From How a Kid From Public Housing Became CEO of Goldman Sachs · · Michael Smerconish
“I was advised to conduct myself so that if I were to have an obituary of say nine paragraphs, no more than three of them would refer to Goldman. The idea was that you should have some balance in your life. You should be doing other things. You should be involved in the community.”
On , Lloyd Blankfein, Former Chairman & Chief Executive Officer at Goldman Sachs, spoke about work-life balance during How a Kid From Public Housing Became CEO of Goldman Sachs on Michael Smerconish.
Lloyd Blankfein, former Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs, has been promoting his new memoir, *Streetwise: Getting To and Through Goldman Sachs*, in a series of media appearances. He has discussed his upbringing in public housing in Brooklyn, attending Harvard as the first in his family to go to college, and his experience navigating feelings of imposter syndrome. Blankfein described his background as a "streety kind of background" that served as an "early imprint" on him. He also stated that he wanted the book to be "relatable," noting that he is "no genius" and that opportunities came his way as markets trended higher. In interviews, Blankfein has offered his perspective on financial markets and risk. He argued that financial crises are inevitable, using the metaphor of "dry tinder on the floor of the forest" to describe the accumulation of risk during periods of stability. He stated that the "real issue" in the market today is that "we haven't had a reckoning in a long time," leading to assets on balance sheets that "probably are marked too high." Blankfein also commented on the importance of authenticity, recalling advice he received that "everybody knows exactly who you are," and discussed the value of contingency planning over prediction in risk management.