S4-EP8: Tom Peters on [B]OLDLY Turning 80: His Childhood, His Passion, His Outrage, His Mission
Listen on
SUMMARY
Debbie talks to legendary business author and speaker Tom Peters about his childhood, his passion and outrage, what matters most to him, and his relationship to work on the eve of turning 80.
Said Tom on Twitter: “Debbie got the hat trick. She got stuff out of my mouth that I have never revealed before. And she wouldn’t let me waffle. She was a real pain in the ass that way, and I loved every minute of it.”
EPISODE NOTES
Debbie talks to legendary business author and speaker Tom Peters. And if you’re wondering why she’s interviewing a business management guru, it’s because Tom exemplifies the new name of the podcast: [B]OLDER. I.e. getting bolder as you grow older.
Tom is the co-author of In Search of Excellence, published 40 years ago and considered one of the most influential business books ever written.
The book makes the argument that excellent companies treat their employees with respect. They put people first.
Tom is known for being brash, fanatical, even outrageous (a combination of Billy Graham and Sid Vicious as one commentator put it) and he’s been haranguing audiences and readers around the world for decades with his philosophy of people first.
Haranguing, because many companies are still not doing it. Although the pandemic may have changed that a bit.
In 2017 he received the Thinkers50 Lifetime Achievement Award. He also coined the term Personal Branding.
And he’s not stopping as he turns 80.
In this conversation, he reflects on why women should be leading; passion and outrage and why they are the most important quality in a good speaker; his love for research and data and the concept of compassionomics.
He also gets personal, opening up about his childhood and his mother’s influence and reiterating why he is not done yet.
He’s as fanatical as ever (especially on the topic of women getting things done) and you’ll hear Debbie occasionally interrupting or trying to interrupt him in this conversation. Not something Debbie normally does but Tom’s Director of Programs, Shelley Dolley, encouraged her to do so.
Debbie met Tom almost 15 years ago when he interviewed her for his Cool Friends series, shortly after her book (The Corporate Blogging Book) came out.
Coincidentally, he is married to a high school classmate of Debbie’s, designer Susan Sargent.
His newest book, Excellence Now: Extreme Humanism, is more relevant than ever with its emphasis on creating a humane workplace. It’s his eighteenth book and it may be his last, he tells Debbie.
Much of his written and speech material is available—free to download—at tompeters.com and excellencenow.com.
Enjoy this spirited and wide-ranging conversation with a legendary thinker.
Mentioned in this episode or useful:
- TomPeters.com
- Tom Peters on Twitter
- In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America’s Best-Run Companies by Tom Peters and Bob Waterman (Harper Business; Reprint edition 2006)
- Excellence Now: Extreme Humanism by Tom Peters (Networlding Publishing, March 2021)
- Complete listing of Tom’s books
- The Brand Called You by Tom Peters (Fast Company, August 31 1997)
- Tom Peters remembers Bob Waterman (who died Jan. 2, 2022)
- Debbie’s Cool Friends interview with Tom Peters (2008)
- Susan Sargent (married to Tom Peters and, coincidentally, Debbie’s high school classmate)
- Rebecca Eaton – Masterpiece Theater
- Dopesick (TV Mini Series 2021)
- Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe (Doubleday; 2021)
- McKinsey & Co
- The Firm: The Story of McKinsey and Its Secret Influence on American Business by Duff McDonald (Simon & Schuster; Reprint edition 2014)
- The Golden Passport: Harvard Business School, the Limits of Capitalism, and the Moral Failure of the MBA Eliteby Duff McDonald (Harper Business; Reprint edition 2017)
- Tickled: A Commonsense Guide to the Present Moment by Duff McDonald (Harper; 2021)
- Should Women Rule? (The Atlantic, November 2008)
- Compassionomics – The Website
- Compassionomics: The Revolutionary Scientific Evidence that Caring Makes a Difference by Stephen Trzeciack and Anthony Mazzarelli (Studer Group; 2019)
- Amazon.com: The Social Psychology of Organizing by Karl E. Weick (McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages; 1979)
- Thomas Keneally, the Australian writer Tom has been enjoying recently
Note from Debbie
If you’ve been enjoying the podcast, please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts. It takes less than two minutes and it really makes a difference. It makes me feel loved and it also attracts new listeners.
Subscribe to my newsletter and get my free writing guide: https://bitly.com/debbie-free-guide.
Connect with me:
- Website: debbieweil.com
- Twitter: @debbieweil
- Instagram: @debbieweil
- Facebook: @debbieweil
- LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/debbieweil
- Blog: Gap Year After Sixty
- Email: [email protected]
– Debbie
We Are Looking For a Sponsor or a Podcasting Network
If you are interested in reaching a smart and thoughtful audience of midlife, and older, listeners, contact Debbie Weil.
Support this podcast:
- Leave a review on iTunes
- Subscribe via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Stitcher or Spotify
- Interested in sponsoring this podcast? We have an avid audience of midlife, and older, listeners. Contact Debbie Weil.
Credits:
- Host: Debbie Weil
- Producer: Far Out Media
- Music: Lakeside Path By Duck Lake
Connect with us:
- Email: [email protected]
- Twitter: @debbieweil
- Insta: @debbieweil
- Debbie and Sam's blog: Gap Year After Sixty
Thanks to our media partners
Encore.org, our newest media partner, is an ideas and innovation hub tapping the talent of those 50+ as a force for good. Founder and CEO Marc Freedman is an award-winning social entrepreneur and author, most recently, of How to Live Forever: The Enduring Power of Connecting the Generations. Looking for a great gap-year transition program? Check out Encore Fellowships, which match skilled, seasoned professionals with social-sector organizations in high-impact, paid assignments.
Modern Elder Academy is a program dedicated to navigating mid-life transitions. MEA, based in Baja California, Mexico, provides the place and the tools to start reframing your lifetime of experience. Grow whole, not old. Founder Chip Conley is a New York Times bestselling author, award-winning hospitality entrepreneur and a rock star of the mid-life transition movement. His newest book is Wisdom @ Work: the Making of a Modern Elder.
Next For Me is an important new resource for the 50+ crowd focused on rewriting life. Taking a gap year or timeout may be the best way to figure out "what's next" when you're in this stage of life. Founder Jeff Tidwell explains, Next For Me "connects and inspires our generation to evolve our post-50 lives through new work, a new purpose, or a new social contribution."