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  • Clayton Christensen wears many hats as an author, an entrepreneur, a missionary, a husband,

  • and a father. His most recent book is called How Will You Measure Your life?

  • Douglas Goldstein, financial planner & investment advisor, interviewed Christensen on Arutz

  • Sheva Radio.

  • Douglas Goldstein: You recently came out with a book called How Will You Measure Your Life

  • which is a very different book from the previous books you've written. Could you tell us a

  • little bit about what made you do that?

  • Clayton Christensen: It has its origins with my students at the Harvard Business School

  • and just the structure of the book entails for every class, I asked the students to read

  • a paper that describes a theory about management, a theory as a statement of what causes what

  • and why. And then after they've read the theory, they also have to read a case study about

  • a company that is in a problem than can be understood if you look at that company to

  • the lens of this theory and then we discussed what we can see to the lens of this theory.

  • The next day, we have another case and another theory about another dimension of a manager's

  • job and you try to then understand that day's case through the lens of that theory and then

  • when you are done, you put on yesterday's theory to see if you can understand this case

  • even more at deeper depths so we do that through the course of the semester. At the end of

  • the class at the suggestion of my students, we dedicate the last session of the class

  • to examine ourselves and is it possible that these theories about management actually can

  • help us understand if I keep doing what I'm doing 20 years down the road, what is my life

  • going to look like and if I want to be a particular person 20 year down the road what do I need

  • to change about now in order to become the kind of person I want to be and if I keep

  • doing what I'm doing, is it possible that my life is going to turn out what I would

  • never hope to happen to me. Then we just discuss if I examine my future through the lens of

  • these theories, what does it say about where I'm going and what I need to change and it

  • truly is an extraordinary experience. It turns out that these theories of management are

  • not just theories about management that there are fundamental explanations of what causes

  • what and why.

  • About five years ago with a particular set of students that year, we just had an extraordinary

  • course and several of the students had recorded the session and they asked would you give

  • this talk to some class session at graduation for the Harvard Business School students and

  • so I did it and I guess that was really quite useful to other people. They asked if I would

  • write a case or write a book about this experience and what the insights were that emerged from

  • that discussion.

  • Douglas Goldstein: In the book, you talk about finding happiness as a big part of your goal

  • and as a financial advisor, I talk to clients and we are talking a lot about money and I

  • always try to refer to them back to the original goals which is it's not about how much money

  • you have, it's about how much life you have. I've explained this many times but for a lot

  • of people they are still finding it difficult to make that connection. How do you help people

  • along that path?

  • Clayton Christensen: It turns out that it's not just people who have that problem. Companies

  • have that problem. General Motors has just been disrupted in [my bank] which is by Toyota

  • and managers of General Motors, nobody ever got down with the management team or the board

  • and developed a plan for driving General Motors into bankruptcy, but they did what the right

  • thing seemed to be at that time and yet doing the right thing added up to a future that

  • none of them intended to have happened to them.

  • The reason why that happens is if you are driven to achieve whether you are running

  • a company or in your personal lives, you have an extra ounce of energy or 30 minutes of

  • time. Instinctively, you'll allocate that to whatever activity yields the most immediate

  • and tangible evidence of achievement and our careers provide immediate and tangible evidence

  • of achievement. We close the deal, we ship a product, we finish a design, we make a great

  • presentation, we get promoted, we get paid and yet investing our time and energy on our

  • children or the relationship with our spouses, they don't pay off on the short term. In fact,

  • investments in our children, time spent with them doesn't pay off at all on a day to day

  • basis. The children misbehave every day and it's really not until 20 years down the road

  • that you can put your hands on your hips and say, "Man we created a great daughter." On

  • a day to day basis, you don't have that feedback and that's why even though none of us intend

  • to get divorced and have children who are alienated from us who hit their guts, a shocking

  • number of people actually have implemented a strategy that they didn't intend

  • to pursue.

  • Douglas Goldstein: Do you see any particular models or particular steps that a family could

  • take in order to insure that they can see the bigger picture?

  • Clayton Christensen: You need to set rules because if you make these decision on a case

  • by case basis, it will always seem to you in the moment as if it's okay if I don't invest

  • in what matters today because I can start that tomorrow. Just like a company can say,

  • "We don't need to invest for the longer term today because we can start that tomorrow"

  • and you really have to set balance. For example in my own life when I finished with an MBA

  • from Harvard, I made a decision with my wife that I just wouldn't work on the Sabbath because

  • I'm a religious guy as you are and if I want to live a life close to God, I need to invest

  • my time that's consistent with that priority and then the other day in the weekend, we

  • decided I wouldn't work on that day either because I want to spend that time with my

  • family and it was really hard because my colleagues and my employers wanted me to work on weekends,

  • everybody works on weekends, but I had to make that decision once and stay with it otherwise

  • I'll make decisions that will lead me in a path that I don't want

  • to go down.

  • People

  • wonder all of the time, "Clay if you are not working every weekend, how can you be successful

  • in your profession?" and my answer is, "If I do what God wants me to do, he will magnify

  • me so that I can be more capable of doing what I need to do professionally" and if I

  • didn't prioritize what God wants me to prioritize the it would just play an old ordinary Clay

  • Christensen competing against thousands of Clay Christensen type people. I really do

  • think that if we do what God wants us to do, God will magnify us.

  • Douglas Goldstein: What are you working on now?

  • Clayton Christensen: I'm working on a new book called the Capitalist's Dilemma that

  • tries to explain why in North America, Western Europe and Japan, the financial parts of our

  • economy seemed to be doing quite well but we are not creating new jobs and why can the

  • real economy not rebound from the most recent recession in a robust way.

  • Douglas Goldstein: How can people follow your work and learn more about some of the many

  • books that you've written?

  • Clayton Christensen: I'm a professor at the Harvard Business School. I have a website

  • that summarizes the elements of my research. They can find us at www.claytonchristensen.com

  • and they can also navigate towards this through the Harvard Business School Website itself.

Clayton Christensen wears many hats as an author, an entrepreneur, a missionary, a husband,

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