about-us

Carly's journey to Crabwalk

This is cliche but true. 15 years ago I would have never believed it if you told me I’d be running a startup accelerator, teaching at MIT, and building Crabwalk. 

It’s not that I wouldn’t have been psyched about that story, but I simply had a different idea of what my life would look like. What has led me to this place surprises me even more. 

My current life is almost 100% credited to the existing people in my life like the alumni of my college, friends of friends, family, clients, and former colleagues to name a few.

Here’s the story of how I crabwalked to where I am today.

My journey to Crabwalk

I sought independence at a very, very young age. Money was a prevalent subject in my house. My dad is an accountant and financial planner.

So in my world at the time, financial independence = true independence. I believed this so much that when 10 year old me was asked what I wanted to be when I grew up, my answer was a philanthropist.

My mission was set; I would work to earn money and be financially independent.

I grew up looking up to other working women - Katie Couric, Barbara Walters, Oprah and Madeleine Albright. Alright, I guess the ones I knew of were all on TV.

My mom was a speech pathologist and teacher; my dad an accountant and financial planner.  One grandfather was a radio talk show host and the other a pharmacist. My grandmother a reading teacher. Besides friends parents who were lawyers and doctors, that was about my total knowledge of job options.

I set out to work as early as I can remember.

At first, just being at my dad’s office, and then as soon as someone let me, at age 12, I was a mother’s helper and was quickly promoted to babysitter. At 15, completely out of the blue, I presented my parents with minor’s working papers for them to sign so I could work at a local florist.

As much as I loved growing up in my small town, I was eager to head to a city and be where the action was.  

My first steps forward.

As soon as I got to college, my dad started to seed me with instructions of how to explore potential career paths. He suggested utilizing the resources I already had available to me, such as alums from Skidmore, who would be willing to share their own experiences. I wasn’t the most outgoing of college students so I wasn’t quite sure how I felt about approaching complete strangers.

My dad reassured me, however, that “people love talking about themselves, so just let them talk.”  It worked like a charm at those first few coffee meetings and my confidence grew during those outings.

That’s when I learned a key part of Crabwalking: how to leverage people I was connected to already to help me move forward in my career.

I got in touch with a young alumni who helped me secure my first professional internship at Goldman Sachs in New York City. I was psyched! I was going to be a financial services professional at the most well regarded bank in the world, in the center of it all, NYC. I was going to be able to make enough money to not only enjoy my life, but also treat my family and friends occasionally and donate to nonprofits that I cared about. Career, figured out!

And then, September 2008 happened and everything started to change.

I was on the front lines of seeing many people’s careers get up-ended. So I started to think, perhaps it wasn’t going to be the same for me as it was for my parents. Industries can change in a day, employers aren’t as loyal as their employees are, and it wasn’t good enough to be a one-skill pony.  

I didn’t fully know what that meant or how that would show up in my life years down the road.  What I did know was that I wanted to learn what my other options were outside of financial services.

That’s when I started to really move sideways and walk like a crab through my career.

My first crabwalk move to the side.

The move out of Goldman Sachs wasn’t easy. I was making a great salary at a highly regarded brand. My parents were quite confused when I told them I wanted to leave. My friends were too, they had been hearing about my dream to be a star on Wall Street since my first day of freshman year.  

When I told my colleagues at Goldman that I was leaving to take a job in local, city government, their heads seemed to be spinning too…

“You’re not moving to a competitor, so this isn’t about compensation?” — my boss asked at the time.

“Nope”, I said. 

I had been a political junkie since I was 12 years old, so when an opportunity in the public sector became available, I jumped at it. I think I would have been excited to work in any aspect of government, but it was a bonus that I’d be working at an economic development agency where I was responsible for working with the private sector to strengthen NYC’s economy. That meant I’d be able to fulfill a goal of mine of getting a bird’s eye view of all of the sectors in NYC.

But, it also meant that I’d be taking a huge bet on myself, and a huge pay cut. And it paid off.

Since taking my leap out of finance, I’ve worked in government, startups, academia, and am now on a journey as a business founder. Crabwalking has unearthed so much for me: my entrepreneurial nature, more confidence in myself, and true independence.

Crabwalking can be an amazing thing.

I strongly believe that my generation’s paths are going to be less linear than our parents. That we are all going to have to take a few steps sideways as we move forward, and that we’ll be better for it.  

Forging a new path will be a bit painful for most. Sometimes we get stopped before we even have a chance to get started because on a non-linear path, there are no clear directions or a clear destination.

It can be confusing or shameful for some when we don’t have all of the answers. We live in a Google-centric world where answers are always at our fingertips, but this isn’t one of those questions with an easily defined answer.  

Answering friends and family’s questions about work becomes more difficult, it takes us a little bit longer to fill out the “what’s your occupation” question on a form, and just like that, our future is a bit more open to interpretation. We don’t know all of the answers to these pressing, societal questions.

I am here to tell you that it is OK. YOU ARE OK.

Why do I feel the need to shout this at you? 

Because I have been on a long, unplanned Crabwalk. At first, I couldn’t really articulate why I wanted to leave the company on Wall Street I had dreamed about and aspired to. I measured my self-worth according to how quickly I could acquire promotions, vacation days, and top reviews. I was all about moving up and forward.

Don’t get me wrong, I am still the same ambitious woman I have always been and I very much want to continue moving up and forward.  But I feel much more comfortable in the sideways. 

Crabwalk exists to help you navigate through the journey so that you can embrace the sideways in order to continue to move up and forward.

— Carly

Life isn’t always linear.

Hi Crabwalk! Here's a little more about Laura + Carly

Hi!

We want to get to know you better, but first, let us introduce ourselves.

We are Laura Castaing and Carly Chase. Our story starts when we met in 2014 when we were both General Managers at startups in New York City. We were those friends / work peers who saw each other once a quarter for drinks or coffee to compare notes, vent, and feel more normal about the challenges we were facing while growing our startups.

Fast forward a few months (and a couple of major work and life changes) later … and we found ourselves sitting across a table once again, both having left our respective jobs. Neither of us was sure what was next. All we knew was that the path we had each been on no longer 100% fit. We found ourselves on the joint pursuit of jobs that authentically fit us while minimizing the anxiety that accompanied career transitions.

8 months later, after many more dinners, coffees, and working sessions, we finally put on paper the simple framework that had helped us navigate our non-linear career paths our whole working lives. Now, we teach that framework to help others navigate their own careers and, in the long-run, develop career agility.

Just as a crab walks, we often take side steps to move forward in our own careers and love helping others learn to do the same.

Here’s a bit more background on our own crabwalk journeys and where that landed us…


A little bit about Carly

Carly in her happy place - Menemsha, Martha’s Vineyard! (with her husband, the lovely Peter)

Carly in her happy place - Menemsha, Martha’s Vineyard! (with her husband, the lovely Peter)

Carly’s Crabwalk Journey

  • Born and raised in Longmeadow, Massachusetts (yes, which means I’m a Patriots + Red Sox fan)

  • Lived in New York City for the last 12 years, so I’ve also adopted the New York Rangers as my new hometown team (maybe because I married a native New Yorker who was at the ‘94 cup winning game)

  • Currently live in the West Village in Manhattan (ask me for restaurant recommendations!)

  • Am a Lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management where I teach Entrepreneurship, and also run a summer accelerator program (delta v) in NYC for MIT student led startups. I crabwalked to MIT via work in corporate finance, government, and startups.

Some other things to know about Carly…

…that you’ll likely see reflected in our newsletters and blogs. I…

  • am a morning person and news junkie and typically start my day by reading or watching at least an hour of news

  • try to spend quality, in person time with friends and family - it feels so good when I do

  • am not a foodie but love the experience of dining out and try to cook too

  • became devoted to yoga because of lingering back problems but appreciate it even more as a spiritual practice (practice is one of my favorite words)

  • care a lot about getting from point A to point B as efficiently as possible

  • wish everyone was more civically engaged

  • love traveling about anywhere, but my happy place is Martha’s Vineyard

  • ….and, sharing personal information in a public forum is still scary for me, so I’ve eaten about 12 Andes creme de menthe thins while writing this!


A little about Laura

Laura (second from left) with her 3 older sisters — she’s interested to know who you think she looks like more

Laura (second from left) with her 3 older sisters — she’s interested to know who you think she looks like more

Laura’s Crabwalk Journey

  • Raised in the suburbs of Detroit, Michigan (“Detroit Hustles Harder” stickers make frequent appearances)

  • Fourth daughter of a French father and Austrian mother (I speak French but only know a few things in German, mostly about food)

  • Have a Mechanical Engineering Degree from Duke University (you likely love OR hate that school — I’m ok with that)

  • Learned all things business in a real estate development job in South Florida

  • Currently living in Manhattan after pitstops in Chicago and DC for work and business school

  • Spent 6 years leading operations for two tech startups from 20 people to 500+ people

  • Launched a Career + Business Coaching business in 2017, helping successful professionals and entrepreneurs navigate work transitions (more detail on that here)

Some other things to know about Laura…

…that you’ll likely see reflected in our newsletters and blogs. I…

  • nerd out on finding ways to make daily life easier. The NYTimes Smarter Living column is a favorite.

  • am a night owl that loves my mornings — they’re sacred for deep work or self care — no calls or meetings before 11am.

  • tend to overanalyze and compensate by finding productivity hacks like accountability partners.

  • spent every summer visiting family in Europe and cherish our 80+ person reunions with games, food, and impromptu musical numbers.

  • play volleyball, sing karaoke, and play trivia on the regular (let me know if you want to join!)

  • rent summer houses on the weekends with friends in the Hudson River Valley — my role is usually the cocktail-maker and kitchen-organizer.


 

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