
and Lincoln Financial.
You could have stayed on this secure track.
In fact, you did stay in the financial industry for about 10 years.
But then you made a big change during the once-in-a-lifetime global health crisis, right
around 2020.
So what happened then? What was it about the environment or the timing that
either pushed or pulled you towards making that change?
Yeah, that's a great question. I think a lot of people during
that health crisis during this pandemic, something we'd never
seen before in our lifetime, felt like in some ways we were on a wheel like every
day just time started blended together and I at one point I had to stop and
say what am I doing? What do I want to be doing? Am I happy? I realized that my
time at those big companies I had learned a ton but I also started to see
a bunch of patterns where we bring on some new leadership teams and we would almost have to take 10 steps
backwards in order to move that step forward.
And we were about to take that step when someone else came in and I just felt
like I kept getting reset and it wasn't serving me anymore.
And I needed something different.
And I think during the health crisis for me personally
it was this realization that things can change overnight. I never in a million years expected
that we were going to basically not leave our homes for that first six months of the pandemic.
You wouldn't be able to see family and friends. Like that had never crossed my mind as something that would happen in our lives.
And so having experienced that,
I think in some ways you start to think about,
well, what do I want to get out of my life?
And am I getting that right now?
And if not, what needs to change?
And so I really went through the self-reflection process
to understand what, how would I be fulfilled?
Like, how could I be the best version of myself?
And where were the gaps and what did I need to do to make a change?
So for me, I was fortunate enough that my husband and I both worked full-time.
And so I had a little bit of flexibility to make a decision and make a change
and kind of take a little bit of flexibility to make a decision and make a change and take a little bit of a risk
in my next move, but also took the time to make sure
it wasn't too much of a risk that if it failed,
I would be in a position to bounce back.
For me, the crisis and that change just was a wake up call.
That was like, Alison, you haven't really been
fully fulfilled
in this role for some time,
and now's the time to make that change.
But one thing that I think I did that helped mitigate
the risk of making a change is it wasn't just searching,
skimming LinkedIn for jobs,
reading all these job descriptions and being like,
oh yeah, I could do that job.
I didn't wrote it as can I do this job and that job is a better title,
but probably better salary. I can do it.
Like I want to apply for it because I know I can do that job.
I stepped back and said, I could do that,
but then I don't think I'm going to be happy because I'm really good at the job
that I was doing and I know I can do this job and still something's missing.
And so I wanted to step back and say,
all right, what do I really like about the job
that I'm doing right now?
What am I good at?
And really step back and dissect that
to understand all of those pieces together.
What did I want in my next opportunity?
So I think I was very just deliberate about that process
to help mitigate the risk, but also ensure that I achieved
my goal of finding that job satisfaction,
that next adventure, the next challenge
that was going to satisfy me.
So from what I'm hearing, you had a bit of a safety net.
Your husband's full-time job gave you the financial cushion to take some time off, which
allowed you that space to figure things out. You were able to reflect on who you are, what you're good at, and whether you wanted to
keep doing what you know or challenge yourself with something entirely new.
At the same time, you were exploring the market, looking at different opportunities to understand
where you could take a risk, but still manage it in a way that felt comfortable and aligned
with your goals.
Does that sound right?
Yeah.
And I'll just clarify that I didn't take any time off. I was doing this self-reflection in my role, you know, because there were opportunities
to make changes within, I was at Lincoln Financial at the time, within Lincoln and I was trying
to evaluate was that going to meet my need.
It was that next role.
And sometimes you can get caught up in that safety net of having a strong company, great group of colleagues,
and new opportunities coming at you.
If you can get caught up in that, it's fun.
You keep seeing the next thing,
but it might not be that what you're truly looking for,
what truly motivates you.
And so I had to make that time to do that evaluation
and kind of force it for me.
But one of the factors I was considering
when thinking about leaving Fortune 100,
very financially secure job, very predictable,
good benefits, structured raises and bonuses
and all of that was me understanding
like financially what my family could sustain
and then being real with that as part of a decision factor and how I manage that risk
with wherever I went next.
Because you see some folks that will make very drastic rash decisions and I'm like,
oh, I'm fed up, I can't do this anymore.
But they haven't put that time energy and thought into it and they jump into something that is not a perfect
Fint and then might not have
kind of the
Financial safety net around them to allow them the time to find that right bit
So as much as I could I was trying to control for those
that right fit. So as much as I could, I was trying to control for those risk factors or at least account for them and be aware of them. And what was I
comfortable with? How would it impact my family, which is something that's
extremely important to me, and so that I can balance both my professional
aspirations as well as my personal aspirations. A few weeks ago, I released an episode with an executive coach.
We covered a lot, and one of the things she shared was how some of her clients sat up
with their jobs, decided to move on, but then in a lot of cases, they ended up just trading one toxic
boss for another. So clearly, it wasn't the best move. Therefore, it highlights the importance
of making career transitions thoughtfully and mindfully.
You've also shared an interesting backstory with me
about how you ended up at Overalls
and how you connected with the co-founder
through LinkedIn.
Now these days, many people use LinkedIn for job searching, but there's a lot of skepticism
around job postings.
Some of them are fake, and networking can still hit or miss.
But your experience was a real LinkedIn success story.
Can you walk us through what happened then
and how you used the platform to make a genuine connection?
Absolutely.
So I'll start by saying I had already been thinking
about my next move.
I had been scanning the LinkedIn jobs,
trying to get a sense for what I thought was exciting
about different jobs that I read
and pulling out those pieces.
What's gonna do it for me?
What's gonna satisfy me?
And at the same time, using my networks
and actually talking to a group of alumni
from my MBA program and listening to their stories
about how they made job changes.
At this point in my career, I'd been pretty squarely in the insurance industry,
and I was interested in exploring something outside of the insurance industry,
which I was thinking in my head, how does my experience, how do my skills translate,
and how do I communicate those skills effectively when I'm talking to that next company?
So I was doing my own scanning of LinkedIn jobs, pulling elements from different job
descriptions that were intriguing to me.
And then also talking to my network, talking to folks in a very low risk environment about these types of job changes
and what folks had done in the past.
I was sitting at work one day
and I got this newsletter in my inbox
that was talking about the launch of overalls.
And I was reading about the company and the mission
and I got really excited about it.
And then I went on to LinkedIn to do some more research.
I saw our CEO on LinkedIn and I happened to have my meeting
that day with like my networking group
and I was talking to them about something
that I'd come across this company about overalls.
And people almost stopped me and they're like,
Alison, it's very clear to me,
like everything you've talked about up until this point,
like nothing gives you like as much excitement
as this opportunity.
I didn't even know if it was an opportunity.
I had just seen this company announced,
wow, that is what I'm looking for.
It could use my insurance expertise,
but it's in a startup environment
and would help me make that transition into a more innovative space.
So what happened with the LinkedIn story? Well, we'll web it up tomorrow in part two.
We'll web it up tomorrow in part two.
We'll also dive into Alison's current venture overalls,
which is shaking things up in the employee benefit space,
they're building a network of live concierge, people like stay at home parents,
the underemployed, and retirees,
and connecting them with employers to help ease the everyday stresses on employees.
Will this model inspire more loyalty, or maybe even a willingness to return to the office.
We don't know for sure yet, but this is certainly an idea worth building and exploring.
See you tomorrow.
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.