Suppose we have an $(\infty,1)$-category $\mathcal{C}$. There are two ways I can think of to produce an $(\infty,0)$-category from $\mathcal{C}$, and I'm wondering if they're equivalent.
The first way is as follows. Let $\operatorname{Cat}$ be the $\infty$-category of $\infty$-categories, and let $\operatorname{Grpd}$ be the $\infty$-category of $\infty$-groupoids. There is a forgetful functor $F: \operatorname{Grpd} \to \operatorname{Cat}$ which admits a left adjoint $Str: \operatorname{Cat} \to \operatorname{Grpd}$, which one could call the "groupoidification functor". Roughly, $Str(\mathcal{C})$ inverts all the arrows in $\mathcal{C}$.
The second method starts by viewing $\mathcal{C}$ as a category object in the infinity category $\operatorname{Grpd}$. More precisely, there is a fully faithful functor $s: \operatorname{Cat} \to Fun(\Delta^{op},\operatorname{Grpd})$, which assigns to $\mathcal{C}$ the simplicial object $$s \mathcal{C}: \Delta^{op} \longrightarrow \operatorname{Grpd}$$ whose space of zero simplices is the core of $\mathcal{C}$, its $1$-simplices is the space of morphisms in $\mathcal{C}$, and so on. By taking the geometric realization of $s\mathcal{C}$ we get an $\infty$-groupoid $|s\mathcal{C}|$.
Question: Is the composition $|-| \circ s$ equivalent to the groupoidification functor? This seems intuitively obvious to me; e.g. two $0$-simplices of $s\mathcal{C}$ are identified in $|s\mathcal{C}|$ whenever they're joined by a $1$-simplex.
EDIT: I replaced all instances of "strictification" with "groupoidification," in order to avoid any confusion for future readers.