Chief Change Officer - Yale Ventures Managing Director Josh Geballe: Bridging the Academic-Entrepreneurial Divide
Episode Date: December 24, 2024What compels someone to leave the stability and prestige of a CFO role at IBM Europe for the unknowns of a 16-person startup? For Josh Geballe, it was the thrill of challenge and the promise of making... a real impact. His 30-year career reflects this relentless pursuit of meaningful work. From managing finance at IBM to leading Core Informatics as CEO, from VP at Thermo Fisher Scientific to COO of Connecticut’s COVID-19 response, Josh has consistently embraced complex problems with courage and determination. Currently, as Managing Director at Yale Ventures, he is creating pathways for entrepreneurs and innovators, all while continuing to push boundaries. Josh’s journey shows that taking risks and following your instincts can redefine not just a career but an entire industry. Key Highlights of Our Interview: Big Corporate to Small Chaos “Jumping from one of the world’s biggest companies to a 16-person startup was like going from a luxury cruise to a whitewater raft. Every day brought new challenges—chasing customers, closing funding rounds, and ensuring payroll didn’t bounce. It wasn’t for the faint-hearted, but I embraced the chaos because it was exactly the dynamic challenge I craved.” The Two Engines of Growth: Impact and Challenge “My career choices boil down to two drivers: solving meaningful problems that make a positive impact on society and embracing challenges that push me to grow personally and professionally. It’s how I’ve turned a seemingly unusual career journey into a purposeful adventure.” Gut Instinct: The Silent Strategist “For all the logic and strategy in career decisions, sometimes it comes down to a gut feeling. Big moves in my career have often hinged on an instinctual ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ and I’ve been fortunate that those instincts have steered me right—no regrets, just leaps of faith.” Bridging the Academic-Entrepreneurial Divide “Helping brilliant minds shift from academic jargon to investor-friendly pitches is a key part of the role. It’s all about connecting ideas to resources—whether that’s investors, teammates, or future opportunities. And for students? It’s about teaching them to innovate and navigate their career paths, with or without a startup dream right now.” _________________________ Connect with Us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Josh Geballe ______________________ 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, JP 3+ Millions Downloads 80+ Countries
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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 from around the world.
Today we're talking with Josh Chabal, the managing director of Yale Ventures. You've likely heard of Yale University,
but what about Yale Ventures?
It's a key part of the Yale's innovation ecosystem,
collaborating with faculty, students, entrepreneurs,
and local governments to drive
all sort of innovation activities.
Yale Ventures, for example, helps scientists and scholars turn their inventions into real
products, the commercialization process, so to speak, a system in raising money, build
teams and support students in developing their innovation ideas.
And a little personal note, George and I are both MBA alum from the Yale School of Management.
We both graduated in year 2002.
He chose a path in consulting.
I went into finance. George's career has been nothing short of remarkable,
filled with impact and challenges.
I'll save the specifics for you to discover in this episode.
Among many roles,
George was pivotal in managing Connecticut's COVID-19 health response.
For those interested in his contribution during that critical period,
check out the YouTube link in the show notes where he hosted the press conference.
Without further ado, let's dive in.
Great. Thanks, Vince, for having me. I'm delighted to be here. As you point out, started Yale
as an undergraduate, worked for a few years, went back to Yale to the School of Management
to get MBA and then spent majority of my career in the technology industry. So initially 11
years at IBM, climbing the corporate ladder, a number of different roles and client facing
consulting roles, the integral finance organization, general management, but left to become the CEO of a software startup
that was doing scientific data management cloud, kind of software as a service for scientists.
And through that company, over a number of years, ultimately were acquired by Thermo Fisher Scientific, one of the major
global scientific tools companies.
Worked there for a couple of years as running a new division they created when we were acquired
called Digital Science.
That was a combination of our business plus some other software assets that they had.
And once that integration was set up and the team was integrated,
Left was taking some time off for the first time in my career.
And he got a call from the woman who led the series B investment
of my startup company, letting me know that her husband had just got elected
governor of the state of Connecticut and asking if I wanted to get involved
in the administration. And so that led to three years of detour into the public sector,
where I worked for the governor here in Connecticut as the chief operating officer for the state responsible for all the executive branch agencies.
And did that for three years when this new opportunity presented itself to come back to Yale to do a new role that was
created to bring together all the programs and services that support entrepreneurs, innovators
in Yale looking to have an impact in the world. So I'm sure we'll talk about that more, but that's
my journey in a nutshell. I spoke with Oplasme, Irina, in an earlier episode.
She has founded and is now leading a new venture in the energy transition sector.
Like you, she has made several significant career transitions since MBA.
I find each of them fascinating. When I ask her about the common themes in her career moves,
she said two things, self-starter and curiosity. Before we dive deeper into each phase of your
career, what have been your main drivers for exploring and trying new things over
about 20 years? Yeah, I think there's really been two common opinions that
I've been seeking out at each step. And first is impact, wanting to be in a
position where the work that I was doing was making a useful impact in the world,
solving a problem or contributing to solving problems that I thought were
important to solve and that if successful would have a really positive
impact on society more generally. So that's one. And then the second one was
challenges, seeking out interesting challenges where I felt like I would learn,
where I'd be challenged, where I would have to push myself to get better and to grow as a professional, as a person.
And so those have been the two common threads that maybe weave together what would otherwise look like a rather unusual career journey that I cannot.
You've got a strong background in strategy
from your education at Yale,
then as a strategy consultant at IBM,
diving deep into business strategies with solid logic.
But when it comes to something more personal, such as career decisions, career moves, it
sounds like even for analytical minds like ours, there's a need to balance logic with
psychology.
If I have to use an economic term, it is about finding equilibrium between the two.
Have to encounter any mental hurdles while trying to decide on a career path, or in figuring
out if a decision is right or worthwhile? Well, if you have, how do you navigate the psychological ups and downs in your career decisions?
Yeah, it's an interesting question. It's a very deep question.
Unfortunately, I feel like I'm going to answer it with a very shallow answer, which ultimately,
I think it was each of these big changes, it was just following my gut instinct.
each of these big changes, it was just following my gut instinct.
I think in each step, when opportunities presented themselves, I just pretty quickly would come to an instinct on whether it was a good idea or not and just followed that instinct. But in the end,
I think it's really, for me at least, it's been that simple. And fortunately, there's
none of those kinds of gut instinct decisions
I've made over the years that go back and say, I wish I'd done that differently.
Hmm.
She's been very fortunate that it's served me well so far.
I'd like to explore more about your move from IBM to a startup.
Early in your career, after completing your MBA at Yale, you started as a
consultant at IBM.
That was amazing. Remember that was 2002, after 9.1.
A lot of us were challenged to get a full-time job upon graduation.
Yet, you got a full-time job offer from IBM.
After about a decade with IBM, you move to a venture where, if I remember correctly,
you were the 16th employee. What was going through your mind when you made the switch
from a well-established firm to a startup that you needed to help grow?
What was your gut feeling about the transition?
Yeah, my 11 years IBM was amazing.
Like, I learned an enormous amount, incredibly rewarding period of time.
I really loved it.
I got deeper into my time there.
You know, I come to the conclusion that I didn't want to spend my entire career there.
I think that was clearly a path in that direction.
A lot of the people I worked with worked there their entire career and it was a great company.
It still is.
But I had this kind of growing instinct that I wanted to be part of something that was
smaller, that was more entrepreneurial, that was more disruptive.
During the second to last job I had at IBM
was an international assignment in Europe.
When I came back, started looking around,
just trying to identify a company or co-founders
that were doing something that I thought
was particularly interesting.
And it was casual at first,
and I was just very fortunate to reconnect with
actually old high school friends who had co-founded this software startup and
was at a point where they were getting some traction. They were looking for
business leaders to come and help them grow and complement their technical
skills and just the stars aligned and it all fell into place but it was really
more than anything this instinct that a lot of the real impactful change that happens
in business and society often is driven by smaller,
disruptive kind of entrepreneurial startups.
And that I wanted to experience that.
I wanted to contribute to that, be part of that.
I bet you must have experienced a lot of cultural shock
in this transition.
Sure, I think that transition was, as you probably expect,
rather dramatic, going from one of the biggest companies in the world
to a tiny little startup.
And there's an enormous number of benefits and things that I love about startups.
I relished about that opportunity.
Of course, it carries a lot of challenges as well. You're much more at risk in terms of having a smaller number of
customers, more reliance on making sure the payables are coming through, the orders are
getting done so that you can meet payroll and keep the lights on while you're innovating and
adding value, adding new features and products to grow the business, attract new talent, but it's much more kind of chaotic every day,
presents new challenges, but it was great.
That's what I wanted.
And I wanted that kind of very dynamic challenge and I got it.
And so I think moving from a big stable company to that type of startup
environment is not for everyone.
And certainly an important set of considerations for people considering a change like that. But it was just what I
wanted, it was what I embraced, but it's nonetheless certainly in the moment if
we were battling for a new customer or we're trying to make an existing
customer successful that was struggling with adoption or whether it was trying
to get around a
venture capital finance and closed when we were running low on cash. There were
so many of those moments of extreme kind of challenge and stress that at the time
were very all-consuming. You can look back afterwards a successful outcome and
embrace that as part of the journey but it's's certainly, anyone who's worked in a startup
or is growing in a small company knows it's every day
is a new challenge and a new opportunity
to learn and to grow.
You joined the public sector
during a very interesting time,
from 2019 to 2022.
You were responsible for Connecticut's COVID health response efforts.
Can you share with us some of your insights from your experience during this period of time?
Sure, yeah. When I joined the administration, the Lamont administration, at the beginning,
the real original vision for what I was going to do was, you know, Governor had a
very strong priority and agenda to use technology better in government to modernize our operations.
We were really behind the times that there was a huge opportunity to modernize state
operations to improve service, to reduce costs, but also to break down silos between state
agencies and foster better
collaboration and better problem solving, better service for the residents of the state.
And given my technology background, that was really the main thrust to start.
But then when COVID hit about a year later, at that point, I was the chief operating officer
for the state side, all the other commissioners reporting to me.
And I was about this battlefield promotion to lead the state's COVID response.
And that was a, yeah, quite an experience.
Cause here I am, this guy who's come up in the technology industry now in the middle
of this kind of once in a lifetime public health crisis, having to be the person
that the governor's looking to marshal resources, help us chart a course forward as he is serving him and this kind of broad set of stakeholders we brought together.
So it was quite a journey and it was obviously incredibly the kind of public perception that overall the state
of Connecticut did a solid job of balancing many of the competing forces and factors that
everyone was weighing through that period of time and I think leading the state through
to overall very good outcomes relative to a lot of our neighboring states and other
areas around the country and the world.
It was hopefully something I'll never have to experience again.
I just really feel that way. But at the same time, a period of my career, I'm definitely proud of.
The COVID-19
pandemic was truly a once-in-a-lifetime event that went beyond
anything we've learned from traditional business or management textbooks.
Reflecting on that unusual and intense period,
what were your main challenges?
Using your consultant mindset,
an entrepreneurial experience,
how did you address or mitigate these challenges
as you learned and adapt it to find better and more effective
solutions for? Yeah there were so many there were so many learnings and
lessons along the way I do think the point you make about the commonality
with general business management there there were a lot of similarities I think
the importance of communication first and foremost was a lot of similarities. I think the importance of
communication first and foremost was a period of time where even the experts,
the public health experts, the medical experts, were trying to figure things out
in real time and often had more questions than answers. Just trying to make sure we
were communicating openly and honestly and being transparent with the public
about what we had confidence in and what we didn't have confidence in, what we were
still working on and trying to figure out.
And also communicating internally.
We had a lot of so many stakeholders involved, agencies, nonprofits, hospitals,
et cetera, and just keeping lines of communication wide open.
I think it's a clear one.
Also recognizing where you need to bring in additional help, where you need
additional expertise and not being shy about doing that.
And I think that was a real strength of our governor was recognizing, you know, that we
didn't have all the resources and state government that we were going to need to marshal the
best possible response.
And so he enlisted a lot of other outside leaders, health and health care and public
health, but also in business.
We were obviously thinking about the impacts on the private sector, the impacts on education,
children, and so bringing in experts from across the board who can help advise us through
that was a real important part.
And then operations too, we had the benefit of marshaling resources from the National
Guard and a lot of agencies that have resources and operational excellence, but also getting
support from the private sector and from non-profit organizations to be able to execute the strategies that we put in place to procure or deploy, whether it's
testing or PPE or vaccines or whatever the challenge of the day was at the time.
You've managed complex operations involving stakeholders with different interests, agendas, and goals that sometimes, and especially in
the unusual and intense time period, conflict with collective objectives.
Now at Yale, you are engaging with a wide range of groups—acadies, students, administrators,
and the public sector.
What is your approach to managing these multi-stick holder relationships?
As you're well aware, this is crucial not only to the success of your role,
but also to the impact you aim to achieve.
Yeah, I think it starts with making sure that everybody you're working with knows that you're
operating with integrity and that you're operating in good faith.
The point of view that you're going to push forward is one that's clear and hopefully
aligned with something that people can understand and get excited about or at least understand
and empathize with.
The second point too, which is often when we're
working with people with different agendas or different goals, the
importance of listening as well and really understanding the perspective of
that other party and what was important to them and why were they espousing a
different view or why were they pushing in a different direction. I think too
often people don't take the time or to really put themselves in note versus
choosing.
If you do that and you do that sincerely and really invest the time, it does make it more
likely that you can find common ground, but at a minimum, if you do have to negotiate
through or navigate different conflicts or disagreements, at least there is that kind of
base of trust that at least you understand what's important to them and why they feel that way.
In the end, it does require effort to push things forward and sometimes have to agree to disagree
and to try to drive towards the outcome that you feel is the right one at the end. And I think
maybe those are some of the common themes
that are experienced or observed over the years.
A cliche question at this point would be,
oh, Josh, what's your typical day at Yale?
Well, I believe there isn't any typical day.
So let me flip the question.
Tell us about what are some of the things
that you try to help with the Yale communities
day in and day out.
Yeah, every case is different, of course.
There are some common themes.
One is helping particularly very accomplished
PhD scientists learn how to talk about their idea in a way that resonates with potential investors or potential
founding teammates, as opposed to what they've been used to most of their career, which is how to present
at an academic conference or an academic environment. Very different things and that's
certainly one area. Another is helping to make connections that help them get their
venture out the ground and that can be connections to investors. People might be
excited about that idea and want to fund the seed round or the series A to help
get the company formed or connections with people who could become the
founding CEO or the
founding senior chief scientific officer, let's say, or other early employees who
could take that idea and run with it because if it's a faculty member, they're
not going to leave their job at Yale.
We need to find a team that can help them get it off the ground.
Or if it's a student, oftentimes it's a more kind of educational experience.
And we run a number of programs that complement
what our students learn in the classroom
to help them learn to become innovators and problem solvers
and understand what good next steps in their careers
might be because the reality is very few of them
will become founders right away.
Most of them will go get jobs at other companies,
large companies, other startups,
but help them prepare for their career journey
and help them understand that if they do become a founder
in the future, how to know when is the right time to do that
and how to organize to be successful
at that point in time as well.
Given your role in building and developing
the innovation ecosystem at Yale,
you interact with faculty, scholars,
and presume a lot of MBA students
from the Yale School of Management
would come to you for guidance.
Considering the challenges, career challenges in particular
that MBA students face today,
whether they're exploring corporate roles
or interested in entrepreneurship,
and with the tough funding market for new founders,
what career advice would you offer them?
There's a few bits of advice
I find myself sharing rather commonly.
I think first and probably most importantly
is try to work, especially early in your career,
for people who
you're really inspired by who you think you can learn a ton from. I think often
people chase a specific job rather than an opportunity to work with individuals
who are really spectacular who can really help get them going in their
careers and really help build their kind of base of knowledge
and experiences of the best possible ways
to lead organizations or to solve problems.
I have definitely been fortunate to work with a lot of incredible people.
During my career, there's so much you can do as one person
if you have the opportunity to work with a lot of great people.
Obviously, you get a lot more done.
So that's one.
I think a second is we all, when we were young and early in our career, we're often very
impatient and wanted to do as quickly as possible, get that next promotion or get that next raise
or whatever it might be.
And I think it's very important for people to try to keep that instinct in check, but
really just focus more than anything else on doing the best possible job that you can in the role that you're in today.
And have confidence that if you're part of an organization that's well managed, that
good things will naturally flow from that.
And just rather than being overly focused on those next steps and milestones, just being
really focused on working hard,
doing a great job at your current set of responsibilities, seeking out new challenges in that role and
having confidence that as a result of the great work that you'll do, that new challenges
and opportunities will present themselves. specific behavioral related advice,
what book would you recommend to those who are interested
in entrepreneurship or are ready in entrepreneurship?
There's been a lot.
I think if I had to pick out a couple
of most influential writers, I think Nassim Tlaib,
author of Fooled by Randomness, Black
Swar, Anti-Fragile among those more popular books, been very influential on me.
He's a person who has a pretty sharp edge and so it's turned some people off.
But I think the underlying kind of writings and intellectual arguments have been very
influential in me in terms of thinking about risk and probably how the world works.
Another not necessarily a book, but a collection of essays, particularly for people who are
interested in entrepreneurship and innovation.
I recommend reading Paul Graham, the famous founder of Y Combinator, has a number of essays
published online about innovation
entrepreneurship, which I think are just excellent and really worth diving into.
This is the last question of the day, and I want you to give me your honest answer.
You've had a very successful corporate career. Then you joined a startup as a professional CEO, eventually took them
into acquisition. Then you joined the public administration to help them deal with once-in-a-lifetime
crisis in human history. Now you are working at one of the most famous universities in the world
to build and drive the innovation ecosystem.
So what else is in your career life
that you may want to do in your future?
What may be the missing piece?
Would it be perhaps at some point,
you will become a founder to found company, build it to scale it on your role?
I think at this point I don't think so, clearly. Mostly because of the role that I've been now I
absolutely love and had a successful kind of entrepreneurial startup experience
and being in a position where I can give back to others who are just starting
that journey is I find incredibly rewarding and challenging and engaging.
And I love that aspect of it.
In this role now, I get to work every day with faculty, with students who are just at
the beginning of their entrepreneurial journey, who have maybe discovered something in their
research or have an idea for how to solve a big problem in the world.
And in many cases, these faculty members are the leading scholars in the world in a particular
area of scientific research, but very few of them have business experience or startup
experience.
And so the opportunity that my team and I have to pack in around them and help them
and guide them and position them to spin out that technology, build a company around it,
attract funding, attract the team and give that idea or that invention a
chance to have a real impact in the world.
There's so much fun.
That's likely to be my life's work from here forward.
I think it's just unlimited potential of opportunity to learn and to
grow and to have impact.
So I think that's where my focus will be gone for.
Great! Great news for everyone in the Yale Innovation Community.
I really wish we had someone like you around when we were at best of school.
Josh, thank you so much for your time.
Please come back and tell us more about the founder stories and the innovations activities
happening at Yale, New Haven in Connecticut, also upcoming Yale Innovation Summit.
For those of you who are unfamiliar with this event, this is an annual event usually happening
in May and this year will be May 29th and 30th, with Chelsea Clinton as the keynote speaker.
Just to clarify, this is not a paid ad.
My podcast doesn't do pay promotions at this stage.
It's definitely an event worth checking out,
especially if you are close to the Yale campus.
I hope to make it there myself next year.
And Josh, come back to the podcast whenever you have time.
You're always welcome here.
I'd be delighted to come back, Vance. It's been fun.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard,
don't forget, subscribe to our show,
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check out our website,
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I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.