Peter Drucker was a Jew by descent but his parents became Christians. He was an eminent man nonetheless.
From http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_48/b3961001.htm
He had often said that at his age "one doesn't pray for a long life but for an
easy death." Since then he had struggled through a series of ailments, from
life-threatening abdominal cancer to a broken hip. Oversize hearing aids plugged
into both ears, he had a pacemaker in his chest and needed a walker to get
around his ranch home on Wellesley Drive. Over 20-plus years, I often met or
spoke to Drucker in the course of reporting any number of business and
management stories.
On that spring morning in April, in black cotton slippers and socks that barely
covered his ankles, Drucker seemed unusually frail and tired -- not at all in a
mood to ponder his legacy. "I'm not very introspective," he protested in his
familiar guttural baritone, thick with the accent of his native Austria. "I
don't know. What I would say is I helped a few good people be effective in doing
the right things."
Let others now speak for Drucker, who died peacefully in his sleep at home on
Nov. 11 at age 95, eight days shy of his 96th birthday:
"The world knows he was the greatest management thinker of the last century,"
Jack Welch, former chairman of General Electric Co. (GE
), said after Drucker's death.
"He was the creator and inventor of modern management," said management guru Tom
Peters. "In the early 1950s, nobody had a tool kit to manage these incredibly
complex organizations that had gone out of control. Drucker was the first person
to give us a handbook for that."
Adds Intel Corp. (INTC )
co-founder Andrew S. Grove: "Like many philosophers, he spoke in plain language
that resonated with ordinary managers. Consequently, simple statements from him
have influenced untold numbers of daily actions; they did mine over decades."
The story of Peter Drucker is the story of management itself. It's the story of
the rise of the modern corporation and the managers who organize work. Without
his analysis it's almost impossible to imagine the rise of dispersed,
globe-spanning corporations.
But it's also the story of Drucker's own rising disenchantment with capitalism
in the late 20th century that seemed to reward greed as easily as it did
performance. Drucker was sickened by the excessive riches awarded to mediocre
executives even as they slashed the ranks of ordinary workers. And as he entered
his 10th decade, there were some in corporations and academia who said his time
had passed. Others said he grew sloppy with the facts. Meanwhile, new
generations of management gurus and pundits, many of whom grew rich off books
and speaking tours, superseded him. The doubt and disillusionment with business
that Drucker expressed in his later years caused him to turn away from the
corporation and instead offer his advice to the nonprofit sector. It seemed an
acknowledgment that business and management had somehow failed him.
But Drucker's tale is not mere history. Whether it's recognized or not, the
organization and practice of management today is derived largely from the
thinking of Peter Drucker. His teachings form a blueprint for every thinking
leader (page 106). In a world of quick fixes and glib explanations, a world of
fads and simplistic PowerPoint lessons, he understood that the job of leading
people and institutions is filled with complexity. He taught generations of
managers the importance of picking the best people, of focusing on opportunities
and not problems, of getting on the same side of the desk as your customer, of
the need to understand your competitive advantages, and to continue to refine
them. He believed that talented people were the essential ingredient of every
successful enterprise.
RENAISSANCE MAN
Well before his death, before the almost obligatory accolades poured in, Drucker
had already become a legend, of course. He was the guru's guru, a sage,
kibitzer, doyen, and gadfly of business, all in one. He had moved fluidly among
his various roles as journalist, professor, historian, economics commentator,
and raconteur. Over his 95 prolific years, he had been a true Renaissance man, a
teacher of religion, philosophy, political science, and Asian art, even a
novelist. But his most important contribution, clearly, was in business. What
John Maynard Keynes is to economics or W. Edwards Deming to quality, Drucker is
to management.
After witnessing the oppression of the Nazi regime, he found great hope in the
possibilities of the modern corporation to build communities and provide meaning
for the people who worked in them. For the next 50 years he would train his
intellect on helping companies live up to those lofty possibilities. He was
always able to discern trends -- sometimes 20 years or more before they were
visible to anyone else. "It is frustratingly difficult to cite a significant
modern management concept that was not first articulated, if not invented, by
Drucker," says James O'Toole, the management author and University of Southern
California professor. "I say that with both awe and dismay." In the course of
his long career, Drucker consulted for the most celebrated CEOs of his era, from
Alfred P. Sloan Jr. of General Motors Corp. (GM
) to Grove of Intel.
-- It was Drucker who introduced the idea of decentralization -- in the 1940s --
which became a bedrock principle for virtually every large organization in the
world.
-- He was the first to assert -- in the 1950s -- that workers should be treated
as assets, not as liabilities to be eliminated.
-- He originated the view of the corporation as a human community -- again, in
the 1950s -- built on trust and respect for the worker and not just a
profit-making machine, a perspective that won Drucker an almost godlike
reverence among the Japanese.
-- He first made clear -- still the '50s -- that there is "no business without a
customer," a simple notion that ushered in a new marketing mind-set.
-- He argued in the 1960s -- long before others -- for the importance of
substance over style, for institutionalized practices over charismatic, cult
leaders.
-- And it was Drucker again who wrote about the contribution of knowledge
workers -- in the 1970s -- long before anyone knew or understood how knowledge
would trump raw material as the essential capital of the New Economy.
Drucker made observation his life's work, gleaning deceptively simple ideas that
often elicited startling results. Shortly after Welch became CEO of General
Electric in 1981, for example, he sat down with Drucker at the company's New
York headquarters. Drucker posed two questions that arguably changed the course
of Welch's tenure: "If you weren't already in a business, would you enter it
today?" he asked. "And if the answer is no, what are you going to do about it?"
Those questions led Welch to his first big transformative idea: that every
business under the GE umbrella had to be either No. 1 or No. 2 in its class. If
not, Welch decreed that the business would have to be fixed, sold, or closed. It
was the core strategy that helped Welch remake GE into one of the most
successful American corporations of the past 25 years.
Drucker's work at GE is instructive. It was never his style to bring CEOs clear,
concise answers to their problems but rather to frame the questions that could
uncover the larger issues standing in the way of performance. "My job," he once
lectured a consulting client, "is to ask questions. It's your job to provide
answers." Says Dan Lufkin, a co-founder of investment banking firm Donaldson,
Lufkin & Jenrette Inc. (CSR ),
who often consulted with Drucker in the 1960s: "He would never give you an
answer. That was frustrating for a while. But while it required a little more
brain matter, it was enormously helpful to us. After you spent time with him,
you really admired him not only for the quality of his thinking but for his
foresight, which was amazing. He was way ahead of the curve on major trends."
Drucker's mind was an itinerant thing, able to wander in minutes through a
series of digressions until finally coming to some specific business point. He
could unleash a monologue that would include anything from the role of money in
Goethe's Faust to the story of his grandmother who played piano for Johannes
Brahms, yet somehow use it to serve his point of view. "He thought in circles,"
says Joseph A. Maciariello, who teaches "Drucker on Management" at Claremont
Graduate University.
Part of Drucker's genius lay in his ability to find patterns among seemingly
unconnected disciplines. Warren Bennis, a management guru himself and longtime
admirer of Drucker, says he once asked his friend how he came up with so many
original insights. Drucker narrowed his eyes thoughtfully. "I learn only through
listening," he said, pausing, "to myself."
Among academics, that ad hoc, nonlinear approach sometimes led to charges that
Drucker just wasn't rigorous enough, that his work wasn't backed up by
quantifiable research. "With all those books he wrote, I know very few
professors who ever assigned one to their MBA students," says O'Toole. "Peter
would never have gotten tenure in a major business school."
I first met Drucker in 1985 when I was scrambling to master my new job as
management editor at BusinessWeek. He invited me to Estes Park, Colo.,
where he and his wife, Doris, often spent summers in a log cabin, part of a YWCA
camp. I remember him counseling me to drink lots of water, ingest a super dose
of vitamin C, and take it easy to adjust to the high altitude. I spent two days
getting to know Drucker and his work. We had breakfast, lunch, and dinner
together. We hiked the trails of the camp. And I became intimately familiar with
his remarkable story.
Born in Austria in 1909 into a highly educated professional family, he seemed
destined for some kind of greatness. The Vienna that Drucker knew had been a
cultural and economic hub, and his parents were in the thick of it. Sigmund
Freud ate lunch at the same cooperative restaurant as the Druckers and
vacationed near the same Alpine lake. When Drucker first met Freud at the age of
eight, his father told him: "Remember, today you have just met the most
important man in Austria and perhaps in Europe." Many evenings his parents,
Adolph and Caroline, would gather the intellectual elite in the drawing room of
their Vienna home for wide-ranging discussions of medicine, politics, or music.
Peter absorbed not merely their content but worldliness and a style of
expression.
When Hitler organized his first Nazi meeting in Berlin in 1927, Drucker, raised
a Protestant, was in Germany, studying law at the University of Frankfurt. He
attended classes taught by Keynes and Joseph Schumpeter. As a student, a clerk
in a Hamburg export firm, and a securities analyst in a Frankfurt merchant bank,
he lived through the years of Hitler's emergence, recognizing early the menace
of centralized power. When his essay on Friedrich Julius Stahl, a leading German
conservative philosopher, was published as a pamphlet in 1933, it so offended
the Nazis that the pamphlet was banned and burned. A second Drucker pamphlet, Die Judenfrage in Deutschland, or
The Jewish Question in Germany,
published four years later, suffered the same fate. The only surviving copy sits
in a folder in the Austrian National Archives with a swastika stamped on it.
Drucker immigrated to London shortly after Hitler became Chancellor, taking a
job as an economist at a London bank while continuing to write and to study
economics. He came to America in 1937 as a correspondent for a group of British
newspapers, along with his new wife, Doris, whom he had met in Frankfurt.
"America was terribly exciting," remembered Drucker. "In Europe the only hope
was to go back to 1913. In this country everyone looked forward."
So did Drucker. He taught part time at Sarah Lawrence College before joining the
faculty at Bennington College in Vermont. He could be a difficult taskmaster.
One Bennington student recalled that Drucker said her paper "resembled turnips
sprinkled with parsley. I could wring his fat frog-like neck," she wrote in a
letter to her parents. "Unfortunately, he is a very brilliant and famous man. He
has at least taught me something."
Drucker was a professor of politics and philosophy at Bennington when he was
given the opportunity to study General Motors in 1945, the first time he peeked
inside the corporation. His examination led to the publication of his
groundbreaking book, Concept of the Corporation, and his decision, in
1950, to attach himself to New York University's Graduate School of Business. It
was around this time that Drucker heard Schumpeter, then at Harvard University,
say: "I know that it is not enough to be remembered for books and theories. One
does not make a difference unless it is a difference in people's lives."
CREATING A DISCIPLINE
He took Schumpeter's advice to heart, beginning a career in consulting while
continuing his life as a teacher and writer. Drucker's most famous text, The
Practice of Management, published in 1954, laid out the American corporation
like a well-dissected frog in a college laboratory, with chapter headings such
as "What is a Business?" and "Managing Growth." It became his first popular book
about management, and its title was, in effect, a manifesto. He was saying that
management was not a science or an art. It was a profession, like medicine or
law. It was about getting the very best out of people. As he himself put it: "I
wrote The Practice of Management because there was no book on management.
I had been working for 10 years consulting and teaching, and there simply was
nothing or very little. So I kind of sat down and wrote it, very conscious of
the fact that I was laying the foundations of a discipline."
Drucker taught at NYU for 21 years -- and his executive classes became so
popular that they were held in a nearby gym where the swimming pool was drained
and covered so hundreds of folding chairs could be set up. Drucker moved to
California in 1971 to become a professor of social sciences and management at
Claremont Graduate School, as it was known then. But he was always thought to be
an outsider -- a writer, not a scholar -- who was largely ignored by the
business schools. Tom Peters says he earned two advanced degrees, including a
PhD in business, without once studying Drucker or reading a single book written
by him. Even some of Drucker's colleagues at NYU had fought against awarding him
tenure because his ideas were not the result of rigorous academic research. For
years professors at the most elite business schools said they didn't bother to
read Drucker because they found him superficial. And in the years before
Drucker's death even the dean of the Peter F. Drucker Graduate School of
Management at Claremont said: "This is a brand in decline."
In the 1980s he began to have grave doubts about business and even capitalism
itself. He no longer saw the corporation as an ideal space to create community.
In fact, he saw nearly the opposite: a place where self-interest had triumphed
over the egalitarian principles he long championed. In both his writings and
speeches, Drucker emerged as one of Corporate America's most important critics.
When conglomerates were the rage, he preached against reckless mergers and
acquisitions. When executives were engaged in empire-building, he argued against
excess staff and the inefficiencies of numerous "assistants to." In a 1984 essay
he persuasively argued that CEO pay had rocketed out of control and implored
boards to hold CEO compensation to no more than 20 times what the rank and file
made. What particularly enraged him was the tendency of corporate managers to
reap massive earnings while firing thousands of their workers. "This is morally
and socially unforgivable," wrote Drucker, "and we will pay a heavy price for
it."
The hostile takeovers of the 1980s, a period that revisionists now say was
essential to improve American efficiency and productivity, was for Drucker "the
final failure of corporate capitalism." He then likened Wall Street traders to
"Balkan peasants stealing each other's sheep" or "pigs gorging themselves at the
trough." He maintained that multimillion-dollar severance packages had perverted
management's ability to look out for anything but itself. "When you have golden
parachutes," he told one journalist, "you have created incentives for management
to collude with the raiders." At one point, Drucker was so put off by American
corporate values that he was moved to say that, "although I believe in the free
market, I have serious reservations about capitalism."
We tend to think of Drucker as forever old, a gnomic and mysterious elder. At
least I always did. His speech, always slow and measured, was forever accented
in that commanding Viennese. His wisdom could not have come from anyone who was
young. So it's easy to forget his dashing youth, his long devotion to one woman
and their four children (until the end, Drucker still greeted his wife of 71
years with an effusive "Hello, my darling!"), or even his deliciously
self-deprecating sense of play.
During his early consulting work with DLJ, the partners flew out to California
to meet with Drucker at home. After one of his famously meandering monologues,
Drucker thought everyone needed a break.
"Well, boys," he said, "why don't we relax for a few minutes? Let's go for a
swim."
The executives explained that they hadn't brought their swimming trunks.
"You don't need swimming suits because it's just men here today," replied
Drucker.
"And we took off our clothes and went skinny-dipping in his pool," recalls
Charles Ellis, who was with the group.
Surely, Drucker never fit into the buttoned-down stereotype of a management
consultant. He always favored bright colors: a bottle-green shirt, a knit tie, a
royal blue jacket with a blue-on-blue shirt, or simply a woolen flannel shirt
and tan trousers. Drucker always worked from a home office filled with books and
classical records on shelves that groaned under their weight. He never had a
secretary and usually handled the fax machine and answered the telephone himself
-- he was something of a phone addict, he admitted.
PRIVACY PREVAILS
Yet Drucker also was an intensely private man, revealing little of his personal
life, even in his own autobiography, Adventures of a Bystander, the book
he told me was his favorite of them all. Not surprisingly, perhaps, the Drucker
Archives at Claremont Graduate University contain only one personal letter from
his wife to him. Doris had clipped two images from a 1950s-era newspaper, one of
a handsome man in a plaid robe, fresh from a good night's sleep, another of a
couple in love, man and woman staring into each other's eyes, over a late
evening snack. She glued each black-and-white image onto a flimsy piece of
typing paper and wrote the words: "I love you in the morning when things are
kind of frantic. I love you in the evening when things are more romantic." It is
undated and unsigned.
It was Doris, in her own unpublished memoir, who told the story of how she once
locked Drucker in a London coal cellar to hide him from her disapproving mother.
As Doris' mother turned the house upside down in a frantic search for a man she
thought was sleeping with her daughter, Peter spent the better part of the night
crouched in a cold, dark hole. Doris' mother had long hoped her daughter would
someday marry a Rothschild or a German of high social standing. The last thing
she wanted was for her to marry a light-in-the-pocket Austrian.
In his later years, as his health weakened, so did Drucker's magnetic pull.
Although he maintained a coterie of corporate followers, he increasingly turned
his attention to nonprofit leaders, from Frances Hesselbein of the Girl Scouts
of the USA to Rick Warren, founding pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest,
Calif. Warren, author of The Purpose-Driven Life, considered Drucker a
mentor. "Drucker told me: 'The function of management in a church is to make the
church more churchlike, not more businesslike. It's to allow you to do what your
mission is,"' Warren said. "Business was just a starting point from which he had
this platform to influence leaders of all different kinds."
Still, it was clear Drucker cared deeply about how he would be remembered. He
tried in 1990 to discredit and quash an admiring biography of quality guru
Deming, whom he seemed to consider a rival. And when Professor O'Toole assessed
the influence of Drucker's landmark 1945 study on General Motors, he concluded
that the guru not only had had no impact on GM but also became persona non grata
at the company for nearly half a century. "I sent it to Peter, and he spent
hours going over it with me," recalls O'Toole. "He was a little unhappy with it
because he didn't like the conclusion. He felt he had had a big impact at GM. I
thought that was either very generous of Peter or else he was kidding himself."
During the same period, Drucker, then 80 years old, penned a severely flawed
foreword for a new edition of Alfred Sloan's My Years with General Motors.
In one passage, Drucker quotes Sloan as saying that the death of his younger
brother Raymond was "the greatest personal tragedy in my life." Raymond,
however, died 17 years after Alfred. In another section, Drucker noted that the
publication of the book had been delayed because Sloan "refused to publish as
long as any of the GM people mentioned in the book was still alive. On the day
of the death of the last living person mentioned in the book, Sloan released it
for publication," wrote Drucker. In fact, Sloan generously heaped praise on 14
colleagues in the preface of his book, and all were still alive when My Years
with General Motors was first published.
Whether the mistakes were a result of sloppiness or his declining intellectual
power is not clear. But Drucker was no longer at the top of his game. The dean
of the Drucker school, Cornelis de Kluyver, had reason to believe that Drucker's
influence was on the wane -- the school was having difficulty attracting big
money from potential donors. To gain a $20 million gift for its puny endowment,
de Kluyver agreed in 2003 to put another name on the school, that of Masatoshi
Ito, the founder of Ito-Yokado Group, owner of 7-Eleven stores in Japan and
North America. Students protested, even marching outside the dean's office
toting placards decrying the change. An ailing Drucker volunteered to speak
directly to the students. "I consider it quite likely that three years after my
death my name will be of absolutely no advantage," he told them. "If you can get
10 million bucks by taking my name off, more power to you."
In April, during our last meeting, I asked Drucker what he had been up to
lately. "Not very much," he replied. "I have been putting things in order,
slowly. I am reasonably sure that I am not going to write another book. I just
don't have the energy. My desk is a mess, and I can't find anything."
I almost felt guilty for having asked the question, so I praised his work, the
38 books, the countless essays and articles, the consulting gigs, his widespread
influence on so many of the world's most celebrated leaders. But he was
agitated, even dismissive, of much of his accomplishment.
"I did my best work early on -- in the 1950s. Since then it's marginal. O.K.?
What else do you have?"
I pressed the nonagenarian for more reflection, more introspection. "Look," he
sighed, "I'm totally uninteresting. I'm a writer, and writers don't have
interesting lives. My books, my work, yes. That's different."
UNQUOTE
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Updated on 18/07/2012 18:38